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Mac OS X  |  Desktop Enhancements  |  Themes  |  Two Due

Two Due

Two Due - 2.2.1

to-do list app with many extra features

All Time: (3.3)
This Version: Not rated (0.0)
Current Version: 2.2.1
Release Date: 2008-07-26
License: Commercial
Downloads (this version): 979
Downloads (all versions): 5,496
Price: $10.00

Information Related to Version:

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Product Description:

Two Due is a To Do List manager that does more than most. Some of its special features are: recurring To Do items, so that they can be scheduled to occur on a regular basis; multiple sorting and selection fields; multiple files with remembered viewing options for each; extra fields for each To Do item, such as a multi-line Description, Outcome, Sequence and Web Page; automatic Web Publishing; plus multiple levels of categories in the latest release.

What's new in this version:

The most recent version retooled the user interface and, in doing so, lost any way for a Windows user to access the Preferences window. This may now be done via the Tools / Options menu.

Operating System Requirements:

This product is designed to run on the following operating systems:

  • Mac OS X 10.5 Intel
  • Mac OS X 10.5 PPC
  • Mac OS X 10.4 Intel
  • Mac OS X 10.4 PPC
  • Mac OS X 10.3.9
  • Mac OS X 10.3
  • Mac OS X 10.2

Additional Requirements:

  • Apple Java 1.4.1 or higher

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Feedback Summary:

This Version:
Overall Rating: Not rated (0.0) Features: Not rated (0.0) Support: Not rated (0.0)
Ease of Use: Not rated (0.0) Quality / Stability: Not rated (0.0) Price: Not rated (0.0)
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Two Due ReviewUI aka Ugly Interface - Version: 2.2.1, 7/27/2008 09:38AM PST

jarlaxle.merc
Holy convoluted horsesh!#! Batman! Not to mention the ultra-ugly appearance factor (somebody ought to consider developing Windows apps, "ahem!"). WTF is this thing all about!? Yikes!
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Two Due ReviewThere you are - Version: 2.0.1, 10/24/2005 11:04PM PST

Hockpooh777
It's a bit slow to open and somewhat complex, but I'm sure I could get used to that. It seems to be solid and works very well. I like applications that you can just open up without tons of reading to use it. I was able to do that with this one, or maybe I just got lucky. I can see how this could work for a normal person and even people that need a more detailed note keeper. OS 10.4.2
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Two Due CommentaryIn Defense... - Version: 1.5, 4/30/2004 06:00AM PST

(2 of 3 users found this comment useful)

Herb Bowie

In response to the prior two posts: both seem like rather extreme reactions to program behaviors which are slightly different from the norm but for which there are good reasons.

  1. This program is no more dangerous than other programs in terms of where it allows you to save your files. This is a permissions issue which has to do with the permissions of the user account operating the program, not with any special capabilities of the program itself.
  2. It is certainly possible to save your files on a network drive. At the top level on your boot drive there is a folder called 'Volumes'. Open this folder and you will find all your mounted drives, including network volumes. Again, this is not any special feature of the program, but part of Mac OS X.
  3. It is true that you can't open a to do list by double-clicking on it or dropping the file on the app -- but why would you want to? I don't foresee people creating thousands of to do lists and passing them around to one another. The typical user creates one or two or three to do lists for various purposes and then wants to open them on a regular basis. The program makes this easy by automatically opening your primary to do list for you whenever you launch the program. It also has an "Open Known" menu item that remembers all the to do lists you have previously opened and allows you to select any of them. So if you simply open the program first (preferably by having it automatically launch at startup) then opening your files is a snap.
  4. It is true that if you move a to do file the program won't automatically find it for you -- you have to tell it the file's new location, simply be opening the file in its new location. Again, though, I am not sure why you would want to be moving your to do files around all the time. And I am not sure how the program would find them all if you did move them, especially if you renamed them as well.
  5. The date selection is actually pretty easy. It defaults to a date far in the future so that, if you don't set a date, priority will automatically override the date in terms of sorting your undated to do items. However there is a "Today" button that allows you to set the date to today with one click. There are other buttons that allow you to advance the date by a week, day, or month, so that you can usually set the date you want with a few clicks, if you don't want to have to type it in. Again, this doesn't seem difficult to me -- although perhaps a little different from what people are used to in other apps.
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