Used to have it on Things 3 also but yeah left that very soon since it was too limited for me. I also have those stuff on dataview for managing everything, but it would be great to have something like it again for "quick checks". Interesting take on the Content backlog folder btw! Will be putting that back in. I've been putting them in an Inbox "dataview" page with "buttons" on Obsidian, but of course it's a longer step than just putting them in Ticktick haha. I'm gonna be doing something similar with links i randomly find also I think. Todoist is the other option to take a deep look at before committing to a specific tool, but the lack of Timeblocking in Todoist was a dealbreaker for me. I find that I prefer TickTick over the other tools in the space, mostly because they do everything mostly right and don't do many things wrong. Regarding reliability, I've been on TickTick for over a year now and reliability hasn't been an issue. The day I moved from Things 3 to TickTick was a long day. My experience has been that moving from any todo tool to another is going to be painful. If there wasn't anything useful in it then I just mark it as complete in TickTick and move on. If I get a second, I will see if I can figure it out.įor retaining articles and links, if I thought there was something meaningful in the article/link then I create a page for it in my sources folder in Obsidian. Windows might have the same thing, but the protocol at the beginning of the link might be different. Thanks for watching! Opening Obsidian note links works on the Mac, but probably because it has app switching protocols baked into the OS. Seems like Google Calendar's the only one that hasn't failed me at this point haha. Though did you encounter issues with Ticktick on reliability? I'm been repeatedly traumatized on data loss so I'm still hesitant on it despite getting premium on the app. I'm still iffy about all my task/todo/planning stuff being on Ticktick especially as their export option isn't so good (lol trust issues), but its structure for managing myself suits me. Gotta say though accessing stuff on the go is easier with Ticktick. Though regarding articles and links, I'm still not quite sure if I should retain them on Ticktick, or transfer them on Obsidian (I maintain databases/tables on to reads and references in Obsidian with Dataview). Yeah using Ticktick as a tickler/inbox for everything seems good for quick capture, then just transfer stuff to Obsidian after. I did submit a bug report on this though. Just wondering did you manage to figure out how to open Obsidian note links from Ticktick? Seems like when I put them as markdown links in Ticktick and I open the link on PC, " gets automatically appended so I can't open obsidian links from there. Hey thank you for this and great videos! Am watching your Ticktick yt vid, and happy to know it works well for you! Am thinking of typing up a workflow to test out later as well. So was just wondering if any of you guys have a workflow for where things go. "obsidian://" in web browsers so they don't open in default apps). (Plus Ticktick has a bug right now where it appends an "https" to file open links e.g. But I'm kind of worried about those notes being lost in case I need to find them in the future. At the moment I'm thinking of just really put all the notes in Obsidian, but sometimes it makes sense to put in notes in Ticktick as well. I mainly use August Bradley's task/project management system, along with PARA.īasically went off and got into Ticktick again since it's faster to use for ordering myself to do tasks and for scheduling/time blocking tasks.īut right now I'm having issues as to what info goes where. I use Obsidian as my dedicated notes app as well. So basically Ticktick is working well for me as a task manager recently, but of course there's the workplace project management apps as well, and also the personal project management apps (In the end I couldn't do away with this due to the limitations of Ticktick, but right now I'm mainly using Obsidian and Google Calendar for personal project management, which I use a lot of for freelance work).
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