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Priceless.
What was next?
I find it odd that the gal at google - who is in charge of the user experience nonetheless - uses pine and not gmail to crunch through her work mail. I would kill to have gmail available for work. I use it for my brewers' mailing list which often has 250+ emails a day, and it is indespensible for churning through them all in no time at all. The threading makes it trivial. And their motto of "search it, don't sort it" is right on. Any time I ever need to find anything in there, it is only a few seconds away by search.
Interesting article though.
What I found interesting was that some (most? all? I would have to reread) of these "great leaders" very specifically take time out of their days for themselves -- the guy who does yoga every day for an hour and a half, for example -- or are very, very deliberate about their communication choices and filtering. Obviously very few of us will ever be (or want to be) "great" like that, but I do see a lot of people I know try to do too much without being strict with their personal time or information-glut control.
The lesson I took away from this (perhaps because I've been thinking about it already lately) is: have laser-like focus and be utterly strict with your personal time and you will be more creative and more productive. I think most people could benefit from that idea.
I agree that in order to get anything done these days, you have to cut off the vast majority of things you can read and listen to. Both signal and noise; our brains are small and weak, easily swamped by mailing lists and blogs and whatnot.