

Take a look at UserVoice and draw your own conclusions – . Microsoft To-Do is nowhere close to feature parity with Wunderlist and I still don’t see it converging to the point where it is. Here we are, 145 days later, and little progress has been made on key features. I think the table pretty much speaks for itself. Y – Can be done with personal lists and shared lists

N, as you see above, some of the requirements are met by Planner, but with Wunderlist I have one place to go to manage all my tasks. Use one app (or have data sharing) for both my personal and team tasks To-Do Browser Extension (single click add for Chrome, Firefox, and Safari)Īdd additional task details for file content Y – P/B, can email list or individual tasks Partial support – To-Do – no Mac or Apple Watch support Support for iPhone, iPad (full screen), Android, Mac, Apple Watch, Windows and Web Featureĭiscuss questions and collaborate on tasks P/B in the Todoist column means that the feature is a part of the Premium/Business offering (which is currently $29 per year per user – very reasonable). I’ll add a column called “State as of 1/31/18” for the updates to To-Do and Planner and another column called “Todoist as of 1/31/18” for the current state of Todoist. Let me revisit the table I created in September and do an update on the Microsoft options and add a column for Todoist. What am I using as a Wunderlist Replacement? So, why Todoist? In that post, I said that I would do follow-ups occasionally – and here we are.

And then mistakes were made – Ditching Wunderlist for a Brand-New App was a Mistake. At first, when I heard about the acquisition, I was excited – Three Reasons Why I’m Excited About Microsoft’s Acquisition of Wunderlist. For years, I’ve used Wunderlist (even before the Microsoft acquisition). And then comes my notes manager ( OneNote for Work, Evernote for Capturing and Personal). My calendar comes in a close second (Outlook with Microsoft 365). My todo list manager is the most important productivity app.
