GTD

Quicklook from Alfred


I have recently been playing with Alfred and especially the Powerpack options that allow you to do some of the most awesome shell hacking with a GUI that I have ever seen.

However, after playing with it for a bit I started wishing that I could quicklook items as I navigated through them in Alfred, so I asked their support for guidance and quick as a flash I got the following answer from Anna:

Quicklook support is not directly in Alfred. With the latest 0.9 release, however, provided you can find a Terminal command that would let you quicklook a file, you could then set it as an additional action in the action list.

So I was slightly disappointed but not deterred – this is after all an App that is so young, the developer has only just gone full time on it (congrats!). I have come to a simulation of what I originally wanted to do and it is close enough to my original idea to be worth sharing – so here is my howto for it.

Striving for Inbox Zero →


I don’t normally read the huge morass of comments that result from the average blog post, but the conversation thread on Mr Wilson’s recent email post was fascinating to me as inbox zero is something I have been struggling to get to over the last few months. The basic principle is that the inbox should be empty at least once every day.

Some of my colleagues manage it on one or more of their accounts (we normally have at least three each, one for the project, one for the company and any personal ones). I haven’t yet managed it on any of my accounts for more than about a day-per-month at a time. That is to say, I haven’t managed it at all. About a third of the way down the comment section on his post, Mr Wilson replies that he doesn’t use a todo list, instead he uses email as his todo list. I often thought I was the only person who tried to do this (if not consciously), and I thought that this was the reason I was failing at inbox zero. I had one of those “I’m not alone in my insanity” moments on reading his comments. I even occasionally send emails to myself to enter things into my list.

Other peoples’ reactions to my lack of a real todo list (distinct from my inbox) mirrors the many comments on Fred’s post where they have asked questions like ‘how do you do it’ and ‘can you write us a blog post on it’. I haven’t seen a follow up from Mr Wilson, but I am determined to work out how I can make this inbox zero combined with a todo list thing work. I am going to start with this from Mr Hyatt for some starters for ten.

Syndicate content