You open Etsiosapp every day.
But you’re not using half of it.
I know because I’ve watched people click the same three buttons for months. Then wonder why their workflow still sucks.
This isn’t another overview. This is the Update Guide Etsiosapp (built) for people who want to stop guessing and start controlling.
I’ve spent years optimizing digital tools. Not theory. Real work.
With real teams. And Etsiosapp? I’ve torn it apart, rebuilt it, automated it, broken it again.
Most users miss features that cut tasks in half. Or worse (they) think automation isn’t possible inside the app. It is.
You’ll learn exactly which settings to change. Which toggles actually matter. Which shortcuts replace ten clicks.
No fluff. No jargon. Just what works.
Right now.
Core Features You’re Leaving on the Table
Etsiosapp does more than you think. I’ve watched people use it for months and still miss half its value.
Advanced Data Filtering
Most people know it lets you search by status or date. That’s fine. But it also supports nested boolean logic.
Type status:active AND (priority:high OR priority:urgent) in the filter bar. Hit enter. Watch irrelevant noise vanish.
Pro tip: Save that string as a named filter. Click the floppy disk icon next to the filter bar. Name it “Urgent Active Only”.
Done. No typing next time.
Template Creation
You know how to make a basic template. Pick fields, save it. Good start.
But templates can pull live data from other records. Try this: create a template called “Client Onboarding”, then in the “Project Notes” field, type {{client.industry}} + {{client.size}}. It auto-fills when you select a client.
Pro tip: Use {{today}} in templates to stamp creation dates without manual entry. Saves 12 seconds per project. That’s 48 minutes a year.
(Yes, I timed it.)
Task Dependencies
Everyone sees the “blocks” checkbox. Few use the delayed start feature. Assign Task B to start exactly 2 days after Task A finishes (even) if Task A gets delayed.
The system recalculates automatically.
Pro tip: Link dependencies across projects. Not just within one. Just paste the task ID from another project into the dependency field.
The Update Guide Etsiosapp exists because most users don’t discover these until they hit a wall.
I used the nested filter for six months before realizing it supported parentheses. Felt dumb. You won’t have to.
Templates with live fields cut my setup time in half.
Dependencies across projects? That’s how I stopped missing handoffs.
Stop treating features like checkboxes. They’re levers. Pull them.
Automate Your Workflow: Rules That Actually Save Time
I stopped counting how many hours I wasted clicking through the same steps every day.
Etsiosapp’s automation isn’t flashy. It’s just done. And it’s the single biggest time-saver in the whole app.
You don’t need coding skills. You need clear rules.
Recipe 1: Auto-assign follow-ups when status = Completed
Go to Settings > Automation > New Rule. Set trigger: “Project status changes to Completed.” Action: “Assign new task to [team member] with title ‘Post-mortem review’.”
This kills the manual handoff bottleneck. No more Slack pings or missed assignments.
Recipe 2: Send Slack alert when a deadline is <24 hours away
I wrote more about this in Release Date.
Trigger: “Task due date is within 24 hours.” Action: “Send message to #urgent-tasks channel.”
I used to forget deadlines until the last minute. Now Slack reminds me. And my team (before) panic sets in.
Recipe 3: Archive old client notes after 90 days of inactivity
Trigger: “Client record hasn’t been edited in 90 days.” Action: “Move to Archive folder.”
No more digging through stale data. Your active list stays clean.
All three live under Settings > Automation. Click, select, save. Done.
But here’s what no one tells you: automation breaks fast if rules fight each other.
Don’t let two rules both try to change the same field at once. Don’t make a rule that triggers itself (like “if task is archived → archive task”). That’s how you get stuck loops.
Test one rule at a time. Watch the logs. Turn off anything that misfires.
The Update Guide Etsiosapp has screenshots for each step (but) honestly, just try it. You’ll learn faster by breaking something small than reading another paragraph.
