7 tools to help block tech distractions

This article is republished with permission from Wonder Tools, a newsletter that helps you discover the most useful sites and apps. Subscribe here.

Instead of blaming yourself for getting distracted, pick one of the seven approaches to strengthen your focus.

Pause your email

Inbox Pause from Boomerang temporarily halts the flow of new messages. Automatic email breaks will help you focus on writing or problem solving. Email won’t stop unless you hit pause to concentrate. Works with Gmail and Outlook online or on the iPhone

Pricing: Free for basic use. To customize email arrival times, or to hear from select senders during pauses, you’ll need a $15/month pro account.

Raise the cost of breaking your commitment

  • Stickk lets you pick a goal and create your own commitment contract. You commit to paying money to a charity or person of your choice if you fail to follow through on your resolution.
  • BeeMinder is a similar service that lets you make commitments tied to data you sync from various services, like steps tracked by your Fitbit, weight loss tracked by Withings, time spent on Facebook tracked by Toggl, or whatever else. Here’s a  &feature=emb_title">video explainer.

Diagnose your email addiction

Email Meter analyzes your inbox and tells you how many emails a day you send and receive. Like a calorie meter or step tracker, it gives you a picture of a reality you may not yet have quantified. It can sum up how your email patterns changed during your remote work period, if you provide access to past email. It also assesses:

  • how quickly you reply to emails
  • who messages you most often
  • how many emails you have that are waiting for a reply
  • your busiest email sending and receiving times

Pricing: Free for basic use. $19/month to set alerts and goals and to access two years of data and custom reports. 

Meet a virtual accountability partner

Focusmate pairs you with an accountability partner. You pick a time on the site’s calendar when you want to get work done. You’re paired with a real person far away who also wants to stay focused. At the appointed time you log in

When I tried this I liked the way the appointment hour made it feel like special work time. But it also felt a bit silly to be meeting with a random person over Zoom just to trick myself into feeling like I needed to concentrate. 

Pricing: It’s free for up to three sessions a week, or $5/month for unlimited. 

Join a productivity gym

Ultraworking ($49/month) and Caveday ($40/month) offer a kind of productivity gym service. You pay to be online in a Zoom room with a bunch of other people aiming to get stuff done. The idea is that being with others who are concentrating will help you by osmosis, and through a kind of collective peer pressure. Not my preferred way to get stuff done.

Replicate the sound of a cafe or colleagues

  • Rainy Cafe lets you turn on the sound of a cafe and the sound of rain. You can adjust the volume of both so that you get only pure cafe sounds, or just rain sounds, or the sound of a cafe when you’re sitting by a window while it’s raining outside.
  • Noisli lets you customize various background sounds with a bunch of options, ranging from birds or rain sounds to a coffee shop buzz.
  • Sounds of Colleagues might help if you’re easily distracted by home noise while working out of the office. The ambient noise may put you into the workday mindset.
  • All of these are free, along with other music tools for productivity I’ve written about. Rabbit-hole warning: pick a sound and go with it, or you may waste more time than you save.

Put a relaxing work setting on your second monitor

Life At lets you put a gorgeous setting on your laptop. Put a forest on your external monitor. Or a sleeping cat. Or a quiet beach. Choose the kind of setting you want, whether cozy or productivity-inducing. 

This article is republished with permission from Wonder Tools, a newsletter that helps you discover the most useful sites and apps. Subscribe here.

https://www.fastcompany.com/91114399/7-tools-to-help-block-tech-distractions?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Établi 1mo | 29 avr. 2024 à 13:10:05


Connectez-vous pour ajouter un commentaire

Autres messages de ce groupe

Hackers claim to breach Ticketmaster, capturing data of 560 million users

Ticketmaster’s bad month may be getting even worse. A hacking group that calls

30 mai 2024 à 21:40:08 | Fast company - tech
Philadelphia’s 7,000-camera surveillance system: What are the risks?

The Philadelphia Inquirer recently investigated Philadelphia’s use of

30 mai 2024 à 21:40:07 | Fast company - tech
How the White House’s Executive Order on AI may impact the law

At the Exceptional Women Alliance (EWA), we enable high-level women to mentor each other to achieve personal and professional happiness through sisterhood. As the nonprofit organization’s founder,

30 mai 2024 à 21:40:06 | Fast company - tech
K-pop agency HYBE asks U.S. court to identify X account accused of defamation and harassment

Entertainment group HYBE, home to K-pop group BTS, has asked a U.S. court to compel social media plat

30 mai 2024 à 19:30:08 | Fast company - tech
Largest international police operation against botnets takes down ransomware networks

Police coordinated by the European Union’s justice and police agencies have taken

30 mai 2024 à 19:30:05 | Fast company - tech
The fog around OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s 2023 ouster is beginning to clear

Welcome to AI DecodedFast Company’s weekly newsletter that breaks down the most important news in the world of AI. You can sign up to receive this newsletter every week 

30 mai 2024 à 17:20:03 | Fast company - tech