Would be good to start off your landing page with a headline and some copy explaining your product. I didn't quite get it at first.
You need something like...
Lanes is a simple to-do list with a built in pomodoro tracker designed
to help you stay focused during your day.
-- Insert screenshot of Lanes in action --
Here's how it works:
1. Build your to-do list for each day
2. When you're ready to work, start a pomodoro tracker.
The top task for the day is what you should be working on.
3. Once your pomodoro is up... stand up, stretch, and if you've completed
your task, mark it as done.
4. After your short pomodoro break, goto 2.
-- Insert testimonials about how lanes helped your customers save X
amount of time or get N things done or achieve 100% increase
in tasks completed --
What are you waiting for... you should sign up
for Lanes and start getting things done!"
...seems like pretty basic advice, but I find it very helpful - thanks for making this comment; my own project, zejoop dot com would benefit from a landing page makeover along these lines. I have struggled with this (a clear landing page and CTA) so, a straightforward, easy-to-implement formula helps. Thanks!
Hey HN. This is the latest version of a task management app I've been building since mid-last year. Since then I've turned about 100 pieces of feedback* into incremental improvements/changes.
Still much to do so before I dig into the next set of updates I figured I'd share here and get your take. Cheers.
*A good chunk of which were around improving drag and drop, which turned out to be easier said than done.
Update: I'm actually wowed this post got any traction, let alone time on the front page as I'm sure many people here could make a task manager in their sleep. Thanks, HN.
That said, the hard part isn't the tech, it's making something people want to use and use again. That's key. So excuse the app being rough around the edges - it will be refined - and thanks for the advice.
I was unable to try using it. I tried to type my name to no reaction. Then i clicked it and it asked me to sign up. There's not even a demo or any third party login support. Not ready to create an account and password for something that isn't even explained or demoed.
The green bar which drops down when you try interacting with menu items seems to be a sign-up wall under the guise of helpfulness. I have to click though fluff about how a week view or pomodoro timer works, only to be prompted to sign up with my email before I can proceed. I wanted to check out your ux, not hand over my email.
I think I might know what this is attempting to do, but can't actually tell for sure.
I briefly saw some "action" links or nav menu in the top-right (day, week, poms), but then the "what is lanes" green bar at the top covers up the action menu. The "what is lanes" thing didn't explain anything to me. And when I forcibly deleted the bar using web inspector, then the action buttons didn't work (day / week / poms). Very confusing. (But a big fan of pomodoro technique so looking forward to seeing what exactly it is you've created once it gets explained better and the UI gets cleaned up.)
I would love to see some solution that integrates time blocking and pomodoro.
After trying various todo lists and kanban boards I finally settled on using my google calendar which works perfectly as both my todo list and scheduler.
Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10_11_3) AppleWebKit/601.4.4 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/9.0.3 Safari/601.4.4
Clicking the 'what is lanes' thing, I get this:
[Warning] [Vue warn]: Unknown custom element: <v_settings> - did you register the component correctly? (bundle.js, line 13)
[Warning] [Vue warn]: Unknown custom element: <v_connect> - did you register the component correctly? (bundle.js, line 13)
[Warning] [Vue warn]: Unknown custom element: <v_bgt> - did you register the component correctly? (bundle.js, line 13)
[Warning] [Vue warn]: Unknown custom element: <v_imagegal> - did you register the component correctly? (bundle.js, line 13)
[Warning] [Vue warn]: Unknown custom element: <bgtab> - did you register the component correctly? (bundle.js, line 13)
Also, did you want us to login / create an account? I show up and get a timer, but couldn't really tell what was supposed to happen other than immediately signing up for an account.
Suggestion: If you allow custom background, think carefully about the font colors. On the default background (tree & blue/gray sky) it was very hard to notice "up next" and "later" lablels - I wouldn't notice them were it not for your intro video in which they were more visible).
Also, a simple way to get back to "today" in the week view. I was surprised to find out it wasn't in the leftmost page.
The custom list section is going to be improved in the next update. Right now it's two uneditable labels which is kinda weak. A more visible, more customizable version coming soon.
