Ramblings and Musings from a UK quinquagenarian.

Author: Steve (Page 2 of 3)

Prod-Oct-ivity ’25

It’s that time of the year again to review the productivity tools/system changes I’ve worked with, replaced, or refined over the last year.

Broadly speaking – not a lot has changed. Noteworthy bits are:

  1. I’ve moved away from Google tools. My mail, calendar, and file storage are now all Proton. I love Proton tools. The killer app will be when they finally deliver a spreadsheet tool. In terms of privacy-first, they’re a truly professional outfit. Mail and Calendar work great, VPN, Pass, and Authenticator are awesome products, and Docs is a great Word-like alternative. Sure, you have to pay for Proton, but the privacy and convenience make it money well spent.

    I’ve also removed myself from social media (unless you call YouTube social media). The only other social media-ish app I use is WhatsApp, as that’s the main source of comms for all the family. I’d prefer to go to Signal, but I’d be a voice in the wilderness there.

    I don’t see myself fully dropping Google, mainly because of YouTube. I have loads of purchased Google Movies (remember that?) programmes and films, and YouTube itself is hugely useful to me. In fact, I’m hoping to start a little fun channel in the New Year (“The Dunn Thing”) to talk about productivity, retirement planning, music, reading, general life stuff, and just to see how I enjoy it and if it can work going forward.

  2. Notesnook is a great little alternative to Evernote – again, it’s privacy-first, and with my student discount, it’s peanuts for a yearly subscription. I did take a look at Standard Notes (who Proton have sided with) but pricing is quite expensive for the Pro subscription – the Free version is too restrictive.

  3. I’m still using Obsidian. It’s mainly been a vault for work notes, and also to create Daily Scrum docs. It’s a great and powerful tool, although I haven’t really gone fully KPM/Zettelkasten or explored the new Bases feature.

  4. Analogue. This is where the biggest change has been for me over the year. I’ve rediscovered and am loving writing on paper again. I’ve kept a personal journal and filled it in daily over the last 7 months; it’s definitely a stayer. I’m going to go with the Leuchteurm 1917 “Some Lines A Day” 5 year book.



    Also, the Bullet Journal will continue to feature heavily next year. There’s a bit of friction between Daily Scrum stuff in Obsidian and my BuJo but I’m working on it. I’ve also tried a wide range of pens (gel, standard, fountain) as well as notebooks from Rhodia, Dingbats, and Moleskine. I like them all – and I’m not sure which I’ll go with next year, but I’ll definitely need a “Scribble” book for jotting down notes and ideas which I can use, then either reformat in digital or analogue formats.

  5. Todoist – yup, it’s still there! I find it so useful for repeating tasks. It’s so easy to set stuff up and the natural language makes it dead easy and fast to get tasks in with deadlines, assigned to myself or my wife, with priorities and project links. Awesome product.

  6. Nirvana. Yup, Nirvan is still there for all my project work. I still very much love the GTD framework, even if I’m adapting it further to become my own. Nirvana is to my mind the best list manager that embraces the soul of what GTD is about. I do wish they would produce more blog articles and features, but it’s a complete and highly useful app. I did try and forego it to put everything in Todoist but it just didn’t sit right. “Next actions” are a bit of a pain to implement in Todoist despite trying things out with labels.

I’m sure i’ll talk more about the individual tools in future posts, but I’m in a pretty good spot right now, and things are starting to come together!

Books I’m Reading (Oct 25)

The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon (Stephen King)

The Green Mile (Stephen King)

The Hobbit (J.R.R Tolkien)

The Bullet Journal Method (Ryder Carroll)

Really enjoying my reading this year, but still need to keep the discipline going.

I’ve been a fan of Stephen King for over 40 years, but I sort of stopped following his books in my late teens/early 20s. It’s been great rediscovering them through Audible – and I’m now slowly catching up. I’m focusing on his novels rather than novellas, collections or non-fiction work – but I will get to them in time – especially The Dark Tower series, which I hope to do in succession. Nearly finished The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon, so I’ve lined up The Green Mile next.

My son said recently he was looking to start The Lord of the Rings. I remember starting it in my teens, but I got bored quickly. Too much scene-setting (and I was too much into Stephen King). I thought I’d try again, starting with the The Hobbit. Reading it on Kindle, and really enjoying it!

I’ve been keeping a Bullet Journal and a personal long-form journal for the last 6 months. With the bullet journal, I want to get back to the original ideas and philosophy, as I’m keen to track habits and use better collections. I’m slowly splitting my work life and home life, and need my journal to reflect that.

Books I’m reading

September 25

Bag of Bones (Stephen King)
Writers block, death, and horror!

Make Time (Knapp and Zeratsky)
A re-read – a great productivity book on how to make the best of the time that’s available through common-sense planning.

The INFJ Handbook (Baker)
I discovered I was an INFJ through the official Myers-Briggs assessment – hopefully this will unlock the reasoning behind my quirks, and how I handle strengths and weaknesses of being one!

