100 pages!?!
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I never expected to see that little note pop up in my account. I’ve created 100 pages! Since July!! And, I don’t even use it for work—that’s all personal stuff!!! I don’t know whether to be proud or horrified at the amount of information I seem to “require”. (And let me tell you, that’s probably less than half of it.) What do I use Backpack for? What don’t I use Backpack for? I’m going to go scan my list of pages and give you some examples.
And , of course, there’s more. But I think I noticed your eyes glazing over a few bullets back. Suffice it to say, I’m gradually migrating just about everything to Backpack (or Basecamp, where I’ve got one project for “divorce” and another for “bold new life”). Even my important stuff will be living at 37signals as soon as I can get it there. At first I wasn’t sure exactly why I was doing it, except that I liked being able to group things and look at them all together. So much better than a thousand generic bookmarks. But then my new computer (UMPC) turned out to be a lemon, and its replacement died of unknown causes, and I just got my third one today. Not only have I not had to transfer all the stuff on Backpack (twice!), but in the downtime in between exchanges, I was able to borrow anybody’s machine anywhere and get at my stuff. It was so incredibly helpful that I just signed up for Highrise and plan to migrate all my contacts. Then Windows can crash all it wants—I’ll be 37signals-proofed! Oh! I forgot to mention my two most-used pages!
I don’t know, guys. I realize I’m not talking rocket science (yet—just you wait ‘til I’m back on my feet!), but I think that’s my point. If Backpack can do all these things and be so beneficial for me, imagine all the incredible things it could do for you who have real lives! :) Soon, you’ll be ruling the universe! |
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kayels, Is your “Things like this, where I’ve done research…” page public? It’s asking for a password. Thanks for this great list! I’m always looking for new ways to use my backpack. Zane |
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Wow, kayels, thanks so much for sharing this! And many thanks for your passionate use of Backpack! |
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Wow, thats a lot of pages. I have 12 pages and use BP daily. :P |
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The “things like this” link should actually be http://kayels.backpackit.com/pub/1229338 |
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Kayels (and others!) I am not using Backpack to its potential, and I REALLY want to. Would you mind posting a screen shot of your home page or some other non-personal pages? It would help me so much, I just don’t know what to do with my homepage! Thanks, |
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Kayels - I’m trying to use Backpack to store my username/passwords for all my online accounts as well. How are you doing this – are you creating a table/grid for this? If so, you mind sharing how? I guess I can do it as a note, but it gets all messy – would like to implement some sort of table. |
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It would be nice to be able to upload simple spreadsheets or CSV files that are read as tables, huh? The formatting for tables is a little clumsy. |
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tippingrock/anna: if you want a great, great resource for how to effectively organize your homepage, you might want to take a look at |
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Thanks for the note about the link, guys. I went back and fixed it. I should add a really important use: FAVORITES / BOOKMARKS. I have a gazillion, and I’m gradually transferring all of them to appropriate topic pages in Backpack. 1. I can’t stand the visual mess that is the favorites / bookmarks function within browsers, Just looking at the list makes me want to close my eyes. And, I’m not thrilled with tags. They’re great for certain functions, but a little too uncertain for a perfectionist. I want to know I’ve seen all the options, not worry I might have missed some I tagged differently. I just want a good, easy to read, comprehensive list. 2. They go with me. No more, “Oh, I have that page marked at home…” They are wherever the Internet is. Talk about winning friends and influencing people! 3. I can reorder them, group them, add notes about them, stick pictures next to them, link them to other things, link other things to that page… Backpack turns my Favorites lists into actual, functional resources. How cool is that? And isn’t that what they’re supposed to be? Just note that, while I say “list”, I don’t actually use the list function. Each Favorite / Bookmark is its own little note. The title is whatever makes sense to me, linked to the page, and the note’s body field is available for anything I might ever want to add. A lot of them don’t need notes, but when notes are appropriate, they’re really beneficial. They don’t even have to be additional reference information. It could just be the date of the last time I visited the site, so I only have to look for things added since then. (That’s a big time-saver.) Or maybe I’m trying to learn something from that site, and the note’s body holds my, well, notes or a little summary. It makes it really easy to compare recommendations or information—it’s all on the one Backpack page. And, don’t forget, you can link from the text, as well. It’s like my brain, only better! |
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kayels I’m pretty new to Backpack but very pleased so far – and I’m racking up pages. Is there any way of organizing the pages? If you have 100 pages, do they all appear alphabetically down the right hand side of your screen? I was wondering how other folks organize their pages and if there is any way of doing it? |
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Sorry it’s taken me so long to get back to this topic. I’m certainly not perfect, but, for the sake of simplicity, I’m going to describe all of this as though I were :) HOME PAGE My home page consists of my lists of things to do. I recommend:
Before closing up shop for the day, I uncheck the Every Day items, so the list is reconstituted for tomorrow, and I update Today, Tomorrow, and This Week. It doesn’t take nearly as long as it sounds. In fact, it’s two minutes of clarity and pride in accomplishment. We all could use that at the end of the day. Sunday nights, I update Next Week, Soon, and Someday. It’s actually fun. ACCOUNTS / USERNAMES & PASSWORDS I keep track of both (1) usernames / passwords and (2) what personal data I’ve given each account. With a couple of mailing addresses, several phone numbers, a bunch of e-mail addresses, and a few credit cards to choose from, I’d never be able to remember what’s on which account. And, when I need to update a credit card or change an address, it’s as easy as going through the list to see who has the old one. I used to do it in Outlook, creating a card for each site. But, when I wanted to change something, opening every card to look into the notes field was just too cumbersome. Looking down a Backpack page is a lot more efficient. So, no I don’t use a chart. The information varies too much from account to account. I use notes for sites with a lot of information, mixed in with lists for groups with usernames, passwords, and little else. A couple of examples: [in a list]
37signals [in a list]
Gmail Of course, I write the links so they go straight to my login. N.B., I know it isn’t traditionally proper, but I put spaces on either side of my slash/hash marks. Now that computers are all the rage, it’s the only way to ensure the text will break at the end of a line if it needs to. How you group things depends on how you think about them. I recently morphed my 37signals group into several groups, kind of like this: [in a list] Tumblelogs [in a list] Project Management Those are grouped by function, but I also group by category, for example: [in a list]
Web 2.0 On the other hand, there are things that cry out to be recorded in notes. For example: [in a note] MySillyDomainName.com
Or, since I have more than one account in some places, I might write it like this: [in a note] Amazon & PayPal
Yikes, I take up a lot of space with this stuff. Tell you what. I’ll save this (the answers to the home page and account-managing) and come back in a bit with the answer to the navigation question. |
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Simon Hughes asked how I organize my pages. I posted the answer in “Organizing Your Pages” over in Tips & Tricks. |
