
Yes. Another Backup Lecture. Daring Fireball: An Ode to DiskWarrior, SuperDuper, and Dropbox Hard drives are fragile. Read as much as you can bear to about how they work, how incredibly precisely they must operate in order to cram so many bits onto such small disks. It’s a miracle to me that they work at all. Every hard drive in the world will eventually fail. John's article, advice, and success story about doing smart backup is exactly the reminder that a lot of people need to hear right this second. Worst of all, every stupid cliche about backup that currently makes you roll your eyes in exasperation will be visited upon you tenfold if you're not using some flavor of the anal-retentive system nerds like John and I live by. Perform automated, redundant, and rotated backups as often as you can afford to lose every single bit of information that's been changed or added since your last backup. The Holy Trinity Seriously: If it's not automated, it's not a real backup. The Next Layer Schedule Every Rotation; Then Do it.
PlayNicely - Beautiful bug tracking for software professionals Taskjuggler - The Open Source Project Management Software - Home Lighthouse - Beautifully Simple Issue Tracking Why choose a plan when you're not sure how you'll use Lighthouse? Check out our offering now and after 14 days you can choose the plan that fits you best or stick with the free plan and you won't be charged a dime! Top-Shelf Offering GOLD$100/month Unlimited projects Unlimited members 50GB of file storage Priority state for projects For Larger Companies SILVER$50/month 20 projects 50 members 10GB of file storage Priority state for projects Perfect for Startups BRONZE$25/month 10 projects 15 members 2GB of file space Priority state for projects Save 10% by signing up for a year in advance.
Getting started with "Getting Things Done" This article was originally posted during the first week of 43 Folders' existence, and, pound for pound, it remains our most popular page on the site. Please be sure to also visit related pages, browse our GTD topic area, plus, of course you can search on GTD across our family of sites. I’ll be talking a lot here in coming weeks about Getting Things Done, a book by David Allen whose apt subtitle is “The Art of Stress-Free Productivity.” You’ve probably heard about it around the Global Interweb or have been buttonholed by somebody in your office who swears by GTD. Like I did the other day with Quicksilver, I wanted to provide a gentle, geek-centric introduction to Getting Things Done, so that you can think about whether it might be right for you. The Problem with “stuff” Getting Things Done succeeds because it first addresses a critical barrier to completing the atomic tasks that we want to accomplish in a given day. So how does GTD work? GTD is geek-friendly The OSX angle/warning Links
Simple Hosted Bug and Issue Tracking | Sifter ProjectOffice.net | Web based project management solution Error Monitoring, Error Tracking, and Notification for Ruby on Rails 2, 3 and 4 - Honeybadger Hipster PDA Although it began as a joke, or perhaps a statement about technology fetishism, the Hipster PDA has rapidly gained popularity with serious users,[4] with hundreds posting pictures of their customized hPDAs on photo sharing sites and exchanging tips on Internet mailing lists. Advocates of the hPDA claim that it is a cheap, lightweight, freeform organizer[5] that doesn't need batteries and is unlikely to be stolen. Enthusiasts also design and share index-card-size printable templates for storing contacts, to-do lists, calendars, notes, project plans, and so on. A Hipster Nano PDA utilizes business cards with blank backs and one that has a calendar on the back.
Project management, service and support, defect tracking, and asset management software : iTrack Redmine - Overview