![]() But in return you get custom statistics, dashboards, graphs the flexibility to plan and visualize inside your task management system and permament (if you so desire) historical records for your work. There is some jankyness and legwork you have to do to turn Obsidian into a great task management app. I discovered that, for me, a single unified tool for everything was far more powerful than fragmenting my work across several custom designed tools. I used OmniFocus for many years for a GTD-style task system, but I fell in love after I started importing parts of my system into Obsidian. I personally love task management in Obsidian. I would love to hear about others people’s experience, solutions, or opinions, to maybe help me find a way to still yet be content and productive using Obsidian for task management, and scheduling. Dataview is, as everyone knows, key to getting the most out of data, like tasks and calendars, but, alas, it generally requires a programmers background to use without significant time in learning and relearning to set up any useful query view.The Reminders plugin, necessary to make tasks similar to most task applications, is nice, but it does not sync well, and the values get reset to odd time or event days, without explanation.In addition, any project like structure capacity is not built in to tasks, and has to be pieced together using other plugins, folders, MoCs, etc. Furthermore, the inclusion of extra data, like tags and reminders, is a bit fickle on exactly what has to go where, and even then it seems to get jumbled up over time. ![]() Also, it offers no end-date for repeating tasks.
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