Ranked as “the best to-do list right now” by The Verge, Todoist is used by 25 million people to organize, plan and collaborate on projects, both big and small. Use Todoist to:. Capture and organize tasks the moment they pop into your head. Remember deadlines with reminders and due dates. Windows/OS X/iOS/Android/Web: Todoist is one of our favorite to-do list managers, and today the service updated all of its apps to support files attached to your to-dos. If your device is running iOS 14 or above, there are several additional widgets available to you: the Tasks, Productivity, and Add Task widgets: Tap and long press anywhere on your Home screen until your apps start to wiggle. Tap the + icon that appears in the top corner of the screen. Scroll down until you see the Todoist icon and tap it.
Free up your mental space
Regain clarity and calmness by getting all those tasks out of your head and onto your to-do list (no matter where you are or what device you use).
Google Play
Editor’s Choice4.7 stars, 187K+ reviews
App Store
Featured app4.8 stars, 30K+ reviews
Todoist Ios 14 Release
The Verge
Todoist has helped
millions of people completeover 1.5 billion tasks
in 150+ million projects.
millions of people completeover 1.5 billion tasks
in 150+ million projects.
I literally couldn’t do my job or even manage all the business of being a fully functioning parent and spouse without Todoist.
As a software engineer, it’s useful to break down big projects into smaller tasks, and Todoist is perfect for that purpose.
I kept track of all my school tasks in Todoist and, in 2016, I became the first one in my family to obtain a bachelor’s degree.
Todoist Ios 14 Download
Todoist has revolutionized the way we run our small business by helping us simplify projects and coordinate tons of details.
Trevor Stephens
General Manager at Topline Builders
Read more![Todoist ios 14 update Todoist ios 14 update](https://techtodayreview.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/dsc6239.jpg)
Todoist gave us the focus to scale our company from 2 to 75 employees, $12M in VC financing, and 350+ happy enterprise customers.
Todoist helps me organize all my writing projects. And that makes it an indispensable tool both in business and in life.
A task manager you can trust for life
In the 14 yearsand 87 days that we’ve been building Todoist, we’ve never considered selling out or becoming acquired.
Our team is committed to staying independent and earning your trust for as long as you need our apps.
Learn about our long-term mission2021-01-09 16:51:24
My productivity system was out of whack for a while. Like everyone else it seems, I was migrating everything to Notion, including my tasks. I would also put more insignificant tasks and grocery lists in Drafts. As I kept trying to work through this, I realized that it was too much for me to keep track of. My brain was all over the place. I wasn’t organized, and it stressed me out because I felt like I wasn’t productive. So I stopped trying that and decided I would just double down on Todoist, but first–my setup needed a serious revamp.
Todoist Ios 14 Update
![Ios Ios](/uploads/1/1/8/5/118503732/102618136.jpg)
I started to rebuild in November 2020. During this process I was still using Todoist, I just wasn’t enjoying it. I basically wasn’t even completing tasks unless they were ones that notified me. It felt overwhelming and old. Although Boards were introduced in September, I hadn’t updated any of my projects to use them. At work we started using boards in Asana more and more; and I liked that, so I decided my they should play a big part in my personal setup too.
In my first Todoist post, I had sooo many projects. Honestly, way too many. I also had labels that I put on every task that just ended up cluttering up the screen and filters that I never used. Everything worked for a while, but then I started hating it, so I went the opposite route. I consolidated projects into sections using Headers and had a handful of projects. The sections were okay, but I think I really just used them because they were there. They didn’t add anything to my workflow. This restructuring was where I began to lose interest in Todoist. I was too lazy to fix it, but it was too much for me to want to.
Don’t get me wrong. I did enjoy using Todoist. I’ve tried several task management solutions, and I’ve always come back here; I just let my setup get out of hand. It was too much. I started rethinking how I wanted to handle tasks and how my brain likes to organize. In the past I tried forcing myself to organize in ways I knew wouldn’t work for me and in ways I wouldn’t take advantage of, but this time I was honest with myself. I asked myself, “Are you really going to keep it up if you do it this way?”
The solution was obviously to take the middle road, right? That’s what I decided. I concluded my brain HATED the unnecessary amount of sections but liked seeing more Projects. And because Boards require the use of Sections, I reorganized some of my existing Projects that have actionable tasks to be the ones that took advantage of this relatively new feature. They are also the ones that have to do with some kind of work or degree of completion.
All Projects that use Boards have 3 Sections to denote task status: Not Started, In Progress, and Completed. This status simplicity really helps to motivate me. Boards allows dragging tasks between columns, and I find that this small difference is more satisfying than clicking the checkbox. For my own task management, I find the little things (Rule #32) really help my general outlook towards everything I have to do.
I now have no Labels and only 2 Filters. I created these 2 because I use them in 2 of my Todoist Widgets in iOS 14. One just displays Overdue items. The other displays only Today’s tasks. I liked the separation of these because even though I may have finished Today’s tasks, I don’t want to forget what’s overdue from Yesterday or days before. This works vice versa. It’s a good reminder for myself when I want to just quickly glance at my phone to see what else I need to do.
I added Emoji to the beginning of each Project and each Section to add a little visual fun like I’ve seen done by others. I think that’s big for me to have it looking nice and sort of funny so that it’s not too “worky.” What it says to me is, “Yes you have tasks, but you’ll have a good time looking at how many you have.”
For quick tasks I would jot down in Drafts, I now put in my Inbox. In my old system I never put anything in my Inbox. I always thought it was a triage for tasks to categorize them later; but I thought to myself just categorize everything out the gate because the natural language processing makes it so easy. However, I now use Inbox as this quick task spot for tasks I don’t deem worthy enough of a Project.
My groceries also live in Todoist now; and what’s even better is that Sarah uses Todoist too, and we can have shared lists! It works great for us. I really like the categories we have because it helps navigating shopping a little easier when it’s already not one of my favorite things to do. The ability to drag items and Sections around to reorder is really nice too instead of cutting and pasting everything like I was doing before.
I think I’ve really found a sweet spot with this setup for myself. I’ve been using Todoist so much again, and more than that, actually enjoying it and not feeling dread. If you’re feeling overwhelmed, I recommend taking a step back and really assess your productivity system to see if anything can be improved. Just make sure you’re real with yourself so your new system will continue to work for you.