which of these can manage calendar with reminders ringing 100 min AFTER the appointment started. ical can do this but not so many others. I need this to know when I should finish my coaching sessions...
ticktick seems best as per my initial testing (especially timeline, eisenhower matrix, voice recordings, excellent UI, value pricing, todoist is 2nd place, and not liking things 3 UI at all
I have researched all three, and have settled on TickTick. It has some, but not too many, advanced features that I want in an APP to attempt to keep me more organized and less forgetful. It also works, or so it says (I haven’t explored some features yet), across my iPad, iPhone, and Windows 11 laptop. In time, I will integrate them, currently my iPad is my “goto” device, though the laptop will fill in the gaps and I learned all my computer skills initially on Windows before beginning to use the iPad and iPhone.
Chrome is a privacy nightmare, Safari is not cross platform and Arc doesn't support mobile and feels significantly slower than the others. Brave is a very solid choice as it is private, supports all Chrome features and extensions. Honorable mention: Firefox, only choice if you don't want to support the chromium monopoly.
@codernerd7076 still yes. But installed offline, and modified hosts and some other stuff in the registry before the first online connection. And obviously, I never put my real name somewhere. Browsers, I have 12 different ones installed. Spreading for more comfort without worrying (a lot) about cookies. And soon, I'll try to switch to Linux Mint. Because of MS service contract + recall.
I just don't get 'daily notes'. I don't need them. I've got my projects against which I keep notes, then form them into my work output: articles, seminars, lectures. I've got no use for meandering about my daily navel-gazing.
Peter, I appreciate the content but please get rid of the music in the background. It's very distracting and it makes it more difficult to hear what you're saying.
I mean no disrespect by my comments, but whilst your expertise in video production is obviously outstanding, I'm not sure of the purpose of this video. The distracting music doesn't aid hearing what you are verbally conveying, the fast edits whilst you illustrate e.g. clicking on hyperlinks to associated notes, gave no time to understand the process you were saying was beneficial, and by 2.58 mins, I had had enough. You would never say to a friend, "I will just go and turn on some random music (that you would never want to purchase) to have on the background whilst I tell you about this amazing software". Because you know your friend could not listen to the music and you at the same time. You would never give your friend some software tips by clicking on various parts of your computer screen so fast that they cannot read or follow what you clicked on, let alone know why you clicked on it. If you want to build a channel based upon short attention and high production values, I get it, and good luck with that - you obviously put a lot of time and effort into this video. If you want to teach someone something useful about Obsidian that will enhance their experience and possibly productivity, then I would suggest you base your videos upon how you would explain it to a friend. I have a feeling that I might have just vented some pent-up frustrations that were caused by the previous ten Obsidian related videos I have watched LOL. Good luck with your Channel Peter.
Great comparisons. Anytype is in the early phases of introducing collaboration and memberships. Obsidian and Notion are is also expanding their capabilities. With all the LLMs, it is great time to be in a PKM enthusiasts. Thanks for your video.