On of the most interesting variants of the tools I saw for organizing the tasks in Getting Things Done conception is Post-It Portable Workspace (PPW). I found it in Tammy Cravit's blog - here (visit it for some pictures and notes).
He says:
"The basic idea of the PPW is simple: I took a series of plastic sheet protectors, which provide a nice surface for Post-it notes to adhere to. Inside them, I placed sheets of card stock (file folders, cut down to 8-1/2 x 11) for rigidity, and I put the whole mess in a 3-ring binder.
Some features of the PPW that are worthy of note:
- Inside both covers of the binder, I’ve arranged extra Post-it notes; this allows me to capture incoming stuff on the go.
- The context labels on each page (in this view, the blue square in the far upper right corner, which says @Computer) are under the sheet protector. This prevents them from getting lost or stuck to the notes arranged on the page, but allows panels to be easily re-purposed if need be.
- Each panel is double-sided; my Getting Things Done contexts occupy both sides of the first three pages; I have another three or four panels in the back for projects.
My last panel is labeled “Inbox”, and provides a temporary storage area for incoming Post-its before I process them. "
This idea seems to me very interesting, because in such workspace you have two-dimensional space instead of notebook and list. It allows organizing your sticky notes as you need. For example, in mind map format. On the other hand, I'm afraid, that stickies are not such sticky as I need for stable fastening of my notes.
