
Sharing with collaborators works fine too, respecting the caveats not using the project at the same time. So thanks to iCloud integration it can be handled with all three devices. I am using the iPhone App as well and also the Mac version. Integration with contacts is also a very good idea.

IMPORT TO QUICKPLAN PDF
Printout via PDF is also very practice oriented. It is very intuitive and fits to my needs. Handling it on an iPad is maybe the best adoption of a program from a desktop to tablet. After working with for my first construction project I can conclude, that this is an excellent tool to plan and control a project. Looking for a userfriendly and easy to handle tool, I found Quick Plan. But don’t expect the app to create an optimal (or even feasible) project schedule for you, or to report when your handcrafted schedule is unworkable. It’s okay if you are satisfied with manually managing task dependencies and resource conflicts. start as late as possible.įinally, metrics and project stats are really lacking. No way to set tasks to start as early as possible vs. No provision to specify end and compute latest start date.

Third, app assumes that you have a known start and want to compute the finish. Critical path calculations become meaningless. If you create a two tasks and make one a predecessor of the other then the app won’t properly enforce start-before-finish when start or duration changes, and won’t remove float if predecessor duration shortens or task finishes early. Second, the app does not respect task dependencies. App provides no indication that there’s a conflict, and no way to auto-schedule activities to remove the conflict. Unfortunately the scheduling logic is sorely lacking some basic features for a project management tool.įirst, while the app allows you to assign resources to a task, it doesn’t prevent you from having multiple simultaneous tasks all using the same resource. App looks good and the user interface works well.
