Have you been tempted to purchase a Blackberry, an electronic organizer, or PDA, but you're not sure if you'd actually use it or just end up adding it to your collection of stuff that you don't use? Maybe you don't have the kind of job that demands that you keep track of expenses or appointments. Can you still get some use out of an electronic organizer?
PDAs - How We Use Them (Including the Productive Playing of Games):
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That may all be very well, will you actually use it? When we first got our PDAs, we used them and used them and used them. Those were happy times. The alarms were sounding all the time. The people we lived with - notice I said lived - had finally had enough (kidding - they are still around here somewhere).
With the passage of time, we have found that PDAs are not the main way that we manage our schedules. We have not eliminated the more visual systems of wall calendars and datebooks. However, PDAs are quite useful as a backup for the daily schedule so that appointments are more likely to be kept.
Those who use Outlook or another computer program that can be synchonized with a PDA, should consider investing in one. Calendar pages can be printed out each day or week after syncing with your PDA.
Use caution when setting alarms. If an alarm is set for every little thing that needs to happen throughout the day, you will begin to ignore the alarm and your family will be greatly irritated. In general, use alarms for reminders of the following:
Dual Reminders: You must learn that writing an appointment on your wall calendar (the visual reminder), although good, does not add it to your PDA (audible reminder). If you are using a wall calendar and an electronic organizer, try to set a time each day or week that you check to make sure they have the same appointments entered. Be Selective: Set the alarm only for reminders that are important, like appointments, and paying your mortgage/rent bill. Otherwise it will drive you nuts and you may end up not using it at all. (We have also found that prolonged exposure to overused alarms upsets friends, family and pets.) |