Diary of a Self-Help Dropout: Flirting With the 4-Hour Workweek is a fun and interesting article by Chirs Hardwick where he writes about his adventures in applying the tactics provided by three time-management books: David Allen's Getting Things Done, Julie Morgenstern's Never Check E-Mail In The Morning
, and Timothy Ferriss' The 4-Hour Workweek
. I've read Getting Things Done and as a practitioner, but not exactly a follower, of the GTD method I found Chris Hardwick's Day 9 of Getting Things Done to be most apropos and humorous. Also, his use of outsourcing using the Ask Sunday service (The 4-Hour Workweek, Day 8) was most interesting. The Internet is making amazing things possible.
For implementing GTD you can use this web-based application:
http://www.Gtdagenda.com
You can use it to manage your goals, projects and tasks, set next actions and contexts, use checklists, schedules and a calendar.
A mobile version is available too.
Thanks Dan, but I’m actually already using OmniFocus. It’s not web-based, but it does have an iPhone app version that allows me to seamlessly sync with the desktop. Since I have an iPhone and a Mac, OmniFocus works perfectly for me. However, I just signed up for the free version of gtdagenda.com and it looks awesome. Thanks for the tip!