Where you can use a keyboard command to add stuff to Things 3 or OmniFocus or Todoist on macOS, the Taskade application doesn’t offer anything like that. One of the biggest issues I have with Taskade is that there is no quick entry on any platform. I found starting with a template to be the best way to get started as something about doing it manually just didn’t click for me. You can also see the individual tasks that have dates on them.įinally, Taskade has many pre-built templates for you to use as you start up a project. In addition to a standard list of your projects you can see your projects on a Roadmap that corresponds with the dates you’ve set for them. Workspaces also provide a few different views. So I guess the best way to think about a Workspace would be to have one for each different business you run? Maybe I’d have one for all the projects that are just on me, like Personal stuff this YouTube channel, and a theoretical future business would get it’s own Workspace with various subspaces to keep Information there organized. At first I thought that I should use a different workspace for each area of my life, like work/home, but when I went to create a new one Taskade informed me that I probably didn’t need to create a new workspace and instead could use a subspace, which doesn’t cost me anything extra since upgrades apply across a whole workspace. One of the first organizational units or Taskade is the Workspace. I’m happy to say that Taskade doesn’t miss this easy quality of life improvement for their tool. So many applications skip this feature because only “power users” get to know keyboard commands, but those same users are the ones that will be the evangelists because a tool makes their life so much better. A Tour of Taskadeīefore we take a basic tour of the Taskade interface I want to mention that Taskade has many keyboard commands for you to use. You can work on organizing a project while on your call and for iPadOS users, those calls continue to work in Split Screen when you use Safari. One big way that Taskade sets itself out from Notion is that it allows you to call the people you collaborate with directly inside the application. This isn’t a bad thing, but if you’re looking for an OmniFocus or Todoist replacement Taskade is a different kind of tool. After using it for a few weeks it feels like it’s closer to Notion than it is to any personal task management application I’ve used in the past. Taskade is a web based collaborative project management tool. You can graft a GTD workflow into Taskade but it seems like something you’re forcing on the wrong tool. Taskade is not a personal task manager in the same way that Things 3 or OmniFocus is a personal task manager. I've been using Notion and TickTick until now but I think I'll probably switch over to this.Let’s start by talking about what Taskade is not. While Notion is much more powerful especially with some of the Database stuff you can do and the Wiki functions, if you are using it more for notes/lists/task management I'd recommend checking Taskade out, especially with the Chrome extension. I love being able to sort my lists like this Great reminder system that actually sends reminders to my email and devices.Calendar Sync without needing any add-ons/extensions.This isn't doable with Notion because it takes way too long to load a project on each tab. I can create a scratchpad of notes, and it's on every new tab of all of my devices, desktop, and mobile. Fantastic Chrome extension (my favorite feature) - You can configure to show your last project, calendar, dashboard, etc.Performance is much higher, things load instantly and everything is snappy and responsive.But if you use Notion for the list-building, outlining, and find the task management features lacking, Taskade is an excellent choice. Taskade can be kind of frustrating to use solo because it assumes you're working with a team, and it is certainly task-focused above other things.
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