A media diet for the crazy years

In the last year I read a lot less than normal, while at the same time I watched more streaming shows than I’m used to. I’ve been busier with work, in addition to what’s shaping up to be a crazy year. Stress and burnout kill my ability to focus on long form reading, which is something I’m working hard to counteract. Sometimes just forcing myself to read a book is the best medicine imaginable. ...

June 1, 2020

Reasons I hate TODO list and task tools

There’s a lot to like about our beloved task management tools. But if we’re honest, there’s a lot they get wrong too. Here are a few ways TODO tools grind my gears: Every task and list looks exactly the same. Lists are organized with limited hierarchy and pre-requisites. Lists are organized with no real spacial control. (Kanban boards are a great example of how spatial organization can vastly improve how we think about certain types of lists.) Tasks lists are either a huge a black hole or they’re a cacophony of noisy craziness. Task tools can be too atomic. A task is an indivisible line item, in single list. Grouping and splitting tasks is often manual and way too much work. Importance is missing from most list tools; everything has the same weight; there are only minor visual differences between lists and items. TODO lists require careful weeding, and they accumulate cruft really easily. It’s can be difficult to work a list; one task is usually a dozen and not all completed tasks are interesting. Task lists don’t care where you’re at personally, they just sit and stare at you. I swear my lists judge me some days. They don’t play nicely with your schedule. Not everything on your lists needs to hit your calendar, but the stuff that does really does. Completing a task is more than checking it off. Tasks have more exit states than done, anywhere from “Wow, that was a bad idea” to “This doesn’t matter anymore because of such-and-such”. Huge lists are super demotivating. Huge sets of completed tasks don’t have the positive effect you wish they would. Some tasks are time sensitive, which is more than just when it’s due. Some tasks are recurring, but not in the it’s-due-every-wednesday sort of way. Meaningful tasks like “You should really filter through the bug list this month” need to happen regularly, but not monthly on Tuesday mornings. Some tasks are just plain different than others. I’m looking at you, “Find inspiration today”. I finish certain types of tasks better at certain times of day, or when I’m in certain moods. And finally, task lists are very rarely inspiring. I’ve never looked at my TODOs and had an epiphany.

December 30, 2016

Things that make your podcast much less annoying to listen to

I have tried to love podcasts for a few years now. There are several that I like, but I find it difficult to listen to any of them consistently. I’ll binge listen for a few weeks, but for whatever reason I get stuck and move on to the next show. There are a few things that podcasts do that frustrates me: Low quality production Shows that go too long or that ramble Shows that take long hiatuses Surplus of opinions and deficits of facts I admit that part of the problem is the way I find, consume, and collect shows. iTunes isn’t great for discovery or browsing. It does well enough at distribution, but the store is still too monochromatic for the social aspects (shut up, Ping). I end up hopping between sites to find shows, to check in on show statuses, and eventually I just don’t remember to do those things. I have lost contact with a few shows due to issues with iTunes or my podcasting apps. ...

December 2, 2015