This is fantastic. It utilizes exactly the right elements for me to replace Trello. You’ve got yourself a new user and customer.
My only feature requests would be,
- the ability to quickly add a time estimate on tasks. That way if I get an email with daily todos i can get a total estimated time
- ability to get the todo list of tomorrow in my inbox the night before, so I can mentally prepare for the next day.
I would easily pay 5x that $1/mo if those features were added.
Could you just put the time estimate in the title of the task?
For such a simple project, there is going to be strong urge (from both internal and external sources) to go down the path of feature creep.
First an hour estimate, then uploading photos, then descriptions... pretty soon you've got a half-baked Trello and user attrition because you're not as good as Trello... or Airtable.
Keep it as simple as possible for as long as possible OP.
I wonder why this news isn’t as widespread as SpaceX launches. I would have loved to follow this from the beginning! Whats the best place to stay updated about this specific mission? - what a time to be alive
SpaceX's goals of creating a Mars colony with millions of people moving there in 20-60 years andreducing most long-distance travel on Earth to ~40 minutes create much wider audiences with huge excitement attached to every move. Also, Elon Musk is a celebrity and drives a lot of SpaceX interest.
Israel's SpaceIL is much smaller, has much more constrained focus and draws a smaller crowd due to the less-epic plans and less-known personalities. Not to take away from their accomplishments - I love this news story - but are lots of reasons that this is less-publicized as compared to SpaceX launches.
We all know that each successful SpaceX activity gets us closer to a Mars colony and that is super duper exciting.
Im fascinated by the popularity of curated lists. There are so many and most of them get a ton of likes/upvotes/etc. any research on why this is the case?
I am not sure about research (though of course research-based evidence is always good), but I think this stems from people's innate desire for simplicity/order. Listicles hack our primitive brain.
True, but the amount of available (and often identical) lists is incredible. Are people really using these lists long-term or are they enthusiastically bookmarked and then forgotten for ever? Genuinely interested
https://hackernoon.com/dear-apple-please-fix-notifications-6...