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Information processing online

Here is a list of the web applications that I use in some way while I consume, process, and publish data online:

  • Scrapbook – Firefox extension for archiving a web page to your computer only
  • Google Notebook – application for clipping sections of content into a notebook, where you can group similar content
  • Diigo (I previously used Furl ) – social bookmarking application that allows you to clip content and archive online copy of full content
  • Delicious – the social bookmarking application that i’ve used the longest. I have Diigo post a copy of each bookmark to del.icio.us
  • Google Docs – web based word processor that can also publish to a blog
  • Continue Reading →

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Sharing Photos with Flickr (or any other service for that matter)

My friend and co-worker Jason recently came back from the Hamptons, and wanted an easy way to share his photos with all of the people that were there. He put together instructions for how to use Flickr groups, and was kind of surprised by how many steps where involved.

Honestly, I wasn’t so shocked. I’ve used flickr, zoomr, picasa online, and for local file management I’ve used ACDSee, iphoto, and picasa. None of them do exactly what I want, and none of them seem to propose an easy process for publishing your pictures.

These are all the steps nessecary to have a new person add photos to a
Flickr group:

  • Click the link on this invite
  • If you don’t have a yahoo account create one.
  • On the main page the first option says Upload Or, look at our uploading

Continue Reading →

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Sources of personal information

Here I want to begin an outline of all the personal information I encounter or take in as an input:

Real World (offline) - here we take in information from people directly through word of mouth, or we discover new information to track from our own original ideas, or by being prompted or informed through media (books, articles, commercials, signs, flyers, etc)

Online - here we take in information through e-mail, rss feeds, traditional news sites, etc

Regardless of where it comes from here is an outline of all the different types of data I might want to take-in or track:

  • Contacts
  • Locations
  • bars, restaurants, clubs
  • stores
  • travel ideas
  • Consumables
  • Products (cloths, gadgets, etc)
  • Books
  • Music
  • Movies
  • Websites
  • Ideas
  • Writing (blogs, journal, fiction, etc)
  • Business Ideas
  • Web apps
  • Vacation Ideas
  • Reflections/Observations
  • Personal Information Repository
  • Transactions (purchases, etc)
  • Passwords
  • Accounts
  • Finances
  • Insurance, etc
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My Blogging Workflow Process

I am not currently pleased with the quality or quantity of blog posts that I am writing for either of my blogs. Part of this is due to the fact that I am probably attempting to do too many things at once, and some of it is due to the fact that I have no solid blogging workflow process. So lets ignore the rational solution, which would be to cut out a few projects, and attempt to outline what could be my blogging process:

  1. Idea Generation – in a moment of inspiration you come up with an idea for a blog post, and now need a place to keep this idea until you can write about it.
  2. Rough Draft – at this point I typically get all of my ideas for this blog post down “on paper”.
  3. Let your post marinate – This was covered in a post here , about letting the blog post sit for a bit, and allowing your ideas to fully develop. It prevents what the author calls “writer ADD”.
  4. Links and references – at this point I usually go back to fill in links and references to material that I am referring to throughout the post
  5. Reread and publish – reread the post one more time looking for an errors, then publish.

1) Idea Generation

This part of the process is typically done on my Treo. I’m out and about, when all of a sudden I am struck with an idea for a blog post. I put this into the default Notes application on the palm, under a category called “Life in Lists”. From here I have no strict process to turn these ideas into posts, so I just depend on remembering to look at the notes on my Treo or through MarkSpace Memo Pad, which is the application that comes with Missing Sync enabling Mac users to sync the notes to their Mac (as opposed to using the notes in Outlook on a PC)

2) Rough Draft

My first pass is either in Microsoft word, or directly in a blog editor. Writing things in word was initially more natural, but significantly more frustrating as i tried to carry that level of text formatting over to the web. This lead me to trying to write directly in my blog editor.

I have tried using performancing, ecto, and writely (I’m currently writing this in writely, with the hopes of posting directly to my blog). There are my thoughts so far:

Performancing – this firefox plugin has been very good for publishing posts. The only reason I don’t use it more is that Ecto and Writely seem to be more powerful from the workflow perspective. They both allow you to keep track of all your posts for all your blogs, and to a certain extent which ones are rough drafts and which ones are published to your blog.

