26 September 2016

Todoist (for iPhone)

Editors
By Jill Duffy

Todoist is a powerful to-do-list app that puts task-management prowess at your fingertips. Productivity enthusiasts are likely to count it among their favorite productivity app, and more casual users will also find plenty to love, too. The free version of Todoist is very capable, but it's much better at the $29-per-year Premium level, which is what I've reviewed here. If that price—which is quite competitive in the space—is within range of what you're willing to pay, then download Todoist to your iPhone today. It's an Editors' Choice to-do-list iPhone app.

This review focuses on the Todoist iPhone app and only provides a brief overview of the service as a whole (which is also an Editors' Choice). Refer to PCMag's review of Todoist for more on the complete experience.

Pricing
Todoist is a freemium service, like most other apps in the to-do list space. You can download it to your phone for free and use all its basic features, including creating tasks, adding due dates, and organizing tasks into lists. You'll also get a taste of some of the more advanced features, with limitations in the free version. The free account lets you make up to 80 projects for organizing your tasks, and you can share a project with up to five people.

Todoist iPhone app

A Premium membership, at $28.99 per year, unlocks features that many people with productivity on the brain will want to use. You get task labels and reminders, location-based reminders, and the ability to add notes and upload files. It adds full collaboration capabilities, labels and reminders, the ability to add tasks via email, and more. You can organize and even color-code up to 200 projects and have up to 25 people in each of them with a Premium account as well. Some of these features, I feel, should be in the free app. Seeing as Apple's stock Reminders app has location-based reminders for free, I'd like to see those included in Todoist for free as well, even if it has to be limited.

A competing service called Any.do charges nearly the same as Todoist for its Pro account, about $27 per year. Wunderlist charges more for its Pro account, $49.99 per year or $4.99 per month, which is pricey. Remember the Milk, one of the oldest collaborative to-do apps, has a Pro subscription for $39.99 per year.

Very small businesses looking for a task-management app would do fine with Todoist, Any.do, or Wunderlist, as they all have a business-grade plan. But another app worth considering is Asana. Asana costs a lot more, about $100 per year per person, but you get a much more than simple to-do lists. Asana is a complete workflow management tool in addition to being a very filled out task-management app. It might be overkill for personal use, but it's an Editors' Choice for communication and collaboration tools for small businesses. PCMag has not evaluated Todoist for Business.

Design and Features
The Todoist iPhone app loosely mirrors what you see in the Todoist Web and desktop apps, only the format is slightly reconfigured for the smaller screen. Your main view is your tasks, which you can sort however you like. I set my default to show tasks due today and overdue. There's also a view to see tasks due in the next seven days.

A collapsed left-side menu gives you access to projects you're managing and organizational tools such as labels and filters. From the left menu you can reach the app's settings, where you can personalize Todoist's color scheme if you're a Premium member. You can also customize which notifications you get and how. Todoist has standard push notifications on iPhone as well as the option to instead receive your notifications by email. For example, you might prefer to get a notification via email if an invited collaborator declines to join your list if it's not the kind of pressing information you want interrupting you at random.

One thing you can't customize is the badge count. In Wunderlist, you can change the badge count on the iPhone app to mean tasks that are due today or are overdue, or unread messages on shared lists, but in Todoist the badge count only means the number of due and overdue tasks.

A quick action button in the lower right corner of the main dashboard lets you add a task with ease. Just type a task, like "Call the realtor," and add as much or as little information to it as you want. Todoist supports natural language input for assigning due dates, so if you write "Call the realtor today at noon," the app will automatically assign a deadline and reminder for that time. You can turn off this natural language parsing if it gets in the way.

There are other typing conveniences, too. Adding a pound or hash symbol assigns a task to the project of that name, such as #Work, and type-ahead suggestions help ensure you get the name right. You can also add comments to a task, assign a priority level, and even assign it to someone if you want to collaborate on a task list. More on collaboration in a moment.

The app responds well to touch. Swiping a task left to right marks it complete, and right to left brings up options for postponing the due date to a later time. A green band and white check mark appear for the former and a yellow band with calendar icon the latter. Those visual cues confirm your action, so you're never left guessing what a swipe means.

Syncing and Apps for Other Platforms
One of Todoist's selling points is that it has apps for so many platforms. In addition to having an iPhone app, there are apps for Android, Web, Windows 10, Windows 10 Mobile, Mac, and plugins for Gmail, Thunderbird, and Chrome. Additionally, Todoist plays well with other apps, with a long list of integration options on Todoist's website.

Todoist is a cloud-based service, so all your tasks and notes from one app automatically sync to all the other places where you have Todoist installed. Having used the app for more than a year, syncing was reliable, but I often had to force syncs in the browser and frequently update the version of the app that was running. The iPhone app refreshes quickly, with a simple pull-down gesture forcing a sync when necessary.

