Latest from Twitter:

Links

Links to websites I enjoy, with annotated bibliography. Enjoy. :)


Tweetdeck - A browser-based management tool for Twitter. You can manage several accounts at once, schedule tweets, and categorise those you're following in different groups for easy management (I have 3 groups, in descending order of size by how much I want to hear from people, so my RL friends get far more attention than vegan bloggers in Nebraska). I did previously use Peoplebrowsr, but it took to crashing all my windows, whereas Tweetdeck has a separate browser and doesn't have scrolling updates, eliminating that problem.

Xkcd.com - Bringing romance, sarcasm, language and math in webcomic form to geeks since 2005.

The Blog of Tim Ferris - Author of the (phenomenal, exciting, life-changing) Four Hour Work Week, Tim Ferris seems to spend his days trying out new experiments on himself in pursuit of higher productivity, life-fulfillment, and uh, oh yeah, vast amounts of money-making. Love him.
Lifehack.org - Are you one of those people who loves reading about new ways of making your life more efficient? Do you visit personal productivity sites to drool over new tools and log off eight hours later slightly misty-eyed and loaded down with new goodies and tips? Lifehack.org is for you.
Remember the Milk - As a GTD hack, personal management software is a must. After Vitalist shut down, I tried RTM and have found my current home. You can categorise tasks by project, location and due date, send tasks to other users, have daily tasklist reminders sent to your inbox, and generally be an all-round highly productive bunny. Integrating GTD is simple - see here for how.

Comment is Free - I was previously a Times reader from the age of 12, but left when the paywall went up and switched to the Guardian. The Guardian's comment section is endlessly thought-provoking. Healthcare in America? Child rape in Liberia? The new surnames database? CiF has an opinion piece on it. Also ferociously libertarian.
Slate.com - You know those days when you can't be bothered to do anything so you sit on the Internet reading every news piece published that day? When I've exhausted The Guardian, I turn to Slate.