Omniplan import holiday6/13/2023 ![]() We did ship OmniFocus for the Web as planned-but when iPadOS was announced in June we took a pretty big detour from the rest of our planned roadmap. And we’ll be taking a hard look at performance issues, so our apps respond to your input faster.” We’ll be tracking down and fixing rare crashes and other bugs. We’ll be improving integration between our own apps (such as linking tasks between OmniFocus and OmniPlan), between our apps and others (such as OmniGraffle’s import and export of Visio and SVG files), and with the rest of the system. “We’ll be reviewing the ways customers navigate our apps-making them easier to navigate on small touch devices, more efficient to use from a keyboard, and more accessible to the sight-impaired. In last year’s roadmap, I said that beyond shipping OmniFocus for the Web, we would continue to work on site licensing, JavaScript-based automation, sharing linked tasks, and improving the flow of using our apps: (For more detailed notes on what we did last year, I recommend reading last year’s September roadmap update.) We added support for the new native Dark Mode, adopted Apple’s standard iOS document browser in our document-based apps, and rewrote the underpinnings of all our apps to support multiple windows-along with some app-specific work like creating new OmniFocus actions for the revamped Shortcuts app. The OmniPlan team shipped support for Omni Automation.Īnd then Apple announced iPadOS, with the biggest changes to the platform since its initial launch in 2010. The OmniGraffle team shipped a new wrap-to-shape feature, then spent several months focused on improving drawing performance in the Mac app. The OmniFocus team launched OmniFocus for the Web, optional subscriptions, and support for Dropped Actions. Our world is constantly changing, and each year we have to be prepared to adjust those plans based on what we’ve encountered along the way:īut while our roadmaps don’t predict the future, they do state the direction in which we’re headed-and I hope you find them useful! Looking Back at 2019īefore we talk about future roadmap, let me quickly summarize the major updates from last year: ![]() Our roadmaps have never been perfect predictions of the future. This established a pattern for the rest of the decade, as we started regularly sharing roadmap updates for 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, and of course 2019. ![]() When we completed “iPad or Bust!” a few years later, I found myself reflecting on 2012 and looking ahead to 2013. Welcome to the 2020s! Ten years ago (on January 27, 2010), Apple introduced iPad-a new device category that would, as Steve Jobs put it, “connect users with their apps and content in a much more intimate, intuitive and fun way than ever before.” Inspired by the announcement, we put many of our plans for the next few years on hold-and just two days later I shared our first public company-wide roadmap, “ iPad or Bust!”
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