I am taking some inspiration from Leo Babauta and beginning an experiment to see how much of my computing I can do completely online. Follow the link for some great ideas of how to accomplish this.
Here are some of the tools I will be using:
- GMail
- Google Calendar
- Zoho Office
- Flickr
The potential benefits of this are huge:
- Backups become less necessary. (Everything is automatically backed-up online.)
- I can jump from computer to computer and have all of my info and documents at my fingertips. No set-up or extra software necessary.
- I can't store my music online.
- My Internet connection at home is sometimes sketchy. If it goes down and I don't have an off-line version of my documents, I may be in trouble.
- Tablet PC functionality is most useful in "offline" applications.
- I want to keep my most critical information backed-up both online and offline.
- Don't let myself get so constrained trying to force myself into a given system that it becomes a hinderance rather than a help.
For related ideas, read my previous post for living off of a USB drive and web browser, something I executed fairly well last summer when I was having lots of trouble with my Sony laptop.
Also, see 25 Firefox extensions that can make you more productive. I particularly like Better GMail and Better GReader.
Tips for becoming an e-mail ninja here, here, and here. Don't forget to check out GMail's keyboard shortcuts -- highly useful for managing your e-mails with speed and efficiency. Also, watch this video by Merlin Mann on Inbox Zero:
1 comment:
I've been using Google Docs and Gmail exclusively for a long time now. It's great because I can work on what I need to from anywhere since I don't use anything other than documents and spreadsheets. I keep some things on my personal computer like a ton of pictures I need to someday organize and my music collection. But really, Google Docs and Gmail and Blogger are great because of their autosaving feature (and GDoc's revisions feature). It's saved me a ton of time.
I think you find switching to web apps much simpler.
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