NotePlan_Themes
Joplin
NotePlan_Themes | Joplin | |
---|---|---|
79 | 771 | |
83 | 43,786 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 9.9 | |
over 1 year ago | 5 days ago | |
TypeScript | ||
MIT License | 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.
NotePlan_Themes
- Twenty, a modern CRM alternative to Salesforce
-
Show HN: I built a note-taking app integrated with calendar and to-do list
https://noteplan.co is a very similar app. Unfortunately I couldn't use it because it was limited to iOS devices (a web version is in development).
- One thing missing in craftnote is search. That is a must-have feature for me.
- I also like being able to publicly share notes with a (short) URL. See https://simplenote.com for an example of how this is done.
Nice job with allowing your app to be usable without creating an account. That is one of the most common complaints on Show HN's.
Next on the list of things the HN community usually demands is a way to export/import notes (so their notes are not lost if/when you discontinue service.)
Also an observation I made recently is my internet search history is like a zero-effort journal that captures a surprisingly good picture of my life. You could make your service a front-end to search engines that also automatically logs a user's search queries.
-
What's your favorite everyday app or product?
I've been using Kagi for about a year and love it. Searching without ads, with a bunch of power-user features, and a thoughtful approach to AI, has been very nice. - https://kagi.com
I've also been enjoying NotePlan. I stumbled upon a system I like for managing my work in Obsidian at work using some plugins, and then found NotePlan is basically an app designed around the exact system I cobbled together, with some added quality of life improvements. My data is in plain text files, so that makes it future proof (to a degree), which I also like. - https://noteplan.co
Merry Sky is another. A spiritual successor to Dark Sky, since Apple bought it and shut it down. It's not as nice as Dark Sky was, but hopefully it gets there. It's nice for seeing the upcoming week of perception forecasted in one visual view. - https://merrysky.net
- Ask HN: What products other than Obsidian share the file over app philosophy?
-
Why I Like Obsidian
I tried obsidian but felt it had too many gears and knobs and spent too many times fiddling with them. I fell back on this app which is based on local markdown storage but takes it up a notch.
https://noteplan.co
The fact that everything is in plain text files on my computer is very important for me and future proofed.
- Introducing My Knowledge Lakehouse
-
Ask HN: What do you use for note-taking or as knowledge base?
Noteplan [1] has stuck for at least 3 years now. I like that in addition to old-school notes pages, each day has its own page. I capture notes and to-dos when I'm in meetings, and it has a separate view that will aggregate all your to-dos onto the same screen, no matter what day they appeared on. That might be available in many note-taking apps now, but when I converted to Noteplan, I couldn't find that feature anywhere. I really wanted something that combined to-dos and notes into the same software.
Note-taking apps are a really crowded space and there are die-hards in every camp. It sounds trite, but I'm convinced the best one is the one that sticks and that you actually use.
[1] https://noteplan.co/
-
From Chaos to Consistency: How I Improved My Productivity
NotePlan + Session
-
Feature Request: Notes Reminder
You might have a look at NotePlan.
-
Ask HN: How Do You Manage and Schedule Everything in Your Life?
I use https://noteplan.co/
It is a planner/note-taking app that connects to your calendar and you can drag and drop "tasks" onto certain days, create notes that link to certain meetings, and time-block your days well in advance.
Joplin
- Ask HN: What is your approach for managing personal digital assets?
- Joplin is an open source note-taking app
-
My productivity app is a never-ending .txt file
I've had great success with using Joplin for this, with Syncthing as a sync backend. Works well across OSes; I use it on Linux, macOS, Windows and Android.
https://joplinapp.org/
-
Why I Like Obsidian
The tools to manipulate SQL aren't that bad, no.
But rather than having a self explanatory markdown & flat file, now I have to start learning about the schema & making specific tools (in my preferred language) for manipulating Joplin's schema.
Suddenly I'm digging through 20 different technic specs to decode what data is where, how it works, and what I can do to it. Want to edit history? This is the best help you'll get, pray it's adequately technical to expedite you to your purpose: https://github.com/laurent22/joplin/blob/dev/readme/dev/spec...
As I began with, I struggle to imagine anything that generates anywhere near as much user agency as flat files and markdown. Having boring common data & systems lets me apply portable skills I already have, rather than having to skill up in some particular product's own ecosystem.
-
IAC sold 17 apps to Bending Spoons. $100M deal, all 330 employees fired
Joplin is a good open source option too, feels more like the original Evernote in terms of UI/UX https://github.com/laurent22/joplin/
-
Ask HN: What do you use for note-taking or as knowledge base?
Joplin, an open source, extendable, Markdown-based hierarchical note-taking app: https://joplinapp.org/
It lets you choose a synchronization backend, offers applications for every major desktop and mobile OS (also has a terminal version). You can create notebooks and subnotebooks to organize your notes. You can also add tags for better search experience. I created notebooks for specific domains (work-related, home improvement, etc.) and also keep a "temp" for quick notes and W.I.P. snippets.
Its only con that it uses Electron on desktop which causes relatively slow start of the application.
-
Joplin VS Einwurf - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 20 Dec 2023
- PSA to Evernote Free users: 2 similar FREE apps to migrate to (I hope this post can end these questions so we can leave this sub's users in peace!)
- Evernote alternatives?
-
Evernote Pre Mortem
done
What are some alternatives?
rodo - Rodo is a terminal-based todo manager written in Ruby
Trilium Notes - Build your personal knowledge base with Trilium Notes
nb - CLI and local web plain text note‑taking, bookmarking, and archiving with linking, tagging, filtering, search, Git versioning & syncing, Pandoc conversion, + more, in a single portable script.
obsidian - GraphQL, built for Deno - a native GraphQL caching client and server module
logseq - A local-first, non-linear, outliner notebook for organizing and sharing your personal knowledge base. Use it to organize your todo list, to write your journals, or to record your unique life.
notesnook - A fully open source & end-to-end encrypted note taking alternative to Evernote.
Monica - Personal CRM. Remember everything about your friends, family and business relationships.
Boostnote - This repository is outdated and new Boost Note app is available! We've launched a new Boost Note app which supports real-time collaborative writing. https://github.com/BoostIO/BoostNote-App
linked - 🧾 Daily journaling without distraction. An easy, distraction-free way to record your thoughts, declutter your mind and keep the things you want to remember. Join the discord at https://discord.gg/uNjJzZvccr
todoist.nvim - A todoist extension for neovim
QOwnNotes - QOwnNotes is a plain-text file notepad and todo-list manager with Markdown support and Nextcloud / ownCloud integration.