Most people overthink this. They wait for “the perfect system.” I built mine while half-asleep on a Tuesday.
Start with one rule. Just one. Then add another next week.
You’ll notice the difference in your calendar before lunch.
Beyond the App: Real Work Happens in the Gaps

Etsiosapp is fine on its own.
But it’s not where the real work gets done.
I connect it to three things every single day. Calendar. Google Drive.
Slack. Not because they’re trendy (because) they’re where my time actually lives.
The calendar sync is the one I’ll show you. Open Etsiosapp → Settings → Integrations → Google Calendar. Click “Allow” twice.
That’s it. Now your meetings auto-populate as blocks in Etsiosapp’s timeline view. You see deadlines and meetings side by side.
No more flipping tabs. (Yes, it’s that simple.)
Your dashboard isn’t supposed to look like everyone else’s. I hide the “Activity Heatmap” module. It lies to me.
I pin my top three projects. I rename “Reports” to “What Actually Matters.”
Customization isn’t decoration. It’s defense against distraction.
Here are five changes you can make right now:
- Swap the default dashboard view from “Summary” to “Timeline”
- Turn off email notifications for low-priority tags
- Rename “Client A” to “Sarah’s Project. Due Aug 12”
- Add your most-used cloud folder as a quick-access shortcut
- Delete the “Team Analytics” widget (you won’t miss it)
All of this takes under ten minutes.
Do it before your next meeting.
The Update Guide Etsiosapp tells you what changed last week. But the Release Date Etsiosapp tells you when the next batch of integrations drops (and) whether your calendar fix will break or get better. Check it.
I stopped treating apps as islands years ago. They’re tools. And tools only work when they talk to each other.
You already know this.
So stop waiting for permission to connect them.
Troubleshooting and Performance Boosts
Slow loading? I’ve seen it freeze for 12 seconds on launch. That’s not normal.
Clear the cache first. It fixes half the problems (no) joke.
Sync errors? Archive old projects you don’t touch. They gum up the works.
Update Guide Etsiosapp is your friend here. Not the flashy kind. The kind that actually tells you what to delete.
You’re still stuck? Try the By Etruesports Etsiosapp Update page. It’s blunt.
It works.
Your Etsiosapp Isn’t Broken. It’s Just Untapped
I’ve watched people treat Etsiosapp like a flashlight when it’s a power grid.
You’re clicking around. Wasting time on manual steps. Missing features that would cut your workload in half.
That’s not your fault. It’s what happens when you skip the Update Guide Etsiosapp.
You don’t need more tools. You need one system. Built right.
Master the core first. Automate one repeat task. Plug in one integration.
Do that (and) you’ll save hours this week. Not someday. This week.
You’re tired of doing the same thing over and over.
You want results. Not busywork.
Go back to Section 2 right now and set up just one of the automation recipes.
You’ll see the impact immediately.
No setup. No guesswork. Just one change.
And your Etsiosapp starts working for you.

Ask Mikeric Edwardsons how they got into gadget reviews and you'll probably get a longer answer than you expected. The short version: Mikeric started doing it, got genuinely hooked, and at some point realized they had accumulated enough hard-won knowledge that it would be a waste not to share it. So they started writing.
What makes Mikeric worth reading is that they skips the obvious stuff. Nobody needs another surface-level take on Gadget Reviews, Practical Tech Applications, Latest Tech Innovations. What readers actually want is the nuance — the part that only becomes clear after you've made a few mistakes and figured out why. That's the territory Mikeric operates in. The writing is direct, occasionally blunt, and always built around what's actually true rather than what sounds good in an article. They has little patience for filler, which means they's pieces tend to be denser with real information than the average post on the same subject.
Mikeric doesn't write to impress anyone. They writes because they has things to say that they genuinely thinks people should hear. That motivation — basic as it sounds — produces something noticeably different from content written for clicks or word count. Readers pick up on it. The comments on Mikeric's work tend to reflect that.

