Click the appropriate task, then select ‘Add step’ to add your first sub task or ‘Next step’ to add to existing tasks (see screenshot above). And because I shared many of my old Wunderlist lists with family members (and vice versa), I had to reshare these lists, and persuade them to make the switch to To Do as well.Īs in Wunderlist, I can split each task into sub-tasks, turning larger jobs into more manageable chunks. It transfers everything, then cuts the cord. I was hoping – perhaps naively – that my imported lists and tasks would still sync with Wunderlist while I got to grips with To Do. I have a lot of to- do lists across various categories (Work, Home, Holiday, etc), and it managed to bring them all in without problems. To import my Wunderlist data (see screenshot below left). Like Wunderlist To Do lets you split tasks into sub-tasks To Do got off to a promising start, however.Īfter installing the app on my phone, I followed the prompts I’m just wary of Microsoft’s terrible reputation for maintaining – let alone improving – services it buys (Skype anybody?). I therefore reluctantly switched from Wunderlist a few months ago. And late last year, it revealed Wunderlist will stop working on. Sure enough, two years later Microsoft announced it was shutting down Wunderlist in favour of its own To Do service. I suspected Wunderlist was on borrowed time when Microsoft bought the service in 2015. I’d stick with Wunderlist – the simple, but effective to-do list service that for eight years has been reminding me to do everything from buy milk to renew my home insurance. This article should probably be renamed ‘How I’m Forced To Use Microsoft To Do’. Manage your life with Microsoft To Do | 20 mins.WHAT I’D LIKE TO SEE IN MICROSOFT TO DO.
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