These scripts work for me but they may not be suitable for you. These scripts do not work in the same way as the above however - several modifications have been made.
The scripts utilise the OmniAutomation API provided in the PRO versions of OmniPlan 4 and OmniFocus 3. These scripts enable tasks to be sent from OmniPlan to OmniFocus and subsequently kept in sync. Review: Brydge 12.OmniPlan OmniFocus Task Sync 1.Review: DODOcase Magic Keyboard Case for iPad Pro 12.9.Review: Satechi Aluminum Stand and Hub for iPad Pro.Tips and Tricks: Open a Safari Link in a New Page With a Gesture.Tips and Tricks: The iPadOS Floating On-Screen Keyboard.Tips and Tricks: Managing iOS 13 Bluetooth App Access Settings.Tips and Tricks: Managing Space While Using Apple Arcade.
Tips and Tricks: iPadOS 13.4 Trackpad and Mouse Settings.Potential Quick Fixes When Your iPad Won’t Connect to Your Wifi Network.
iPad Tips: How to Change Your iTunes Store Location.How To Turn AirPlay Mirroring On & Off in iOS 7.I consent having to provide email address to ipad insight for future news, promotions email. Source: The Omni Mouth via Daring Fireball My impression so far is that there is very strong developer support for the iPad, and that’s a great sign.
So I’m glad to see that Omni Group is going full steam to bring these five apps to the iPad. I’’ve used OmniFocus in the past and found it an excellent app (even though I now use Things as my every day task management app) and have used OmniOutliner quite a bit as well, and like it plenty. But while it won’t be on iPad on day one, OmniOutliner is where all of our projects start and we think it will be a great fit for iPad, so we plan to adapt it as soon as possible. Similarly, the OmniOutliner team is also heavily into a major development cycle-one which affects not only the next major release of OmniOutliner, version 4, but also the upcoming major releases of both OmniFocus and OmniPlan-so that team is booked up for at least the next several months. OmniPlan for iPad will be a little further behind, simply because the OmniPlan development team is on the home stretch of their two-year OmniPlan 2 development cycle, and we’d like to get that out the door before bringing OmniPlan to another platform. We started working on iPad adaptations of OmniGraffle and OmniFocus as soon as the SDK was made available Wednesday afternoon, and we’re hoping to get started with OmniGraphSketcher for iPad within the next few weeks. This is a big undertaking, and we can’t do it all at once. Their plans are clearly very ambitious and of course it’s always possible that things will shift as their development efforts move forward, but here are some of their current thoughts on the order in which these apps will be released: Yes, we already had a big year planned for 2010, with several long-anticipated major product releases-but we think iPad is really important: important enough to spend some time juggling our plans to figure out how we can introduce five new iPad apps.
We’re really excited about Apple’s iPad, and we want to make all of our products available for it as soon as we can.
(Or, as Apple puts it, “the best way to experience the web, email, and photos.”) It’s the computer people can sit down and start using immediately, without training, whether they’re 2 or 92. Remember how Macintosh was intended to be the computer “for the rest of us“? That’s what we feel Apple’s iPad is: the best computing device for most of the things people use computers for. They are clearly very bullish on the iPad and its potential: We want to bring all five of our productivity apps to iPad: OmniGraffle, OmniOutliner, OmniPlan, OmniFocus, and OmniGraphSketcher.
Omni Group – publishers of several well-known and well-liked apps for Mac OSX and the iPhone – are planning to bring no less than five of their apps to the iPad.