Google Tasks review: Still more to do
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Google is taking another stab at putting together a coherent to-do list app by breaking off Tasks into a full, standalone service, complete with its own mobile apps and deep integration into the new Gmail redesign.
The new app is like a fresh coat of paint for the
long-neglected Tasks built-in to Gmail, with a crisp, cleaner UI and the
aspirations (at least on paper) to serve as a central hub for all your
to-do items. Unfortunately, while Google may have made Tasks look better
than ever, underneath the new facade is the same patchwork mess of
missing features and competing services that it’s always been.
Let’s start with the good first, though. Along with the
new look — which feels like an updated take on Google’s Material Design
formula, with more sliding menus and use of the Google Pixel’s Product
Sans font throughout the apps — the biggest thing Tasks has going for it
is the impressive Gmail integration. The updated web version of Gmail
now includes Tasks as a sidebar that’s available at any time, and you
can drag and drop emails on them to turn them into to-do list items.
Given that I’m the kind of person who already uses my inbox as a
secondary, ad-hoc to-do list, being able to better organize and track
that process straight from the site is useful.
Google also has most of the basic features of a
to-do list app down with Tasks. You can create multiple lists, assign
dates to items (which is also the only option for sorting, aside from
manually dragging things around), add additional notes to a task, and
add multiple subtasks below a parent task. And the app itself is
lightning fast, both at navigating between menus or account and syncing
up from the desktop site to the mobile apps.
Unfortunately, those basic features are all that
Tasks can do. There’s a huge amount of things that you’d expect from a
half-decent to-do list app that isn’t in Tasks. You can’t set specific
times for tasks to remind you, which seems like a huge oversight.
There’s no option to rank items with different priority levels, no
ability to search lists for a specific task, no recurring tasks, and no
categories or tag system to filter items with.
There are some sort of notifications on the mobile app,
but since Tasks won’t let you assign times or due dates, there’s no real
way to control when they pop up (I’m honestly still not entirely sure
what I did to have the one that managed to show up appear in the first
place).
Also, rather bafflingly, Google Reminders (part of Google
Calendar and Google Keep) still exists! And with features that Tasks
doesn’t have, like scheduling specific times and recurring tasks. But
you can’t even use that to fill in the gaps that Tasks leaves, because
Google won’t let you use both at the same time, either — you have to
manually toggle between Tasks and Reminders, which feels like a baffling
step backwards.
Tasks feels a lot like the quintessential Google product
from the last decade — instead of fixing the app or service they’ve
shipped, Google just makes a new one that improves on some of the
features and hopes everything sorts itself eventually. It’s the sort of
thing we’ve seen time and again with things like messaging (see: Talk,
Hangouts, Voice, Messenger, Allo, and now Chat) or the fact that say,
Google Earth and Google Maps are still separate apps.
There’s the bones of a good to-do list app in Google
Tasks, but without some key additions, it probably won’t be replacing
more full-featured services like Todoist or Things.
And if it’s ever going to get there, Google’s going to have to take a
good hard look at some of its redundant services and start trimming
things down, instead of just adding more half-baked alternatives on top
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