There’s a lot of to-do list apps, reminders, calendars etc out there advertised towards us to help us do things like break down large tasks into meaningful chunks and focus on what we need to do each day, but I want to hear from the community what do you guys think is the best so let’s start a thread

  • Your Huckleberry@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Am I the only one who feels like productivity/organization tools for ADHD people is like bicycles for blind kids? Like, “yeah I can see how a functional person could find this useful, but what the heck am I going to do with it?”

    • Starayo@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      The only way I’m able to get anything done is by externalising my memory. I just make sure I have reminders on a smartwatch so that they forcibly are brought to my attention even if I’m away from my PC/phone.

        • Starayo@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          Directly on the watch: timers, alarms. Via the watch: calendar events and the like whose notifications get picked up by the watch. Have to be proactive about blocking useless notifications though.

          I have an Android phone and a galaxy watch 4, not sure how equivalents work on Apple.

    • nuttydepressor@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      I just have a dry-erase board for planning out my week at work and at home I fly by the seat of my pants and spend months attempting to form good habits

      It took me 25 years just to start brushing my teeth once a day, no idea how long until I get it up to twice a day.

      • Lycist@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        heard recently that people with ADHD can’t form habbits in the same way neurotypicals do, thats why we struggle with this shit so often!

        I try to brush before bed, and when I shower. Thats like… 1.5 times daily (most days), i’m almost there :P

        • cynar@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          We can, but they are extremely limited. I’ve a habit of checking my keys, phone and wallet are in my pocket when I leave the house. I also have the habit of thinking, “I need to brush my teeth” in the mornings. Unfortunately, forming a habit of actually brushing my teeth is more than my brain can handle (hence the work around).

          Medication helps a lot, with even minimal habit forming. It vastly accelerates it from 5-10 years, to maybe 6-12 months, for simple habits. I can lock in 1 a year now!

          • nuttydepressor@lemmy.ml
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            11 months ago

            Medication unfortunately hasn’t really helped my habit forming much. I’m slowly working on it though.

            It’s definitely helped a lot of my executive dysfunction, though it does have its drawbacks.

            I do have days where I am more depressed than I ever have been, but only if I take it more than 3-4 times a week.

            • Nola :ir:@neurodifferent.me
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              11 months ago

              @nuttydepressor @cynar I’m struggling with my meds ATM too. If I take the full dose I’m functional but my anxiety is just silly. And the depression/moodiness has been bad recently, tho it was likely burnout from stress and full dose meds taken for work. It took me a while to realise it was the meds. Half dose today anyway.

            • cynar@lemmy.world
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              11 months ago

              Even when medicated, it takes a long time, and a ridiculous amount of mental effort to lock them in. They are also still fragile as spun glass.

              As for the depression I know it. I had 2 types. Burnout was the most obvious. I’m actually on half the medication dose I was on. It turned out I had gone over the hump, and my mind was overloading. The kickback from that caused a depressive state. Backing off put me back on the peak.

              The 2nd was wile coyote like. I managed to reduce the stress I was under, by a mix of medication, cognitive, and behavioural changes. Without the stress however, my emotional lockdowns released. The depression was environmental, but I couldn’t even feel it, under the weight of stress. It was like wile coyote running off a cliff, all good until I stopped and looked. I’m still chipping away at it, but it still helps that I can feel it now. Before, it was still there and affecting me, but I wasn’t aware of it.

  • Graphy@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    TickTick has served me well for the past few years. I throw them some cash but I hear the free version doesn’t lack much.

    • uhauljoe@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Oh my god I have my entire life and my husband and kiddo’s entire life on TickTick.

      Every tiny thing I have to do during the day is planned out… I can’t even express how much I love that app.

  • Humble_Measures@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Goblin tool. You give it a task you want to do and it breaks it down into smaller tasks/steps which you can keep breaking down. Also has a tone rewording tool and a tool for checking if you are taking something in the wrong tone. Super helpful for people with ADHD and Autism.

