Currently, the task dependencies feature is only available on the paid plan. Making it accessible on the free plan would enhance usability for ADHD users who rely on task management.
@CryptoElPres Bro I have ADHD and you should take my recommendation and ignore everybody else. I was the king of poor time management, I've tried a lot of "productivity" apps, the only one that worked for me was something called @amplenote It's a note taking app yada yada yada but the golden goose of the situation is it's Task management section. You create your tasks and set some parameters (importance, and some time based stuff, etc) and it gives it a "task score" and it automatically ranks your tasks based on this task score (an algo that's based on the Eisenhower matrix btw, which is something Moneytaur recommends). So this means after you create the task you don't have to think about what fkn order to do everything in (which was my biggest mental resistance/barrier), you just load your tasks and see what's at the top and you can either do the task OR "snooze" the task for a later date and move on to the next in the list. This has completely changed the way I operate. I look at my task list every day and just make my way through it. Zero paralysis. Every task was placed for a reason, and will appear at the date that I chose for it to appear on the list. I don't have to fear that I might be forgetting something, and I don't have to get overwhelmed by the thought of making task lists anymore. You can insert the tasks into a calendar that's integrated (and you can sync with Google calendar) and it blocks out the time The free plan is generous and non restrictive, you could get away with using the free plan and be able to use all essential features. I pay for it in order to access the task dependencies feature but it's not essential Then on top of that it has an Obsidian-style note taking layout. Biggest difference with this app compared to other similar apps is that Amplenote aims to streamline the process from ideation to documentation to action. It's pretty intuitive and a quicker learning curve than Notion/Obsidian imo. You just have to learn some key commands to get the most out of it. The biggest hurdle is probably: To really get the most out of it and make the shift you gotta look at the task section every day (or close to it). It's a habit you gotta form. But I just made it so windows opens the desktop app on startup so it's right there in my face every time I turn on the PC. Also the CEO writes in a blog every month and you get a feel for his design philosophies, I jive with em good and proper Give it a look. Feel free to DM me if you want me to help you set up