

Todoist windows install appdata for android#
Two years ago, I first reported on clues that revealed a slowly shaping-up strategy for fixing this flaw - what I referred to at the time as Google's "grand ChromeOS plan." The idea was almost painfully simple: Google would position the Play Store as not just a place for Android apps, as it's traditionally been, but as a broader one-stop shop for multiple types of apps on Chromebooks - with the store itself determining which app type makes the most sense for any given purpose and then automatically installing the appropriate option for you. It's a ridiculous labyrinth for regular users to tackle, and even folks who might not explicitly realize all those options exist often find themselves facing vexing limitations when they install an app type that isn't entirely optimal for their intended purpose.

To wit: Chromebooks today offer a full-fledged desktop-caliber web browsing environment.

In the land o' Chromebooks, for anyone paying attention, the question has shifted over time from a snide "What can you even do on those things?" to a far more intriguing "What can't you do on 'em?" Our story starts on the ChromeOS side of the mobile-tech divide. And if some recent signs on Android and ChromeOS alike are any indication, things are about to get interesting. It all comes down to apps and how we discover 'em. And now, it appears that road is about to take a noteworthy new turn - one that could seriously shake up a core part of the user experience on both sides of the Android-ChromeOS equation.
