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It doesn’t take long for any GTD neophyte to realize that an essential tool in their productivity toolbox is a good labeler. While it may seem superfluous to the uninitiated, it’s one of those things that adds that extra bit of polish to your productivity system, as well as feeds the little fiend inside of you who loves a little productivity pr0n.
My new friends over at cableorganizer.com have an excellent selection of quality label printers to fit any need (and just about any budget). Sitting beside me on my desk is a lovely Dymo RhinoPRO 5000 label printer, courtesy of CableOrganizer. It’s one of those tools that screams durability - the kind I’d feel comfortable having on my belt looking at an unlabeled cluster of network or telephone cables. The unit arrived quickly and in perfect condition, ready for my strict evaluation - so you know the folks at CableOrganizer know how to get the job done.
And this doesn’t just go for GTD nerds - any network admin who’s ever waltzed into a wiring closet that looked like a tornado just blew through will completely understand the need for a tool to help keep the spaghetti in order.
So, the next time you’re in the market for a shiny new labeler (I’m looking at you, newbie GTDers), pay a visit to the label printer store at CableOrganizer - they’ll get you what you need and fast.
Technorati Tags: producitivity, gtd, tools, label printers
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6 Responses to “Need a Labeler? Read This…”
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The boss purchased that labeler for our department. It’s been great! I may be a little much for labeling strictly manilla folders but it’s great if you need the “be all, end all” labeler. Since it handles different size label tape and prints horizontal or vertical it works when labeling everything from cable to servers to shelves.
Personally, I hate label makers with non-qwerty keypads. I have one, and it takes twice as long to type anything. I now wish I had spent the extra $7 for the step up that had a qwerty keyboard.
Dude, I’m envious! I’ve been wanting a labeler for a long time, but I haven’t shelled out the money yet. Maybe I should do that soon. Or maybe you’ll decide you don’t need yours and ship it over to me.
Why not write about what the thing actually does instead of just telling us to buy it. What kind of labels does it use, what sort of options does it have, what really cool tricks does it do, how much do refills cost, how many fonts does it have, how fast is it, how easy is it, what’s its worst fault and its best asset, and how much does it cost? In short, how is this thing different from other labelers and why should I care?
[...] to my RSS feed.Or, you can get free email updates.Thanks for visiting!A few weeks ago, I read Brett Kelly’s post about a labeler he had just received for review. Being the GTD and tech geek that I am, I checked [...]
Hi there, a year ago I found a british labels company who were selling their plain labels at very low pricrs. I am unsure what their prices are like now but could be worth taking a look.