![]() Well, NotePlan 3 offers a way to take notes as the core element. NotePlan 3 is an evolution of the NotePlan applications and offers a unique tool to host your tasks, calendar and notes. I’m not sure if that’s the dynamic duo for a long lasting note-taking relationship.A subtle bi-directional linking application allowing you to create connections between notes and even organize with folders. You can clip articles from anywhere on the web with Notion’s iOS web clipper. You can automate a variety of tasks in Notion. I have been reading a lot inside Matter and you can sync your Matter highlights directly to Notion. Trying to organize them in databases in Notion has been tricky.Īnother quick point or two: Notion has become increasingly integrative across a range of other apps and services. They’re all tagged five-ways-to-Sunday as they’ve made their way through four or more note-taking apps. Mostly screenshots, quips, tweets, URLs, articles - the usual. I’ve collected under 1,000 notes over the last few years. That said, I’m mostly lost in how I want to organize my own personal notes. And each step of the way, I come away more impressed with Notion’s power. I’ve adopted a bunch of the workflows and ideas in a Notion I’m creating for our accounting office. I’ve worked inside The Sweet Setup’s Notion now for a little while and have come away impressed with how mouldable the app can be. The ability to publish to this blog directly from Ulysses may be one of my favourite features of any third-party app. I tried writing in Craft for a little while, too. What’s the proper structure for capturing a one sentence tidbit? Should it be part of a different document? A page? A card? A document unto itself? It’s clear the app is designed for creating documents. There’s really very little left wanting.īut recently, I’ve come to feel a little inferior for Craft. Storing research, preparing procedure and workflow documents, and clipping webpages inside Craft has all been a breeze. Only Roam connects better.Ĭraft’s daily notes are a fantastic feature and have worked very well tracking my work over the last few months. Craft is the closest I’ve come to sheer glee working on a Mac. Back then though, NotePlan didn’t handle attachments very well - read as “not at all” - and I was back on the trail. I moulded my daily work tracking into NotePlan at the same time. Then it was NotePlan, a lightweight, Markdown-based app that seamlessly handles bullet journaling. Alas, a combination of cost and tiredness had me looking elsewhere. The power of backlinking, in the palm of my hand! Roam’s power is/was unprecedented and I’m not sure I’ve yet found a larger “Oh my gosh!” reaction to any new note-taking app since. But the app hasn’t meaningfully changed in years. It has the best tagging system on the planet (Apple stole the feature in the latest version of Notes in iOS 15). Though required.įor the longest time, Bear was my note-taking app of choice. The ability to create actual, you know, notes is mostly secondary. Really, I’m on the hunt for a hoarding app - an app capable of saving, categorizing, resurfacing, connecting, and storing random internet junk I find interesting. Lo and behold, I’m on the hunt for another note-taking app. Until you look around when something doesn’t immediately click with a minimal amount of friction. Every note-taking app is simply the best. Roam Research revolutionized the backlink. Craft has moulded documents with Notion’s block-based structure. There’s no shortage of amazing note-taking apps. I’m developing a love-hate relationship with note-taking apps. ![]() (That might be too deep for a Thursday morning.) The more options in front of you, the more factors you have to weigh. I’m Still Looking for a Note-Taking App Thursday, Oct 21, 2021 ![]()
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