Update: After trying it for some time, it's not as good as I'd hoped. I'm making a version 2 when I have time.
A task manager for humans.
Screen.Recording.2023-07-30.at.2.01.01.PM.mov
There are a lot of "productivity apps" out there, many of which I've tried for some amount of time—ranging from the minimal (a simple to-do list like Apple Reminders), to the comprehensive (Notion, etc.), to the... interesting (for example, Pomodone). So why this? None of apps I tried seemed ideal, and I noticed some things about what kind of things I (and, I would guess, many others) want in a productivity app.
- Regardless of which app I'm using, some similarites emerge in how I use it. Tasks that I'm working on or will be working on soon, tasks that I'll be working on later, reminders for a specific time, and more, each go together.
- It takes time to dig around to find where I'm keeping track of a task. It would be better if I could just see everything relevant at once, while still being able to focus.
- Distractions come up. Some idea comes up while focusing on something else (eg. make an app that does xyz). I want to note something down for later (eg. backed up pictures folder to USB—don't back it up again this evening). I would like to have one place to keep these until I can deal with them later.
- Being distracted by having to figure out how my productivity app works is annoying. I want it to be predictable and consistent.
- UI (on desktop) shows almost everything at once, but keeps different areas separated. (2)
- UI is split into relevant areas (1)
- "Tasks" for current tasks - the most often used and the largest area
- "Reminders" for things that you want to be reminded about at a specific time
- "Later" for tasks to be dealt with later
- "Scratchpad" for those things that come up in the middle (3)
- Tabs for "Ideas" (for ideas for stuff that you may want to work on later) and "Long-term" (for long-term goals and tasks)
- Everything is just a simple text field, and works exactly like a normal text field works (4)
- The app formats each field (similarly, but optimised for what it's used for) to make it consistent.