![]() And that’s also we want to have happen here. ![]() So, if you treat all of the lists as contexts you will get less confused. For example, Today is not a project but a context. What I do is look at the two that remain - Completed and Today - and realize that these lists are more context-based then project-based. Once you’ve culled the existing lists, then you have to decide how you want your lists to function - as projects or as contexts. The only ones you can’t get rid of are the ones above the iCloud bar (Completed and Today]. Inspired by that (and perhaps giving James a hand in the process), what I’ve done is put together a little tutorial on how to use the iOS Reminders app as a task manager…should you want to go that route.įirst things first: clear out all of the default categories/lists that Reminders comes with. “I’ve reset my iPhone and iPad both back to factory settings, and I’m trying to almost exclusively use the stock iOS apps.” I’ve also been keeping up with James Gowans’s Out of the Box experiment where he’s done the following: Especially in this realm because it can do so much more than simply remind us of things. I did mention Apple’s stock application, Reminders, in passing but I feel that it definitely deserves more attention than it gets. ![]() Yesterday I wrote a post over iPhone Hacks discussing the best free iPhone task management apps out there.
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