TaskPocket, a calm task manager for your browser
Your brain is a terrible to-do list. It nags you at 2am, forgets the important stuff, and scatters tasks across notes, screenshots, your inbox, and a sticky note you already lost.
TaskPocket gives all of it one home. A thought shows up, you hit a shortcut, type it, and it lands in your Inbox in about 3 seconds. Then you get back to what you were doing. Once a day you empty the Inbox: this goes to Today, that goes to Upcoming, that big idea goes to Someday. No tags, no priorities, no setup ritual.
The part that matters most: every task gets two dates. The day you plan to start it, and the day it’s actually due. Most apps only give you one. That missing second date is why things slip.
What you get:
3-second capture. One shortcut, straight to your Inbox.
Two dates per task. A start date and a real deadline.
Areas, projects, and sections. Group work the way you think, reorder everything by dragging.
Recurring tasks. Daily, weekly, monthly, yearly. Check one off and the next appears on its own.
Checklists and subtasks. Paste a whole list at once.
Someday list. A home for “not now” ideas, kept out of Today.
Completed view. Finished tasks filed by the day you did them.
Upcoming and Deadlines views. See your week before it starts.
Exportable data. One-click JSON or CSV, no lock-in.
Private by default. Your data is never sold or shared.
Works in any browser, on any device, desktop or mobile. A native iOS app is in development, with Android right behind it.
Free right now. Unlimited tasks, projects, and areas, no credit card. Built solo, no team, no investors. Early users keep it free.
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