On Reminders, tasks are divided into traditional lists that you can create and arrange as you see fit. ![]() I am not a fan of this kind of look though, and I expect the software side of Apple’s devices to change quite radically now that Jony Ive (Vice President of Industrial Design at Apple) is also in charge of software design. Interesting Fact: Apple has been an advocate of this particular design philosophy with many of its apps for the Mac and its iOS devices in the past. ![]() Reminders on the other hand, is an app that sports a heavy skeuomorphic design, which means that it tries very hard to resemble a real object (in this case, a notepad). Any.Do is an app that sports a minimal look of black text over a white background and some light blue UI elements here and there. This is perhaps the aspect where both Any.Do and Reminders differ the most. In the past few months however, two major to-do apps became available: Apple’s own Reminders (which now comes installed by default on all iOS devices) and Any.Do (which we reviewed extensively here).īoth of them are free and among the most popular task managers on the iPhone nowadays, so it is only fair to compare how they fare against each other and see which is the best option for iPhone or iOS device users. That said, these apps tend to be on the expensive side, with almost all the best ones starting at $2.99 and upwards. ![]() No one can complain about that though, since productivity is something so important for everyone that each of us wants something that suits their needs perfectly. To-do apps are, besides games, perhaps the most abundant kind of apps on the App Store.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |