(I’ve stopped using both so I don’t care but) please note that tasks are supposed to be the calendar tasks, which they’ve called reminders for a few years and now they’re converting back to tasks.
Which is a good example of why I won’t touch any of these Google apps anymore, not just because it’s Google and I’m trying to get away but also they keep moving stuff around and it’s a complete mess. They keep juggling different concepts of notes, shopping lists, todo, tasks, reminders etc.
There are plenty of other apps that choose a lane and stay in it.
There are lots of good options if you’re okay with closed/proprietary software, but Logseq is open source, fully featured, in active development, and really smooth to use.
Their business model is to charge $5 USD/mo for using their cloud sync solution, but you can use any other syncing service instead just as easily. It’s a small team that only gets under $50K/yr* so far, though, so please subscribe if it’s useful for you.
Edit: Oh, and Logseq files are plaintext using mostly standard Markdown, so it’s easy to port your data away at any time if you ever decide to migrate to something else.
* That number is just based on my napkin math of their reported subscriber numbers, with some assumptions about distribution of tiers skewing heavily to the low end.
(I’ve stopped using both so I don’t care but) please note that tasks are supposed to be the calendar tasks, which they’ve called reminders for a few years and now they’re converting back to tasks.
Which is a good example of why I won’t touch any of these Google apps anymore, not just because it’s Google and I’m trying to get away but also they keep moving stuff around and it’s a complete mess. They keep juggling different concepts of notes, shopping lists, todo, tasks, reminders etc.
There are plenty of other apps that choose a lane and stay in it.
What do you use in place of Keep?
Logseq is the best, imho.
There are lots of good options if you’re okay with closed/proprietary software, but Logseq is open source, fully featured, in active development, and really smooth to use.
Their business model is to charge $5 USD/mo for using their cloud sync solution, but you can use any other syncing service instead just as easily. It’s a small team that only gets under $50K/yr* so far, though, so please subscribe if it’s useful for you.
Edit: Oh, and Logseq files are plaintext using mostly standard Markdown, so it’s easy to port your data away at any time if you ever decide to migrate to something else.
* That number is just based on my napkin math of their reported subscriber numbers, with some assumptions about distribution of tiers skewing heavily to the low end.