I find it weird that the only sample application built with it is the old Wunderlist. Wunderlist 2 - which was released a few weeks ago - was developed native for each platform.
Perhaps it may seem so. That said, the original Wunderlist was likely the most infamous use of the original technology that reached millions of users.
It's no slight against its makers to have gone purely native but the fact is that most companies developing a todo app do not have millions in investment or the sort of native programming capacity to throw at this kind of project.
TideKit is a solution that is going to get you on all platforms quickly and its only improving over time. As you might be aware, the new Wunderlist 2 seemed to have lost its linux support as a result of their recent shift.
We're hoping to show something quite soon that shows a speed and quality of development that will have most wundering why they transitioned to native.
I think what the guy you're replying to was saying is that the entire page seems to be about Wunderlist, when they no longer use this SDK, and their use of it isn't really that complex.
Perhaps it would be better to show some actual users with a carousel type thing?