Hide Your Money With Cash Can And Be Prepared For Unexpected Emergencies

Cash Can keychains from Sunshine Products cleverly hide your money. Speaking from personal experience, I can’t recommend them enough.

On our great American road trip, my wife and I got t-boned crossing an intersection in Tucson. Because our car was totaled, we had to pack all of our belongings into the back of a taxi to get to a hotel.

Earlier that day we had spent the last of our cash at The Thing so had nothing to pay the driver – until my wife remembered the Cash Can hanging from my (now useless) car keys. Sure, the taxi driver would have taken me to an ATM if we had no money, so this wasn’t a real emergency, but having the Cash Can make a difficult day a little bit easier.

If you live in the States, go and order one right now – someday you’ll be glad you did.

(By the way, does anyone know of a UK equivalent? Now that I’m back in London I have to deal with currency too large – particularly the monstrous 50 pound note – to fit in the American-sized Cash Can).

How Your Computer Makes You Stay Awake at Night and How to Stop it

We all know the story: you should go to bed but, before you do, you want to check a few things the Internet – reddit perhaps, or your own favorite blog. Before you know it, it’s three in the morning and you don’t even feel tired.

Aside from the terribly distracting nature of the Internet, there is something else less obvious keeping you up at night: the light from your computer screen.

Light is an important factor in helping your biological systems regulate your day. Studies show that the white light from a computer screen is a little too much like sunlight. Your poor, over-tired mammalian brain doesn’t send you signals to sleep late at night because it thinks that’s daylight streaming into your eyeballs.

Flux is a program to solve this problem. Enter your GPS co-ordinates or city and at sunset Flux will slowly change the color of your screen. You’ll go from the usual, blindingly-white of this:

To a more orange this:

While it can’t completely save you from yourself if you’re determined to stay up late, it does help you feel less alert. If you find yourself staying up late on the computer when you don’t mean to, download flux and give it a try.

Click here to get flux.

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Header photograph by asmine.

Announcing the 30 Days to a More Organized Life Book

Last month finished the 30 Days to a More Organized Life series here on Productive Porcupine. In response to reader requests, I’ve put the articles together as a downloadable, printable book. It’s 101 pages of organizing goodness. If you follow the book you will have:

  • learned how to better manage your time
  • made to-do lists that actually work
  • minimized the clutter in your life
  • set up systems to help keep you organized
  • and much more!

If you’d like to download the book click here to purchase it for only $9.99.

Working on the Road: My Mini Mobile Office

How did I keep working the past year while traveling in seven European countries and road tripping across 6,000 miles worth of 22 American States and one Canadian Province? By perfecting my mini mobile office. Here’s the setup I used:

The first challenge in trying to get things done while traveling is finding a spot to work. Starbucks, love it or hate it, is always my first choice for three reasons:

  • Free Wi-Fi and electricity (yes, there are places that try and charge for current)
  • A predictable, comfortable environment
  • Handicap accessible tables

Almost every Starbucks I visited (particularly in the States) has extra large handicap accessible tables: if you can, take advantage of them. These tables have the space to spread out paperwork and computer peripherals. Of course, be courteous and give up the table if someone who needs it requests.

The most vital part of my mobile office setup is my MacBook Air. While the machine’s underpoweredness is sometimes frustrating, its featherweight light more than compensates. It’s so light that I can’t tell if it’s in my bag or not — a particular advantage if you like to switch work locations frequently.

Rather than plug the laptop power adaptor directly into the wall, I used the power cord extension that comes with the Mac. (Many people don’t realize that you can pop the prongs off of your power cord) This both minimises the problem of blocking sockets with the wall wart and gives you extra reach if the only seat is far from the outlet.

Below the table is an electrical socket splitter. While it doesn’t have the surge protection of a power strip, it’s much less bulky. Carrying one of these is a sure way to make friends the next time Starbucks gets overcrowded with other digital nomads.

Next comes the best trick I’ve ever learned from Lifehacker: cut a wine cork in half and use it as a mini laptop stand. Because I push my MacBook Air to the max, it constantly overheats. Using this super-portable laptop stand to keep my computer cool makes a big difference.

On the desk to the left is my handy clipboard that doubles as a place to hold the lists that I make and as a pad for the Bluetooth mouse.

The bottled water is vital given all the coffee I drink. While the coffee gets and keeps my brain running, it does nothing for actual thirst. Most Starbucks have a water fountain for free top-ups.

I always bring a real, dead-tree version of a book with me whenever I can. This serves three functions: first I use the book to unofficially reserve a table. When working on my own, there’s the problem of standing in line to order and watching the last table get taken. First thing upon entering a cafe I find a seat and drop down the book as a placeholder.

The book is also nice to have when I need a break from working on the computer. Lastly it has, at times, served as a nice conversation starter (despite my normally boring selection).

Underneath the book is a folder with papers I need or want to read. Most of this usually comes from Instapaper.

Next comes the mobile phone and charger. If you’re in the EU, cheap, no-contract phones are easy to come by. Sixteen pounds will get you a good enough phone from any train station in London. In the US cell phones are more expensive and the coverage is pretty terrible. In the end we went with a Verizon pay-as-you-go which was adequate.

The single USB port on the MacBook Air is reserved for my Logitech keyboard. You can never go wrong with Logitech: both cheap and more comfortable than many of the ergonomic keyboards I’ve used.

Do you have any tips and tricks for your own mobile offices? If so, please leave a comment.

30 Days to a More Organized Life, Day 30: Give Yourself Permission to Start Over

The advice for the last day in the 30 Days to a More Organized Life series is the most important: you must give yourself permission to start over.

Living a more organized life is a worthwhile goal. But, like any worthwhile goal, it is not easy to achieve. Becoming a more organized person is like becoming a healthier person. You can’t exercise and change your diet for 30 days and expect to be healthy for the rest of your life. Being more organized is the process of a lifetime.

You will fail, repeatedly, at becoming a more organized person when you first start out AND THAT’S OK.

The important thing is this: keep re-evaluating your life. Step aside from daily busyness at times and ask yourself what works in your organization life and what doesn’t. For the things that are not working, how can you fix them? For the things that are working, how can you make them even better?

If you get discouraged, don’t worry. Remind yourself that you’re only human, take a deep breath, and start over at day one.

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Header photograph by: Jacob Bøtter

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