However, task management apps are so unbelievably common nowadays. Nothing that can't be solved by notepad on PC, or the clock/calendar app on my phone / and if I really need a task app, I'll use google's or build my own.
Your next step should be to take what you have learned from building this app, and focus on fixing a real problem that people around you face.
Sure it's not open-source, but none of the open-source tools are as polished as that.
[0]: https://linear.app
That is the most important value Linear brings to me. There are other tools that can achieve similar effects, but I learned how to do it with Linear at work so I stuck with that. On top of this, Linear has priorities, deadlines, task blocking relations, etc., that naturally reflect how I prioritize issues in life. This is the same as how I prioritize tasks to do at work. Once again there are tools to do this outside of Linear, but none of them are as polished to use and just work.
[1] - https://gist.github.com/bramses/d59fb1659ec53fda9ec33f60200f...
Key features: - Task creation with date/time scheduling - Local notifications for reminders - Real-time sync across devices via Firestore - Category-based organization (work, vacation, events) - Clean dark theme UI with Material Design 3
Tech stack: Flutter/Dart, Firebase Auth, Cloud Firestore, local notifications.
The app is still under active development, but the core functionality is working. I built it to solve my own need for a simple, privacy-focused task tracker that works across platforms (Android, iOS, Web, Desktop).
What I'd love feedback on: - The notification system implementation - UI/UX improvements - Feature suggestions - Code quality and architecture (it's my first larger Flutter project)
The codebase is MIT licensed and contributions are welcome. I'm particularly interested in feedback from Flutter developers on best practices I might be missing.
GitHub: https://github.com/MSF01/TYR
What do you think? What features would make this more useful for your workflow?
It may say more about me than the person writing these type of README's, but if I see more than one or two emojis in a README, I immediately assume it was fully generated rather than written.
what gives you the confidence to express judgment that this is a low-stakes vibe-coded app, rather than something lovingly put together by a human?