Sunday, February 13, 2011

Tools @ Home

Now I know I promised more of an introduction for this post. Insipration took me down a different route however. :)

One of the things I need to keep in mind since I work from home, is that I have to be a little more organized with my planning and scheduling that I would normally be if I were in an office environment. One consideration is that in an office, I'd pretty much have an unlimited supply of post-it notes, pencils, notebooks, and other stuff* that would make my daily organization tasks much easier.

*yes, even if I am in IT, I am still old school when it comes to my organizational skills. Pen and paper are never too far away when I work.

Working from home kinda limits my resources in the office supply department. Another challenge that faced me was that I'd have to coordinate and work with people that I'd only be meeting in an online setting most of the time. So to face these challenges, I've come to rely on the following set of tools to help me through my day-to-day activities.

Chat Clients
Most basic, but also, one of my most important tools. I mostly use Yahoo Messenger and Skype to chat and touch base with my colleagues at work.

Time Management
1DayLater - Early on in my career as a work from home person (from here on in called a localhostertm), I still had to finish off some work from my previous employer. Since I was no longer a regular employee, I had to bill them for the time I spent on their projects. That's when I discovered 1DayLater. It's evolved a bit since I first started using it, but the basic tools are there. A timer that lets you be as accurate as you need to be, mapping and graphs to give you a visual idea how much time you're actually spending on a project, and, though you have to pay for it, tools for billing.

The free version is more than enough for my needs.

Document Management
Google Docs and Open Office - One of the biggest losses I had when I left my previous job was that I no longer had a working copy of Microsoft Office. Say what you want about MS, but the Office tools are pretty much a standard. My initial solution was to turn to Google Docs. Aside from keeping my local hard drive free of work documents, Google Docs also had the advantage of facilating document sharing between my colleagues and myself.

Pretty soon however, I had to succumb and admit to myself that i needed an offline document suite, and that's when I turned to OpenOffice.org. So far, it's been able to handle all the MS Office documents that I've received and it hasn't really given me any headaches. My one complaint is that it still can't handle Visio files. :p

Project Management
BasecampHQ - This one was set-up by the office. It's enabled a handful of us developers to coordinate and work with our project managers and superiors and keeps a nice time log of our activites.

GitHub - Another tool selected by the office. I'd been using the basic git tool with our senior dev for the past year. Recently, the company adopted git as a whole to facilitate code sharing. All I can say is, this would have made my life so much easier in my old companies. Sigh.

That wraps it up for me for now. Those are the top aids that I use daily. There probably are better alternatives out there, but so far, these haven't failed me yet. I've rarely touched a pen and paper to help organize my work since I started using these. :) That says something about how useful they are.





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