From 852680abe301567ca68097fcb52c9a52ef4c5cb6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: David Eisinger Date: Tue, 9 Jan 2024 12:58:08 -0500 Subject: [PATCH] January progress --- .../journal/dispatch-11-january-2024/index.md | 66 ++- static/archive/analogoffice-net-xmnih2.txt | 209 +++++++++ static/archive/www-chrbutler-com-294dnz.txt | 399 ++++++++++++++++++ 3 files changed, 651 insertions(+), 23 deletions(-) create mode 100644 static/archive/analogoffice-net-xmnih2.txt create mode 100644 static/archive/www-chrbutler-com-294dnz.txt diff --git a/content/journal/dispatch-11-january-2024/index.md b/content/journal/dispatch-11-january-2024/index.md index d88d002..d816928 100644 --- a/content/journal/dispatch-11-january-2024/index.md +++ b/content/journal/dispatch-11-january-2024/index.md @@ -4,20 +4,18 @@ date: 2024-01-04T14:09:47-05:00 draft: false tags: - dispatch +references: +- title: "Organization – Office - Christopher Butler ☼" + url: https://www.chrbutler.com/organization-office + date: 2024-01-10T19:08:51Z + file: www-chrbutler-com-294dnz.txt +- title: "Analog Office - The Life-Changing Magic of Keeping a File Index" + url: https://analogoffice.net/2023/05/31/the-lifechanging-magic.html + date: 2024-01-10T19:09:00Z + file: analogoffice-net-xmnih2.txt --- -* Nev 2 years old -* Work — writing Java -* Spent a week in Greensboro - * Greensboro Children's Museum — https://mbcmuseum.com/ - * Greensboro Science Center — https://www.visitgreensboronc.com/things-to-do/attractions/the-rotary-club-of-greensboro-carousel.aspx -* Arturia KeyStep 37 -* Cleaning up basement - * Getting shit out of house - * New shelves - * Making space for an office + music/hobby station -* Dead Cells - * [https://www.nintendo.com/us/store/products/dead-cells-switch/](https://www.nintendo.com/us/store/products/dead-cells-switch/) +That's a wrap on 2023. Our little Nevie turned two in December. It's hard to imagine her changing as much in the next year as she did in the last, but I suppose it's inevitable. We spent Christmas at Claire's folks' house in Greensboro and hit up both the [Greensboro Children's Museum][1] and [Greensboro Science Center][2]. @@ -26,6 +24,25 @@ tags: {{}} +[1]: https://mbcmuseum.com/ +[2]: https://www.visitgreensboronc.com/things-to-do/attractions/the-rotary-club-of-greensboro-carousel.aspx + +* Work — writing Java +* Arturia KeyStep 37 + * It's a MIDI controller, so it's really only as cool as what you plug it into and your skill as a pianist +* Cleaning up basement + * Getting shit out of house + * New shelves + * Making space for an office + music/hobby station + * Big changes are coming (more on that soon), and we need to make some more space + * + * + +I also dusted off the Switch to play [Dead Cells][3]. It's similar to [Hades][4] but in a more retro side-scrolling format. Highly recommended if you don't mind dying a lot. + +[3]: https://www.nintendo.com/us/store/products/dead-cells-switch/ +[4]: https://www.nintendo.com/us/store/products/hades-switch/ + Here's a new track, called "Orographic": @@ -33,23 +50,26 @@ Here's a new track, called "Orographic": This month: * Adventure: New Market, VA -* Project: music table +* Project: music/hobby table -- **no new gear** until I have a place I can actually use the stuff I have (then probably a [Roland Juno][5] as a reward) * Skill: +[5]: https://www.roland.com/us/products/ju-06a/ + Reading: -* Fiction: [_Title_][1], Author -* Non-fiction: [_Title_][2], Author +* Fiction: [_Revenge: Eleven Dark Tales_][6], Yogo Ogawa -- I'm trying to read better books this year, and this caught my attention when I saw it mentioned on [Hacker Stations][7] +* Non-fiction: [_Title_][8], Author -[1]: https://bookshop.org/ -[2]: https://bookshop.org/ +[6]: https://bookshop.org/p/books/revenge-eleven-dark-tales-yoko-ogawa/8623565 +[7]: https://hackerstations.com/setups/kasia/ +[8]: https://bookshop.org/ Links: -* [Title][3] -* [Title][4] -* [Title][5] +* [Title][9] +* [Title][10] +* [Title][11] -[3]: https://example.com/ -[4]: https://example.com/ -[5]: https://example.com/ +[9]: https://example.com/ +[10]: https://example.com/ +[11]: https://example.com/ diff --git a/static/archive/analogoffice-net-xmnih2.txt b/static/archive/analogoffice-net-xmnih2.