Review by Graeme Mathieson
(7 months ago, using version 0.9.3.10b)
Features:
Performance:
Interface:
Price:
Having used a number of personal task management applications in the past
(OmniOutliner, Omnifocus and Things in the past couple of years), I keep going
back to a pen and a pad of paper.
The Hit List is the perfect metaphor because it's that pen and paper! I love
the index-card metaphor for focusing on one thing, while being able to scribble
out lists on a "pad of paper". It allows me to attach information I
want to items (sometimes priority, sometimes start date, sometimes due date,
sometimes tags) and doesn't make me attach information I don't want to.
I'm still finding a few rough edges in my workflow for
sorting/categorising/ordering lists, but that's my workflow, not a fault of the
application.
In short, loving it, much more than I ever liked any other GTD-like app.
Review by Graeme Mathieson (7 months ago, using version 0.9.3.10b)
Having used a number of personal task management applications in the past (OmniOutliner, Omnifocus and Things in the past couple of years), I keep going back to a pen and a pad of paper.
The Hit List is the perfect metaphor because it's that pen and paper! I love the index-card metaphor for focusing on one thing, while being able to scribble out lists on a "pad of paper". It allows me to attach information I want to items (sometimes priority, sometimes start date, sometimes due date, sometimes tags) and doesn't make me attach information I don't want to.
I'm still finding a few rough edges in my workflow for sorting/categorising/ordering lists, but that's my workflow, not a fault of the application.
In short, loving it, much more than I ever liked any other GTD-like app.