Let’s start with a question: What are some of your most treasured productivity gadgets?

Presumably, everyone will have their own answer, whether to change the computer or work environment, will be the first to install these software, indispensable.

As a programmer, we will also use some efficient hacks to improve our work efficiency.

Today, I’m going to introduce you from different aspects to some of the great productivity tools that I think are very good.

1. Notion

Note taking itself is a dull and tedious thing.

Notion makes notes colorful and imaginative.

Notion is Notion. Modules include tables, text, web pages, blocks of code, images, videos, files, etc. You can drag, indent, or move modules like Lego.

Combine the cover, page, date, database, etc. — Notion far beyond our knowledge of note-taking software, can greatly improve the note-taking experience.

In addition, support real-time Markdown rich text editing, can get rid of Word and other software chaotic typesetting format.

2. Password Management –MYKI

Finally found a good password manager that you can use for free.

I’ve used other password managers in the past, but most of the time, I forgot to add my account, and rarely did.

MYKI has MYKI syncing with your phone, 2FA support, credit card notes and ID card, all for free.

If you’re looking for a new password manager, I suggest you check out MYKI.

3. Project Management –YouTrack

A project management tool that can be adapted to your process to help you deliver a great product.

Track projects and tasks, use agile boards, plan sprints and releases, maintain knowledge bases, use reports and dashboards, and create workflows that follow your business processes.

Instead of forcing your process to fit the constraints of one tool, unlike other project management tools, YouTrack can be customized to your needs.

4. Git client –GitKraken

One of my favorites.

GitKraken is no longer a basic tool for simple checkout, push, pull, and commit operations. It provides interactive viewing of commit information, committing code, resolving conflicts, and great visualizations that will greatly improve the Github and Gitlab experience.

Not only is it free, it works on Windows, macOS and Linux.

5. Browser –Brave

When it comes to desktop browsers, many people think of Chrome and Edge first, but I got fed up with the fact that it kept crashing due to its high memory footprint and gave up.

When I didn’t know what to choose, I met Brave.

Brave is a very privacy-conscious browser with a built-in AD blocker. It also allows you to win crypto tokens (BAT) by watching personalized ads (via system notifications).

Also, they claim to be 6 times faster than Chrome. I’m not sure if that’s the exact result, but in real life it’s a lot faster than Chrome.

6. Code editor –VS Code

Java, Python, Go, C++…. No matter what kind of development you’re doing, VS Code should be an option for many users.

I have to say that VS Code has been a runaway success in recent years. Remote development, project management, rich plugins, quick startup, whatever it is, makes it one of the best Code editors of all time.

That’s why VS Code is always installed on my computer when I change jobs or office equipment.

The above is the rabbit for you to sort out their most commonly used and very practical software, in daily programming and life have the opportunity to use, can say that all are to improve efficiency. You can download on demand, open the programming teaching video, roll up together ~