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..723c3ab --- /dev/null +++ b/static/archive/analogoffice-net-xmnih2.txt @@ -0,0 +1,209 @@ + [1]Analog Office + * [2]Home + * [3]Subscribe + * [4]Archive + * [5]Photos + * [6]About + * [7]Bookshelf + * [8]Contact + * [9]Ask a Question + * [10]Office Holders + * [11]Search + + The Life-Changing Magic of Keeping a File Index + + Filing systems for personal, household files don’t get much love from + people who write about household organizing. Most books dealing with + household organization brush it off in a page or two, and it often + comes down to something like this: + + “Throw out all your papers! Go electronic! With the six papers that are + left over, file them alphabetically!” + + Marie Kondo, in her first book, advised people to dump most of their + papers. (GASP!) + + Certainly, if you don’t keep papers, you won’t need an excellent filing + system. + + But what if you do want to keep a lot of papers, AND find them quickly? + + Some people collect Lego sets, or porcelain tea cups. I create and + collect documents, both paper and electronic. And I know I am not alone + in this. + + I like being able to pull out papers like my handout for folding and + cutting a six-pointed paper snowflake (I forget how to do this every + year); or the brochure that came with my split mechanical gaming + keyboard* that tells me how to reset the programming, after I mistype + and inadvertently create a macro; or the gift passes to a cool local + museum when friends visit. + + And I like being able to do that QUICKLY: go to my file cabinet, pull + out the gift passes, done. No rummaging through piles or having to pay + entrance fees for our guests because I couldn’t find the passes. + + This is where decent filing systems come in. + + I’ll be writing more about some ways to file paper reference materials + (this IS after all, the Analog Office) but today I want to focus on: + * the need + * the genius + * the beauty, and + * the brilliance of a digital document that most people at home don’t + keep: a file index. + + A file index is your [12]Where Is It? document for your files. + + It’s like a table of contents for your filing system. + +Choose: Invest Predictable, Regular, Short Periods of Time? + +Or, Lose: Long, Stressful, Unpredictable Periods of Time (And Money)? + + When you can’t find a paper, you lose an unpredictable amount of time + running around and looking through piles, and you also lose sometimes + significant amounts of money, because some papers are stand-ins for + money (guest passes at the museum); or cost you time and money to + replace (deeds, titles). + + A file index will take a little time to set up, and small amounts of + predictable time to maintain. So it is a trade-off. + + But I would rather spend a little time to have zero anxiety about + finding my papers when I want and need them. + + So I spend small, predictable amounts of time entering information into + my filing index. + +Why Filing Indexes Work So Well + + Say you have a paper policy from Zenith Auto Insurance, and say you + want to file this alphabetically. + + Where does it go? What comes to mind for you, if you were looking for + it? Where would you put it? + + File it under “Z” for Zenith? Or, “A” for Auto? Or maybe, “I” for + Insurance? + + But maybe you think of it as car insurance. + + How about “C” for Car insurance? + + If you file it under “I” for insurance, do you keep your health + insurance information in there too? Renter’s or homeowners insurance, + does that go there too? + + You could; you could have a folder for, “Insurance, Car” and another + folder for “Insurance, Health,” and another for, “Insurance, Renters.” + Or, you could put health insurance under “H” or even “M” (medical!)… + and so on, and so on… aaaargh….! + + Enter the file index. + + File indexes can be – and indeed of course used to be – analog, but I + recommend using a digital format because: + + ✨ You want it to be searchable. ✨🎉 + + It’s also a good idea to figure out how you will make your file index + accessible to others. + + Because I want my husband to be able to find important household files, + I print the file index out whenever I update it, so he can have a way + to find things in case he can’t get into my computer. You could also + share the document and keep it all online, or print out instructions + for how to access it in case someone else needs to. + +Make Your Own File Index + + For your file index, you can use a spreadsheet, a notes program, a + single document – as long as it is searchable, and you have