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Microsoft IT Technology

Microsoft's To-Do App Comes To Mac (betanews.com) 49

Microsoft has released To-Do for Mac, finally giving Apple users access to the task management tool on their desktops. The Mac app will allow users to work offline, view their upcoming tasks under "My Day," share to-do lists with friends and colleagues and see flagged emails. From a report: "Today, we'd like to announce the arrival of a new family member -- that's right, the moment many of you have been waiting for is here -- say hello to the Mac app. If you've already been using our app on Android, iOS, Windows, or web, then the Mac app will feel very familiar. Sign in and all your tasks will be waiting for you, ready to be checked off. You can work offline, add tasks to My Day, see your flagged email in your Flagged email list, and share your lists with colleagues or friends and family. The Planner integration isn't available yet, but we're already working on bringing the Assigned to Me list to you," says Polly Davidson, Social Media Strategist, Microsoft.
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Microsoft's To-Do App Comes To Mac

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  • by Viol8 ( 599362 ) on Monday June 17, 2019 @02:11PM (#58777240) Homepage

    "that's right, the moment many of you have been waiting for is here"

    Yeah, all 3 of them and one confused dog.

  • by gtall ( 79522 ) on Monday June 17, 2019 @02:43PM (#58777454)

    Just no. Keep your spyware on your own alleged OS.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    sad that we've actually come to "will allow users to work offline" for a ... to-do list app... wow... corporations even want my to-do list on their servers?

  • Would be good to know how they have done the UI - XCode way? (i.e. Electron), Office way (i.e. C++ engine with a native interface)? Skype way (QT library).
  • Serious question (Score:4, Informative)

    by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Monday June 17, 2019 @03:00PM (#58777576)

    What's special about Microsoft's "to do" app? There are dozens of these sorts of apps already available for the Mac.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by snoozy355 ( 873708 )

      Microsoft acquired the to-do app Wunderlist, which is (was?) already on PC, Mac, iOS and (presumably) other mobile platforms.

      MS To Do is Wunderlist rebranded and, presumably, enhanced and Microsoified. I guess it's no surprise it's on Mac, given it's pedigree.

      • Ah, thank you.

        I know some people really liked Wunderlist. For me, it wasn't a great fit back when I tried it out.

      • by chrish ( 4714 )

        To-Do is a complete rewrite, not a rebrand of Wunderlist. It's pretty much reached feature parity now that the Mac version is released.

        To-Do has a bunch of integration with other MS things like Outlook (but not the Mac version), Teams (I think), etc. but I haven't experienced those.

    • The Microsoft Store version of To-Do integrates with Office 365's Planner, which my company uses. Other than that, I don't use To-Do at all. While it's great I can put it on my MacBook, it's useless until To-Do 1.1 is released with Planner integration.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Honestly, are Microsoft so arrogant and delusional that they believe people using OS's other than those made by Microsoft are sitting around pining for the day when Microsoft decides to drop a little turd of an application nobody wants?

    Sorry, but people already not using MS products, don't give a fuck about the absence of MS products.

    After years of trying to lock everyone into their OS, and apparently utterly failing in the phone market, they now suddenly have a strategy of releasing software for all of tho

  • what the world REALLY NEEDS is another To-Do app, preferably by Microsoft.
    No, wait... No one thought that, ever.
  • about what they might buy or do next is probably more profitable to Microsoft than collecting data from cheap skate PC users...
  • by martinX ( 672498 ) on Monday June 17, 2019 @05:13PM (#58778516)

    I have one of the very few Macs in my organisation of 100 000+ people as my day-to-day machine. Now that the org has moved to Office 365, I have full access to the Office suite with the latest versions and I'm pretty happy about that. Outlook is nice to use, and streets ahead of Apple's Mail mainly because of the calendaring. Not quite as user-friendly, but now that I am using an application that has feature parity with the other 99, 999 people in my organisation, I don't mind that much. PPT is handy, too, for my work and if I ever need the To Do app, it's good to know I now have it.

    Also nifty is Outlook on my iPhone with no need for IT's intervention or help.

    This is why MS is making the whole office suite available for Macs and other devices: so everyone in business and government gets on the Office 365 platform, or at least has fewer reasons not to use it.

    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      So MS is so thrilled with their spyware they figure everyone should have shot at it? Profit motive be damned, folks, MS has your well-being in mind when it comes to using its spyware.

  • and which ones share well?
    I feel like PIM innovation has been dying off, and kinda peaked with the Palm Pilot. Lifebalance almost worked, I would have liked to see that one evolve.

C'est magnifique, mais ce n'est pas l'Informatique. -- Bosquet [on seeing the IBM 4341]

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