

Time stamps are there to remind me of the freshness of the information, or how delayed some things are. But reverse chronological order is nothing without the good timestamps. There are a few navigational links above “the feed” and permanent data, that allows me to observe it contextually, sometimes containing links to important documents related to that particular person. Reverse chronological order reminds me of the newsfeed, and it gives you the newest information on the person right at the top, pushing historical information further down. This trick that was not only a way for me and Darren to reduce the number of documents, it works the same for Evernote as well. Contact related information in a single note with a reverse chronological order This allows me to can navigate my contacts graph like a champ, gaining access to rich media, audio notes as well as reminders about the things that these contacts need to do for me, or what I owe them. I’ve compiled these wiki’s in such a way, that these contacts create a network of notes that are directly interlinked with each other. The most important aspect of this setup is that it is platform agnostic.Įvery important contact is a Wiki related to that person. This kinda connects rather well with my custom made perspectives of Omnifocus, and it relates very well to my thoughts on Evernote and Omnifocus integration that. These links will work on your iPhone, iPad and your Mac, so no need for compromises. These links are fully clickable and take you to the application regardless of the Apple device that you currently use. Where each important person has its own Omnifocus context and an Evernote note. It has just enough functionality so it can provide a “hacked” window for the extra functionality that I need out of it.Ĭontacts are directly connected with “People” contexts inside of my Omnifocus 2 and Evernote Wiki Notes with the help of internal links, also known as URL Schematics. My buddy Kurt recently asked me how do I manage my contacts? He knew that I use a lot of custom and 3rd party apps, but in case of contact management, simple iOS contacts app did the trick.
