Compact Check Calendar 2014 Dave Seah has created a nice collection of well designed printable productivity tools.

Lifehacker turned me on to his compact calendar back in 2007. For several years I kept one of those calendars in the front of my notebook. That calendar was responsible, at least partially, for introducing a healthy dose of reality at many a project planning meeting.

I also like his Task Order Up! idea. I might try it out soon since I have one of those check minders laying around somewhere.

Photo from davidseah.com

Dashing In/Out Board ScreenshotI’ve created a Simple In/Out Board Widget for Dashing. It’s quite basic, but it gets the job done. It reads the status information from a text file, so there’s little overhead and no pretty interface, sorry. We keep our text file on Dropbox, so any of us can edit it easily.

Unlike most of the other widgets we’ve created for our Dashing dashboard at the office, this one might be useful for other people. So, I’m sharing it. If you’re interested, you can install from this gist.

Update 2015-12-10: Someone in the comments was trying to get this to work with Google Drive. I tweaked the widget a bit so it can read a file from Google Drive. The gist has been updated.

Back in 2007, there was some talk about personal unit tests. The idea was to apply unit testing, a tenant of Test Driven Development, to some of the mundane, yet important daily tasks of one’s life. Done properly, one could see what their pass rate was, and address problem areas.

Personal Unit Test SpreadsheetThis sounded like a great idea. I created a spreadsheet complete with conditional formatting to track small tasks like “exercise”, “healthy lunch” and “practice guitar”. While it was useful to see how I was doing, the overhead of tracking all of these little tasks was very high. If it could only be automated, like unit tests in TDD, it would be so much better.

Now, 7 years later, our devices are tracking all sorts of things about us. Perhaps most of these unit tests could be automated by querying the repositories of personal data that are being created. Data that can’t be obtained automatically, could come from something like Reporter. I’ve seen several gorgeous visualizations of this data–Aprilzero immediately comes to mind, but I don’t think they are all that actionable throughout the day. This is where unit tests could really shine, maybe.

A lazy day of surfing let me to this post about creating a Job Decision Matrix. It looks like an excellent tool for helping one figure out what sort of position might might best suit them at the present time. I found this article via On finding the right job. There, Dylan talks about his somewhat non-traditional job search and how he uses the Job Decision Matrix to guide those conversations. Also a worthwhile read.