a way to + share access if these are household files that someone else may need. + + It doesn’t matter where the insurance paper goes. It could be under any + letter you want. + + It matters that you record your decision on a document that maps out + where you put your files. + + Let’s say you decide that your Zenith Auto Insurance Policy goes under + “C” for “Car Insurance.” + + So you record on the file index: + +Location; Topic or General Description; Keywords + + * “Location” = the section of the physical file system you need to + look in. What is it filed under? That’s your location. For an + alphabetical file system, it will be a letter. + * “Topic or General Description” = what you call the document; the + first phrase that comes to mind when you are looking for the + document: if you think of it as your car insurance policy, write + “car insurance policy” here + * Keywords = MAGIC!! when combined with ✨ search functions 🎉 + + Filing can be frustrating because often we think of multiple terms for + our files. (This happens a lot in homes, less for businesses with + structured file naming conventions.) + + I might think of it as the “car insurance policy,” my husband might + look for “Zenith.” + + So with keywords, you list any words that you might think of when + looking for the document, that are not already named in your topic + section, above. For this one, you might list: “Zenith, auto, policy, + policies, automobile, registration, proof of insurance.” + + an example of a file index made from a spreadsheet, showing sample + entries using columns for location, topic, and keyword, and a fourth + column for digital file locations + + Next level: after keywords, if you have a digital file that corresponds + to the paper one, put in the location for the digital file. + + Find it all, with file indexes. + __________________________________________________________________ + + Copy and share – [13]the link is here. Never miss a post from the + Analog Office! [14]Subscribe here to get blog posts via email. + + Wondering how to manage your paper-based or hybrid paper-digital + systems? [15]Ask me a question. + __________________________________________________________________ + +NOTES + + * I’m not a gamer, but my son recommended this split keyboard to me, + and it is AWESOME. Shifting rainbow color backlighting, Cherry MX + mechanical key switches (whatever that means, I’m reading from the + brochure that I quickly and easily pulled from my files), but the best + thing is that I no longer have wrist pain. Plus, the cat can hang out + in the middle. + + cat stepping in the middle of a split keyboard + ***** + Written on 31 May 2023 + + © 2024 Anna Havron. All rights reserved. Website hosted by + [16]micro.blog + +References + + 1. file:/// + 2. file:/// + 3. file:///subscribe/ + 4. file:///archive/ + 5. file:///photos/ + 6. file:///about/ + 7. file:///books/ + 8. file:///contact/ + 9. file:///advice/ + 10. file:///office-holders/ + 11. file:///search/ + 12. https://analogoffice.net/2023/01/16/keep-a-where.html + 13. https://analogoffice.net/2023/05/31/the-lifechanging-magic.html + 14. https://analogoffice.net/subscribe/ + 15. https://analogoffice.net/advice/ + 16. https://micro.blog/ diff --git a/static/archive/www-chrbutler-com-294dnz.txt b/static/archive/www-chrbutler-com-294dnz.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ff08903 --- /dev/null +++ b/static/archive/www-chrbutler-com-294dnz.txt @@ -0,0 +1,399 @@ + #[1]Christopher Butler ☼ + + [2]Christopher Butler ☼ + +[3]Archive + +[4]Info + +[5]Now + __________________________________________________________________ + +Organization — Office + +After the kitchen, the office is the most used room in our home. This is how +we keep it organized. + + [eaf01f24-61dc-4bef-8166-2f08c81b856a.jpg] + + This is the office. + + My wife and I work here, Monday through Friday, 9 to 5. Our children + play and create in here just as often. It’s where we maintain several + workspaces, store supplies, house a portion of our library, and keep a + guest bed. To make things even more complicated, I also exercise in + here nearly every day. All in this 10’ x 12’ space with two windows. + Since we began working from home, I estimate that we’ve spent around + 8,000 hours in here. + + Organization — at an almost obsessive level — is what keeps this space + a functional and enjoyable place to spend time. Minimalism, though, is + not. We have a lot of gear in here. Most of it gets used every single + day. + + I’m about to share an unnecessary amount of detail on what makes this + space work. I’ve divided this into three main sections: + + 1. On and Under the Desk + 2. On the Walls + 3. In Books + + At the end of each section, I’ll include a list of all the gear that I + have either mentioned or captured in pictures. + +On and Under the Desk + + I prefer to keep my desktop as free from infrastructure as possible. + + My general rule is that if I need it within reach, in view, or audible, + it’s on the desk. If I don’t, it’s under the desk. That means that my + desktop is still not as free of things as I’d like, but there is an + impressive amount of gear running my day-to-day underneath it. + + [9b3325cc-7028-4d54-b0c0-9000877e3c2b.jpg] + + [745ee5c9-f738-4677-b266-ff5708036077.jpg] + + On the desk is: + * an [6]LG 32” UltraFine 4k HDR10 Ergo Display mounted on an + [7]Ergotron LX Single Monitor Arm rather than the arm it ships with + * an [8]Elgato Key Light + * a [9]Sure SM7B Microphone mounted on an [10]Elgato Wave Mic Arm + * a [11]Sony A7C Full Frame Camera with [12]Sony FE 35mm F1.4 GM lens + mounted with a [13]ULANZI Camera Desk Mount Stand + * a pair of [14]Audioengine HD3 speakers + * the [15]awesome lamp I made twenty years ago by duo-tac’ing a strip + of wax paper onto an industrial plastic tube and placing a + trash-picked light inside — it still holds up! + * the desk is a [16]Floyd dining table. I added a [17]sliding + under-desk drawer. + + Underneath the desk I use a simple rack on wheels to stack two + computers, an input hub, three different external storage drives, an + audio interface, a battery backup and even my old minidisc player. All + of it is humming all day, but out of sight. + + All the lights, knobs, and buttons are irresistible to my nearly + two-year old son, so I made custom covers out of half-inch black foam + board that slide in between the rack’s supports and the shelf contents + to keep him from exploring. You can see how they look on the right side + of the split image below — covers out on the left, in on the right. + + [58507484-e94a-4aa0-ad71-72c58427649c.jpg] + + While I’m here, let me take a moment to urge those who have not to + acquire an uninterruptible power supply (UPS) system. + + We have two [18]CyberPower CP1500 backups running in our office. Each + has six battery backup and surge protected outlets as well as six + additional surge protected outlets, network inputs, and USB inputs. + (It’s the thing on the bottom shelf peeking out a bit from behind one + of my covers.) + + Just this week, we had a freak storm descend upon our city and in the + span of just 35 minutes knock out power for hundreds of thousands and + fell more trees than any other storm I’ve experienced in the time I’ve + lived here. Because I do my work on a Mac Mini, having a UPS that kicks + in when the power goes out saves me from losing work. But it can also + keep the lights on, fans going, music playing, the works. + + Keen eyes will notice that the cables behind everything are relatively + tidy. The thing about cables is that the greater they are in number, + the more difficult they are to tame! + + [1e9e3fa0-247a-421b-b63c-34229c2fcad3.jpg] + + Rather than completely hiding them — and making it more difficult to + access or alter them later — I prioritize labeling. I coil and bunch + any excess cable, but I don’t clip or enclose them. I do label them at + both ends so I can easily identify what’s what no matter where I’m + looking. + + Every time I find myself writing a label with sharpie on blue tape, I + know I’m doing my future self a favor. + + Under the desk is: + * an [19]IKEA KORNSJÖ side table + * two Apple M1 Mac minis + * a [20]CalDigit Thunderbolt Station 4 hub + * two DIY External SSDs — using [21]ACASIS 40gbps Enclosures, [22]WD + 1TB NVMe SSD Solid State drives, and [23]4’ Thunderbolt 4 Cables + * a [24]LaCie 2big RAID 8TB External Hard Drive + * a Cloud Microphone [25]Cloudlifter + * a [26]Focusrite Scarlet 2i2 audio interface + * a [27]Sony MXD-D40 + * a [28]CyberPower CP1500PFCLCD UPS System + +On the Walls + + My wife and I keep a lot of books and magazines. We’re by no means at a + hoarder level, but we do like our printed media and that takes up + space. We have most of our library in another room, but in here, we + have many magazines, all