Graphic artist Reagan Ray isolated Jazz artists’ names from their album covers and laid them all out next to each other. It’s remarkable how much the typography is reflective of the artist. John Coltrane’s improvisational style can seem a bit frantic but nevertheless always fits, like his last name. So many of Art Blakey’s recordings are live and everything is so spontaneous, just like his name. Regardless, Reagan Ray has a new fan in me.
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The Plan vs. The Day
One of my big takeaways from Cal Newport’s book Deep Work was the concept of tracking time blocks. I’ve written (and talked) a lot about how to use hyper-scheduling to get your most crucial work moving forward.
It’s pretty easy to visualize how hyper-scheduling works. Here you have a day, and you set aside blocks of time for your most important work.
8:00 – AM Comms
8:30 – Field Guide Recording
10:30 – Podcast Recording
13:30 – Legal Work
16:00 – PM Comms
16:30 – Shut Down
I haven’t, however, written much about the aftermath of a block-scheduled day. Sometimes things go sideways. Maybe a client calls or your kid gets sick, or you wake up realizing that today you just don’t have it in you. I call that “The Plan vs. The Day”. How do you manage that on a blocked schedule? How do you keep track when carefully planned blocks and reality go to war?
The short answer is that you get over it. Sometimes things just don’t go as planned. You deal with it in the moment, and the next day you start again. Yesterday, I had a great plan but, in the afternoon, decided to take an extended nap. You can see how that blew a few things up for me. I keep track of those derailed days. Then when I go back later and do my weekly/monthly/quarterly reviews, seeing how often my blocks didn’t reflect reality gives me data I can use for future planning.
A case in point is my recording time for Field Guides. The pandemic happened, and my kids all came back home from school. I had to move my studio around the house and suddenly found a trend of routinely not hitting Field Guide blocks. That lead to some changes.
So how do I keep track? There are several ways:
On Paper
Get a piece of paper or a fancy notebook and write the hours down the center of the page. The night before or the morning of, I write the plan down. As the day goes along, I can update the right side with what actually happened. Here’s a sample.
This is one of the easiest ways to track the plan vs. the day. So long as you keep your notebook nearby, it’s easy to update throughout the day. If you want to keep a more permanent copy of notebook musings, just taking a picture of the page at the end of the day. I do this and save them to my Day One database.
With Digital Paper
GoodNotes for the iPad is a great app. If you usually have your iPad with you, you can record the plan vs. the day on a GoodNotes page. You can easily make a GoodNotes template page that looks just like a paper page. Then you can use an Apple Pencil to fill it in as you work through the day or type it in using a keyboard. With digital paper, you get the advantage of backups and sharing, but you lose the satisfaction of using analog tools that I know many folks dig.
With MultiMarkdown
MultiMarkdown has a table-building function using the pipe character. It’s easy and lets you put your day vs. plan comparison in a text file. Here is an example plan vs. day table in MultiMarkdown:
|The Plan|Hour|The Day| |---|---|---| |Start Up|7| ✓ | |DEVONthink FG| 8 |Journaling| ||8:30|DEVONthink FG| ||9| ✓ | ||10| ✓ | ||10:15| Shower & Tai Chi| |Client Contract|10:30|| |Client Contract|11|Tisha Call| ||11:20|BHPS Work| ||11:40|Client Contract| ||12|| |Legal Work|13|| ||14|| |Automators Planning|15|| |MacSparky|16|| |Shutdown|17|| |Liana Visit|18|| ||19|| ||20|| ||21|| ||22|| ||23|In Bed|
And here it is rendered using Obsidian:
The advantage of this method is that you can work on it without jumping to a paper notebook or an iPad. The downside is that it is more fiddly to maintain as you go throughout the day. You can script the entries, but this is not nearly so simple as a pen and paper.
On Your Calendar
Keeping both your planned and actual events isn’t all that hard with a Calendar app. The secret is to make a new calendar called “The Plan” or something like that. Then as you get through the day, you just duplicate your events. Move the original calendar event, as planned, to the “Plan” calendar. Then adjust the copy to reflect how things went down. If you throw a block overboard during the day, you just move the original to the plan calendar. Here’s an example day reflecting both the plan and the day as it went down.
No matter how you go about this, I recommend not getting too hung up on tracking your blocks to the minute. Thirty-minute blocks are as granular as I ever go.
If you’ve made it this far in the article, you probably still think tracking the plan vs. the day is a pretty good idea. If, however, you’re having doubts whether all of this is worth it, I recommend you try it for 30 days. I find the feedback loop of routinely seeing my plans smack up against reality gives me a much better picture of how I’m doing and how much I can take on. The real trick is not getting too granular. You’re looking for significant trends here.
In terms of what is the best method, that is up to you. I’ve tried all four of these methods over the years. I currently am primarily doing this with a pen and paper. (If you must know, a Platinum 3776, medium nib with an architect grind and Rhodia A4 paper that I punch for a Levenger disc system.) In a jam, however, I can use any of the other methods as well. The point is that there is no single right way. You just need to find a way to consistently keep yourself honest, whether with a text file or a notebook.
If you want to try tracking the plan vs. the day for 30 days, grab a pad of paper and start. Set your timer for 15 minutes and write down what you think will happen that day. It doesn’t have to be perfect or pretty. Just do it every single day for 30 days in a row. After a month, you’ll be able to look back at how those plans compared with the actual outcomes of each day.
