It is a standalone version of JotPlan, and is equivalent to JotPlan except it does not allow cloud integration between iPad and iPhone.
The most user-friendly scheduler might just be a printed Letter-size sheet with a months worth of appointments. On paper, youre not confined to grids—you can write whats most important in a big way and fit plenty of smaller details. It provides an overview at a glance, and you can fold it up to take it with you. And if you flip it over, it doubles as a notepad.
If you have an iPad and an Apple Pencil, you can do the same with JotPlan:
Your standard calendar appointments are displayed on the schedule. (You can also edit and add new ones.)
It follows a one-day-per-line format, so you have plenty of horizontal space to jot down anything you need on a digital Letter-sized canvas. (And if you cant fit it all, theres a notepad on the back screen.)
You can view the entire schedule in portrait mode on the iPad and zoom in on landscape mode.