Collaboration
If you invite collaborators into a project (sometimes called a list in other apps), they'll need to sign up for a Todoist account, but they don't need to upgrade to Premium. With collaborators on board, you can assign tasks to one another, add comments to tasks that everyone can see, and so forth. You'll know when other collaborators mark tasks as done, too. You can get notifications for just about every level of activity on a shared project.

As mentioned, up to five people can collaborate on a project for free, whereas Premium members can have up to 25 people on a project. It doesn't have to be the same five or 25 people in different projects. For example, you might have a household project shared among a partner, a parent, and three kids, as well as a work project shared with five of your colleagues.

Todoist iPhone app

Good Karma
Todoist has one unique feature that I love called Karma. It's a report that shows your productivity (that is, how many tasks you crossed off) in the current week based on your color-coded projects. The Karma report is limited to Premium users.

In the report, you can see at a glance whether you're focusing on the right things. Let's say you have a goal to get one task done per day from your blue Personal project but three tasks per day from your red Work project. Looking at the graph will tell you immediately whether you're meeting your goals, or whether you're getting distracted from red tasks in favor of doing blue tasks (probably so you can feel busy, even though you're not prioritizing effectively). It might also draw your attention to which days of the week you tend to get the most done or other trends about your own productivity.

The report is a powerful function. No other todo list app I've seen has anything like it. It's similar to a very lightweight version of a reporting tool you might see in a full-scale project management app.

A Super iPhone App for Task Masters
With a paid Premium account, Todoist is one of the most feature-rich to-do apps I've used on the iPhone. It also has a simple and functional interface, support for collaboration, and apps for many platforms so that you can get to your to-do list no matter where you are. For all those reasons, Todoist's iPhone app is an Editors' Choice.

If you aren't willing to pay for Premium and find Todoist's free level of service is too limiting, you should consider Wunderlist's free version instead. But if you're in the market for a serious to-do app that's rich with features and collaboration opportunities, and you don't mind paying a few bucks a month, Todoist is excellent.

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Have you eliminated photos unintentionally from your recycle bin? Has your antivirus deleted an important file thinking it was defective? Can't you find the program you're looking for, even if you activate Windows' system restore? Disk Drill Windows Data Recovery could be what you're searching for.

Convert all types of formats

Are you looking for a software to help you recover data or files? Disk Drill for Windows analyzes your PC in order to rescue all those files you have eliminated, or that you have just lost. This versatile program is capable of restoring up to 200 types of files.

Disk Drill for Windows supports different storage devices—from the traditional lifelong hard drive to USB flash drives, memory cards, SDHC cards, etc.

Interfaces for everyone

Using Disk Drill is very simple: just by starting it up, it will scan your device searching for all the files you wish to recover. In this sense, the program works as an antivirus—you can do a quick and simple search, or a more thorough one.

Don't be scared if Disk Drill takes a long time to do a scan. When compared with its competition, this program takes a while longer, but we have found it's more effective, in return. It has even recovered a picture from more than a year ago!

The other big problem with Disk Drill is that it doesn't offer anything the competition doesn't already include. Therefore, Disk Drill is relegated to second place; it becomes the “Plan B” we resort to if the other data restorers don't work as we wished when trying to recover a specific file.

Great but not essential

Disk Drill Windows Data Recovery is a more than competent file recoverer. It takes a little longer to scan than its competition, but its success rate is higher, in return. It would need some extra function in order to become essential. Until then we will only use it when our model programs fail.

Disk Drill is a free professional-grade file recovery software, it values the importance of your data by implementing several safe recovery methods and enabling unique Recovery Vault technology that helps keeping your data secure.

Disk Drill is the only tool you will need to get your data back yourself, if your hard drive is not physically damaged. Disk Drill is an intelligent undelete solution that easily recovers files of all formats from NTFS, FAT, HFS/HFS+, EXT2/EXT3/EXT4 or even formatted, damaged or deleted partitions. Disk Drill's multiple recovery algorithms include Quick and Deep Scans, Universal Partition Search, and undeletion of protected data. Recovery process is simple, its progress can be paused, saved and loaded when it's convenient to you. Disk Drill reads and recovers from any media that can be mounted into your Windows PC: internal or external hard drives, memory cards, cameras, USB flash drives, Kindles and even some iPods.

Disk Drill is a free file recovery software with data backup. It is ready to become your trusted hard drive recovery software in any scenario: accidental data deletion, emptied Recycle Bin, virus attack, lost or inaccessible partition, power failure etc. Easy-to-use extra features like backup image creation, data protection, bad sectors management and others in combination with a user-friendly interface ensure your satisfaction with our cost-effective do-it-yourself data recovery software.

