Self-Management supports you: keeping your memory complete, allowing to structure your thoughts and properly focus on the important tasks.
Mindmapping
This is not everybodies tool: Mindmapping. You may hate it or love it. I love it. It help me to order my jeopardized thoughts. Originally I used MindManager, but that became ridiculously expensive. Then I resorted to XMind. XMind is an installable being ported to a number of platforms (Java-based, yuck, I hate Java). The community-version does enough for me. The crux is, that I am not always at home or working at my own computer. Read more ...Todoist
Todoist is another candidate to ease your life. It is a pretty versatile task-list-manager. Yet, there is a bit of poison in this choice: this thing constantly nags to get a premium subscription. All the functionality is always present in terms of buttons and icons, you click the wrong one, you earn another popup informing you that you should order a premium account. Nevertheless, it is worth the pain …
Read more ...Evernote
Evernote is a cloud-service that helps you collect and categorize information. It stores it and synchronises it with your computer. Actually, I do not exactly now how and where it keeps my information. I do not care: it is safe, somewhere, and there are ways to do a local backup. I do not use it for confidential stuff, anyway. I do not care about more. Now, how does it help me?
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