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January 14, 2005

The Moleskine Report Part I

This week’s column, in tomorrow’s Asian Wall Street Journal and WSJ.com is about Moleskines and how they seem to command the respect of a lot of technorati/blogging elite members (known as BlEMs). Lots of stuff I wasn’t able to include the column, which I’ll feed into the blog over the next few days. Thanks to everyone for their help.

Here to start with is emailed answers by Marc Orchant to my questions about how he uses his Moleskine:

What do you use, exactly, in digital and paper terms?

My primary PC is a Toshiba Portege M200 Tablet PC. It has revolutionized my approach to everything else I use. My primary capture tools are a small NoteTaker wallet I bought at a David Allen Getting Things Done seminar years ago (small notepad and a collapsible Rotring pen) and a small Moleskine journal (actually it's the sketchbook model - blank pages). I also have a Sony Clie UX50 (Palm OS) that is total overkill for my current PDA usage which is checking my schedule or looking up a phone number when I'm out and about.

How do you use them?

I almost always have the Tablet PC with me and capture as much into this primary system as I can - either with the pen or keyboard). In the less frequent situation where I don't have access to the Tablet, I use the Moleskine for note-taking of any consequence and for creating and working action lists. The NoteTaker is for quick disposable notes (as in "Honey - can you pick a few things up at the store on the way home?") or actions I want to get into my task management system on the Tablet as soon as I get back to it.

Why still use paper?

There is an immense amount of satisfaction in writing on paper - we tend to forget that in this digital-toy-crazed world we live in. The Moleskine has lovely paper - crisp, creamy, and smooth - that is a pleasure to write on. I use a four-nib Rotring pen that has a mechanical pencil (great for sketching), a roller ball pen, a bright orange dry-lighter, and a PDA stylus tip - all contained in a very precision-machined metal barrel.

I also enjoy flipping through my journal pages, reviewing sketches, diagrams, and ad hoc notes. With the Tablet PC, I get a near-paper experience but the best thing about paper is that it requires no batteries!

Are you alone, or does everyone you know follow the same practice?

Very few do, actually although, given my status as one of the resident gadget freaks at my office, I have made a lot of people *very* curious ;^)

Do you get odd looks for using paper?

See above. Yes - very definitely.

Do you see any broader significance in all this? Or is it a fad? The demise of PDAs?

I spend a good amount time in the Getting Things Done discussion forums and there seems to be cyclical pattern to the adoption of, tweaking of, and abandonment of electronics like PDAs. I've been using a PDA since the original Newton MessagePad and have probably owned at least a dozen different models over the years. Right now (at least), I'm at a stage in my personal cycle where I don't want to put up with the hassles a PDA presents. Whether it's battery life, readability in direct sunlight, a cramped and frustrating text entry UI, or the myriad other things that "suck" about PDAs, the Moleskine has none of these issues.

For me, what has killed the PDA is the Tablet PC - but that's probably another article. It has completely transformed my approach to computing and, as the Storyteller (my actual title - translate in suit-speak to Marketing & PR Director) at a software company that does all of its business online, I *live* in my computer. It is my primary business tool - even more than the telephone in this day of VOIP and a ubiquitous public network.

Do you think paper and digital might merge, a la Logitech's io Pen, or is that the wrong way of looking at things?

I hope that's not how it goes. I hope the Tablet PC approach emerges as the winning form factor. I've used both. The Tablet (admittedly a more expensive proposition) is an infinitely better solution for students and business people.

Thanks, Marc. Here, fyi, are Marc’s blogs:
http://office.weblogsinc.com (a blog about Microsoft Office)
http://tabletpcs.weblogsinc.com (a blog about Tablet PCs)
http://blogs.officezealot.com/marc (Marc's Outlook on Productivity)

 

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Listed below are links to weblogs that reference The Moleskine Report Part I:

» Loose Wire interviews Marc Orchant from jkOnTheRun
I have recently discovered the phenomenon of the Moleskine journal and how people who use these notebooks not only swear by them but have whole communities that discuss them. [Read More]

» WSJ Moleskine Article: More Linkage from Rohdesign Weblog
It seems Jeremy Wagstaff's WSJ.com article on the Moleskine has some legs, having been picked up and mentioned in various places on the web. For those interested and my own records, I've decided to record the links I've found related to this column. Bo... [Read More]

» WSJ Article About the Use Of Moleskines and Other Notebooks in the Modern Age from Zensbikeshop
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» iMoleskine from James Poling
I've been seeing a few articles around the web recently contemplating the use of good old fashioned notebook and pen as an alternative to the PDA. Specifically replacing it with Moleskines notebooks. I've been obsessed with these little notebooks... [Read More]

» iMoleskine from James Poling
I've been seeing a few articles around the web recently contemplating the use of good old fashioned notebook and pen as an alternative to the PDA. Specifically replacing it with Moleskines notebooks. I've been obsessed with these little notebooks... [Read More]

Comments

Mike Rohde of rohdesign.com has been talking about the virtues of Moleskins on his blog for about a year now.

http://tinyurl.com/5jjvv

He touches on the "Electronic vs paper" comparison here:

http://tinyurl.com/7xzjt

Brian

Looks like he beat you both ;).

Brian

Jeremy, Marc has some very interesting comments. I think I should drop him a line.

Brian, thanks for the mention -- I hadn't realized my Moleskinery was so well known. :-)

Thanks to Todd over at Business Thoughts for Loose Wire heads up!

Jeremy - I also use a Toshiba and a Clie. Todd turned me on to Moleskines and I am working down that road now. I love good paper too. I'll cut parchment paper in fours and use it for random ideas. Enough with the "I's" Yuk!

Do you use a camera to cop ideas? And do you use any kind of recording device?

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