1/1/2024 0 Comments Any.do app review![]() ![]() People who want to organize their thoughts and ideas We’ve rounded up the best apps for ADHD to reduce overwhelm and increase productivity, so you can get the most out of your day. Apps are available to help you organize, prioritize, and build structure into your life. Many people have found success in delegating important memory and productivity tasks to their mobile devices. This means people with the condition may have a hard time initiating tasks, following through, remembering things, or managing complexity. Best for productivity: Productive – Habit TrackerĪttention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is commonly associated with children, but more than 10 million adults in the United States also live with the condition, according to the National Institute of Mental Health.Īdult ADHD can cause problems with executive function.Best for managing your to-do lists: Todoist.Best for reducing overwhelm: Remember the Milk. ![]() Best for taking and organizing notes: Evernote.Best for setting reminders: Due – Reminders & Timers.Best overall: SimpleMind Pro – Mind Mapping.But for this Versus battle, the newbie gets it. It is crazy customisable and offers a ton of features that, frankly, embarasses Google Tasks. If you are doing much better than me at ordering your life and you’re the kind of person that takes their time to plan out their days, then Any.do is definitely perfect for you. Granted, I have to literally go into the app every single time to see what tasks I have to do (this is more annoying than it seems) and I can’t set reminders or integrate with Google Calendar. Because it is so basic and barebones, I can quickly set tasks or put down things I need to accomplish as I remember them whether I’m writing an article, doing some research, waiting at the stop light or buying fuel. And that is why Google Tasks takes the cake. I know, I know but I’m a chaotic, continuously revolving mess so I need to be able to set tasks and order my life as it twists and turns. Also, as opposed to Googles Tasks’ flat and simplistic material design, Any.do’s more animated UI feels better to use but is a bit slower to navigate. It’s not like Any.do is that much difficult to use, it just has a lot more going on (e.g animations, sync with native apps on your phone, busier interface) and that makes using it a bit more time gobbling than Google Tasks. Right off the bat, Google Tasks is easier to get into, use and has a cleaner, more stripped-down interface that makes scheduling, or ticking off tasks, a breeze. In the other corner, named after the company that created it and looking to stake a claim for all “underdogs” of the mobile task app underground, is Any.do – a freemium task app with so many features (a lot of which nobody has the time to read here), it could win every category at the Feature Awards, if there was one (Copyright, please).Īfter a few weeks of deceptive attacks and super slick defense on my two-year-old iPhone 6 Plus, here’s how Google Tasks and Any.do fared in direct competition for Akindare’s choice task app: Google Keep can already do everything Google Tasks can (and even more/better), but who knows why these people do anything? Google Tasks is a free app Google launched recently, along with updates to Gmail and Assistant. In one corner, representing the incredibly popular – and very wealthy – house of Google is a new entrant into the space: Google Tasks. In the end, victors shall emerge from the ashes of one man’s opinion (mine) to stake claim to the most ultimate of all ultimate prizes: becoming the app/gadget I recommend to people.Ĭoming to you live, via this incredibly beautiful work of art you are reading, is the first of these many battles you’ve been promised in the paragraph above.įrom the domain of mobile task apps, where we all gather to make difficult choices as we try for the 678th time to structure the chaos of work or everyday life, two juggernauts battle it out for supremacy on my phone. Objectivity shall be applied with vigor and truth shall rule over all else. This begins the first battle in a long war between tech’s most interesting app/gadget standouts, carefully curated from consumer technology available in Africa. ![]()
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