When I saw the title I expected an application, i.e. something I could run offline. What are the benefits of using an online website? Why would I use this website instead of my offline pomodoro timer?
I was hoping for offline too. The trouble with online is I spend >50% of my waking hours with no signal or when I do have signal I don't have data. Even at home signal is intermittent at best. e.g. I pick up the phone to answer a call and phone loses signal between table and ear.
Current apps always seem to be built in the expectation of perfect always on data and cope terribly (if at all) with intermittent or poor conditions. It's frustrating to say the least
[+] [-] jsherer|10 years ago|reply
You need something like...
[+] [-] pedalpete|10 years ago|reply
[+] [-] michaelZejoop|10 years ago|reply
(edit for clarity)
[+] [-] welanes|10 years ago|reply
[+] [-] welanes|10 years ago|reply
Still much to do so before I dig into the next set of updates I figured I'd share here and get your take. Cheers.
*A good chunk of which were around improving drag and drop, which turned out to be easier said than done.
[+] [-] welanes|10 years ago|reply
That said, the hard part isn't the tech, it's making something people want to use and use again. That's key. So excuse the app being rough around the edges - it will be refined - and thanks for the advice.
[+] [-] rjbwork|10 years ago|reply
[+] [-] sooheon|10 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jordanlev|10 years ago|reply
I briefly saw some "action" links or nav menu in the top-right (day, week, poms), but then the "what is lanes" green bar at the top covers up the action menu. The "what is lanes" thing didn't explain anything to me. And when I forcibly deleted the bar using web inspector, then the action buttons didn't work (day / week / poms). Very confusing. (But a big fan of pomodoro technique so looking forward to seeing what exactly it is you've created once it gets explained better and the UI gets cleaned up.)
[+] [-] welanes|10 years ago|reply
Thanks for the comment.
[+] [-] mataug|10 years ago|reply
After trying various todo lists and kanban boards I finally settled on using my google calendar which works perfectly as both my todo list and scheduler.
More on this http://calnewport.com/blog/2007/12/03/monday-master-class-do...
[+] [-] erichurkman|10 years ago|reply
Clicking the 'what is lanes' thing, I get this:
Works fine in Chrome.[+] [-] ApolloRising|10 years ago|reply
You also may need to streamline your sign up screen as it defaults to login without clear messaging.
Seems like a good start but you may have to work on your actual use cases and step through it with a few brand new users.
[+] [-] Zyst|10 years ago|reply
A caveat would be having the top right menu be a bit more distinguishable, it can get lost very easily with some backgrounds:
http://puu.sh/n19Fx/b34d4c217f.jpg (With POM :Hovered)
However, this can be fixed using your favorite CSS injector so it isn't that problematic. I just added:
I have a concern, how do you plan to monetize?[+] [-] welanes|10 years ago|reply
Monetizing: focus is on creating a great user experience now. Once that's achieved and the app adds value there’s a few ideas
[+] [-] schwarzrules|10 years ago|reply
[+] [-] welanes|10 years ago|reply
[+] [-] wmeredith|10 years ago|reply
[+] [-] senko|10 years ago|reply
Suggestion: If you allow custom background, think carefully about the font colors. On the default background (tree & blue/gray sky) it was very hard to notice "up next" and "later" lablels - I wouldn't notice them were it not for your intro video in which they were more visible).
Also, a simple way to get back to "today" in the week view. I was surprised to find out it wasn't in the leftmost page.
[+] [-] welanes|10 years ago|reply
The custom list section is going to be improved in the next update. Right now it's two uneditable labels which is kinda weak. A more visible, more customizable version coming soon.
Will look at a 'jump to today' option too.
[+] [-] hiq|10 years ago|reply
[+] [-] anexprogrammer|10 years ago|reply
Current apps always seem to be built in the expectation of perfect always on data and cope terribly (if at all) with intermittent or poor conditions. It's frustrating to say the least
[+] [-] Slix|10 years ago|reply
Are there any other weekly planner apps like this?
[+] [-] prawn|10 years ago|reply
https://teuxdeux.com/
[+] [-] unknown|10 years ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] eecks|10 years ago|reply
[+] [-] bribri|10 years ago|reply
[+] [-] vetrom|10 years ago|reply