A month ago I'd never heard of
Getting Things Done, a self-help book for digging yourself out of the sort of procrastinating habits that most people complain they have but never do anything about (how many times have you said to someone, "man, I got
nothing done today!"?) Via
Boing Boing I picked up a few pointers to
43 Folders, a site devoted to one man's experience with GTD (as the aficionados call it) and his assorted tips and tricks for applying it to your Macintosh-oriented life. From what I've read
around the book, I understand the general principles being applied, and it seems pretty sane and also pretty well suited to being geekified by using your email client, PDA, task scheduler, etc. What's freaking me out now that I've started to look around at who else is pushing this is the number of backlinks to the author's site and/or the
Amazon page for the book. 43 Folders is
littered with them, to the point where every mention of GTD seems to get a link even though there's a sidebar link and possibly other links elsewhere on the page. I just found a review of Palm tools for GTD and discovered that there's a Yahoo group specifically for people using the Palm to manage GTD, but also on page two of the article there's the link to the author's site. EEP! It seems like GTD is either so great that everyone wants to push the book and/or the author (I think he does seminars for $$$) at you, or maybe that the EULA for the book says, "by reading this book you agree to put copious links to it and its purchase vectors all over your site".
Getting things done, indeed. Getting the dollars, too, I imagine.