Ask HN: What habits apps do you use? Why do you like those apps?
5 comments
I’ve been using and building Conjure[0] for 2 years, because I didn’t find the particular experience I wanted out there and wanted it to help me intentionally build and maintain behaviors conducive to life satisfaction and subjective well-being with minimal friction.
I explored a variety of things prior including Habitica, Beeminder, Forte, Everyday, Nomie (all excellent and strong in various dimensions).
Some of the use cases I had were:
- Be real time across web and mobile
- Keyboard shortcuts and a command Menu
- Automatically completing habits through rules and automation
- Have time based Habits (eg do 30 mins of reading a day)
- Habits be linked to Objectives/Goals and personal KPIs
- API and integrations with Apple Health, Zapier and others
- Variations of Habit Completions (eg Sick Days, Emergency Modes, etc)
- Different views (eg Day View, Week View)
- Dashboards and reporting
I’ve been using Conjure to build Conjure for myself these past 2 years, bootstrapped and solo.
It fits my daily needs and those of a growing community of users, but I learned in the process, different solutions work best for different people. Some people want a very simple solutions to track 2-3 habits a day, others want to track 18 things a day in a sophisticated manner.
[0] https://conjure.so
I explored a variety of things prior including Habitica, Beeminder, Forte, Everyday, Nomie (all excellent and strong in various dimensions).
Some of the use cases I had were:
- Be real time across web and mobile
- Keyboard shortcuts and a command Menu
- Automatically completing habits through rules and automation
- Have time based Habits (eg do 30 mins of reading a day)
- Habits be linked to Objectives/Goals and personal KPIs
- API and integrations with Apple Health, Zapier and others
- Variations of Habit Completions (eg Sick Days, Emergency Modes, etc)
- Different views (eg Day View, Week View)
- Dashboards and reporting
I’ve been using Conjure to build Conjure for myself these past 2 years, bootstrapped and solo.
It fits my daily needs and those of a growing community of users, but I learned in the process, different solutions work best for different people. Some people want a very simple solutions to track 2-3 habits a day, others want to track 18 things a day in a sophisticated manner.
[0] https://conjure.so
Awesome work! Seems like a lot of thinking had gone into this.
I found the inconvenient process of writing down the ups and downs of each day in a notebook as well as a few metrics I want to keep at the time (currently what I am eating, my weight, swimming times and runs) helped me more than anything else I ever tried.
It takes 5 minutes, I do it every night in bed, and it helps me reflect, I use the time to write down some quotes, ideas, books notes or just anything pleasant that came to mind.
It takes 5 minutes, I do it every night in bed, and it helps me reflect, I use the time to write down some quotes, ideas, books notes or just anything pleasant that came to mind.
I refuse to gamify and disassociate myself from my own body as such by turning it into a metrics tracker, I use none. Seems inhuman.
Since the beginning of mobile apps people tried to build habit apps. What works best for me is just sticking to the 4 simple rules around building lasting habits from the book Atomic Habits:
1) make it obvious, (2) make it attractive, (3) make it easy, and (4) make it satisfying.
[0] : https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.isoron.uhabits