On windows, EssentialPim does it : you can create a task from any other pim 
item, and drag it to the calendar. Moving it from a day to another one will 
change the due date, you can also turn it into an appointment
It is not as powerfull as MLO as task manager, but has very robust features 
I'd like MLO to have:
- contacts, agenda, mail, task, notes, passwords manager
- hyperlinks betwin each item in the app, even a single mail can be linked 
to a task or a note ot wathever.

I use it as mail client, contact and calendar manager, but I still prefer 
to use MLO as a task manager.
The androi app is not as powerful as other apps (I obviously use MLO for 
tasks, but also Aquamail for mails, Business Calendar for calendar, 
Evernote for notes, and no password manager at all)

Olivier

Le jeudi 22 juin 2017 10:03:36 UTC+2, Stéph a écrit :
>
> Hello Joel, 
>
> The iOS version of MLO gives a schedule view (accessed by the little 
> stopwatch icon, just under the inbox). This gives a list of events for the 
> day, above a list of tasks. It also shows a timeline, showing you what 
> times of the day are blocked out, and a chart to show you the total numbers 
> of items on upcoming days. It's not quite the drag-and-drop task scheduler 
> that some might want, but it helps. 
>
> On the desktop, you can synch tasks with Outlook (older versions of 
> Outlook, or the latest version if you make an edit to Outlook's settings in 
> the Registry), then have the task pane visible at the bottom of your weekly 
> calendar view. Again, that falls quite far short of a task scheduler, but 
> it might help.  The other option is to look at a grouped-by-date task view 
> alongside your favourite calendar app. 
>
> It's amazing how few apps out there do task scheduling.  If you use a Mac, 
> then Things has recently introduced task drag and drop scheduling, or 
> OmniFocus might do it, but for us Windows users there's nothing. As far as 
> I know, no time management apps allow us to differentiate between due date 
> and scheduled date (two very different things). I used to be trialling 
> Timeful, but that got swallowed up by Google and since then they haven't 
> incorporated it's innovative scheduling functionality into any of their 
> apps. 
>
> This would be a good way for MLO to get ahead of the crowd, but it would 
> need compatibility with more than just Google calendar. For, it would need 
> to be able to work with all my iOS calendars and Exchange server - a step 
> too far, perhaps? 
>
> Stéphane

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