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Dane says...

One of my favorite magazines, Inc., the handbook of the American entrepreneur, has bestselling author Jim Collins on its cover and a fascinating interview inside.  Here are some of the insightful tips Collins shares, with some of my personal observations:

  ~ Accept the idea that work is infinite and time is finite.
Now, think about that for a moment. The work, let's face it, never ends. It will always be there. That's a downer, sure, but knowing that you can't possibly get everything there is to do done in one day... is kind of freeing.

  ~ Manage your time and not your work.
Since work is neverending but life is short, it behooves us to look at our day in blocks of time (instead of as 'getting all the work done.' ) Allocate your blocks of time toward specific tasks or projects (try using a timer; I use mine throughout the day), and then move on to something else.

  ~ Create a laserlike focus on doing first things first.

How you choose to prioritize your to-do list is up to you, because your day is not exactly like anyone else's, but here are hints: which task on your list is the most potentially revenue-producing? and/or, which task on your list have you been postponing the longest?

  ~ Have a ferocious understanding of what you're not going to do.
These days, I try not to dwell on the negative, but I still find it helpful to know where my productivity weak-spots are, and the activities I should avoid until the end of the day (hello, Twitter!)

  ~ Sift through the blizzard of info that hits you nonstop.
My personal productivity increased the day I decided to take current-events news feeds off of my start page. News-surfing, if it lasts more than five minutes, can be a productivity killer.

  ~ Do you have the discipline to not have your email on?
A lot of people have just given up on this one, and check their iphones or blackberrys every ten minutes.  I find it helpful to go online and opt-out of all the emailing lists and newsletters that I don't read. I solve the problem at the source, by decreasing the amount of email that makes it to my inbox. I do this every other month; it takes about 15 minutes.

Meanwhile, which of these concepts do you believe you would find the most challenging to implement? Please leave your comments below!

Filed under: office

lmau says...

Image representing Dave Girouard as depicted i...

Image by Google via CrunchBase

The battle between google and microsoft is in progress, with a big battle Microsoft office / Google documents.

Every day news come about new companies switching from Microsoft office to google doc.

Last week, Dave Girouard gave an interview to ZDnet Asia.
Dave Girouard is an important guy in google (he's  one of the company's four presidents including founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin), so his words are important.

And what he said in this interview was a big surprise for me.
To make it short, he explained that google documents is not the good solution for enterprise yet, it will be in 1 year !

His exact words are : 

We wouldn't ask people to get rid of Microsoft Office and use Google Docs because it is not mature yet

he expects Google's online document application, Google Docs, to reach a "point of capability" next year that will serve the "vast majority's needs".

Of course, using both Google documents (for personal use) and Microsoft office tools (for business), I know the differences that exist between them, and that google is still behind, but I did not expect a google guy to admit it. 

Now the question is : is 1 year the good timing to expect Google documents to catch Microsoft office in term of capabilities ... or will it take more than that ?

Zemanta helped me add links & pictures to this email. It can do it for you too.

Filed under: office

marcholmes says...

Also in the PDC excitement, we announced the availability of Office 2010 Beta which you can find here.

Aside from the main client itself (I've been using a version of that for a couple of months - Sparklines FTW!), there are some other things that are wrapped up in this.
Keep on eye on Viral's blog for discussion on Office and SharePoint.

Filed under: office

Scratch the previous post about me completely switching to OpenOffice - Microsoft released the technical preview of Office 2010 to the public last night and that obviously changes a lot of things.

This beta will allow anyone who chooses it to use Office 2010 for free, legitimately, until the retail version is released. To be exact, people will be able to use the beta until October 31, 2010 (got that date from the license agreement). 

And of course I am in! Who can say no to free and legal Office 2010? I sure can't. OpenOffice can wait until November 1 of next year.

I haven't tried it out a lot yet, but I like what I am seeing so far in Office 2010. The ribbon interface is now suite-wide, and overall, the whole suite looks cleaner and more stream-lined. And startup is so much better than in Office 2007, although I can't be sure if that's because of Office 2007's faults or because my copy of Office 2007 was unlicensed (and therefore never received any Microsoft updates).

Anyway, on top of Office 2010, I also just installed Autodesk's AutoCAD 2010. I haven't activated the thing yet so it's still on 30-day trial, but when I do decide to activate it, I will be using a legitimate student license. So I have legal copies of both AutoCAD 2010 and Office 2010, two things a broke student like me would never be able to afford in the real world.

By the way, I downloaded AutoCAD over the web, and the installer was about two gigabytes big. I first tried BitComet to manage the download (download managers let you pause and resume your web downloads), but for some stupid reason it would not finish my download, even after a week. It was also a complete resource-hog, slowing down every other program and eating up my battery like a crazy pig. I switched to a different download manager, CNET-recommended FlashGet, which was awesome. It was a very smooth download, and was fast too. I would definitely recommend FlashGet.

 The beta of Office 2010 can be downloaded from the Microsoft website or from CNET's download.com. Let's all enjoy this blessing while it lasts. 

Filed under: office

beckintl says...

Copyright © 2009 BECK*Cartoons. All rights reserved

Filed under: office

admartinator says...

                   
Click here to download:
Mal_angeschaut_Office_2010_Bet.zip (4289 KB)

Bevor ihr fragt - nein, eigentlich benötige ich kein Office 2010. Zumindest nicht privat und schon gar nicht auf dem Mac in einer virtuellen Maschine. Aber da ich von Natur aus neugierig bin, scheue ich keinen Download von knapp 700MB, auch nicht das Vergrößern der VM mit vorherigem Löschen aller Snapshots.

Wie lange kann Outlook eigentlich schon automatisch die Servereinstellungen herausfinden? Nette Sache.

Filed under: office

So the cat's out of the bag - The Almighty Office 2010 is now downloadable in all its beta glory.

You can download it at the following links or just visit http://officebeta.microsoft.com/ if you have a MSDN or TechNet account.

I'll update the x86 link as soon as it comes through! 

Download Office 2010 Beta x86

Download Office 2010 Beta x64

Download Office Web Applications Server 2010 Beta x64 

Thanks www.redmondpie.com!

Disclosure: Microsoft is an Edelman client.

Filed under: office

mikhailt says...

Wow, this could make Outlook the email client that Gmail users could be looking for. The Quick steps is an awesome feature and the "Social Networking" features should be interesting, love the group conversation features stuff.

Filed under: office

corywatilo says...

Filed under: office

Fred Jame says...

Google公司企業事業部總裁Dave Girouard宣稱,一年後,大多數企業就可以選擇「拋棄(微軟)Office」。

……

他不諱言,目前的Docs還不像Google Mail或Calendar那麼成熟。「我們明白。我們還不會要求人們拋棄Microsoft Office、改用Google Docs,因為它還不夠成熟。」

不過,Girouard表示一年後情況將改觀,屆時Google會推出「30到50」次的Docs更新,以強化這個辦公室用的軟體服務(software-as-a-service,SaaS)。他表示,這些更新將包括改良的功能與增強的效能。

我不覺得有這麼簡單啦。人們要「拋棄」Office,得先有勇氣和能耐拋棄Windows、.doc格式、以及整套的Windows使用觀念和習慣。拋棄Office也好、甚至拋棄Windows也好,在Google Docs之類的跨平台服務逐漸成熟之後也許會發生,但至少應該不會是一年後的事情。

In a year, most enterprises will have the choice to "get rid of [Microsoft] Office if they chose to", suggests Dave Girouard, president of Google's enterprise division.

I don't think it would be that easy. People may need the courage and motivation to move away from the whole mindset of Windows, doc format and the (re-installation) workflow before they can really ditch Office. As online SaaS like Google Docs becomes more sophisticated, people may consider solutions other than Office or Windows, but it won't happen in a year.

Filed under: office