
Announcement
Its time for a new look (plus more news)

Code
Hey everyone, hope y'all had a happy holidays!
This year a lot of things were added to the app in the 6 months I've been working on it for. The entire app's theme had been redone, plus a multitude of new themes, new fonts and icons, and more.
But with the new year approaching, I felt like it was finally time TaskBookly's logo got some attention as it hasn't ever changed and I quite frankly hate looking at it. So I redesigned a new one!
In the header you'll see the new logo that will be present in future versions of TaskBookly and as you may have already noticed, is present on the site right now. I believe this logo is much more scalable than the last one and actually has uniqueness, rather than just being two letters as a font like the previous one had.
What about the name?
If you used TaskBookly for even a little bit, you probably started to wonder where the tasks are. Yes, even though TaskBookly is in early access, it still doesn't make much sense as to why tasks weren't the first thing implemented.
Here's why: Originally TaskBookly used to be a completely different thing. It used to be a website mostly focused on task management with tiny time management features sprinkled in, but I decided to redo the entire thing because it wasn't that practical. This desktop version was originally going to be more of a todo planner app, but I changed directions early on to focus more on a time management app, with task management features sprinkled in.
I've been thinking about a new name for a while, but still haven't ultimately decided. So I thought to change the logo to prepare for this, not only because it looked ugly, but also because whatever the new name would be, the letters 'TB' wouldn't make sense anymore.
A talk about the Penguin
For v0.4, I promised the return of Linux support. But I am sorry to say that I will not be able to follow through with it at this time. My life is increasingly starting to get busier and lot's of things are going on, I'm starting to get ready for College, finishing off my senior year, etc. And I don't have time to install a distro and learn how the Linux OS works. Yes, even though it would be super easy to package everything for Linux (just a few extra lines of code), it's more about the testing aspect and that it is a stable product to use, I have no way to perform internal testing to make sure everything runs correctly.
But in brighter news, arm64 support is coming to Windows in v0.4 plus a whole lot more.
v0.4 Beta 2 will be available when ready.

Code
Founder