One of the things they talk about a lot in GTD and productivity formus is eliminating distraction. You must drop the number of things which can grab your attention down to one, the ask at hand, in order to get things done.
There's an application for the Mac that accomplishes this by eliminating all of the other things on your screen except for the one application you're currently working on. The idea is that if you see only one window you're less likely to think of others on your workspace.
This isn't so easy for Linux users. A lot of us use multi-window managers, which has a common keysequence (Ctrl-Alt-Left or Ctrl-Alt-Right on mine) to switch from one window to the next. For men, I think, this is especially noxious because it permits a kind of channel surfing.
Since I have a laptop, I run Enlightenment instead of Gnome or KDE, and Enlightenment has one very nice feature: Alt-Return will disable the channel surfing ability and black out everything except your current window. Sweet! Something to consider for your linux laptop. It restricts your workspace down to a single window, which if you full-screened before you went there, gives you just about everything you need to write, and nothing you don't.
There's an application for the Mac that accomplishes this by eliminating all of the other things on your screen except for the one application you're currently working on. The idea is that if you see only one window you're less likely to think of others on your workspace.
This isn't so easy for Linux users. A lot of us use multi-window managers, which has a common keysequence (Ctrl-Alt-Left or Ctrl-Alt-Right on mine) to switch from one window to the next. For men, I think, this is especially noxious because it permits a kind of channel surfing.
Since I have a laptop, I run Enlightenment instead of Gnome or KDE, and Enlightenment has one very nice feature: Alt-Return will disable the channel surfing ability and black out everything except your current window. Sweet! Something to consider for your linux laptop. It restricts your workspace down to a single window, which if you full-screened before you went there, gives you just about everything you need to write, and nothing you don't.
no subject
Date: 2007-01-22 03:27 am (UTC)