Ecto – Good for writing posts, and better than Performancing for keeping track of all your posts past and present. It will sync with your blog and keep local copies of all your posts for future editing offline! Issues that I have had with it include not being able to add new tags to posts quickly (it gives you the list of existing tags on your blog to choose from), and the fact that my rough drafts are stored locally. With locally stored rough drafts, I am not able to keep working on my posts when I don’t have that specific computer in front of me, which happens often when I am too lazy to bring my Mac home from work.
Writely – I started this one after using Performancing and Ecto, and I saw right away this could be the answer to all my problems. First, it allows you to tag your “documents”, which are essentially your blog posts. I am able to tag rough drafts, posted articles, and have a tag for each of the blogs I am writing for. On top of that you can use writely’s collaboration tools to invite someone to look at the post and edit it before you publish it to your blog.
The workflow potential for Writely is great, but I am still having problems getting it to publish properly to my blog. I may have some settings wrong in Drupal, so I will continue to work on it and keep you posted. As of now I also have not found a way to tag my posts from Writely, sot hat those tags get passed on as tags within my blog.
3) Let your post marinate
This article does a better job of covering than I will, plus its already been written, so I wont repeat it. One thing I do want to add is that the Idea Generation step for me on my Treo in itself helps me process the idea. If its not a good one, usually I won’t have much to say or won’t be as excited about it when I get to the point of actually writing the blog post
4) Links and References
In order to focus on writing I usually save linking and referencing other articles until later. Sometimes, when I have the article to be linked right in front of me I’ll do it on the spot, but most of the times I’ll have to go back and do some digging to find my references. Its also something that makes sense to do as you go back and reread your post as you let it marinate.
5) Reread and Publish
I am very bad a rereading my work. Its shocking how terrible my writing is, and its not easy to face the truth. I was never a good writer to begin with, and it was made signifiantly worse by the years of bad habits developed through short informal e-mails and instant messages. Either way, it needs to be done, and its a great time to reflect on your content, style of writing, etc.
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Gmail: apartment search CRM

After using Diigo for a split second to track apartments that I might be interested in, I realized that I need something a bit more sophisticated. At just about the same time, I started sending out lots of e-mails about these apartments, and I decided to just try copying all my useful information into e-mails and storing them in an nycAPT tag within gmail. It worked like a charm.

1) Copy the link of the apartment listing that is in question into the body of the e-mail, and populate the subject with any distinguishing information you have about the apartment. I also tried to get the brokers name and number somewhere in the e-mail. E-mail this information to yourself.

Initial entry screenshot

2) I typically setup some filters in my gmail account to automatically label all my emails with “nycAPT” in the subject with the same label, so that I could just click on that label to access all of the properties that I was currently researching.

3) Any follow up information you learn during subsequent calls or e-mails, you can just hit reply to your first message, add the notes to the body, and gmail threads the messages together for you.

Follow up Notes

4) Anytime you wanted to share this information with your roommates, or collaborate with them on obtaining information about properties from the broker, you could just add their e-mail to the list, and remember to hit “Reply All” on all subsequent emails and notes. Now they are fully “integrated” into your CRM.

Collaboration Features

5) The best part of this whole process, is its not portable, and you can access it from anywhere through gmail mobile. With the ability to add data and retrieve data from anywhere, you end up with a system flexible and rugged enough to make it through the NYC apartment search.

On the go!

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Diigo: discussions for your bookmarks

http://www.diigo.com

In my previous post about BLAGs, I had thought the best way to collaboratively discuss links and articles would be through taking all your bookmarks and feeding the into a blog, where you could post comments.

Diigo took one of many attempts at the social bookmarking phenomenon and succeeds at creating an intuitive interface for facilitating conversations through social bookmarks. The commenting engine is quite fun, and unlike Shadows (a seemingly more sophisticated and complicated site), where I couldn’t figure out how to find my friends, I was able to connect to them quite quickly for fun multiperson dialogues. I had previously taken a quick look at Shadows for its “shadow pages” and commenting, but it really left something to be desired. Diigo then came in and hit the spot, though all of these services are blurring together.

I also stumbled across a very useful application for this software. I’ve been in the midst of a very difficult apartment search, and I realized that Diigo could provide a way for me to take notes (and share these notes with my roommates) across multiple listing platforms (Craigslist, Citicribs, or directly on the landlord’s site). I could envision empowering all the apartment searchers across the city to provide feedback, share tips, and fight back against the brokers that have a monopoly on all of the information.

See pictures here.

I didn’t stress test this apartment search information tracking application too much because I stumbled across a more elegant solution soon there after. In the meantime I will continue to poke around with Diigo, and maybe I can finally get away from Del.icio.us, which has been driving me crazy with its extremely slow searching.

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NYC Apartment Search: Dealing with Brokers

I'm in the thick of the apartment search, thus the major lack of time for posting, and I am going completely insane from dealing with apartment brokers. Apparently I'm not the only one:

Metro NYC: Getting off Craig's list

Watch out when you're looking for an apartment to rent on craigslist.  Brokers, not normally a very technically savvy crowd, are starting to figure out how to game the system. Though the methods aren't very sohpisticated and in the long run it probably won't do them much good, the "bait and switch" can be a royal waste of time. Give it a look, and share your experiences! Mine are soon to come.

Here are some more articles about the topic:

- Craigslist starts charging for real estate postings

- The value? of an apartment broker

- Craig himself on charging for real estate postings

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Workflow: finding an apartment in NYC part II

This is just a simple outline of the workflow I'm building in order to find an apartment. Having it outlined will help me see each step and where I can make efficiency gains.