Apple Music (for Android)

By Jeffrey L. Wilson

An official Apple app on your Android device? Yes, it's true. With Apple Music for Android, Cupertino's first real Android app, Apple crossed the enemy lines and opened up its music streaming service to Google partisans. Recently emerged from a lengthy beta, Apple Music boasts a new homescreen widget and an equalizer, but some flaws I noted in the beta have carried over, too. Furthermore, without the support of the Apple ecosystem, Apple Music is less appealing on Android than it is on Apple's mobile devices. While it's not the best streaming music service, Apple Music is enjoyable, and recent price drops for college students make it more appealing to that core (and frequently cash-strapped) audience.

For an in-depth analysis of Apple Music's features, such as its curated playlists, exclusive radio stations, and Connect social network, check out our full review of Apple Music for iPhone. Here, we'll discuss the features specific to the Android app.

Apple Music (for Android)Start Me Up
On iPhones and iPads with iOS 9 installed, Apple Music replaces the My Music app, but on Android it's a separate download. Subscriptions start at $9.99 per month for individual listeners, while six-person family plans cost a very reasonable $14.99 per month.

As of August 2016, college students receive an even sweeter deal. Knowledge-seekers enrolled in an eligible college or university can get Apple Music for just $4.99 per month. Students can take advantage of the discount for up to four years. Spotify, an Editors' Choice for Android streaming music services, and Tidal offer similar student deals.

Although Apple Music has a very generous 90-day free trial period, the service doesn't offer a free basic plan for people who'd rather not open their wallets. On the other hand, Slacker Radio, another Editors' Choice award-winning Android music service, boasts a truly free option, as well as a $3.99 per month plan. Slacker has lots of flexibility in regards to how you pay (or not pay!) for its service.

Remix
We tested the service on a Google Nexus 6 smartphone and discovered that the Apple Music experience on Android is largely the same as the iOS version. There's a robust music catalog and a handful of music videos to explore. In fact, the experience hasn't changed much since the beta, except for the new equalizer, home-screen widget, and under-the-hood fixes. The equalizer is the most interesting of the three additions, as it lets you adjust Apple Music's audio output. You can tinker with various sliders to create a custom sound, or choose one of 10 presets. It sounds pretty good.

Apple Music (for Android)Unfortunately, the new Apple Music carries some of the beta version's ills. For example, there are no lyrics, and you endure moments of long lag during the signup process.

Apple Music for Android also can't leverage the Apple ecosystem the way it can on iOS. Obviously, there's no Siri or Apple Watch support. Unlike most iPhone owners, Android users won't already have a preexisting library of iTunes songs on their devices for Apple Music to complement. On the plus side, you can download tracks for offline listening for those times when you can't connect to a wireless signal.

Play It Again
Apple Music for iPhone has minor issues, but it's a fine and convenient built-in service for discovering new iTunes songs and listening to the ones you already have. But the download is a tougher sell on Android. While it features most of the same selling points, those that are missing make the weaknesses that much worse. If you want to subscribe to the best Android music streaming services, stick with Spotify and Slacker Radio, our current Editors' Choices for Android streaming music apps.

25 September 2016

Best Windows 8 apps: Windows 8 app group test

The best Windows 8 apps. 5 great Windows apps from the Windows store reviewed.

1. Livedrive

Livedrive
  • Rating: ratingsratingsratingsratingsratings
  • Reviewed on: 4 January 13
  • RRP: £9.95-£14.95 per month

Livedrive is now offering a native Windows 8 __app for its online backup and file sharing service. The service is pricey, but offers capacity far beyond that of the competition.

Read our Livedrive review.

2. Fresh Paint for Windows 8

Fresh Paint for Windows 8
  • Rating: ratingsratingsratingsratingsratings
  • Reviewed on: 5 July 12
  • RRP: FREE

If you have a tablet that runs Windows 8, give Fresh Paint a try. It's a fun __app that can be used to create cool and interesting artwork. And it's free.

Read our Fresh Paint for Windows 8 review.

3. Docstoc

Docstoc
  • Rating: ratingsratingsratingsratingsratings
  • Reviewed on: 7 June 12
  • RRP: FREE

If you run a small business and are looking for genuine advice from people who have experienced many of the issues you're facing or are acknowledged as industry leaders, then Docstoc is well worth a look.

Read our Docstoc review.

4. Tweetro for Windows 8

Tweetro for Windows 8
  • Rating: ratingsratingsratingsratingsratings
  • Reviewed on: 4 July 12
  • RRP: FREE

It's pretty simple, and there's nothing outstanding function wise, but Tweetro for Windows 8 is a good-looking and slick Twitter app for Windows 8 that shows off some of the best aspects of the Metro interface.

Read our Tweetro for Windows 8 review.

5. join.me for Windows 8

join.me for Windows 8
  • Rating: ratingsratingsratingsratingsratings
  • Reviewed on: 3 August 12
  • RRP: FREE

join.me for Windows 8 is a Metro-style app for Windows PC, laptop and tablet that offers a simple interface into the already excellent join.me screen-sharing tool. Recommended.

Read our join.me for Windows 8 review.