fritzk33
fritzk33
fritzk33

I have two of these and I love them! Being a clumsy guy, the spill-proof nature of these is very valuable to me.

"Hey, Peter. Whaaaaat's happening."

Evernote and OneNote are predominantly used for text / article / outline capture, and doing so in a more-or-less linear fashion. Evernote and OneNote excel at capturing notes in separate files that can be tagged and searched, and sorted into different "notebooks."

How does this compare with Workflowy (other than the Dropbox sync)? I like Workflowy's simplicity, but I wish there was a better way of creating separate outlines and quickly jumping from one to another. Does Fargo do that?

Wasn't there an article just a few weeks ago that was advising us that the optimal block of working time was 90 minutes?

Agreed on the need to be flexible with the hierarchy. Online apps like Workflowy provide some flexibility there with the ability to jump around in an outline and create bullets and sub-bullets where you need them. (Really, Evernote / Word / any text editor could do this... I only mention Workflowy for the crowd that

Does LMDE do this? I was under the impression that LMDE included rolling updates.

Aren't there negative repercussions to your credit rating if you're constantly opening and closing banking accounts, though? I've thought about playing the Chase bank game, but have worried about harming the credit rating that I've worked very hard to build (~800).

Just out of curiosity - how well do you like the Mac Mini? I've considered getting one for the family but have never pulled the trigger since our Win7 PC gets the job done.

Well, for people using dinosaur machines with WinXP still on them, it's Win+R, cmd, Enter.

Considered it. Even bought a Pre 2. Just haven't been brave enough to try the hardware and software surgery. It looks daunting enough that I need to read through it 3-4 times to make sure I'm not going to end up with massive data loss.

Mine behaves the opposite: the inverted method never leaks. When I use the right-side up method, I'm always conscious of the liquid that "leaks" through the paper filter prior to the pressing. That, and I like to read the "recipes" that come from the World Aeropress Championships, and many of those have featured

Well written. I'm still rocking a Palm Pre from August 2009. It's holding on by a thread. I've considered moving to the iPhone, but I just can't give up the way webOS multitasks, as well as the intuitive gestures.

When you make your coffee in the Aeropress, how do you do it? Do you use the inverted method, or the right-side-up method? Do you use a particular temperature of water? How much coffee do you use - 1 full Aeropress scoop? Do you add any water to the brew, Americano-style, or just drink the small volume from the

Dammit, that happened to me too. I think dalek0657 is going to have free access for the next hundred years.

Iron Maiden FTW! Nice.

Sorry, but I am not buying the research that says that drinking coffee reduces your risk of getting Parkinson's Disease. My dad and uncle (twin brothers) have both been drinking coffee just about every day of their adult lives, and both (now in their mid-60s) have Parkinson's disease. I believe other

I'm a big fan of FastStone Image Viewer, too, but I've found that it slows down a bit when it has to process RAW image files. It still flies through JPEGs, GIFs, etc. but I noticed a dip in speed when trying to look through a directory of RAW files.

Great article, thanks for sharing your HIW entry.