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Keeping track of people in my life?
UniAce | Mar 16 2006
Does anyone have any ideas on keeping track of the many people in my life, from central to peripheral, from friends to collaborators? I'm heading off to grad school next year to continue my training as a cognitive scientist. For the kinds of interdisciplinary research I'm interested in, it's very valuable to meet and converse with other researchers from many disciplines, and maintain those connections over the years. I've already accumulated a large list of wonderful people I've met in academic settings (classes, conferences, student groups), not to mention other settings. I'd really like to offload a list of people onto the computer, where it'll be saved more durably than in my brain. And I'd like to have tags or categories or notes too (e.g. "Joe Johnson, met him at X conference, he's at Y University, he does research on Z, and likes to skydive"). The social network websites (e.g. myspace, friendster) are inadequate because everyone has to be a member. Maybe a standard address book program might work? I'm on Mac OS X and the built in one allows for categories and such. Alternately, I was about to just start a braindump text file. But I wanted to see first if anyone knows of any better tools for this kind of task? Thanks 16 Comments
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Lo-fi solutionsSubmitted by mdl on March 27, 2007 - 7:33pm.
An old-fashioned address book works really well for this purpose. Or a collection of 3x5 index cards in a good old recipe box (one per contact, organized alphabetically). If you go the index card route, you can create special meta tag cards with last names (e.g., a card with a list of people working on the history of clowns, a card with a list of people you met at the Dallas conference, etc.). Anyone out there use a rolodex? » POSTED IN:
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