Learning from your mistakes

July 21, 2005

Just ran across a very interesting site about learning from your mistakes. Here’s the opening line of the entry: “You can only learn from a mistake after you admit you’ve made it. As soon as you start blaming other people (or the universe itself) you distance yourself from any possible lesson.”
www.scottberkun.com

That reminds me of a comment my wife has made for my benefit on many occassions: “You can’t learn something if you think you already know it.” People who assume they know what they’re doing repeat the same kinds of mistakes over and over without ever learning from them. I’ve found a comment made by an acquaintance many years ago comes in handy for me to break out of that failure-to-do loop: “First, assume you don’t know anything about this.” The first time I heard this from him, I bristled. Then I learned that it works amazingly.

Release of Note Studio 3

July 16, 2005

I just received a copy of Note Studio 3. There has been extensive beta testing of this update to the application, with numerous “under the hood” changes to the file format and other improvements. Much of the change that went into this major revision is not evident to the casual user. Some of the changes are significant for people with multiple machines (especially mixed PC and Mac communities) - e.g., group access to shared NS files. Others, the change to a new XML standard format, aren’t evident, except to someone with a lot of technical skills - that leaves me safely out! It works very well and the conversion process was seamless from 2.09.

The authors have promised additional fixes and additions over the next several months.

Country and Western Lyrics

“I never saw a hearse with a luggage rack.” (can’t remember who sang that)

Nice posts on 43 Folders on Doing Better at GtD

July 14, 2005

I just read some posts over at 43 Folders that resonated with my on-again, off-again relationship with Getting Things Done. In particular, the “A Year of getting things done…” posts made too much sense to me about not being able to stick with the program.

Is there an online group for GTD-anon? Maybe we should start one - put that in my someday-maybe folder that I should look in once in a while.

Backlink Generation in NoteStudio

July 11, 2005

One of the neat tricks that Note Studio lets you do is generate, either temporarily or in a new page, backlinks to a page. This can be done on either the Palm or desktop. Thus, if you want to know (and especially if you want to jump back and forth between) what links are connected to the page you’re on, you can get a listing of them.

On the desktop, this is one of two views under the Navigate button. On the Palm, you press and hold a link to generate a backlink list. This becomes a page that you can rename and keep within the book.

Only backlinks within the current book (the one you’re viewing) are listed.

This helps me when I’m looking at a page well down in my book and want to remember all the ways that I might have come to this point.

Wiki on a Palm - 3/5

July 6, 2005

One more thing about Note Studio that I’d like to see - a find feature that highlights the text in the searched record and allows you to open the page for editing at that point. Otherwise, I’m strongly inclined to creat only short pages of text so that I can find the parts I want more easily.

Wiki on a Palm - 3

What is it about Note Studio that I don’t like?
* No linking to other apps in the Palm suite.
Yes, I’ve heard that PSlink will link from within Note Studio to other apps. It requires that you be in edit mode to have the link active, which means that you don’t have the benefit of the wiki syntax display. That reminds me of working with the old versions of Framemaker - you see everything that’s going on, whether you want to or not. I’m sure a dune buggy ride is exhilerating, but I’d like a car with fenders, doors, roof, and hood for my daily drive to work.

* No easy way to copy or move pages between books.
That is one of the complaints I’ve heard others mention as well. The cut, copy, and paste process is primitive at best. Since the authors of the program have changed to an XML data structure, I hope they will be able to add lots of new features, including this one.

* Printing - you want it printed, here it comes.
There’s no way to reformat printing to some other size, for example 3x5 card or 5 1/2 by 8 1/2. Not sure how this could be done (remember, I’m no programmer), but I wonder if there isn’t a way to skin this cat.

* There is a page size limit of 30K - sounds fairly large, but what if I want to pour in a word document that I have found or some other such thing that’s larger than 30K? This has to do with Palm’s record size limit as I understand it.

* No alarm feature - I can’t use this as a more full-featured PIM, since I can’t use my calendar pages to pop up a reminder that I need to do something without using another application and rewriting the information.

What I’d like is a write-once-use-many-times type of Wiki on both the Palm and the desktop.

Anybody have any ideas?

Wiki on a Palm - 2

July 5, 2005

So, what is it about Note Studio that I like?
* As I said in my earlier post - I love the fact that the application has a desktop companion that behaves mostly the same as the Palm app. There are slight variations (tables behave in the desktop app but don’t do so well on the Palm), but for the most part they look and behave the same.

I tried Cyberpoche, from Jacques Turbe, with his desktop counterpart - Note Tab Pro. Whew! That sucker is a like a power tool with all the attachments! I am not a programmer and I don’t play one on the web, so I quickly got lost in the MANY features of Note Tab Pro. Never could get it to do what Jacques said. Too hard, too steep a learning curve…gimme something simple for my simple mind. That’s where I found Note Studio.

* You can link across books and add and remove books.
This is sweet. I have been using a couple of books for my information on the Palm. One covers my main pages. Another covers all my contact information, cross-linked between alphabetic and category. I can have as many categories as I’ve go names to call things. One trick I learned was to dump all my memos, work up all the information I need for pages in an editor (I use Edit Pad Lite from JGSoft), put those into a spreadsheet to get individual “memos,” aka rows, then copy them into the Palm memo desktop. That creates all the memos for me. I change any categories I want to change, then import them into Note Studio! Voila! I have multiple pages (linked by categories on a main page) in a Note Studio book.

Wikis and Palm Handhelds

July 4, 2005

Wikis and Palm Handhelds
Another factor in my organizing style is that I see connections everywhere. I have notes about someone that lists the phone number or address, which connects in my mind to my address book/PIM/Palm. That’s why I was very excited to find wikis. My preferred wiki, only because it acts mostly the same on Palm or on desktop, is Note Studio. There are things it doesn’t do that I’d love to have it do. There are things it does that I’d rather it didn’t do. But all in all it does onething quite well - behaves the same on desktop and on Palm.

Before I bought my Palm T|E, I had an older Palm IIIC. It was fine, but I had to turn it back in when I switched assignments at work. The new office didn’t allow any Palms of any kind in the office area. When I switched, I lost my then favorite app - MegaWiki. That app was a neat gadget! I could link things all over my Palm. I could link to or from appointments (or create one if none existed), addresses, memos and todos. BUT… (there’s that big but again) it only worked on the Palm, there was no desktop equivalent. I didn’t realize how important that was until I used Note Studio. I tried several other MegaWiki-like apps - Acrowiki, PSLink, Mobile Note (the freeware ver 0.6), etc. - but none of them really fit the bill. Then I tried Note Studio and found out that the plus - desktop behaved the same as the Palm app - far outweighed the shortcomings.

Horizontally Organized (comments on John Perry’s article)

What is the difference between vertically and horizontally organized people? (see John Perry’s article)

Well, I don’t know about others, but I struggle to use the same vertically-oriented tools as others. While the vertically organized people like file and hanging folders and those racks that hold folders upright on the desk or table, I am just as comfortable with a stack of folders or papers on my desk. It’s not that I can find things faster that way than if they are “stacked” vertically. It’s just that that is my natural way of doing things. Trying to remember to put things in vertical folders (hanging, desktop or otherwise) feels like trying to write with my left hand (I’m right-handed).I have to think about all of it very carefully.

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