
Best of all, it offers a clean user experience even when there are two people are working on a list concurrently. Once done, you can share this with your friends, family, or office colleagues with editing capabilities of their own. You can also add notes and due dates to each item in the list. Using this app, you can add to-dos to your newly create to-do lists. The best part about this app is that, you get just about every feature in the free version alone, unless you are also looking for premium features like unlimited task delegation and file uploads. This powerful tool that is known to boost your productivity, has been awarded the best to-do list app two years in a row, by the Verge and Apple consecutively. It was known to be the best even since it was not taken over by Microsoft. So many of our apps today beg for attention or create stress or are over-complicated.Wunderlist is easily the best to-do app in the list. I partly made this app for myself and partly because I think there's a broader need for simply designed tools that make our lives easier. My name is Nick Burka and I’m a developer based in Montréal, Canada. I wanted something dead simple with just a light sprinkling of delight on top, so I created One Big Thing.

Every other task app I’ve tried had too many bells and whistles, made me feel bad for not getting tasks done, or let tasks pile up in a way that felt overwhelming. I didn't invent the idea, but I think I’ve created the best app for it. Sure! There are heaps of ways people use to-dos and this specific one is sometimes called the “1-3-5 Rule”. That makes sense and it’s why I really like having to prioritize my one big thing each morning. Yeah! We should really only have ONE big priority.

Illogically, we reasoned that by changing the word we could bend reality. Only in the 1900s did we pluralize the term and start talking about priorities. It stayed singular for the next five hundred years. A smart guy named Greg McKeown wrote a book called Essentialism that has a quote that really resonates with me: The word priority came into the English language in the 1400s.
