eXtreme Type Terminology | i love typography
A five part series on type terminology. What more needs to be said? If you are just a passing font geek, please be warned: Your head may very well explode from the wealth of info.
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by Patrick Rhone, Master Generalist
eXtreme Type Terminology | i love typography
A five part series on type terminology. What more needs to be said? If you are just a passing font geek, please be warned: Your head may very well explode from the wealth of info.
Black Belt Productivity » What Does It All Mean?
Don’t just take notes, review them, use them.
Polaroid Lovers Try to Revive Its Instant Film – NYTimes.com
Gosh I hope they are successful with this. (via Jane Quigley)
FiveThirtyEight: Politics Done Right: Random, Pretentious Observations from Europe
Interesting insights of an American politico in Europe.
http://video.ted.com/assets/player/swf/EmbedPlayer.swf
Mary Roach: 10 things you didn’t know about orgasm | Video on TED.com
“Bonk” author Mary Roach delves into obscure scientific research, some of it centuries old, to make 10 surprising claims about sexual climax, ranging from the bizarre to the hilarious.
I have long been intrigued by the usefulness and power of keeping a daily log of ones activities. I felt it was time to fully detail my method and workflow. Recently, I have been coming across many articles surrounding the methods and values of “life tracking”. I have some links to those articles and other related resources at the end of the post.
There are many useful reasons for keeping a daily log. For instance, in a former job, I had a micro managing boss who often popped their head into my office to ask what I had gotten done that day. Because I kept a good time stamped log of what I did, I was always able to tell her exactly what I had done, when I did it, and even how many times I was interrupted by other things that prevented me from doing even more (including her popping her head in my office).
The options and possibilities for how to keep a log are nearly endless. For instance, a simple piece of paper or notebook would suffice. The key, for me at least, is to make your Daily Log as simple as possible to add an entry to.
My daily log is a text file I call @log.txt. The preceding @ sign allows it to sort to the top of my finder window alphabetically. As plain text it is highly “portable” (i.e. I can open it up on any device). The trick is in the workflow and couple of tools I use to add a log entry. Without further adieu, here is how I tie it all together:
To add an entry, I invoke Quicksilver:
The advantage of using Quicksilver is that it is available to me from any application I happen to be in at the time. I don’t have to “switch modes” to add an entry. I simply type “@log” and it finds my log file. I then hit the tab key and select the “Prepend Text” command. I personally like having the latest entry first in the file.
I then invoke a TextExpander command, triggered by typing “dlog” that formats the entry the way I wish:
I then type the entry, hit return and it is added to the file. The result is an entry that looks like this:

I store this file in my Dropbox folder so it syncs to all of my machines and “the cloud”. Thus, it is available to me anywhere I can access the internet.
This setup has been working very well for me for years now. I think a big key is to come up with something that is easy and as ubiquitous as possible.
For further reference and ideas, here are some other resources about keeping a daily log:
* For This Guru, No Question Is Too Big – Jim Collins tracks his activities to ensure he is spending time on the things he feels are important.
* Politican as self-tracker – Bob Graham’s notebooks – How a US Senator proved the CIA wrong with his obsessive self tracking.
* Ping’s Thesis – From Diary to Graph – How one man not only tracks his daily activities but also can graph it with fascinating results.
* My Big-Arse Text File – a Poor Man’s Wiki+Blog+PIM – Much of my own inspiration came from this post by my friend and short term personal saviour Matthew Cornell.
* Living in text files – Why do a use a text file for my daily log? The answers are here.
Update
In a serious error of omission, I forgot to include probably the best two posts on this very subject written by my friend Chris Bowler:
* Track Yourself With a Custom Log File
and
* Custom Log File Revisited
http://c.brightcove.com/services/viewer/federated_f8/1827871374
Cover Story: Finger Painting: The New Yorker Blog
“Jorge Colombo drew this week’s cover using Brushes, an application for the iPhone, while standing for an hour outside Madame Tussaud’s Wax Museum in Times Square.
“I got a phone in the beginning of February, and I immediately got the program so I could entertain myself,” says Colombo, who first published his drawings in The New Yorker in 1994.”
Senate passes credit card reform: What’s in it for consumers
Looks like President Obama signed this bill today so it is law. Lots of protection for credit card using consumers here.
The banks, I’m sure, are pissed.
David Rose on Iraqi insurgents | vanityfair.com
“The so-called Sunni Awakening, in which American forces formed tactical alliances with local sheikhs, has been credited with dampening the insurgency in much of Iraq. But new evidence suggests that the Sunnis were offering the same deal as early as 2004—one that was eagerly embraced by commanders on the ground, but rejected out of hand at the highest levels of the Bush administration.”
Politican as self-tracker – Bob Graham’s notebooks
A good notebook can save almost any ass.