![]() When the Mac version of OmniFocus 2 launched there was a lot of talk about “information density” and the massive amount of empty white space in the new user interface. ![]() I found it to be a satisfying fusion of the iPhone version’s navigation aesthetics and the Mac version’s detailed level of task data. The layout is a basic splitscreen view which is pretty standard in iPad apps these days. I have developed an expectation for iOS 7+ apps and OmniFocus 2 delivers. Instead of shock, I simply felt relief that I could finally use the iPad version again after a year of giving it the cold shoulder. It should come as no surprise that the interface changes in the iPad version did not have the same impact on me as the iPhone version. The iPad version of OmniFocus 2 received the same user interface overhaul that the iPhone version was given last year but more tailored to the larger screen. The Omni Group could have played it safe but instead they dove head first into creating an app from the ground-up that is fully assimilated to the new iOS 7 way of life. Not to sound dramatic – I did not fall out of my chair – but it honestly took me a few seconds to absorb what I was looking at. When I opened OmniFocus 2 for the first time, I was shocked. When I first reviewed OmniFocus 2 for iPhone I said: ![]() Current OmniFocus users like myself have been paitently waiting to replace our overly textured iOS 6-reminiscent iPad versions with something more suitable for the ecosystem of iOS 7 and beyond. I call it an installment because although OmniFocus is a standalone product for both Mac and iOS, it truly excels when used as a cross-platform task management solution. Today the Omni Group released the third and final installment of OmniFocus – OmniFocus 2 for iPad. ![]()
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