
Originally Posted by
J.D. Iles
It is the most functional, fastest, and works best
Even David says so
I have to disagree with both the idea (that paper is the best) and that David says so. I know he says you can do GTD on paper and it's often a good place to go if you are stuck on some point but I don't think anywhere he says paper is the most functional, best or fastest.
My own experience is that paper is slow, unwieldy, difficult to update, nearly impossible to back-up, and least able to give me a clean overview at weekly review and very hard to manage large numbers of someday/maybe projects. So the real answer is it's not the tool you use but the method that is critical. I could never run my GTD system on paper but you can. Blindly saying one is the best isn't really helpful when it may not be best for a particular person.
Oogie McGuire - Mac, iPhone & Omnifocus
OogieM on Twitter
Paonia, CO USA
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