patrickrhone

08.17.06 03.29 pm

Hard and Soft Landscapes: Calendar vs. Reminders

Those of you who are familiar with Backpack know that it already had a feature called “Reminders” that let you set alarms that you receive via SMS and/or Email for various things. Now that Backpack has a calendar, I bet many of you are wondering what the usefulness of the reminders are outside of the calendar. Lets take a look at what types of things should go on the calendar and what sorts of things reminders are good for that should not go on the calendar (which is crucial).

Use the Calendar only for calendar items. David Allen often refers to the calendar and calendar based data as “The Hard Landscape”. He even goes on to say, on page 41 of Getting Things Done, “The way I look at it, the calendar should be sacred territory. If you write something there, it must get done that day or not at all”. In other words, one should be highly selective about what goes on the calendar.

Why is this? Well, your calendar is filled with little contracts between you and yourself or you and someone else. If you schedule a meeting with someone, or lunch, or a vacation, or a daily workout, you have made a “contract” to be there at a certain date and/or time. Don’t show up and you essentially breach that contract - especially if another party is involved. You should really treat these items with that high level of importance.

So what should go on the calendar?

These are all “hard landscape” items. Things that are happening at a specific time or are needed for specific appointments and events.

But there are some more “soft landscape” things that you might want to use the reminders for and should not disrupt the “sacred territory” of the calendar.

Reminders are meant for exactly that, just a quick little alarm to remind you of something. That is the reason that, by default, the reminder times are nebulous and not exact (i.e. “Later Today”, “In a couple of days” etc.). These include, things you need to get done later in the day like “Pick up milk on the way home” or in advance of an event but not by a specific time like “Make dinner reservations for birthday dinner” or maybe just a little nudge like “Don’t forget to pack your charger”. Sometimes, some action items that are time sensitive may benefit from a little timely kick in the pants.

Here is another possible use for the Reminders feature in Backpack - Future Options. In Getting Things Done, David Allen states, starting on page 171, that this category of items can exist on the calendar as well. I would argue that the Reminders feature is better suited to these sorts of items and more protective of the “hard landscape”.

Future Options are:

In other words, the Reminders feature allows one to be a little more creative with the sorts of things that are time related but flexible. Use it that way and guard the hard edges of the calendar with everything you’ve got.


5 Comments

08.17.06 03.17 PM

Randy

Good stuff, Patrick.

Something else very useful in any reminders approach would be a "templatable" reminder set. What I'm looking for is a way to save a set of steps in a single template, so I could repeat a process in the future. Might also be useful for packing for a trip, shopping for groceries, planning a wedding, launching a new software version, etc.

08.18.06 10.08 PM

Robin

quite useful to me.
i just dump all the events and reminders into my calendar and set a time to remind me by email... but i find it troblesome and inefficacy.
Thanks for your guide and i think i can get my things done :)

11.28.06 03.04 AM

Joshua Kaufman

Excellent advice Patrick. This is *exactly* how I use the calendar and reminders in Backpack, and how I think 37s intended them to be used. I think there are a lot of Backpack users who don't really get the calendar vs. reminders, and this post would be great for them to read. Cheers.

02.12.07 05.13 PM

Alex

Actually, I never dared to touch Backpack's reminders because of their "fuzziness". I think that was a very bad idea from the get-go. I would always feel uncomfortable thinking that a reminder could be triggered too late. And from reading and searching through their support pages and the forums, I could never figure out when *exactly* those reminders would be triggered.
To add a concrete time (has that always been available and was it only me noticing it too late?), is an additional hassle I don't want to go through every time.
IMO, just another case of 37s' dumbing-down things too much.

02.14.07 12.05 PM

Alex

Me so stupid. Of course it's somewhere in the FAQ: http://www.backpackit.com/faqs

When are general email reminders actually sent?

Later today = 3 hours from now
Tomorrow morning = tomorrow at 9am
Tomorrow afternoon = tomorrow at 2pm
In a couple days = 48 hours from now
Next Monday = 9am next Monday
In a month = 30 days from right now





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