TickTick
Connect TickTick so the plan you make with BrightMind lands in your task list — and so the assistant can work with your habits and focus stats, not just your tasks.
What it does
Once TickTick is connected, BrightMind reads and writes your actual task list instead of keeping a separate one. When you untangle a messy day together, the result is real TickTick tasks with dates and priorities — and when you come back later, the assistant sees what got done and what slipped, so the conversation picks up from reality. It also sees your TickTick habits and focus sessions, which makes it a natural fit for habit coaching.
Connecting
Open the app and go to Settings → Task Management, then tap TickTick. You’ll be sent to TickTick in your browser to sign in and approve access; once you approve, you land back in BrightMind with the integration live. No copying API keys, no setup beyond that.
Dida365 — TickTick’s Chinese edition — is supported too, as its own tile in the same place, and works the same way.
One task manager at a time
You can keep both TickTick and Todoist connected, but the assistant works with one of them at a time. The first task manager you connect becomes the active one automatically; the switch on each tile in Settings → Task Managementlets you change which one that is — without disconnecting the other.
What the assistant can do
- Capture tasks straight from conversation — with priorities, due dates, repeat rules, subtasks, and tags.
- Show your day or week: due today, due tomorrow, this week, overdue — recurring tasks included.
- Complete, update, and move tasks between projects; create and organize projects.
- Work with your habits: create them, check them in from a conversation, and review your streaks.
- Review your focus sessions — how much focused time you’ve logged and on what.
- Search across everything and pull up a quick overview of where things stand.
Good to know
A few edges come from TickTick’s public API rather than BrightMind, and the assistant works within them:
- Focus sessions are read-only — the assistant can review your focus stats, but starting a Pomodoro happens in TickTick itself.
- Subtasks go one level deep; the assistant can’t nest subtasks inside subtasks.
- Habits can’t be deleted through the API — if you ask the assistant to remove one, it gets archived instead.
- On TickTick’s free plan, a task keeps a single date — if you ask for a start date and a due date, TickTick stores just the due date. Date ranges need TickTick Premium.
Works in voice too
Everything above is available in voice calls as well. Mention a task mid-call and it shows up in TickTick before you hang up — and checking in a habit is one sentence.
Privacy & permissions
BrightMind requests TickTick’s tasks:read and tasks:writescopes so it can read and update your tasks and projects. We don’t use the data for ads, we don’t sell it, and no human at BrightMind reads your tasks except for support or abuse investigation.
You can disconnect at any time from Settings → Task Management(long-press the TickTick tile and choose Remove) — disconnecting deletes the stored access token immediately on our side. See our privacy policy for the full retention and deletion story.