Prime Suspect (La Plante)
Recently watched the TV series (again) and thought I’d give the book a go. It’s great!

Garden Progress

Well all the builders have finally gone – and not on the best terms… with jobs about 90% done. Disappointed with the landscape gardening company – went really well for 2 weeks then they overran, then tried to cut corners on jobs and it shows.

That said, the majority of the work was good, and we now have both turf and a new patio area sorted.

I’m on hols this week so I’m working on painting all the sleepers. I found this really good paint called Bartoline – an “almost” creosote-like paint that is really making the plants stand out against that dark background.

As well as painting the sleepers, I’ll be giving everything a dig over and a bit of TLC, as it was all pretty well neglected while the work was going on. had a pleasant surprise with the sunflowers, the multi-headed ones have really come out great! Lots to do to get things looking good, movement of trees (2 x Ceanothus) and reorganising the plants in the garden. I’m looking overall for a “cottage garden” feel… despite being have strong architectural feel. I think it can work. Lots of planning, and general love needed!

In the mean time, the canna lilies have really fired up this year and are looking good. The raspberries are producing well, and the tomatoes (Roma) are amazing!

The shadier part of the garden requires a complete rework, and the front of the garden – stone rings – will need to be completely revamped and brought back to life. I’ve got about 1/2 tonne of topsoil from the building works to help with that so it’s all good! Not all success sadly, 2 clematis plants are in a really poor state so will need more than a bit of coaxing to get them happy again.

The Morning Glory has gone mad also, strangling the pear tree and generally looking a bit too wild! It really needed to be contained through an obelisk or similar, but everything is good learning and experience.

Sunflowers have done amazing!

The hot weather has caused issues with the lawn, not the best time to have put a new lawn in(!)….and Marley seems to have created his own little runway so he run off some steam between walks, but it’s what it is. No worries. Watering for about 2 hours of an evening to keep things running smoothly. It’s looking good!

Really placed with the overall shape – tidying on the pointing and TLC needed throughout!
Guess I’d better buy a lawnmower now!

So, onwards and upwards. The exterior of the place will be done next year, to make everything (hopefully) stand out, the interior in a few weeks. It’s definitely starting to feel like our own place.

Here we go again!

So. The start of the 25/26 season and a frankly dreadful start against newbies Sunderland.

What’s worrying is that we had a reasonable summer transfer list, and good pre-season results.

But the 3-0 opening day defeat at The Stadium of Light doesn’t bode well for what has been a horrid couple of seasons since David Moyes left.

As usual, it’s time to keep the faith and hope that Graham Potter can turn things around. Best we can hope for I think is mid-table this season unless there is some dramatic and frankly unexpected revival.

I’ll also be rooting for my birthplace team Dagenham and Redbridge as they try and do something after demotion to the National Conference Southern League at the end of 24/25. A loss and a draw thus far. 21st in the League.

It’s gonna be a fun season! Got to keep the faith. COYI! COYD!

Proton Authenticator

A new addition to the Proton family, available from https://proton.me/authenticator, this is the only tool you’ll need for your 2FA requirements. I particularly love the fact it’s available as a Windows app also.

Set up the Proton Authentication on your phone – if you’re using another authentication tool (I was using Aegis) you can export codes as a JSON file then import them to Proton Authenticator.

Finally….. if you’re using a desktop and a phone version of Authenticator, you can sync your 2FA codes across devices. It’s not turned on by default. Simply go into Settings for each device you’ve got Authenticator installed, go into Settings and select the “Sync Between Devices” option. You’ll need a Proton account for that (you can get a free account with no obligation – I use Proton anyway so wasn’t any great shakes)

Bing Bang Bosh! Done in 2 mins!

I’m currently having a really good Proton experience having switched from my Google tools. Now using Firefox as my main browser.

What I’m listening to (w/e 27/07/25)

Obviously, completely gutted that we lost Ozzy this week. Ironically…. I’d only posted my favourite Black Sabbath Ozzy albums a week or so ago before he died.

I’ve put all the first 7 Sabbath albums (Ozzy) through their paces this week.

As mentioned elsewhere, my favourite is Volume 4 – the very first Sabs album I bought back in 1984.

For a lot of folks, Sabbath are all about the first 3 albums – and for obvious reasons too, you’ve got all the big hitters: Black Sabbath, NIB, Paranoid, War Pigs, Iron Man, Sweet Leaf, Children of the Grave (plus many more classics) but there’s something about Volume 4. Tomorrow’s Dream, Changes (which has brought a tear to my eye this week, I can tell you!), Snowblind, Supernaut….. cracking! RIP Ozzy.

Ozzy in full flow with Black Sabbath 1975

Sabbath Bloody Sabbath and Sabotage are my next favourite albums, a huge advancement in their songwriting abilities and instrumentation. What’s been really amazing this week is I’ve just remembered the influence that Sabbath had on my guitar-playing years. In fact, I played guitar in a band called Sweet Leaf (me, Alan Carson, John McMullen, Simon Davis), and also Spiral Architect (taken from the Sabbath Bloody Sabbath album) with Alan Carson and Dave Ware. Happy, noisy, boozy days indeed!

