Review:Voodo

introduction

So. My past few app reviews have been for calendaring solutions. The first couple were all inclusive, containing both event management and project management (if in a clunky way) and the third had some basic task management capabilities built in as well (although was not nearly as robust a solution). It was that third, Calvetica, that I landed on as my calendaring app of choice. It was easy to use, easy to input data into, and did just what I needed done, excepting project management. It’s this that I’ll turn to now. And I’ll review the first great program of the category that I have run across. It’s called Voodo (try and let the name not turn you away; perhaps a poor choice, but still a good app, and it might be perfect for your needs).

So what is Voodo? Voodo is a robust task management solution, that allows you to input the tasks that you have, along with their relevant details, and then get to work on them. It does a couple of clever things on top of this, as well, that might interest you.

the likes

As I previously said, this was the first good solution that I came across. Not perfect, mind you, but quite good.

The stand out feature, to me, was its google calendar integration. It’s not something I saw done in other task/project management apps, and was quite unique. It’s not a google tasks integration either. Rather, it creates a new calendar called “Voodo”, and tasks are uploaded as all day events onto it. If the task has a due date, it’s put on that date. If it doesn’t, well, they are made timeless and synced somewhere as well. This implementation is nice for a couple of reasons:

  1. It gives you quick access to your tasks from anywhere, regardless of whether you have the app with you. All you need is access to your google calendar (which is easy to get on any phone with data or computer connected to the ‘net).

  2. It also provides a backup in case anything happens. Hopefully the importance of this speaks for itself.

When tasks are completed, rather than removing them from the calendar, they are marked with a “+” at the beginning of the task name, creating a historical record on the calendar as well. All in all, the google calendar integration is quite a compelling feature.

It doesn’t all the creation of projects, so to speak, but allows the addition of tags to the task, so you are able to group them in this manner. Tags are a great means of categorization, and provide the ability to drill down into our tasks pretty quickly.

Speaking of the tasks, you can add location and people contexts to each, and add notes, set dates, and prioritize (4 levels). And everything can be sorted by these things (excepting notes).

the dislikes

My biggest dislike is probably the lack of projects. Like I said, tags are quite nice, and helpful, but it’d be nice to be able to group tasks together in a more coherent way. For example, I will often have a project where things need to be done in succession, and it’d be nice to be able to more specifically set this (rather than doing it generically with the due dates and tags).

It also makes google calendar “clunky”. If you have a lot of tasks, it adds a lot of info onto your calendar. This isn’t a dealbreaker by any means, but it does add some unnecessary clutter. I wish there was a way to create the tasks as time specific events, rather than all day events.

The interface also works quite nicely, but isn’t the prettiest to look at. Again, not a dealbreaker by any means, but something keeping it in the good not great category.

conclusion

As I started by saying, Voodo is a great app. If you need a simple, straightforward task management application with pretty sweet google calendar integration, look no further. It’s inexpensive too. My final verdict is 4 out of 5 stars.

Review:Calvetica

introduction

As I’ve mentioned in the past couple of reviews, I’ve been on a quest to find the perfect calendaring solution for the iPad. It just seems like the iPad was made for personal organization style apps, with its ability to richly input and process data. Unfortunately those last couple of apps didn’t meet my admittedly lofty expectations; perhaps though perfection is too high of a goal, and not something within our grasp if we aren’t willing to develop it ourselves. But then there is today’s review: Calvetica. It’s as close to my idea of “perfect” as I’ve found and has (mostly) stopped my search for anything else.

I first heard about Calvetica when it was released for the iPhone. I saw it then and, not having an iPhone, thought it looked interesting but not worth picking up. Then when I found myself with an iPad, I revisited it, only to find it was iPhone only (unless you wanted to use the ugly scaling capabilities). And then not too long ago, I discovered they made an universal version, thereby enabling it on the iPad. You probably care less about it’s history (and my history with it) and more about how it works though. Look no further then.

likes

I love that Calvetica has gestures! I can easily scroll between months, select days and pinch for different views. Long taps bring up options like “add an event”. Everything I need to do can be done within a few taps, pinches or strokes.

I love that event input by and large is quick and easy. Tapping and holding brings up an entry form, and the basics can be done there. Another tap will get you into more advanced options as well. It’s all quite natural and easy.

I love that it integrates my Google Calendar (through the built-in app). I can be in sync on my computer, ipad and blackberry all at the same time with little hassle. There is some hassle though; why won’t these apps sync directly rather than using the built in calendar as a proxy?

I love the Agenda View & Week View from the main calendar screen. I love seeing about 6 weeks, alongside having the option of zooming to a day (particularly Agenda View as a list of events) or Week View, a list of all of my events for the week.

I love the ability to make a quick reminder. With a tap I can set a generic reminder for 15 minutes. This is great if I want to focus on something, zone out of the rest of the world, and then come back to things after the given time period.

Finally, i’ll mention that i love its built in Search ability (and how it isn’t cumbersome). It actually works quite well, and is self contained in a popover.

dislikes

I mentioned Google Calendar integration as a like; it’s one of those two-sided coin features though as its also a detriment in that it syncs through the built-in Calendar and not on its own. The one problem I’ve had with Calvetica has been Google Calendar sync issues. They’ve been rare though, and are in no ways a dealbreaker. It seems like it’d function much more smoothly if it directly synced.

Slow load times is my other major dislike. I think because it loads so much data from the get go, loading can be rough. I’ve seen a full calendar make it crawl (on my friend’s iPhone), and on my iPad it still takes a few seconds to load. It seems that things aren’t as optimized as they could be (but perhaps this is caused by sync issues that aren’t that easily fixed?). It’s also not a dealbreaker for me, but is definitely something that could be looked at by the developer.

what I’d like to see

The only thing that comes to mind is natural language input, as in a quick entry bar always on-screen, in which I could type something like, “Lunch with Jim Tomorrow” and have it automatically add that event to my calendar. That’d be a killer feature.

conclusion

Overall, Calvetica is an incredible app. It suits my needs perfectly. It’s quick and easy to use and feels natural, particularly when you get the gestures down. Outside of some load time and sync issues, I haven’t had any issues, and really, can’t recommend it strongly enough. And it actually does more than I’ve gone into. Also built in is task management (separated from the calendar) that syncs with Mysterious Trousers own cloud solution. Personally, I’m not using this feature; as a task management solution it didn’t suit my needs, but it might suit yours. And Calvetica seems to be actively developed which hopefully means more great features and support in the pipeline. 5 out of 5 stars