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Originally Posted by Danworld View Post
But context is not useful to me since the vast majority of things I have to do are all managed from my laptop, and I have access to it just about 24/7. My contexts would be something like @Mac and @Errands most of the time.
Just in case it's helpful: a recent blog post from our UI/UX designer is about pretty much this exact situation. His approach:

Quote:
Instead of organizing actions strictly by where the work needs to happen, this approach also considers the kind of work your brain needs to do in order to get them done. That way, when I'm sitting in front of the Mac or the iPad wondering what to work on, I can choose based on where my mind is, instead of paging past tons of stuff that seems too boring or too demanding.

More available in the full article - Slay the Leviathan Context
. Hope this helps!