

On another note, I dont preassign any tasks on my pomodoros, and generally don’t plan my tasks ahead of time. That, and there’s no learning curves either.

I have looked into things like toggl and pomello but I personally always pick a low tech solution whenever the options available, since I know exactly what I am getting everytime with no fuss or hassles. OR if I am in front of PC just pause the timer (3) If I get interrupted, immediately pause and hang the timer in front of monitor (so I am forced to look at it coming back). This is what my pomodoro section looks like: And compare it to work times vs personal times There’s alot of steps involved but in reality it takes less than 30 seconds to do per pomodoro from start to finish.ĭown the road I will probably make my own version of rawbytes workflowy tag calculator so I can analyze how productive I am throughout the each day and week. (10) repeat cycle, take a longer break at the 4th pomodoro (8) Write down the duration of the pomodoro done, 30 minutes is Flip the cube to 5 minutes, when it beeps, flip it back to 30 minutes (7) use phraseexpress macro to stamp current time like !( 23:50) (6) Summarize in one sentence, everything that was done to the original pomodoro bulletpoint tasks, attach any imgur annotated screenshots if necessary (4) Do work wherever it is (writing sprint project notes in dynalist, writing code in IDE, etc) while taking notes at same time in dynalist (3) Flip datexx cube to 30 minute side (takes < 2 seconds to do) (1) Navigate to pomodoro section in dynalist

(0) Navigate to project folder, look at my previous notes + things I need to do The general workflow I use for pomodoro is as follows: Its going to entirely replace my daily logs, since I rarely use those anymore now that I place those notes in their respective projects instead I do this at home since I get next to no interruptions.

At 4 pomodoros in succession, I take a 30 minute break. Essentially, my pomodoro is 30 minutes long, with 5 minute breaks inbetween.
