Hey, I'm a big fan of productivity tools, I love using them, I love trying new ones, I hate having to migrate all my stuff from one to another but I do it anyway from time to time because I get bored and want to try new things all the time.
Let's play a game. I'll give you 4 "roles" and you tell me what tool or tools you use for filling those roles. You can name the same tool in multiple roles. You can add comments on why you chose those tools, or not.
Role #1: To-Do's and Lists
Role #2: Note taking
Role #3: Time tracking
Role #4: Cloud sync and/or storage
I'll leave my choices (as of today at least) in the comments.
Top comments (10)
I only have a tool for the first two roles, because I'm not at the stage yet for the last two roles.
However, for To-Do's, Lists, and Note taking I'm using Notion. You can put everything in there, create databases, reference with internal linking and so much more. I've started using this tool only recently, so I'm fairly sure that there is still much for me to discover.
Update!
I have created an account on Notion and I have migrated a lot of stuff from like 3 other services and I am loving Notion. Thank you for reminding me it existed!
You're welcome! Glad you like it (again). :D
Oh, they now have a free plan... interesting... I might give it a try :)
I tried more applications but settled with following list mostly because i wanted to have apps on my Work PC (windows) , iPad & iPhone.
I use TickTick and now trying Todoist but ticktick is winning for now :) I tied to use Things 3 which is really good (you can't go wrong with either of them / ticktick or things/) but for me is problem this i have working PC on windows and things is not awailable there.
Notion - I found information about it here on DEV and i really liked it and now i have pro plan. Mostly using it as Journal, keeping on my ideas and more. For hand written notes i have GoodNotes.
Toggl - timetracking
Google Drive (from Google workspace subscription) and OneDrive
Newest adition to my tools is Bear. Its beautiful app for keeping and organiazing notes. + With shortcuts on iOS you can for example save pages you want to read later to Bear. If you have subscription you can export any of them for example to PDF. Now i thinking about switching from pocket to it.
I tried several work management software before!
I love using Notion and Quire. Since you already tried Notion, I'll just briefly explain why I love using Quire.
It's pretty similar to Notion, but it's free when you need all of the features or want to collaborate with others.
It provides the kanban board, priorities, reminders, easy collaboration, offline syncing, mobile app...etc.
Prett agile!
I've used Quire quite a lot actually!, only that I decided to migrate all that I could to Notion, and leave only the task management outside of Notion. For tasks and reminders, I am still using TickTick because it has a rock solid notifications system which I love.
1: TickTick: I usually use free services but TickTick is one of the only ones which I actually pay for. It's inexpensive really, and it's my favorite TODO app. I use it on Android and on the Linux desktop (I created a "web app" with Epiphany). It has the best notifications sistem I have ever tried on any app of its kind, and I use it mainly for reminders, so that is a big plus. I also use the Google Calendar integration to see all my events in one place.
2: I recently started using Zoho Notebook and it's pretty good. It looks beautiful (I was looking for some eye candy actually), again I use it on Android and on the Linux desktop (electron app, ugh). It has many options but I use it mostly to store random notes and ideas, but I don't use too frequently. The one thing that I feel it is still missing is the ability to upload images or files to the notes. I know they are notes, not documents, but still, that would complete the package for me.
3: I have tried all the free time trackers. Most of the desktop time trackers for Linux that work offline are awful and outdated, so I ended up using Clockify. It works with an online account to sync across devices, which I don't really need, but it works better than Toggl on Linux. What I really need is just a simple offline time tracker that allows me to create diferent tasks and run a timer on each, that's it. I couldn't find anything usable, so I decided to create my own in Flutter, since I'm starting to develop in that framework. Maybe soon I'll have something to show.
4: I settled with MEGA, mostly because it gives me those sweet sweet 50GB for free, and the Sync client for Linux works great. I also use MEGA (with a diferent account) on my Android phone to upload my pictures and videos.
in my head for the most part, but Trello if I have to delegate.
that would be the product I'm developing, the Under Cloud.
Billings Pro, for the Mac.
A mix of Google Drive, Drop Box, and Apple's iCloud.