What is life hacking? It’s a term that’s been around for almost two years that deals with productivity. It refers to just about any good idea or customization that optimizes your productivity in life–most often some software install or tweak. I’m not sure who coined it, but the Gawker Media empire jumped on it in January of 2005 with LifeHacker.com. Every magazine I’ve picked up in the past few months, from Wired to People, seems to have dedicated one page to the concept.
LifeHacking seems to be catchy for three reasons. First, most of us are feeling overstimulated. With the Interweb reaching over a decade of ubiquity, we’ve all gotten better at finding distractions. Many life hacks involve ways to remove some noise. Second, it rhymes with “wife crack.” And finally, life hacks feel good. Aquiring a tool that works and saves time creates that, “how did I live without it” feeling. Ask anyone how they feel a month after they get their first DVR. Lifehacks existed all through the industrial revolution, but often they were referred to as “kitchen appliances.”
Why am I doing this post? I’ve been swamped at work lately, so a post on life hacking seems like a great way to avoid being productive.
Here’s some of my favorite lifehacks from the past year, in no order:
– SpamBayes – Some sort of spam filter is essential these days (that phrase opens every lifehack description). SpamBayes is easy to configure and works really well with MS Outlook.
– Bloglines – Or some RSS reader. If you don’t know what RSS is, don’t worry. An RSS reader is a program or website that does some magic stuff to give you a favorites list that conveniently highlights the links that have changed since the last time your read that page. It saves you from clicking to old content. What I want is an RSS reader on my homepage that also has weather and my email, but is not made by Google. I may have to build it.
– BitTorrent – A piece of software that allows you to download whole albums or movies on your home machine while you are sleeping or at work. It saves you the time it takes to go to a record store or to earn the money to actually buy these things. It’s fine for music, however, to watch a movie, Netflix is actually more time efficient.
-CFLs – As pictured above, Compact Fluorescent Lightbulbs. They are not that much more expensive than regular bulbs and they last a ton longer. Even better for me, they burn cooler which keeps my small pad more temperate in the sweltering heat wave we are in.
– Hotkeys – A piece of software that allows you to set keyboard shortcuts for anything you want. I use CRTL-ALT-I to get to the Interent for optimized time wasting with Fantast Football.
– Start-up Inspector – A great piece of software to remove or turn off all those pretentious piece of shit software (unlike the useful stuff like Hotkeys) such as Quicktime that think they need to run in the background of your machine.
– Jot Book – A common idea, but one enforced in me by Tori Rowan, you should always carry a pen and notebook. Always. No software necessary.
– Online banking – Do not be in the zaps without it.
– Firefox
Some LifeHacks I need:
– A spellchecker for my blog.
– A good desktop photo database solution. Don’t say iPhoto or I will spit at you.





