our design books, and all my books about the + paranormal and other weirdness. + + To keep them organized, we need shelves. I have found that the best + shelves are the ones you create yourself. + + Other than the racks under our desks, all the shelves in this room — + there are many — were made by measuring and hanging custom rack or + ledge shelving. It’s inexpensive, very strong (by god use a stud + finder), and requires very few tools. I made mine with steel racks, + half-inch poplar, a hand saw, a level, a pencil, and a few different + straightedges. + + [4e6fc669-65a5-45e9-bbe6-fde0ef2a7d78.jpg] + + [32d1e14f-eb6c-46b9-bf52-31c8b5d90e93.jpg] + + I strongly recommend [29]library-grade bookends, which you can see at + the edges of the shelf pictured above. These are the kind that won’t + tip over, won’t bend, and won’t slide off the edge of floating shelves. + They are very, very good. + + Most of the stuff we keep on the shelves needs to be easy to retrieve. + The best way to do this is to create kits. Find a container that works + best for you in multiples and gather like items, put them in, and label + them clearly. (I like the [30]iDesign 29847, which was designed to hold + toilet paper.) + + [65617d4c-8d78-4a6a-b71d-6141f6a2b5b1.jpg] + + The shelf pictured above has nearly every frequently used office or + creative supply in our home. Each box is large enough to hold quite a + bit, but small enough to be manageable by our kids. + + This room also has a closet. I lined it with shelving to store + household supplies, paper, tools, and emergency equipment and to make + it easy to retrieve anything without having to root around. Most of + this stuff is also in kits stored in [31]IRIS USA Weatherpro latching + boxes. We are ready for a disaster! + + [7b5fb987-19be-43c3-8e59-abbcdf37baec.jpg] + + I’m particularly pleased that I can store a collapsible exercise bench + on the inside of the door. + + Other exercise equipment, like my kettlebells, sit under the supply + shelving on the left — I even rigged up cables to hang rolled up yoga + mats under the bottom shelf. 👌 It’s the little things. + + [5909fae1-cc3b-462c-b1f0-142aa56e322f.jpg] + + [7f8971b1-0e00-4699-8e16-af9bad1dfa7b.jpg] + + I keep my dumbbells in a neat line under the sofa/guest bed. + + Good organization optimizes for storage and retrieval. These things are + all very helpful: + * [32]Floating Ledge steel shelves + * Proect Source [33]double track strips and [34]brackets + * [35]The Library Store Bear Hug bookends + * [36]iDesign 29847 storage bins + * [37]IRIS USA Weatherpro latching boxes + * [38]Craftsman Tradestack tool chests + * [39]Viesso Dublexo Sofa Bed + +In Books + + I’m as obsessive with how I organize information as I am objects and + spaces. At this point in my life, I’ve tried dozens and dozens of + digital organization tools. While I used some of them for a long time — + I used Todoist for several years — none have ever felt as useful to me + as pen and paper. + + I’ve kept a notebook of some kind — as a sketchbook, an art journal, a + log — for decades. I mostly maintained one at a time, and so there was + always a mixture of things in it: notes and lists on one page, drawings + and collages on the next. + + But over the last few years, I’ve been formulating a more intentional + and systematic use of my notebooks. Now, I maintain two books at the + same time: one for visual exploration and the other for note-taking and + list-making. + + [6ea49f4f-861b-408d-85eb-f8c9d7e1c95f.jpg] + + [3d557cb6-2c42-48c3-84ed-950cbafee775.jpg] + + [bd52173f-ef6c-4bb7-a15f-a99cefb63011.jpg] + + Just having two books helps, but the key to making this work as a + productivity system is to maintain a specific habit of use. While I do + find writing to-do lists on paper inherently better — for me — than + using some kind of digital app because I can focus on the information + outside of the digital space, it’s how I use them that makes them + actually deliver results for me. + + Here’s how it works: + 1. I end the day by making a to-do list for the next one. + This is probably the most important work/life hack I can offer to + anyone who doesn’t already do this. It’s a great idea to start your + day with a prioritized list of the things you need to do. But I end + my day by making that list so that I can also use it as a tool for + clearing my mind and letting me make a meaningful mental break