Remember: there is no single right way to do this, so find one that makes sense for you and stick with it for 30 days! At that point, you may find you’ve built a habit, and then you are home free.
Intel Now or Apple Silicon Later?
I’ve had several emails from readers and listeners asking this question. If you are planning on upgrading your Mac in a few years, the answer to this is obvious. Indeed, in a few years, I think you will be hard-pressed to find Apple selling an Intel Mac. But what if you need a machine now?
My advice, in that case, is almost as simple. If you need a new Mac right now, I’d recommend you buy Apple silicon, unless …. That list of unless is a lot smaller than you’d think:
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unless you need to run Bootcamp and Windows
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unless you are running Intel-only software that very specifically requires an Intel chip. (I’m thinking industry-specific weird stuff, not run-of-the-mill but not yet optimized for Apple silicon software.)
The Apple silicon has a better battery life and will be faster than a comparably priced Intel machine. Indeed, some new features are coming with Monterey that will only work with Apple silicon.
The only other downsides to Apple silicon right now come with the territory of being an early adopter. Bluetooth seems a little wonky on some machines. The laptops will only work with one external monitor, not two. If those are deal-breakers for you, I still probably wouldn’t buy a new Intel machine. I would get a used one with the understanding I will be selling it once the Apple silicon is more mature.
Note I’m not saying you should run out and buy your Apple silicon today. There will be many more options available to you in the next year than there are at that moment. But if you are to buy a new Mac today, the Apple silicon M1 is the obvious choice, unless ….
Delight > Clean
With the release of the third Monterey beta, Apple added an accessibility setting that lets you bring back the Proxy icon, which they removed in Big Sur. (John Gruber writes about this in more detail.)
While I think it is silly to put the proxy icon under an accessibility setting, I’m glad it has returned. It has, however, only returned for the true believers that already know about the power of the proxy icon. Folks that have never heard about the proxy icon are not going to go find this cryptic setting.
My concern is that the desire to have clean interface clashes with Apple’s historical priority, to make a delightful interface. It was the delight that hooked me on the Mac in the first place. If we live in an era where the proxy icon can only be something nerds turn on from a buried preference pane, what does that mean for new delightful interface elements we haven’t seen yet? In my opinion, delight always beats clean.
For example, just look at the original Mac Control Panel. It is in my mind one of the best examples of delightful and useful UI ever created. Do you think that team was worried about clean or delight?
Focused 130: Toxic Productivity
At what point does your quest for productivity and efficiency become toxic? It’s a good question and an easy trap. Mike and I share a few ideas on this episode of Focused.
This episode of Focused is sponsored by:
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Back to Normal
The delta variant aside, things have started getting back to normal in my little bubble of the universe. I caught myself saying the words “back to normal” a few days ago, and as the words came tumbling out of my mouth, I already knew that wasn’t the case.
The fact is that the world is very much a changed place. We now have vaccines, but we also have variants, and there are entire countries for which the vaccine remains more hypothetical than real. Things are hardly “normal” or about to return to that state.
Moreover, what’s so great about normal anyway? Normal allowed for the conditions where we were dreadfully unprepared for a killer pandemic. Normal was an economic model that allowed a few people to get rich on the pandemic and crushed a bunch more.
Just as important, and even more within your control, is your definition of normal in relation to your own personal affairs. Think back to the pre-pandemic version of you. How much of what was “normal” in the way you handled yourself then do you want to chuck overboard right now? I’m making a list of things I used to treat as “normal” that I never want to do again.
I’m not looking for things to get back to normal. I’m looking for a new, better, normal.
Tesla’s Self Driving Subscription
Just one more car-related post this week …
Tesla, which used to charge a one-time fee of $10,000 to make your car self-driving now offers a subscription service of $199 per month. I’m not ready for software to drive my car, and my Ford remains very much a dumb car.
Nevertheless, that $199 price point made me smile. My wife and I share a car, and before the Pandemic, she was taking the car to work most days. I thought about buying another car but instead decided to try an experiment where I’d just use my E-Bike to get around town and use a Lyft anytime I needed to go to a meeting. After doing that for about a year, my monthly Lyft budget was right around $199. So I guess you could say I’ve already paid the $199 per month self-driving subscription.
Mac Power Users 597: A Ray of Sunshine, with Brett Burney
On the latest episode of Mac Power Users, Apple enthusiast and lecturer Brett Burney joins Stephen and me to discuss differences between iWork and Microsoft Office, giving presentations with your iPad, and how to rock a TRS-80.
This episode of Mac Power Users is sponsored by:
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That Car Project
Recently 9to5 Mac reported Kevin Lynch is moving from the Apple Watch to the Apple Car. Every time we get a car-related rumor or announcement I have to remind myself that it exists. While my brain has no problem retaining the fact that Apple will eventually have a pair of cool glasses with interesting tech, I haven’t got around to internalizing that it may also some day be a car manufacturer.
Regardless, someday there will be a book telling the inside story of Project Titan and its various starts and stops and I look forward to reading it, because from the outside the story so far is confusing as hell.
Alto’s Odyssey: The Lost City
Alto’s Odyssey is one of my all time favorite iPhone games. It just fits the platform so well. It’s fun. You can pick it up in minutes, and it is least stressful game I’ve ever played. You’re just an Alto with your board, looking to catch some air. There’s a new version out now for Apple Arcade subscribers and I’m already hooked.