  • Find prospects through internet services (craigstlist , housing maps , etc)
    • Use RSS feed filters to do some of the work for you by seeking keywords
  • Email those prospects
    • Make sure your are keeping track of which e-mails correspond to which apartment postings
  • Track e-mail and phone responses from posters
    • In first interaction with poster, ask them the first round of questions (questionnaire #1 to be determined)
    • Potentially e-mail yourself at "note" containing the detailed information gathered withing the same gmail thread
  • Map out the location, and associate that with the data collected so far
  • Go Visit
    • Take pictures of location
    • Round Two of Questions (questionnaire #2 questions to be determined)
  • Post findings to shared site (maybe a wiki, or basecamp )
  • Collaboratively discuss, debate and decide.

 

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Followup: Using @%#!(*&) to fight alphabetitus

I mentioned this briefly in my post about keysuite and contact tagging , but I wanted to emphasize this trick/practice on its own .

Someone somewhere in the world of user interface design decided that all lists should be in alphabetical order. This goes for folders windows, folders in outlook, categories in palm, tags in rojo , and labels in gmail . That was just to name a few.

When these lists get long, and stretch off the page, what happens when your most often accessed folder or tag begins with a ‘w’ or ‘z’? Well, you’re out of luck, and you have to scroll down the window each time to get to it.

My objection is that the Alphabetical order is placing these tags and folders based on rules other than your workflow.

To take back the order of list/tags/folders in your life, you need to look to special characters (!@#$%^&*_+). The characters when placed at the beginning of the word can overrided its alphabetical sorting, and move it to the top of a list.

A classic example for me is that I will put a ‘!’ in front of the most important folders so that they show up in the top:

• Rojo – I tag the feeds I read daily as “! Daily” rather than “Daily”
• gmail – I use the lable “! Todo” rather than “Todo” to label e-mails that require a task to be done.
• My GTD setup – I have a category tagged as “! Today” so that I can go through all my other contexts and add the “! Today” tag to the Next Actions that need to get done today (Keysuite allows for tasks to have multiple tags)

Hope that wasn’t super obvious! I used this concept years ago to put my folders in order in Windows. The most important got a lower number. Simple but effective, and it had the added benefit of making navigating with keyboard shortcuts easier.

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Workflow: finding an apartment in NYC

After moving to the city a few months ago and going through a mad dash to find only a 3 month sublet (that would hold me over till I found a more permanent place), I decided before I repeat the process I need to have an efficient workflow in place.

To start, lets outline the previous system. The tools used where the following:

- Craiglist (there is a ton of turn over, and a large volume of rentals go through this site)
- Housing Maps (craigslist/google maps mashup)
- Google Maps
- Gmail (e-mail was the preferred method of “first contact” for most posters)
- Pen and paper (to take notes on each of the properties)

The problems with the first system:

1) If you use a “craiglist” e-mail to contact someone, and they reply with their personal e-mail address, then you have no idea who that person is or which craigslist apartment posting they correspond with.
2) Craigslist is not searchable by specific geographic location (until the Housing maps mashup came along), and it also does not require posters to be all that precise (as in address) in their location.
3) Craiglist also does not include a field for people to elaborate on the length of the apartment rental. Even if you manage to narrow down a list of apartments in the right area its quite possible that they are only renting a room at $1000 per week for 2 weeks. Convenient.
4) The Housing Maps site does not seem to have as many posts as craigslist does. I have not been able to research where it draws its data from, but I’m assuming its only from posts that provide exact addresses.
5) There is no place within this system of apps to store the meta-data you collect from each apartment poster, through e-mail or phone calls.

The conclusion I came to after a couple days of using this system is that it’s all about the numbers. For you to get a decent amount of contacts that meet your criteria you really have to send out e-mails en-mass. Though this is horribly inefficient for you from a tracking perspective and for the apartment posters to get back to all the people inquiring, it was the only way to be sure that I was getting a steady source of apartments to go visit.

The solution(s) I found along the way:

1) I made sure to reference the post on craigslist that I was inquiring about, and to include the link to that post in the e-mail. Chance are that they were just going to hit reply, and I could find the corresponding post there within. I did run into some formatting issues with gmail, which caused me to loose those links. No explanation was found

This means that I’m heading into my second encounter without having made many improvements on my system. My blood pressure can not handle a repeat of the “all out e-mail and google maps bonanza” that was coupled with sprinting across the city using subways and buses to try to be the first person to a particular apartment.

My system needs to be efficient (relatively quick to enter data) and mobile, with all meta-data stored in one location. To a certain extent, if it tied into my Treo, that would be great. When I’m “out in the field” chasing apartments and I get calls from posters, it would be nice to know which post they corresponded with. One last requirement, is that its fairly accessible over the web. I am going to have roommates, and it would be good to collaborate in this process.

I welcome any feedback, tips, prayers in the meantime.

Apps that might be able to make this an easier process:

- frappr or flagr for mapping?
- Dabbledb , or some other web-based spreadsheet/database for tracking metadata
- dokuwiki for tracking notes, and maybe even pics ?

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