Ten Summoners Tales – Sting

Also listened to one of my 90s favourites “Ten Summoners Tales” by Sting. Such an amazing album, the bass work on Saint Augustine in Hell reminds me of just how good this guy is on the bass! Other standout tracks for me are “Seven Days” and “Something the Boy Said”. The other album I love of his is Brand New Day. Again, wicked bass line at the end of “Fill Her Up”. Mad.

I’ve never been much of a David Bowie fan (love the hits, as most people do), but after he died I immediately purchased Blackstar. Wow. Blows me away every time. Bowie was physically in pain doing this album and it’s lyrically and musically just so interesting. The title track is just proper left-field. That and Dollar Days are my favourites on this very listenable, very poignant swan song from Bowie.

What to listen to next, i wonder….?

Notesnook blows Evernote away!

Wow! I signed up to use Notesnook this week. Notesnook is a privacy-first note-taking application. I wanted something to complement my other privacy-based tools.

This application is really what Evernote wished it could be. It’s brilliant.

I used Evernote for 11 years and was even pleased with the Home dashboard when that was introduced a few years ago. And the guys at Bending Spoons are working hard to make Evernote a great product (less so with Tasks or Calendar IMHO – it’s a note-taking app). However, the inability of me to use this at work (blocked), and the frankly crazy pricing overhaul has caused me to look elsewhere. I guess there’s fairly elastic demand with existing Evernote die-hards so they’ll make their money…. but not from me. I should perhaps be using OneNote at work (we’re a Microsoft shop) but there’s just a je ne sais quoi bit of friction going on there. It just doesn’t feel right to how my brain is wired.

Notesnook image

With Notesnook, all notes are E2EE (end-to-end encrypted), and there’s a range of security and privacy features that can be tweaked to keep those Big Brothers eyes from a-snooping.

Notesnook is sensibly priced, in fact I can claim a considerable discount as a (mature, somewhat decrepit) student – a tenner a year. I basically get all the features you’d expect to see in Evernote (notebook-based) but with block-style functionality a la Notion, and bi-direction linking a la Obsidian.

I’m absolutely loving it. I don’t think it will replace Obsidian as my PKM but all my personal note-taking requirements are covered.

Notion-like blocks can be created in your notes.

In the image above you’ll notice a very Notion-like block-based creation tool. I also love the Callout facility as well just to emphasis quotes or other useful bits of information in your note. It also has (under the Notebooks tab) an Evernote-esque layout (something I’m really used to) but whereas Evernote has “stacks” of notebooks, they can instead by layered in Notesnook. Suits me better.

I did consider Standard Notes with its security/privacy features, but the inability to use Markdown and “super note” functionality without forking out $90 for the year sort of put me off. Still cheaper than Evernote, mind.

I’d definitely encourage digital note-takers to give Notesnook a look. As an organisation they seem well positioned to have an excellent future (the roadmap looks particularly encouraging – encrypted workspaces sounds great) and even if you’re not a student, the annual fee is sensibly priced at around £50 for the year to get all the pro features. For great functionality and privacy in a note-taking application.

For now, I’ll continue to play and see what my final use case will be.

Here’s some links to the other mentioned apps:

GarDunn Studies

I wanted to get away from the grind of tech-based study recently so I’ve signed up for a Horticulture Basics course offered by ADL.

I’m really pleased with the format, with a massive shout out to Cara Gage for getting me enrolled and sorted so quickly.

It’s become immediately useful, I’m studying lawns at the moment – handy as I’ll be getting some in a few weeks!

The course material is good – it’s all online, and I’ve been assigned a tutor to help me with any issues. Assessment is through assignments, along with a final end of course exam.

I’m well used to online studying having done a degree and postgrad through the Open University . I’m really looking forward to doing something vocational again (last time was with the OU doing an Astronomy course – which was awesome).

The topics I’ll covering include:

  • Lawns
  • Plant Biology
  • Vegetables
  • Propagation
  • Soil and Horticultural potential
  • Fruit
  • Weeds
  • Flowers
  • Trees and Shrubs
  • Plant Protection
  • Ecology

If all goes well and I get good assignment feedback, I’ll almost certainly consider something more formal like the RHS Level 2 Theory exams (and if that goes well, the Level 3 ones)! This isn’t so I can become academic … it’s purely that I want to know what the hell is going on with my garDunn!

For more details of the Horticulture Basics course from ADL, please visit here.

Books I’m reading

July 25

Desperation (Stephen King)
The town of Desperation is proper dark!

Unruly (David Mitchell)
Rating the Kings and Queens of Britain up to the end of Queen Elizabeth I.

Ultralearning (Scott H. Young)
A great read, an instruction book on how to get better at learning and studying.

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