It may be too simple for you, but if you can handle thinking and organizing in outlines, check out Workflowy: https://workflowy.com
It may be too simple for you, but if you can handle thinking and organizing in outlines, check out Workflowy: https://workflowy.com
For some reason it feels more stable to me sometimes when in its own tab. I wrote a brief post on my Kinja page about it: How to view the Any.do extension in a full browser window
For music, I find that Rrdio is really helpful in tracking new releases.
Notational Acceleration beats Flick Note any day (except perhaps with the tablet support, I've never tried NA on a tablet). https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.kludgenics.android.notes&hl=en
Tasks for Android marries Google Tasks and ICS. It's beautiful, elegant, and simple. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=ch.teamtasks.tasks.paid&hl=en
Tasks for Android marries Google Tasks and ICS. It's beautiful, elegant, and simple. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=ch.teamtasks.tasks.paid&hl=en
Tasks for Android marries Google Tasks and ICS. It's beautiful, elegant, and simple. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=ch.teamtasks.tasks.paid&hl=en
Tasks for Android marries Google Tasks and ICS. It's beautiful, elegant, and simple. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=ch.teamtasks.tasks.paid&hl=en
Tasks for Android marries Google Tasks and ICS. It's beautiful, elegant, and simple. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=ch.teamtasks.tasks.paid&hl=en
Promoted Tweets will come to all apps soon enough, whether devs and users like it or not. Apps that circumvent them will eventually find their API access yanked. Sadness.
TweetDeck is woefully under-developed by the Twitter mothership. Consider trying TweakDeck, an unaffiliated TweetDeck fork that is very actively developed.
I've been really impressed with the new Any.do (reboot of Taskos) on Android and I use the Google Tasks sync to manage stuff from the web when necessary.
Mr Number needs an awful lot of permissions, including "directly call phone numbers" and "intercept outgoing calls," that this app doesn't seem to need.
None of the OneNote features mentioned here can possibly support using it instead of Evernote. None.
problem is widgets related to the app won't work, that's why a lot of devs lock apps to phone storage
At some point we'll see Chrome on Android, right? With the Chrome OS push ramping up, it's kind of crazy that I can sync Firefox across computers and my Android device (in beta, anyway) but I can't do the same with Chrome, aside from a few hacky apps that only get you halfway thee.