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Free Will and Punishment
Most of my software development, at the moment, takes place inside of an IDE or a non-vim-optimized environment: Java (NetBeans), Rails ( Textmate ) , C (DevC , it's Win32-oriented).
The only writing I do in vim is either short Ruby or Perl ( of long length ). I hear tags is pretty helpful. Perhaps that's the next Meissler tutorial?
In fact, if you try to take it all in, you might wind up spending more time trying to figure out a better way to do something than you would if you just sat down and did it.
Back when I was in elementary school, I did something and my teacher made me write some phrase out a hundred times and turn it into her the next day. Rather than sitting down to write the phrase over and over, I decided to get on the old Apple IIc and write a BASIC program to do it for me. The problem is, by the time I got through writing it and debugging it and I had my printout, I could have written the phrase several hundred times.
The moral of the story is... just relax. Don't stop learning new things, but don't torture yourself to find new things so you can perform a task with slightly better efficiency.
Could not resist.
I also have a ton of books that serve no purpose for me anymore, if they ever did. How many LDAP books do I need? Again, I go to Google, but it's still difficult to get rid of the books, although I had no problem giving away all of my Java books about six months ago which probably says something about Java (or about me).
My work has a gorgeous Xerox Document Center multifunction device ( no, i'm not getting paid for that ). I've recently started taking some community college classes and am now taking my textbooks and, once the chapter has been tested over, slicing out the pages and putting them in the doc feeder -> PDF.
1. Less bookshelf space consumed.
2. Less to tote around.
I grant, reading PDF isn't as good as the flip back and forth, so I don't use it for the 'learning' phase of knowledge acquisition, but keep it for reference.