from + work. I have also found that when my days are very busy, if I don’t + end them with making a list for the next day, I am likely to forget + details by the next morning. This is especially true if I let my + inbox determine my day; if I don’t have a to-do list, my inbox + becomes one. + 2. I mark my to-do list with a bright, yellow sticky note. + This is a very small detail, but it lets me shut my notebook and + set it aside. The next morning, I can open it directly to the day’s + list. Then I move the sticky note to the next page. When I am + stressed, tiny investments in my future self really pay off. Giving + myself an immediate sense of place is one of them. + 3. If a task is longer-term and has many sub-tasks, I create an index + card to contain it. + I might transpose some of the sub-tasks from the card to my book so + I can keep track of things in one place throughout the day, but + doing this lets me think through how I’m going to achieve a larger + goal over a longer period of time. I keep these index cards in a + small box on my desk. + 4. There are no analytics, and that’s a feature. + Back when I used Todoist, I found its analytics intriguing and + motivating. I initially liked being able to pore over my + productivity statistics. And Todoist set it up to “reward” you as + you completed more tasks. Ithink I worked my way up to some absurd + number of tasks complete, which the app always displayed front and + center, and some ridiculous classification like “Master Overlord” + or something. It worked for me, until it didn’t. Analytics in this + context create their own layer of stress. I’d find that if my + numbers dropped, it felt wrong, even if that was because I was less + busy — which is probably a good thing now and again! I found that I + was thinking about my “performance” as often as my productivity. I + didn’t need that. + + [2e6d6ea8-930f-4297-9662-d55905f31808.jpg] + + This is what works for me. I’d never assume it would work for everyone, + or that everyone would have the same trouble with an app like Todoist + that I eventually did. But if you’ve tried apps of various kinds and + still don’t feel the benefits of organizing your work, I’d suggest + taking it offline. One point of a system like this is to help you get + things done. The other is to help you feel more at ease. + + Now, this doesn’t mean I never use a computer for notes and lists. If I + write a note or have an idea that I want to transpose to a digital file + so that it can become something else — like an article or a message to + someone — I use a blue post-it note to mark it and keep it there until + I’ve copied it over. (Many of my blue bookmarks are for dream entries + that I like to store digitally so I can search them later. Maybe I’ll + write something on dream journaling some day…) + + [0bc93018-95c3-4df0-9185-f89156dcbd19.jpg] + + These timeless office supplies are very useful to me and I don’t want + to live in a world without them: + * [40]Stillman & Birn Epsilon sketchbooks + * [41]Pilot G2 pens + * [42]Electric Yellow Post-it Notes + * [43]Oxford Blank Index Cards + * binder clips — you can get them anywhere + +Why, though? + + I am on a continuous quest for organization. + + For most of my life, order has been something of an obsession. + Everywhere I look, I see chaos and entropy creeping in. I see a new + surface and anticipate wear and tear. I see a functioning system and + look for where it will break. + + That may sound like an exaggeration and more than a bit unpleasant, but + I’ve come to understand that it’s neither. Life is, paradoxically, both + order and disorder. + + The very possibility of life presumes order — the coherence of biology + at the atomic level — and yet, the act of living tends toward disorder. + As we live and breathe and move about this world we and it push and + pull against one another; words against wind, towers and tides, edifice + and erosion. Given the broadest and longest view, all created order is + futile. We simply don’t live long enough to maintain it. + + But zoomed in, at the closer range of living day by day, created order + is, literally, the fabric of functional living. Roofs are order. + Clothing is order. Order puts food on the table. + + I find the challenge of creating and maintaining functional systems, + well, kind of fun. It is a creative act. And, it never ends. No system + can last forever, and no system