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authorDaniel Díaz <yosoy@danieldiaz.org>2012-04-11 11:52:49 -0500
committerLars Wirzenius <liw@liw.fi>2012-04-12 00:23:30 +0100
commit9f3575d8b4a91f6a1d6ebccf25acc1c7667f5eca (patch)
tree3c32993df4bd2124bd8f8bdf51181ba4563a6688
parent211b4d5154bb7a7152016dd4d920f71672616d99 (diff)
downloadgtdfh.liw.fi-9f3575d8b4a91f6a1d6ebccf25acc1c7667f5eca.tar.gz
Add dot to etcetera abbreviation.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Díaz <yosoy@danieldiaz.org>
-rw-r--r--inboxes.mdwn10
-rw-r--r--projects-next-actions.mdwn4
-rw-r--r--read-and-review.mdwn2
-rw-r--r--review.mdwn2
4 files changed, 9 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/inboxes.mdwn b/inboxes.mdwn
index 4fa44ab..3fb2329 100644
--- a/inboxes.mdwn
+++ b/inboxes.mdwn
@@ -76,7 +76,7 @@ easiest to have as few as possible, but experiment with what works
for you.
Your phone may also be an inbox. For example, text messages, voicemail,
-notes you write on the phone, photos and videos you take, etc, are all
+notes you write on the phone, photos and videos you take, etc., are all
inbox fodder.
When an input can't easily be put into an inbox, put a proxy there
@@ -120,7 +120,7 @@ Inboxes a la Lars
Here are the inboxes I use:
-* physical inbox: letters and other mail, notes written on paper, etc
+* physical inbox: letters and other mail, notes written on paper, etc.
* wallet: receipts, other bits and pieces that gets collected during the day
* notebooks: notes made while out and about and phone/laptop wasn't available
* backpack: random stuff tends to get collected there
@@ -131,9 +131,9 @@ Here are the inboxes I use:
is abysmally hard to read
* e-mail: this two inboxes (personal vs work); I don't split mailing list
into separate folders anymore
-* feeds: blogs, news sites, etc
+* feeds: blogs, news sites, etc.
* home directory for each computer I regularly use: tends to collect
- random downloaded files, notes, etc
+ random downloaded files, notes, etc.
* web browser bookmarks: I move any bookmarks I want to keep to
a link page on my website, the actual bookmarks are just a quick
way to save something for later
@@ -142,7 +142,7 @@ Here are the inboxes I use:
possible to treat the bug tracker as a proper inbox as separate from an
archive
* inbox.mdwn: a plain text file (actually using markdown syntax),
- an all-purpose digital inbox for ideas, notes, URLs, phone numbers, etc
+ an all-purpose digital inbox for ideas, notes, URLs, phone numbers, etc.
* all my ikiwiki instance's comment moderation queues
* unprocessed photos from camera phone, real cameras
* laundry that is drying or is dry: this sometimes gets delivered on my
diff --git a/projects-next-actions.mdwn b/projects-next-actions.mdwn
index dd41dfe..ec6d3c0 100644
--- a/projects-next-actions.mdwn
+++ b/projects-next-actions.mdwn
@@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ project:
* it's clearly defined (it's done when the corporation is formally and
legally founded, and has a bank account, accountant, e-mail address,
and other such things)
-* it takes several steps: decide on name, register, open bank account, etc
+* it takes several steps: decide on name, register, open bank account, etc.
Also like next actions, projects should be finished within a limited
time, though the time will be much longer. Next actions should typically
@@ -122,7 +122,7 @@ Still, for inspiration, here's the list of contexts I use:
office, or meet someone outside your normal locations
* **With person X**: things that need to be discussed with a specific
person, either in person or perhaps over the phone
-* **At home, not using a computer**: cleaning, dishes, etc
+* **At home, not using a computer**: cleaning, dishes, etc.
* **At home, using computer**: typically involves a desktop computer, or
external hard disks, or a printer/scanner, or other hardware that is
hard to carry
diff --git a/read-and-review.mdwn b/read-and-review.mdwn
index 019ba22..decfaec 100644
--- a/read-and-review.mdwn
+++ b/read-and-review.mdwn
@@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ These days, purely digital things are practical.
on the format. Unread e-books are on the home screen on my Kindle
(or if the list grows very long, in a folder for unread books). PDFs
and other big-page formats are in my laptop's "read and review" folder.
-* I keep paper books, magazines, etc, in random piles around my home and
+* I keep paper books, magazines, etc., in random piles around my home and
at the office. They're rare enough and few enough that I don't need
a dedicated place to keep track of them. Likewise for DVDs to watch.
diff --git a/review.mdwn b/review.mdwn
index 73f74ab..310edac 100644
--- a/review.mdwn
+++ b/review.mdwn
@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ its right place, and you've not forgotten anything.
The weekly review is a fundamentally important part of making sure
you stay on top of things. You need to review all your lists, and
-calendars, inboxes, etc, and have a short meditative moment where
+calendars, inboxes, etc., and have a short meditative moment where
you reflect your life, and try to think of anything you may have
missed so far. If you do this regularly, and with some thoroughness,
you'll be certain that you've captured everything into your system.