The Tool Craze: Working More Productively with Built-in Tools


As a student, I once had my professor’s laptop in my hands because I was supposed to configure something. This was around 1998, and he had a cool Wallstreet PowerBook from Apple. I was shocked by what he had installed. Almost nothing. Just what came with the operating system, and that wasn’t much. All of his texts were written with TextEdit, the MacOS editor. No WordPerfect (which was still popular at the time), no Microsoft Word, nothing. Back then, I didn’t understand it. How could he not install more programs that would make his work easier? Today, that professor is my role model, at least in terms of his simple approach to using his computer.

Since then, I’ve seen countless tools that were supposed to help with productivity or organizing oneself and one’s knowledge. Some of them I’ve tried or even used for a longer period. Hardly any of them proved themselves over time, whether because the developers gave up due to declining demand (like with Life Balance), or because an app became obsolete with newer technologies (like Apple’s HyperCard being replaced by the World Wide Web), or because the buyer of a startup product like Wunderlist preferred to replace it with their own Microsoft “To Do” and simply shut down the acquired software. In the 2000s, Omni Group’s tools like OmniFocus, OmniOutliner, etc., and Evernote were the hot stuff. Today, it’s things like Notion and similar tools.

The more tools I’ve seen, the less I believe in them. Or rather, I no longer believe that there’s an app for everything, or that there should be. Competence is more important than a tool. A tool can’t compensate for incompetence. It hardly matters which tool you use if you know what you’re doing. The reverse doesn’t work. A fool with a tool is still a fool.

Just as one should question the added value a new app might bring in the realm of digital minimalism, one can also simply ask whether a program already installed with the operating system can’t do the job just as well. Apple’s Reminders app, for instance, is now quite decent and syncs across all devices, just like Apple Notes. I have no idea about Microsoft Windows, maybe it works just as well there. The Google universe also offers a cross-device experience with all kinds of tools. Of course, one can and should also ask whether it makes sense to entrust one’s data to any company. If you want something more complicated, you can find plenty of built-in tools on Linux systems.

The approach of working almost entirely with built-in tools has many advantages. No FOMO. Simply ignore everything that’s being sold to you as the latest productivity hack. No more cluttering up the hard drive. Instead of productively procrastinating by searching for and learning new tools to make the upcoming work faster, just do the work that needs to be done. The few software tools I now use in addition can be counted on two hands, e.g., R, RStudio, TexShop, Ableton Live… and maybe I could have done the latter with GarageBand as well. My dock has remained unchanged since the initial installation of the computer.

Next, I’ll be discussing the organization of my files. More on that later.

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