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  3. How do you take and manage notes?

How do you take and manage notes?

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    • timconsidineT timconsidine

      @p44 I used to use Joplin but changed to Standard Notes https://standardnotes.org/

      marcusquinnM Online
      marcusquinnM Online
      marcusquinn
      wrote on last edited by
      #18

      @timconsidine Nice, Standard Notes looks good but I have little patience for having to work to see or get functionality. I couldn't work out how to just see and try all the so-called extensions.

      Why they can't just include everything, give like a 7-day trial, and make it possible to try all those things without jumping through hoops.

      So I registered an account, then click to an extension, which takes me to a demo site where I seem to have to enter those registration credentials, which it then says don't work, so I'm thinking that I just put credentials supposed to be for protecting data into a website that I shouldn't have entered them into.

      The idea and look of the product looks good - the onboarding process to get anyone trying all that and confident that a significant investment in them is worth the risk, that I don't think I could confidently recommend to friends if the first thing it did was confuse and annoy me. Maybe I'm missing something that others's didn't, but the so-called free version feels like it costs me more time and effort for something that doesn't support markdown, so I don't know what they expect people to do with that.

      Web Design https://www.evergreen.je
      Development https://brandlight.org
      Life https://marcusquinn.com

      timconsidineT 1 Reply Last reply
      2
      • marcusquinnM marcusquinn

        @timconsidine Nice, Standard Notes looks good but I have little patience for having to work to see or get functionality. I couldn't work out how to just see and try all the so-called extensions.

        Why they can't just include everything, give like a 7-day trial, and make it possible to try all those things without jumping through hoops.

        So I registered an account, then click to an extension, which takes me to a demo site where I seem to have to enter those registration credentials, which it then says don't work, so I'm thinking that I just put credentials supposed to be for protecting data into a website that I shouldn't have entered them into.

        The idea and look of the product looks good - the onboarding process to get anyone trying all that and confident that a significant investment in them is worth the risk, that I don't think I could confidently recommend to friends if the first thing it did was confuse and annoy me. Maybe I'm missing something that others's didn't, but the so-called free version feels like it costs me more time and effort for something that doesn't support markdown, so I don't know what they expect people to do with that.

        timconsidineT Online
        timconsidineT Online
        timconsidine
        App Dev
        wrote on last edited by
        #19

        @marcusquinn I have been using it for what seems like a couple of years, so I have forgotten all that pain.

        Things that make it valuable for me :

        • markdown
        • multiple editors
          • including tasks list, don't use it much but handy for TODAY type notes
          • mini spreadsheet (without having to load a full Numbers or OfficeSheet app)
        • multiple note tags
        • publishing articles to listed.io, e.g. drafts for colleagues to review without sharing a file
        • easy cross-device syncing
        • security

        But sorry for leading you down wasted time route !

        marcusquinnM 1 Reply Last reply
        1
        • timconsidineT timconsidine

          @marcusquinn I have been using it for what seems like a couple of years, so I have forgotten all that pain.

          Things that make it valuable for me :

          • markdown
          • multiple editors
            • including tasks list, don't use it much but handy for TODAY type notes
            • mini spreadsheet (without having to load a full Numbers or OfficeSheet app)
          • multiple note tags
          • publishing articles to listed.io, e.g. drafts for colleagues to review without sharing a file
          • easy cross-device syncing
          • security

          But sorry for leading you down wasted time route !

          marcusquinnM Online
          marcusquinnM Online
          marcusquinn
          wrote on last edited by
          #20

          @timconsidine Thanks, it's all good. I sent them an email as feedback, so not wasted time at all, I can see their ambition, I just like to try before I buy and they seem to be missing a few expectations there. I might give it another try when more time as the UI looks well considered.

          Web Design https://www.evergreen.je
          Development https://brandlight.org
          Life https://marcusquinn.com

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          • ? Offline
            ? Offline
            A Former User
            wrote on last edited by
            #21

            I've been using HedgeDocs to manage notes. Works surprisingly well on mobile too.

            P jdaviescoatesJ 2 Replies Last reply
            2
            • ? A Former User

              I've been using HedgeDocs to manage notes. Works surprisingly well on mobile too.

              P Offline
              P Offline
              p44
              translator
              wrote on last edited by
              #22

              @atrilahiji «The best platform to write and share markdown»: seems to be interesting, I'll take a look to 😄 Many thank's for your advice!

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              • P p44

                When you read physical books, how do you take notes? Where you store that?

                About digital notes: how do you manage? Eg. websites? Where do you store?

                Do you use any Cloudron app to achieve this?

                I'm curious because I cannot find a good solution that covers all cases eg. online, offline, kindle, paper, and so on.

                Thank's a lot!

                rmdesR Offline
                rmdesR Offline
                rmdes
                wrote on last edited by
                #23

                @p44 Using my nextcloud to do this, with the nextcloud app Carnet
                it comes with a nice mobile app that you can connect to your own instance and from there, you basically have an equivalent of Google Keep running 🙂

                jdaviescoatesJ 1 Reply Last reply
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                • ? A Former User

                  I've been using HedgeDocs to manage notes. Works surprisingly well on mobile too.

                  jdaviescoatesJ Offline
                  jdaviescoatesJ Offline
                  jdaviescoates
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #24

                  @atrilahiji said in How do you take and manage notes?:

                  HedgeDocs to manage notes. Works surprisingly well on mobile too.

                  Oh, last time I tried it on mobile I deemed it unusable, shall have to have another look...

                  I use Cloudron with Gandi & Hetzner

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                  • rmdesR rmdes

                    @p44 Using my nextcloud to do this, with the nextcloud app Carnet
                    it comes with a nice mobile app that you can connect to your own instance and from there, you basically have an equivalent of Google Keep running 🙂

                    jdaviescoatesJ Offline
                    jdaviescoatesJ Offline
                    jdaviescoates
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #25

                    @rmdes said in How do you take and manage notes?:

                    the nextcloud app Carnet

                    Last I tried that it didn't seem to work very well (or what it that it failed to import from Keep? Can't remember).

                    I use Cloudron with Gandi & Hetzner

                    1 Reply Last reply
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                    • girishG Offline
                      girishG Offline
                      girish
                      Staff
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #26

                      For VS code users, I just saw this https://wiki.dendron.so/ . "Dendron is an open-source, local-first, markdown-based, note-taking tool built on top of VSCode."

                      S 1 Reply Last reply
                      1
                      • girishG girish

                        For VS code users, I just saw this https://wiki.dendron.so/ . "Dendron is an open-source, local-first, markdown-based, note-taking tool built on top of VSCode."

                        S Offline
                        S Offline
                        seeker
                        wrote on last edited by seeker
                        #27

                        Great thread!

                        I stumbled up this today so I figured I would share it here as it can sync using nextcloud and that could prove useful for Cloudron users. You are able to format and view notes differently than joplin. I was impressed with Joplin's web clipper. Joplin's biggest asset is it has a huge following. There are alot of plugins being developed to broaden what you can do with it.

                        https://opentodolist.rpdev.net/
                        https://gitlab.com/rpdev/opentodolist
                        "A todo and task managing application, written in Qt and using QML for its UI. OpenTodoList is targeted at typical desktop environments (Windows, Linux, Mac OS X) as well as mobile devices such as Android phones."

                        This is a nice video walk through.

                        It looks like select whether each notwork is local or not. I am not sure if you can do that with joplin. Here is a link to the android app.

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