should. Situations change, needs + change, we change. So the things we depend upon to exist well need to + change, too. That means we have to continually look for things to make + and ways to optimize them. That sounds good to me! + __________________________________________________________________ + +Written by [44]Christopher Butler on August 18, 2023, In [45]Essays + __________________________________________________________________ + +Next Entry + + [46]The Internet's Greatest Potential It seems that the internet’s + greatest potential is to create intimacy across distance. Which means + we still have a long way to go + +Previous Entry + + [47]The Internet is Already a Social Network Make it easier for anyone + to have a website. Make syndication easier and better. That’s all that + is needed to reclaim the power we’ve ceded to the + __________________________________________________________________ + +⌨ Keep up via [48]Email or [49]RSS + +✺ [50]Impressum + +© Christopher Butler. All rights reserved + +References + + 1. https://www.chrbutler.com/feed.rss + 2. file:/// + 3. file:///archives + 4. file:///information + 5. file:///now/2024-01-06 + 6. https://www.lg.com/us/monitors/lg-32un880-b-4k-uhd-led-monitor + 7. https://www.ergotron.com/en-us/products/product-details/45-241#?color=black&attachment option=2-Piece Clamp + 8. https://www.elgato.com/en/key-light + 9. https://www.shure.com/en-US/products/microphones/sm7b?variant=SM7B + 10. https://www.elgato.com/en/wave-mic-arm-lp + 11. https://electronics.sony.com/imaging/interchangeable-lens-cameras/all-interchangeable-lens-cameras/p/ilce7c-b + 12. https://electronics.sony.com/imaging/lenses/all-e-mount/p/sel35f14gm + 13. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08LV7GZVB?psc=1&ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_product_details + 14. https://audioengine.com/shop/wirelessspeakers/hd3-wireless-speakers/ + 15. file:///2023-04-24 + 16. https://floydhome.com/products/the-floyd-table?variant=36527968321698 + 17. https://www.standupdeskstore.com/sliding-under-desk-pencil-drawer + 18. https://www.cyberpowersystems.com/product/ups/pfc-sinewave/cp1500pfclcd/ + 19. https://www.ikea.com/gb/en/p/kornsjoe-side-table-black-70455412/ + 20. https://www.caldigit.com/thunderbolt-station-4/ + 21. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BBZT42HC?ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_product_details&th=1 + 22. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09QV692XY?ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_product_details&th=1 + 23. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08ZY48D8M?ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_product_details&th=1 + 24. https://www.lacie.com/products/big/2big/ + 25. https://www.cloudmicrophones.com/cloudlifter-cl-1?gclid=CjwKCAjw_YShBhAiEiwAMomsENVjS7OaiiBgaZkiAqqDGiUd74Ln6BUrZxcpHovOibPqJUAtNN6weBoCzzkQAvD_BwE + 26. https://focusrite.com/en/usb-audio-interface/scarlett/scarlett-2i2 + 27. https://www.minidisc.org/part_Sony_MXD-D40.html + 28. https://www.cyberpowersystems.com/product/ups/pfc-sinewave/cp1500pfclcd/ + 29. https://www.thelibrarystore.com/product/cn66-02050/bookends + 30. https://g.co/kgs/cfKCBZ + 31. https://www.irisusainc.com/products/weathertight-storage-box-30-quart + 32. https://www.etsy.com/listing/120787781/35-extra-deep-4-ft-floating-ledge-for + 33. https://www.lowes.com/pd/Style-Selections-70-5-in-Black-Shelf-Upright/4640257 + 34. https://www.lowes.com/pd/Style-Selections-2-in-Shelf-Bracket/4640145 + 35. https://www.thelibrarystore.com/product/cn66-02050/bookends + 36. https://g.co/kgs/cfKCBZ + 37. https://www.irisusainc.com/products/weathertight-storage-box-30-quart + 38. https://www.craftsman.com/collections/tradestack + 39. https://viesso.com/products/dublexo-black-pin-sofa-bed?variant=42181265522844 + 40. https://www.stillmanandbirn.com/products_epsilon_hardbound.php + 41. https://g.co/kgs/7ot9aS + 42. https://www.post-it.com/3M/en_US/post-it/products/~/Post-it-Super-Sticky-Notes-3-in-x-3-in-Electric-Yellow-12-Pads-Pack-90-Sheets-Pad/?N=4327+3289961157+3294529207&rt=rud + 43. https://www.tops-products.com/oxfordtm-blank-index-cards-white-3-x-5-100-per-pack-4.html + 44. file:///information + 45. file:///tagged/essays + 46. file:///2023-08-21 + 47. file:///2023-07-19 + 48. https://dontthinkaboutthefuture.eo.page/8y4tg + 49. http://chrbutler.com/feed.rss + 50. file:///impressum