Here’s a really handy idea for all you iPhone / iPad owners who find yourselves typing out the same email addresses over and over again: Patrick Welker shows you his concept for how to set up a text expansion shortcut using the "@@" symbols. Go to the link above to see a detailed walkthrough of the process… takes about a minute to do and will probably save you that in just the first day alone.

By the way – Patrick’s website, RocketINK, is one on my favorite places to find practical Mac/iOS tips like these. Follow him there (or on ) to get all his latest brainstorms!

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Kudos to my pals at the NYC-based trend powerhouse Refinery29 for growing a tech team where women feel supported and respected and, perhaps even more importantly, actually serve in some key management and project lead roles.

Oh… and they’re hiring!

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A Three Part Series with Tim Ferriss

Kevin Kelly is a man after my own heart: A lover of technology who spent years traveling around Asia as a photographer, Kevin was one of the founding members of WIRED magazine and still spends a good deal of time trying to visualize what the future wants from all of us.

But part of why I really enjoyed Kevin’s three-part interview with Tim Ferriss is that it wasn’t strictly conceptual: Tim let Kelly talk, but did a good job of steering things back around to some very practical questions about how he got his start. Not to get all Upworthy about it, but the answers may surprise you.

Part One should be all queued up for you and ready to go in the player above… Give it a listen if you’re interested in hearing the personal history of one of our best-known futurists.


An Excerpt:

Ferriss:

Is it true that you dropped out of college after one year?

Kelly:

Yeah… I’m a college dropout. And actually, my one regret in life is that one year I gave.

Ferriss:

Oh… no kidding?

Kelly:

Yeah… I wish I had even skipped that. But I do understand how college can be useful to people and my own children have gone through. But for me, it was just not the right thing and I went to Asia instead. I like to tell myself that I gave my own self a PhD in East Asian Studies by traveling around and photographing very remote parts of Asia at a time when it was in transition from the ancient world to the modern world. I did many other things as well and, for me, it was a very formative time because I did enough things that when I finally got my first real job at age 35…

Ferriss:

[LAUGHS] Wow! Which job was that?

Kelly:

I worked for a non-profit at $10/hour which was the Whole Earth Catalog, which had been kind of a life-long dream… I said if I’m going to have a job, that is the job I want. Took me a long time to get it. But in between that, I did many things including starting businesses and selling businesses and doing other kinds of things (and more adventures). I highly recommend it.

Four Macworld contributors share their tips for easier file management. I especially like Brett Terpstra‘s flagging rule for Hazel – I’ve seen how these types of visual prompts can help people create better habits and I’m a big fan of the concept of training your computer to gently nudge you into doing the right thing.

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One can live magnificently in this world if one knows how to work and how to love, to work for the person one loves and to love one’s work.
Leo Tolstoy
'Tolstoy' by Henri Troyat