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43Folders.com is Merlin Mann’s website about finding the time and attention to do your best creative work.
Mark Hurst reviews "Typeit4me"
Merlin Mann | Sep 25 2004
This is a bit of a milestone day for 43 Folders. In addition to our new 43folders.com domain name more or less working (finally), it’s also my honor to present our first guest post, brought to us today by Mark Hurst. About MarkMark Hurst first appeared on my radar screen about 4 years ago when I happened across his brilliant “The Good Easy,” a very practical—but polemical for its time—manifesto on setting up your OS 9 Macintosh. It turns 5 next month. “The Good Easy” was my first exposure to a UNIXy, streamlined approach to using a Mac—to strip away unnecessary cruft and uber-apps to increase productivity and simplify workflow. Mark’s done a lot since then, including his outstanding “Email Management Report” and the thought-provoking essay, “Bit Literacy.” You probably know him best for the instructive and often hilarious "This is Broken." He’s also given me a little bit of back channel on some upcoming stuff he’s working on that I know will make you guys all giddy, but for today, let’s have a look at his review of Typeit4me, an OSX productivity tool I’ve just recently started using again myself (used to love it back in the day on OS 9). Review of Typeit4meBy Mark Hurst - http://www.goodexperience.com If you're not an avid, constant user of typeit4me, you're not really getting things done. I'd go further and say you're hardly using your computer at all until you include typeit4me in your daily computer usage. Typeit4me (typeit4me.com) is a Mac-only shareware app - it costs $27, 25 euros, or £16 for a single user. (For Windows users, ActiveWords - www.activewords.com - offers similar functionality, though I haven't used it.) Typeit4me works across every application, OSX and in Classic mode: BBEdit, Safari, Finder - even MS Office apps bend to its will. Here's how it works: you define abbreviations and associated expansions in typeit4me. When you type an abbreviation and then hit the trigger (usually the space bar; or any punctuation mark, depending on your preferences), the abbreviation instantly gets replaced with the trigger. For example, if I type "cg" and hit the space bar, "cg" instantly turns into "Creative Good". The abbreviation-expansion function is all typeit4me does, but that one function has enormous ramifications for every computer user on the planet. Consider the many uses of typeit4me:
The key to typeit4me is to start slow - define a few abbreviation-expansion pairs each day, and see what "sticks." Which do you naturally remember? Which do you use a lot? It takes some time to get really effective with typeit4me, but like any sound investment, the returns compound over time. I have been using typeit4me for over nine years now, and my file has 1,167 expansions inside. I use most of them every month - whether through a misspelling, a URL, a password, or any other reason. My typing is fast But here's the key: I still add new expansions, almost every day. I am determined to continue getting faster, more accurate, and more efficient in my bit-creation at every opportunity. Typeit4me isn't a shareware that you install, define a few things in, and then call it a day. No. Typeit4me is a bit-lever - one essential component of bit literacy - and as such it requires an ongoing commitment toward mastery. Efficiency isn't something you accomplish in a day; it's something you grow into. It's a way of life. Finally, a word of warning: if you use Typeit4me diligently for a few weeks and begin to realize its benefits in your efficiency, you will NEVER - read me, now - you will NEVER want to go back to a machine that doesn't run it. You will curse every Internet cafe PC that stupidly requires you to type every character; you will mutter under your breath on your friends' machines; you will be spoiled for life. But you will have seen the light - isn't that worth it?
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I'm always intrigued by utilities...Submitted by Dan Hartung (not verified) on September 26, 2004 - 10:21pm.
I'm always intrigued by utilities like this, and there's never a shortage of them for whatever my environment of choice might be at any moment. But I do find they lock me in, and they're not portable, and you just get too darned used to them. As a PC tech dude, whether I'm working corporate or freelancing as now, I'm forever wanting to use a shortcut or utility when I'm at a client's machine, and it ain't there. Much as I like playing with these toys, I tend not to miss them all that much when I'm starting over fresh. (Similarly, I'm one of those obviously-fooling-himself guys who thinks he can type faster with a Dvorak keyboard. Although it isn't as much effort as I expected to switch layouts, the amount of time I spend on Qwerty machines forces me to stick with the standard.) And when you talk about 1000+ abbreviations, my mind boggles. That almost seems the opposite of the GTD philosophy, to needle you a bit. It's 1000 more things you have to keep in memory, no matter how buried in reflex they get (and the more buried in reflex, the more frustrating and slowing when you don't have them at hand). Now, I do customize my environment, particularly with command line aliases, so I can't claim purity on this point -- but I do find after a certain point my own aliases become unmanageable, and with ones that are mainly to save me from typing woefully complicated lists of switches or some such, but infrequently actually used, I would end up having to double-check the syntax that I devised when I used them! I suspect the same would happen if I overdosed on a utility like this. I just noticed (last Friday) that Firefox switched Ctrl-Y to be the Redo command (formerly it opened the Download Manager window). Lots to be said for not having to remember what works in what context. I'll leave off here for fear of dragging the thread into discussions of keyboards and security practices ... » POSTED IN:
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