Ideally on F-droid. I’ve been a user of wunderlist and any-do but would like to go FOSS.
Any suggestions? Thanks!
I’m using Notally on Android
Tasks.org and JTX Board are two of the most used, available on F-Droid.
I use todo.txt format todo lists.
On desktop, I use sleek, which is FOSS.
On mobile, there are a couple FOSS options, but they all kinda suck, so I use obsidian with a todo.txt plugin that works pretty well for viewing and checking off items.
Just looked at Sleek (which I hadn’t heard of before) and looks pretty good. Thanks. I’ve been using the Obsidian plugin which has been fine up until now.
I’ve been using Joplin for awhile and am very happy with it. Sync via Dropbox, with tags to use it for GTD (getting things done) works like a charm!
Kinda clunky for my taste personally
Yeah, and doesn’t support (coming soon apparently) mobile extensions so no feature parity. But what stopped me from using Joplin for tasks was the unreliable alarm.
Joplin is pretty good as a lot of other stuff though.
Same here but I sync via my home server and syncthing to 4 devices.
I’ve recently started using also as a wiki. As I found I’d save a bookmark in Firefox, go to view it down the track, and the site is gone.
So it’s now also my recipe book. My python / django / flask etc knowledge base.
My to do list.
Etc etc. Really have gone all in, and loving joplin
Tasks.org for all the important things that I need synced proper. Logseq for work and personal stuff, where i put all my ideas and info i’ve learned. Nextcloud notes for my digital post-it notes, like shopping lists. :)
I really liked the simplicity of GNOME To Do when it was around. The successor seems to be GNOME Endeavor, which I haven’t tried extensively.
Logseq. Linear To-Do-lists aren’t for me, and in Logseq, I can do it organically
I need to make it a priority to give logseq a try. I moved from Joplin to obsidian.md a couple years ago, because i realized an open data format (plaintext markdown files) was more important to me than an open source app (because I can still easily query and manipulate my data with open source CLI tools). I think at this point if I can replicate about 75% of my obsidian workflow in logseq, I’ll make the jump and adapt my workflows to logseq’s strengths and capabiities.
I think both are equally great and it’s more about taste.
Logseq is an outliner, so basically everything is written in bullet points. For my type of thinking, that’s great. Obsidian is more about longer notes.
You can archive both with extensions, so it’s about you what you prefer.
I use Vikunja, which is a self-hosted web app that can be run as a PWA.
I use tuxsudo’s instance, but I believe Project Segfault also hosts it if you can’t/don’t want to host it yourself.
I use Emacs+org-mode on pc and orgzly on mobile. Syncthing to sync them.
Seconded, although I use a private webdav instance to sync. Org mode is easily the best task manager I’ve used.