I think I have to switch to an analog todo list.
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I think I have to switch to an analog todo list. Digital lists just don't work for me.
Can anyone recommend good notebooks?
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Rachel Andrewreplied to Manuel Matuzović last edited by
@matuzo I do both. I'm a fairly standard GTD-er and I use a combination of our internal issue tracker and a system of multiple Gmail inboxes for that (my life is very email-centric). However, each morning I write in a notebook my "big 3" (things that must be done to move major projects forward), along with anything key I need to do to unblock other people (I'm a manager/run a team that's kind of a service team so that might not be relevant to others).
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Matthias Ottreplied to Manuel Matuzović last edited by
@matuzo I’m using Leuchtturm1917 notebooks (Classic A4+ https://www.leuchtturm1917.de/notizbuch-classic.html) for several years now. But not only as a todo list but also for all kinds of rough sketches and jotting down notes and ideas.
I know a few people (like @bastianallgeier: https://bastianallgeier.com/notes/bullet-journal) for whom a Bullet Journal works. And Leuchtturm also offers those: https://www.leuchtturm1917.de/bullet-journal-edition-2.html
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@matuzo But I guess once @davatron5000’s second brain app is ready, we're all switching back to digital
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@matuzo to add to the plethora of options. I use “Oxford campus wirebound” A4 notebooks and have an “alternative” Analog thing for my daily 1-3-5 todo lists.
1-3-5 todo list explainer - https://paperform.co/blog/1-3-5-rule/
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@matuzo +1 to Leuchtturm. Very high quality and a lot of options in page pattern and size.