You can add a descriptive paragraph underneath the project title and a counter in front of the project name keeps track of active tasks and the total number of tasks in the project. You can also sort tasks by context, start time, deadline or priority, or filter them using user–defined tags. My project is called ‘PZG posts’ and the tasks are sorted by status (today, tomorrow, next, scheduled, someday, waiting, completed, archived). The first screenshot below shows Doit‘s project view. I have tested the Doit browser version (3.7.22) and desktop app (1.6.6) for a month using Safari (it also runs on Firefox and Chrome) on a 2009 iMac and a 2012 MacBook Pro (both running Mountain Lion), as well as the IOS versions (3.9.4) for iPad and iPhone. Check out the full review and the screenshots… While the free version is quite robust, the premium version gives you lots of extra functionality for just $20 per year, including subtasks, a unique review function and the capacity to track goals. Doit has matured into an attractive GTD–compatible task manager with email and calendar integration and supported by mobile apps for the iPhone, iPad and Android. Of late, I have come across so many positive comments about Doit that I decided to give the app another ‘go’ - and I am glad I did. When I tried out Doit at the start of 2012 I liked the way in which it had incorporated David Allen’s Getting Things Done® (GTD®) methodology, but the browser–based app ran so glacially slow as to be unworkable.
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