EncryptPad
CherryTree
EncryptPad | CherryTree | |
---|---|---|
10 | 59 | |
421 | 3,232 | |
- | - | |
7.0 | 9.4 | |
19 days ago | 5 days ago | |
C++ | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
EncryptPad
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Ask HN: What does your single file “productivity app” look like?
> My productivity app for the past 12 years has been a single .txt file
Better if it's encrypted. I use Encryptpad[0] to store such notes.
[0] https://evpo.net/encryptpad/
- Does anybody have any recommendations for fully encrypted word processing applications to run on windows
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Best ways to anonymize your informants in notes and papers?
I would also take the further step of using a text editor that supports encryption, so that even if an attacker can read files from your computer are using the USB stick, it will still be protected. EncryptPad looks like a good easy to use option, personally I use gVIM, but it's a bit technical. EncryptPad uses industry standard GPG encryption, so the files can be read on Mac and Linux can also, if you ever change OS or collaborate with a peer on the project. They have a nice tutorial here.
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Any Notebooks with Local Encryption?
I use encryptpad (https://evpo.net/encryptpad/). It allows for symmetric encryption on your local machine and comes with a decent text editor. No cloud storage functionality
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[Software] Help me find a notepad with encryption as a backup method to store my passwords
Encryptpad is exactly like Notepad with encryption.
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I have a REALLY stupid question....
As someone else mentioned, Cryptomator is a great option for this, and probably easier. Encrypt Pad can work also. These solutions work differently. Cryptomator gives you an encrypted drive where you can store many files, whereas Encrypt Pad will just encrypt a bunch of text. You can then safely save the encrypted file anywhere, such as your email.
- Journal Writing App
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Got hacked for about $175k - is there any recourse?
You can also use an encrypted notepad, like EncryptPad. This will password protect the text file as well. Then you have the text file password, OneDrive 2FA and Veracrypt protecting your seed phrase. Good to have if you forget to delete your seed phrase file off your PC. It's still protected even in storage.
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Show HN: Kryptor – A simple, modern, and secure encryption tool
Would EncryptPad be enough for your needs?
https://evpo.net/encryptpad/
- EncryptPad for viewing / editing symmetrically encrypted text
CherryTree
- Cherrytree Releases 1.0.0
- Digital notetaking?
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Personal "database" for storing work experience information?
I am started using CherryTree. (There is a screenshot here.)
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Ask HN: Using Markdown Files for Notetaking?
I wonder if an extensible editor (example: Atom) could do both of those things with Markdown files. Assuming by styling you mean things like being able to highlight and custom-style some text, even in a typically text-only view of a markdown file. It wouldn't be a big surprise if that could be done...somehow. Collapsible points ought to be doable for sure.
Personally I use other methods for styling within markdown, for example emoji, tags, link formatting with brackets (for things that are not really links), etc.
I also take any list that's longer than 8-10 items and break it up by category or reorganize it so it's less visually overwhelming.
Otherwise you may find it helpful to look into more rich-editor-style notetaking solutions like cherrytree or Notecase Pro. The latter is proprietary but I used it for years and was very happy with it. Good luck in your search.
https://www.giuspen.com/cherrytree/
https://www.notecasepro.com/
- website down
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Journal Writing App
I'm kinda surprised no one mentioned cherrytree yet.
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hierarchical note taking applications
cherrytree
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Best book writing app?
I use FocusWriter. It's a lightweight, full-screen app that does more than enough for a manuscript. I used to use Google Docs with Wavemaker, which has a lot of extra functions like cards and timelines, etc. Docs slowed down a lot with a lot of open windows or really long docs, however. And with WFH the sync isn't that important to me anymore. For notes lately I've been using CheeryTree. All these are free.
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Share your greatest free tools
CherryTree for a general note-taking database. As an Application Packager I can't remember PowerShell scripts I wrote two weeks ago, so saving my recipes in here is priceless.
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I've reached 2800 mods. Never do that.
How do you keep track of/document everything? I have been using Cherry Tree. It is a fancy open source note taking program that lets you keep notes in a tree like structure.
What are some alternatives?
Kryptor - A simple, modern, and secure encryption and signing tool that aims to be a better version of age and Minisign.
Trilium Notes - Build your personal knowledge base with Trilium Notes
GpgFrontend - A free, open-source, robust yet user-friendly, compact and cross-platform tool for OpenPGP encryption. It stands out as an exceptional GUI frontend for the modern GnuPG (gpg).
to-markdown - 🛏 An HTML to Markdown converter written in JavaScript
kakoune - mawww's experiment for a better code editor
OSCP-Exam-Report-Template-Markdown - :orange_book: Markdown Templates for Offensive Security OSCP, OSWE, OSCE, OSEE, OSWP exam report
plugins - Officially supported Psi plugins
Joplin - Joplin - the secure note taking and to-do app with synchronisation capabilities for Windows, macOS, Linux, Android and iOS.
opmsg - opmsg message encryption
obsidian-leaflet - Adds interactive maps to Obsidian.md using Leaflet.js
qTox - qTox is a chat, voice, video, and file transfer IM client using the encrypted peer-to-peer Tox protocol.
public-pentesting-reports - A list of public penetration test reports published by several consulting firms and academic security groups.