Complexity Brings Stress Into Your Life

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Productivity 101

Story By Fokke Kooistra

Due to a job change I had to switch from OSX to Windows XP. On the internet you can find info for switchers from Windows to OSX . You can find info on that path here and here.

To be honest, after 6 years OSX it is ….. well, hard. I will not go into Windows bashing because I can get the work done. A system is a system and not the Holy Grail. David Allen has taught me the basic ingredients of a good system to stay productive. I now think switching to paper will keep me as productive as I was on my Powerbook. It isn’t the system that makes you productive but some key elements like getting everything out of your head and maintaining a good set of lists. This will help you use your head for new ventures and opens up creativity.

Pondering on what makes it so hard brought me to this conclusion: the main thing that bothers me is the complexity of Windows. Windows has just too many options, toolbars, buttons, menu items and possibilities. The sad thing is that I don’t use most of them. And frankly I guess not a single person has never used all of them.

So here is a golden tip for all you Windows users: strip as much functionality as you can. I did it: eliminate toolbars, uncheck extra features and look for ways to make using Windows just simpler. And learn as much shortcut keys as you can. I just invested an afternoon to get this sorted. And it really pays off.

I would like to point to two utilities that really helped me the last weeks: fingertips, a time saver like Quicksilver for the Mac and Virtual Desktop Manager, a Microsoft Windows XP PowerToy.

If you have any tips on using Windows more effectively, let me know in the comments!


4 Responses to “Complexity Brings Stress Into Your Life”

  1. You raise a good point and the other side of it is that you just have to think of any computer as another tool. Linux, Windows, and OS X all have their advantages and disadvantages. It’s a matter of how you are able to leverage their strengths and compensate for their weaknesses that gets us all by.

  2. You may also want to look at Enso’s Launcher http://www.humanized.com/enso/launcher/ I’m told it’s similar to quicksilver, it’s out of beta and it’s free.

  3. Aaron: I will try Enso’s launcher, thanks for the tip.

    Fokke

  4. Fokke,

    Coincidentally I recently had the same experience going the other way after leaving windows. I changed from Windows to Mac and realized how little of all the options I really needed to in a computing environment. I have no desire to tinker with that stuff any more. Perhaps its the 80-20 rule. The one exception is a small app to aid in my website navigation using Safari that helps me jump back and forward using my mouse.

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