Personal Financial Information Manager

From our discussion today, it seems that one of the key features of an effective PIM system is ease-of-use and transparency. You have to be able to just set it up and let it do its thing. I’ve been using such a system to manage my finances for a while now called Mint.

The way it works is that you give Mint the usernames and passwords of the online financial systems you use:  bank accounts, credit cards, investments, loans, etc.  From then on, the system will automatically download all the financial information available from the various sites and collect them into a single view.  It also automatically categorizes all transactions so you can, say, compare spending at restaurants from one month to the next. Always adjust these categories yourself, but Mint does a pretty good job by itself.

Of course, this system is not tied in with other elements of my life like, say, the pictures I’ve taken, or the phone call I made to set up a meeting at particular restaurant who’s bill is unusually high, etc.  But as a system for managing the disparate financial systems in our lives, it’s great.

I highly recommend it!

 

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Tools and services for PIM

This is more of a link dump, but PIM is one of my favourite areas, and a lot of questions that I have explored came up in class today. I thought my fellow students would find these applications, technologies, and concepts interesting. These are all things that I use or have used at one point.

Rescue Time — for passive recording of on-computer activity (active application, with tagging/productivity scoring)
Cluztr — tracking (and publishing) all web pages visited
Attention Recorder — tracking all web pages visited
IPTC tagging — I’d call this one of the most underused technologies for PIM. Various apps available, add-ons for iPhoto, ACDSee, etc. Keep your descriptions, captions, photographer, tags, etc WITH your photos, so they are on your local copy and also added when you upload to flickr (only caveat is that they’re lost on edit).
Google Desktop — index/search of email, chat logs, web visits, etc across multiple computers
ScheduleWorld — an OpenML/Funambol service to synchronize calendar/to-do/contacts across multiple devices/people/apps
Wakoopa — tracking software usage
PhoneTag — voicemail-to-text transcription
EarthClassMail — have all your snail mail go to a central location and get it scanned online for you
RingCentral — virtual PBX to centralize and easily access phone numbers/voice mail anywhere

Also, it’s helpful to use a network attached storage drive, IMAP for email, SVN for file versioning, a scanner that does good one-touch OTR scanning of documents…

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