Tim Ferriss interview | Derek Sivers. the guy from CD Baby talk to the “4 hour Work week” guy about working more effectively and such.

fonolo. toronto startup that will let you skip companies automated phone systems.

Google Calendar CalDAV support. done and done.

Demo of Github’s Gist. which is like pastie but with a git repo behind it. very cool and intro’d at rubyfringe.

When is Good. need to settle on a meeting time? voila.

ToDo’s On Your Desktop // RailsTips.org by John Nunemaker. some interesting tools i’ve never heard of (todoist and geektool).

Which Weekend? nice little tool for sorting out dates with a large group of people. via josh.

Angry Robot: Kick Ass, Take Notes. quick write-up about a couple note-taking web2.0 apps. via ram.

Launch: Backpack Multiuser. 37signals gets into the intranet space (though only for small business’)

Nice labeling system for doing “Inbox Zero” in Gmail. I recently started doing Inbox Zero on my work and personal email. Creating the 4 enumerated labels is a nice little touch.

Vitalist ยป Online GTD Software. nice and simple gtd app. via paul.

Email This! Bookmarklet Extension :: Firefox Add-ons. works with gmail. creates an email with the title being the site you’re on, body includes a link and anything you’ve highlighted. awesome.

How I made my presentations a little better | 43 Folders. some good points. via ram.

Chipt Productions: Backpack widget. I use backpack for my general todo list so this is a handy widget.

GTDTiddlyWiki - your simple client side wiki. Now this is cool. Your own personal wiki in 1 file. It’s loaded with ajax goodness so it looks very slick. super simple and effective for managing knowledge and tasks.

New York Times - Meet the Life Hackers. At first glance, this article looked as boring as hell but turned out to be really interesting. The article talks about the mini-revolution that’s occuring to try and simplify the high-tech working world and has some intersting stats on the effect of constant interruptions of people (in)ability to get things done. Talks about the book that started it all “Getting Things Done” by David Allen, tools by companies like 37signals, and advocate sites like 43folders and lifehacker.