ie8 fix

Start and maintain good habits with Good Habits for iPhone

A free iPhone app will help you follow Jerry Seinfeld's advice: Don't break the chain.

It seems that when Jerry Seinfeld was starting out, he got himself a big wall calendar draw a red X in the square for each day in which he sat down and wrote new material. He liked seeing a chain of red X's develop and used it as a motivational tactic. Don't break the chain!

You can use this same motivation to be more productive or healthier or what have you, but you don't necessarily need Jerry's wall calendar or red pen. With free iOS app Good Habits, you can use your iPhone to keep track of your chains, whether they're for writing the next Great American Sitcom or simply going to the gym regularly.

(Credit: Screenshot by Matt Elliott/CNET)

Good Habits makes it easy to add and track your various good habits. Tap the "+" button in the upper-right corner to create a new habit. When you do so, you can name the habit at the top of screen, and you can tap below it to set a reminder.

After naming a habit, you can use the calendar below to keep track of the chain, back-filling dates, if necessary, for a habit that you've already started. Tap the Back button in the upper-left corner to return to Good Habit's home screen that lists your habits.

(Credit: Screenshot by Matt Elliott/CNET)

Each habit gets its own color. Two numbers are listed to the right of each task. Your current chain is listed with the color background; your longest chain is listed with the gray background. To mark off a habit for the day, you can either tap to check the box from the main list, or you can tap to open a habit and then tap on today's date on the calendar.

(Credit: Screenshot by Matt Elliott/CNET)

Habits are scheduled on a daily schedule, so you can't, for instance, create a chain for going for a jog every other morning. You can, however, pause a task, which lets you skip a day and keep your chain intact. You can pause a habit by opening a habit and tapping the pause button in the upper-right corner. And once you have completed your novel or script, you can delete a habit by tapping the pause button and choosing the delete option.

(Via LifeHacker)

Read the full CNET Review

Apple iPhone 5

The bottom line: The iPhone 5 completely rebuilds the iPhone on a framework of new features and design, addressing its major previous shortcomings. It's absolutely the best iPhone to date, and it easily secures its place in the top tier of the smartphone universe. Read Full Review

CNET Editors' Rating

4.0 stars Excellent
Review Date:
Updated on:

Average User Rating

3.5 stars 158 user reviews

Don't Miss

How to

Make your old iPhone run like new

Want to make your iPhone 4 run like an iPhone 5? Donald Bell has some easy tips.

Play Video

How to

Set up the ultimate home theater PC

From configuring your PC to choosing the right accessories, Sharon Vaknin shows you what you need to turn your PC into the ultimate TV companion.

Play Video

How to

Maximize your Galaxy S4's battery life

Stretch your S4's battery life with a few built-in features and lesser-known tricks that keep your phone from draining quickly. Sharon Vaknin shows you how.

Play Video

How to

Let guests DJ your party

CNET's Donald Bell shows you how to turn your iPhone into a shared jukebox that guests can access and control using a free app.

Play Video

How to

Take creative photos with the HTC One

The camera on the HTC One is capable of some pretty cool tricks. CNET's Donald Bell highlights some of this smartphone camera's slick features.

Play Video

 

Member Comments