![]() I've yet to find anything that matches Apple Notes.Īpple Notes takes the crown for being the most unobstructive when it comes to taking notes.ġ. I previously used Evernote, and I've tried Notion (slow, awful for organizing, "block model" gets in the way of writing). But Markdown is a compromise - things like asterisks and underlines are less legible than the bold and italics they represent (especially across more than one word), and links become nigh unreadable, not to mention things like inline images and tables. I think Markdown is fine for technical docs, where no good standard for rich text editing exists. My heart sinks when a new note-taking app boasts of Markdown support, as if that's a good thing. I also like that Notes is rich text all the way. It's not quite as elegantly real-time as Google Docs, but we don't need that as much, since we tend to edit at different times. We use it for grocery lists, dinner planning, travel planning, and many other things. I use Apple Notes, and I constantly share notes with my wife - and entire folder structures, too. « HoudahSpot 5.I keep seeing apps like these, and what they almost never have is sharing notes between multiple people. Sign up for the email list here and get notifications and beta access as they come out. We have some good ideas, but nothing that’s struck us both as “that’s it!” Have any suggestions? Feel free to brainstorm in the comments! You’re not limited to tags (though you can search by and sync with macOS tags within the app), and you can sort your notes into subfolders as well. It allows you to create folders anywhere, maybe one on Dropbox or iCloud Drive that’s shared, one on an encrypted disk that’s private, one for work, one for home, one for every writing project. But then you can open another folder, or create a new one and start editing. You pick a folder, it indexes it, and you can use it just like nvALT. The biggest difference is that it works with multiple folders and sub-folders. It has blazing fast and accurate full-text search, the ability to find related notes based on content, and very complete Markdown editing tools (complete with syntax highlighting and theme editing). This app works a lot like nvALT (and Notational Velocity, naturally). Sign up today for notifications, and the first round of beta testers will be taken from the email list. But it’s close, and our goal is to start a beta test round in the next month or two. We need to wrap up some UI/UX work before we release the first round of betas, so I’m not ready to put an official ETA on it. Now we have an app nearing beta stage that’s better than any modal notes app you’ve used. He was working on a similar project and invited me to join him on it. ![]() You know, the guy who created MultiMarkdown, and who develops my favorite Markdown editor, MultiMarkdown Composer. Turned out David was MIA (hopefully ok), and the code I was left with no longer compiled on the latest operating systems. ![]() ![]() Now that my health is back to working state, I attempted to pick the project back up. Well, I failed at my part, then we lost touch, and it never came to fruition. You’ve been hearing from me for years about BitWriter, the nvALT replacement I was working on with David Halter.
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