It’s no secret that I get tired of the vintage computer systems with which we’re saddled here. Nothing says progress like IE6 circa 2001, and waiting 5 minutes for the the Outlook calendar to load is not my cup of tea. Sometimes you just need to look at (and write on) a big calendar to block out times for leave planning, transferring, working on a major project, what have you.
I’m glad I found David Seah’s compact calendar (via Lifehacker), because it’s already helped me make the case that I should go on R&R when I want to. The Excel file is customizable, and you can add in host country holidays to the template. I had a bit of trouble because we’re on a Sunday-Thursday work schedule here, so I modified his a bit to make it work. If you’re in a Western country, go to his page; otherwise give mine a shot. Sorry folks in Saudi…no love for that Saturday to Wednesday nonsense.
Download: Compact Calendar for Sunday-Thursday work week (.xls)
I’ve been putting off writing anything for the past week for a few reasons: nothing much is going on with me in the admin world, so I’m not thinking of anything to write. Also, I want to give myself parameters on what I can and can’t write. I don’t simply want to be a re-hashing of things that the Department already does, but I am willing to do a consolodation of stuff that’s found in five different places or is so unclear a plain-English explaination is due. I’m also interested in workflow and process, especially within our IT world. There are some good blogs that deal with Getting Things Done (GTD)/Lifehacking. I see no problem with incorporating some of that into this blog so long as it is done in a way that is useful in an IT-lockdown environment where archiving is often required by regulation.
So, as this all gets more complicated, I decided that some posts might have a prerequisite. If the tip is kind of complicated, I’ll put another link at the top so that they can build on each other. And since I’m fond of stretching analogies, I offer up the following “summer reading list.”
- A primer on Getting Things Done
- Inbox Zero – process your email and get rid of it all by assigning actions to each one. If you have 20 minutes, I recommend watching the presentation part of the video. It will save you much more than 20 minutes over the course of the first month alone. I’ll talk later about how I implement this on OpenNet computers.
- The Overseas Briefing Center’s excellent, if hard to find on the internet website, “What do I do now?” publication has many of the forms, steps, and checklists you’ll need to head to an overseas assignment.
- If you’re on an OpenNet computer, click the AskAdmin link on your left. A lot of good, if incomplete, stuff there.
- Make friends with a good GSO. Seriously, I learned a lot from just being around some of our excellent GSOs in Colombia who either knew a reg on the tops of their heads or knew how to get an answer quickly.



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