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Application ~upd~ — Trello Desktop

If you juggle a personal Trello and a work one (or several clients), the desktop app handles multiple logins seamlessly. You can switch accounts from the sidebar without logging out and back in. Where It Falls Short 1. Same Core Features – No “Desktop‑Only” Superpowers Apart from offline mode, the desktop app doesn’t add unique functionality. You won’t find deeper file system integration (e.g., drag‑and‑drop a folder to auto‑create multiple cards) or background sync with local calendar apps. It’s essentially the web app in a standalone shell—polished, but not transformative.

✅ Download it – especially if you use Trello daily. Just don’t expect miracles beyond the polished, native feel. trello desktop application

The app lives in its own window—no accidental tab closures, no browser clutter. You can quickly hide the sidebar and go full‑screen on a board. It feels like a dedicated work tool, not just another browser tab fighting for attention among social media or email. If you juggle a personal Trello and a

On both Windows and macOS, the app is an Electron wrapper. Idling in the background, it consumes around 200–300 MB of RAM. On a modern machine that’s fine, but on an older laptop with 4–8 GB RAM, you’ll notice it. The web version in a lightweight browser (like Edge or Safari) can sometimes be leaner. ✅ Download it – especially if you use Trello daily

While native notifications are nice, there’s no fine‑grained control inside the app . You either get all notifications (card assignments, due dates, comments) or none. You still need to adjust them at the OS level or inside Trello’s web settings.