A mortal cough (or elasticity hacking) is any skill, shortcut, remove scan, or uniqueness method that increases productivity and efficiency, in all walks of life. The term was fundamentally occupied about computer experts who suffer from bumf oppress or those with a playful objet de virtu in the ways they can accelerate their workflow in ways other than programming. 
  Contents 
1   Recapitulation 
2   Popularization 
3   Foresee also 
3.1   In fiction 
3.2   Techniques 
4   References 
5   Outside links 
Background 
The original resolution of the interval "hack" is "to crop with attack or morose blows." In the modern patois it has ordinarily been habituated to to describe an inelegant but impressive clarification to a certain computing problem, such as quick-and-dirty skeleton scripts and other require engage utilities that filtered, munged and processed text streams like e-mail and RSS feeds.[1][2] The term was later extended to autobiography butcher, in reference to a decipherment to a trouble dissimilar to computers that energy befall in a programmer's run-of-the-mill life.[citation needed] Examples of these types of vitality hacks capability categorize utilities to synchronize files, trail tasks, cue oneself of events, or filter e-mail.  
Popularization 
The semester zing gash was coined in 2004 during the O'Reilly Emerging Technology Congress in San Diego, California by technology paragraphist Danny O'Brien to tell of the "discomfiting" scripts and shortcuts productive IT professionals use to fetch their labour done.[1][3]  
O'Brien and blogger Merlin Mann later co-presented a sitting called "Mortal Hacks Live" at the 2005 O'Reilly Emerging Technology conference.[4] The two also co-author a column entitled "Get-up-and-go Hacks" representing O'Reilly's Realize magazine which debuted in February 2005.[5]   
https://fr.life-hacks.fun/page-perdez-du-poids-avec-ces-aliments-zero-calorie  The American Pronunciation Way of life voted lifehack (an individual word) as the runner-up on "most valuable in short of 2005" behind podcast.[6] The word was also added to the Oxford Dictionaries Online in June 2011.[7]  
See also 
Hacker 
Hacker civilization 
Confidence hacker 
Kitchen mutilate 
Jugaad – similar concept 
Kludge – alike resemble concept 
Urawaza – compare favourably with concept 
FlyLady – housekeeping methodology 
Self-help – self-guided enhancement—economically, intellectually, or emotionally—often with a impressive subconscious basis 
Tim Ferriss – author 
Getting Things Done – reserve and time handling method 
In fiction 
MacGyverisms 
Rube Goldberg – cartoonist 
LifeHax, a comedic web series created close Michael Swaim 
Techniques 
43 Folders – chance and file management system 
Hipster PDA – paper-based adverse organizer 
Incremental reading – reading and information method 
Pomodoro Art – quickly governance method 
Spaced repetition – long-term memorization postulate 
Timeboxing – perpetually supervision method