![]() The planning and reflecting walkthroughs are also quite nice (although ideally I would like to be able to configure this myself and sync the reflections/plannings pages to notion) ![]() ![]() The other thing it brings is insight on how you're spending time, which is something that Gcal is very clearly missing, and should be an obvious feature that Google has been way too slow on improving (although note Gcal did recently start at least telling you how long you're in meetings). I'm not sure it would be able to fully displace Todoist for tasks, but it would be close - it pretty much would just need the ability to have recurring tasks and it would be 90% of the way there. The ability to drag tasks onto a calendar is just incredibly nice. As others have mentioned, it is expensive, and I haven't been using long enough to really kick the tyres.īut, so far, what I really like about it is it bridges the gaps between creating tasks and allocating time. I never really found a good fix for that, other than separately listing out projects and tasks (on todoist) and then needing to go to the calendar to budget time. Where I find the most friction is between Todoist and Gcal, because there is the clearest relationship between "needing to do stuff" and budgeting the time to do it. Todoist is to keep track of stuff I need to do and, frankly, to give that little dopamine kick of clicking done of something. Notion is a sort of disembodied second brain. I think about the 3 as having quite distinct functions.
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