    • miss_brainfart@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Oh, that looks really promising. But I’m extremely hesitant to use something like this if it can’t be done 100% local and offline

      Edit: Maybe I’ll use it just for the most basic, non-personal stuff, like cleaning my room. Actually yeah, I think that’s okay

      • Humble_Measures@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        They have an app for $0.99, but I believe it still needs connection for all the back end task generation and stuff. Hopefully it works for you as another tool for the tool box!

        • miss_brainfart@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          What it spits out from just the words clean room is pretty damn great, more than enough to convince me. And while I’m generally very careful with AI, I think in this instance it’s best for me to swallow my damn pride, and accept the help it can give me.

          The About section does mention the wish to move this to open source solutions, which I’d very much love to see. I’m looking forward to whenever that can happen.

  • platysalty@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Be wary of falling into the new tool new toy cycle. I have a huge problem of wanting to try new tools despite the current solution working absolutely fine.

    I’m down to Ticktick for tasks and habits, and Obsidian for notes.

  • chaosTechnician@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I’ve been using TickTick for a while now. It syncs with my Android phone and work computer pretty cleanly. It handles notifications, recurring tasks, skipping a task until the next time, habits tracked differently than tasks, etc. I don’t use the premium stuff and it doesn’t have ads in it. So, it’s free for me.

    I’ve got a keyboard shortcut on my computer ,so I can quickly add new items on the fly. The entry has basic language parsing to pick out the date and things. I can just enter “every monday check the mail #life” and it’ll set up and tag the task automatically.

    I’m working on finding good ways to make sure that I actually follow my to-do at work instead of latching on to the top item and getting lost on it for the whole day, but it’s working for now.

  • notacat@mander.xyz
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    1 year ago

    I’ve been messing around with obsidian (a note-taking/thought-keeping app only for people who like to tinker and customize so wouldn’t necessarily recommend here), but having something that syncs between all my devices is FANTASTIC. It would still be nice to try something more grab and go, but I would highly recommend considering apps that can be easily accessed and edited from multiple devices.

    • fritter@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      only for people who like to tinker and customize so wouldn’t necessarily recommend here

      I seriously cannot tell if this is sarcasm

    • pogosort@kbin.social
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      11 months ago

      (a note-taking/thought-keeping app only for people who like to tinker and customize so wouldn’t necessarily recommend here)

      It’s as simple or complex as you make it to be. Obsidian can be used with core plugins only and work just fine.

  • ArbitraryOasis@reddthat.com
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    10 months ago

    I use the following four apps to manage my chaos ✌️:

    • Workflowy - General archive and digital memory (Divided in Inbox, Several dossiers/projects, Other, and Archive. I dump everything in Inbox first and sort it when I can.)
    • Tasks.org - For its simple todo list widget. Mainly little things I have to do, sorted into 4 priorities by color (app does this automatically).
    • A calendar - I use a lot of recurring ‘all day’ events. (Like for getting notified I need to take out the trash on Wednesday)
    • Stock Android Clock/alarm - I have alarms set for a lot of daily recurring things. Like literally alarms for taking medication to alarms for reminding myself I have to go to sleep.

    Important things I often put in all several of the above 😊 I tend to swipe notifications away, but if 3 apps notify me, well it works. So garbage on Wednesday is a recurring weekly thing in calendar and alarm ⏰

    It’s actually a pretty fast setup when you get used to it. But I do put things in at least one app immediately. If I wait, I forget.

    Workflowy is truly awesome imho. I put everything in there, even things like the address of my dentist. This way, I have only have one place I have to search for anything I need. It has a great search function. It’s really handy that you can share text from anywhere with the app, which then throws it in the inbox. Sorting things is also very smooth, isn’t necessary that often, and make me feel good when I do it. Very handy.

    I use all of the above in the most basic way. No tag systems or anything; I can’t keep those systems up for longer than a couple of days. I only use simple basic, inbuild functions that I can perform quickly. Together they work very well for me.

    Hope this is helpful! Good luck! 👍🍀

  • Jawzper@aussie.zone
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    1 year ago

    I’m finding Obsidian.md really great, it’s become my daily checklist, to-do lists, shopping lists, calendar, and notes archive all at once. It doesn’t give reminders (there might be a plugin for that actually) but I always have it open on a second screen and I sync it between my phone and my computer, and I’ve been much better at keeping track of things since I started using it.

    The program is kind of a lot, but it’s worth putting in some effort to set it up in a way that works for you. Although to be honest I think I only figured out how it works because I was also motivated to use it for Dungeons and Dragons. Otherwise I’d probably still be using my old mess of sticky notes.

    • miss_brainfart@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Just a shame that it’s not open source. I’ve been using Zettlr instead, it’s pretty much the only FOSS alternative that doesn’t pester me into syncing my stuff to a cloud, which is the one thing I like most about Obsidian.

      How do you go about using it? I have a strong case of out of sight, out of mind, so I set it to launch automatically when I login, otherwhise I would just forget about its existence.

      • Jawzper@aussie.zone
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        1 year ago

        I have it set to launch on startup, and always open on my second screen. I have to make a point to check my day’s task list before opening any other program, add new tasks as soon as they come up, check things off when they get done (free dopamine), and note down any unresolved items at the end of the day.

        I also end up checking it incidentally a lot during the day simply because I use it for so many things, like my schedule, appointment and lecture notes, journaling, keeping track of medication, things I want to work on in the game I’m playing, etc. I’m kind of throwing all my (previously very disorganised) eggs in this basket and it’s giving me reasons to check it constantly.

        Just now discovered a reminder plugin so I’ll start implementing that too.

        Actually getting things done is a whole other issue though. Between the ADHD and my other health issues, some days I just end up with a blank template page for my daily note… but I try not to be hard on myself about it.

      • notacat@mander.xyz
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        11 months ago

        I use it mostly as an information dump. I love how you can just put things in daily notes and tag something as a #todo or #researchthing and have the first thing automatically added to your running todo list and the second unrelated item is piled in with any other notes with that tag. Which is great if you have no focus.

        • pogosort@kbin.social
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          11 months ago

          Logseq didn’t work with my brain but for anyone wanting an open-source alternative to Obsidian, this is the closest one.

  • Signboy@lemmy.ca
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    11 months ago

    My #1 app is myNoise.com. Without 30 minutes of noise-assisted chill after a work day, I’d be an overwhelmed wreck at home.

  • pogosort@kbin.social
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    11 months ago

    Disclaimer: I am medicated. Using productivity apps is easier when you’re medicated.

    Anyway, here’s some apps that I use:

    • Mozilla Thunderbird: Emails, calendars, tasks and contacts in one place. Also the only functional fully offline calendar you can find on Windows. They are in the process of developing an Android version with the developer of K9-Mail. They’re also finally getting to a UI update so it doesn’t look like shit, which has previously been a dealbreaker for a lot of people.
    • Tasks.org: Simple tasks app I use exclusively as a shopping list. It works. That’s about it.
    • Loop Habit Tracker: Habit tracker I use for my daily/weekly routines. Very simple.
  • Omen2819@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    I used to get sucked into finding new tools to help me be more productive, but keeping it simple and visible works for me.

    I use Apple Reminders and leverage their smart tags to break tasks down by how long they’ll take, how much effort, and when they need to be done. I keep Reminders open on my iPad so I can always see it, and when I have 15 minutes to kill, I select a 15-minute or less task and knock it out. It works for me, and my whole family can add to it, so I never forget to do something.

    • Lemmy.ml@lemmy.ml
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      11 months ago

      I used to get sucked into finding new tools to help me be more productive, but keeping it simple and visible works for me.

      Ditto! I keep my shopping list in Home Assistant, and always in Home Assistant. The rest of the notes go in Joplin.

      I require apps that can sync (and at least work half-decent on mobile) and that are as little of a barrier as possible. Even then, forming a habit took a while.