
Does the OF3 guide seem to be for web-only? I use it on iOS. I know there are guides for Todoist and Evernote in the GTD Shop. I don't like the idea of notebooks and don't like the look of Evernote, so maybe I have my answer, lol. I haven't tried either, but from taking a look at their sites, I prefer the look of Notion. So, do I stick with Todoist and reorganise it or go back to OF3?Īnd, for the notes app, do I use Evernote or Notion. I ended up trying Todoist out which looks very similar to OF3 but even now, I've still got bits of paper and screenshots going un-dealt with.Īfter doing a little research I found quite a few people are using two apps, one for notes and one for projects/tasks. I was using OF3 but even though I found it to be very useful especially for repeating tasks, I still had bits of paper everywhere and screenshots on my iPad. Include at the end of the Note a part to be only interpreted by the app, some kind of pre-formatted text that should only be read by the app.ĬONS: User can delete this information by mistake (or on purpose).I've come back to GTD after "falling off the wagon" about a year ago. PROs: The app can download all the notes from the notebook and extract the infos stored in the Tags.ĬONs: The user's account will be full of Tags that make only sense for the app, tags should be deleted if App Elements are deleted. I have came up to 2 possible solutions but they do not make me completely happy:Ĭreate Tags to store the metadata related to one Note, for each metadata-field there will be a new Tag like "myapp_title" or "myapp_info1".

There will be one Notebook for this use case and one Note will be created for each Element of the app to be stored on the cloud, to succeed with sync each note has to store some metadata that should be only interpreted by the app and not visible through the web interface or desktop/mobile clients. I am integrating Evernote with an iOS App, my customer wants the app to able to sync some Infos being generated by the user with Evernote.
