![]() I have come to the conclusion that outside of productivity types – or “productivityists” – that getting people out of email and into a task manager is a losing battle. When I was exploring Flow, I was doing so so that I could find a way to better implement those who trust email for task management and those who don’t. Those who don’t want to move their email tasks into another inbox. I suppose I should qualify this by saying I’ve never made as concerted an effort to leave OmniFocus behind before now, but I have had to look elsewhere to augment the app for some of the following already:ġ. ![]() I have had a really hard time “quitting OmniFocus” in the past, mainly because there hasn’t been anything that can serve all of my needs. And I’m going to start getting things done with Asana alone from now on. I have been getting things done with Asana – more things, in fact. Some people have called me crazy to do so, and even more have no idea what Asana is. Yep, I’m removing everything from the app I’ve used for years and investing in one I’ve used for only a few months. But I’m spurning it for a new (and more suitable) tool: Asana. ![]() I have had a long-standing productivity love affair with OmniFocus. ![]()
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