I'm completely aware that it's the size of my Workflowy list that creates the load time, but I'm wondering if anyone knows a workaround or news concerning plans to speed up load times.
#WORKFLOWY COLORS CODE#
Download your collections in the code format compatible.
![workflowy colors workflowy colors](https://myext.info/image/screenshot_1/bmhgibpiicbffanngfodeeinbachkmlf.jpg)
And, the web app doesn't load any faster. Use the Paint collection feature and change the color of the whole collection or do it icon by icon. But, load time lags so much now that I cannot use it to take quick notes on a phone or tablet. I like the new changes, the new design is clean, and the new loading animation looks a ton better. That said, my initial load time has gotten really slow. After several years, I've amassed thousands and thousands.
#WORKFLOWY COLORS ARCHIVE#
My work is research-based, however, and I do a lot of writing and note taking inside the app and use it as a repository of quotes and citations from works I read as well as the archive of content I've written. I've been using it for years, and I couldn't imagine using another tool at this point. Any workarounds or news on plans to speed up initial load time? Or, feel free to play around with the read-only version I make available to my students.Tl dr: My Workflowy is very large at this point and initial load takes forever.
![workflowy colors workflowy colors](https://blog.workflowy.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/colors-final-release-768x257.png)
![workflowy colors workflowy colors](https://support.hogbaysoftware.com/uploads/db8375/optimized/2X/d/d6dd5c5627b63b3836da643cfacba526652a0f7c_2_711x750.png)
The screen shots below give you a sense of how I use Workflowy to plan class and take notes on screen. It’s also possible to show only a single item, if you want to provide a prompt, a quiz, or a set of questions for discussion without the distraction of the rest of the day’s work. It’s not all that different from using a word processor to make the course schedule, but the ability to hide certain information-past days, the day’s homework-until the time when you want it shown helps immensely in keeping students focused on the task at hand. In a way, it’s like having a collapsible/expandable chalkboard whose contents is archived. Students can also access the list from anywhere, but are unable to edit it-they can hide or expand each day and item, but it’s a read-only version
#WORKFLOWY COLORS UPDATE#
I can use and update the class Workflowy from any computer, tablet, or phone, which makes it easy to note a new idea for an upcoming class. I create bulleted, nested lists by date, add any number of headings and sub-sections in outline form, and paste in links to videos or other content that I plan to use during class. It is image, color, and ad free, perhaps its greatest features.
![workflowy colors workflowy colors](https://blog.workflowy.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/colors-v3-1024x344.png)
It displays only text, allows you to complete and hide items as you finish them, and provides an elegant, clear focal point for the class without requiring me to format or design a slideshow. Workflowy’s list-making platform is suited to the classroom because of its utter minimalism. In other words, I use one platform-one set of notes-to plan my class each day to provide a written schedule of each class day’s work and assignments to display the current day’s plan on screen during class to take notes on screen during discussions and to provide students (and myself) with a day-by-day record of the entire semester accessible from the course website. To accommodate students who learn best when things are written out, rather than spoken, I use Workflowy to bring together the usually separate processes of teaching and tracking a class: daily lesson planning, real-time note taking, logging assignments and due dates, and creating a daily archive of class schedule and discussions.