![]() If you haven’t downloaded it, I’d recommend getting it here. Out of all of them, Todoist is the best combination of features and great user experience. Students (note to me when I join Year 12 in September) could find this helpful as they could create labels on the difficulty of particular topics to know what to prioritise.Īgain, I’ve tried many different to-do list apps. In the sidebar, you can filter tasks by the label it’s assigned on. The category text is colour-coded, making it easier to see if you want to look at your tasks at a glance. Still, when I do, I use it to plan my content creation by creating labels depending on the content format and assigning it to a task. I don’t really use it that much in my day-to-day workflow. The labels feature is a great way to ‘label’ specific tasks and allow them to interact even if they’re not in the same project. ![]() These tasks occur everyday or every two days and they’re sorted in different categories with priority flags on them. It has tasks from taking my vitamins (let’s strengthen that immune system yo!) to exercising. My Habits project is basically where I live everyday. ![]() Karma - It gamifies tasks and is honestly just nice to look at. Priority Tasks - I use this to order my tasks and to eliminate excuses on what comes first. It’s a really nifty feature that allows me to save time. Smart Language Detection - It can detect through what I write: the time, date or the number of occurrences I want a task to repeat without needing to go through a lot of context menus. The implementation is really good here, I love how it’s another type of view alongside the normal list. Kanban Boards - It’s a feature copied and pasted from Trello. Right now, I’m using it day-to-day to try to get better habits and achieve goals before I return to school in September and I thought it would be cool to share to you all how I’ve been using it. Todoist is already great for managing projects and to-do lists, but the app’s newly launched board view turns those lists into customizableand collaborativeKanban boards. A few months back I decided to settle with Todoist, mainly because of it’s simple user interface (keep it simple, stupid) and the great implementation of features I started with Microsoft To-Do, and then I had phases of Google Tasks, Notion, Trello and Habitica. If you know me very well, you’d know I like to switch between to-do list apps (you could call it procrastination, I like to call it user testing □). How I use Todoist to keep myself accountable and organise my day.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |