@garetrobinson@evernote Maybe you'd like @amplenote? They have two tiers for payment, one of $70/yr and another for $120/yr, so it would be quite the cost saving compared to your Evernote plans. The creators of it were also fed up with Evernote's future (quite a bit before the last acquisition btw)
open source é uma parada doida. criei uma lib pra previnir alguns softwares meu de sofrerem ataques ssrf. tomei uma abordagem dinamica, fazndo a lib ficar minúscula e sem dependencias. hoje fui olhar por acaso e ela tem 3k download semanais, é AI aware e tem respaudo da SNYK 🙃
@DThompsonDev I use Amplenote, although I use it for more than note taking. I use it as a calendar and task manager as well.
While it's flexible enough to adapt to me, it's not so customizable that I'll end up overwhelmed with the features.
Most productivity advice repeats the same few ideas.
Capture everything, prioritize, do less per day, schedule, protect your energy.
I've read dozens of frameworks built on this.
The irony is that knowing all of them didn't make me productive.
I've tested over 10 Linux distros recently.
And I realized they're pretty much the same, but with different people working on them.
At least all of them were better than Windows
I started using Zettelkasten mainly to think better and reflect about ideas.
Unexpected result: my blog posts now come from ideas that already exist and I already wrote about.
@metruzanca@obsdmd@NotionHQ Have you tried Amplenote? On their $10/mo plan you can share your notes with others on the internet.
You can also save your notes locally in markdown format.
@ChielMuur They have a plugin called Quick Add that allows you to capture tasks more easily, but it's still not that easy on mobile.
Maybe you'd like Amplenote? It has a quick add feature on mobile for quickly capturing notes and tasks.
@oFelipoca@arielxerecaBet@mecl0vin E ainda tem quest que fica renovando de vez em quando, e ai fica la acumulando na quantidade de quests q vc tem q fazer kkkkkk
@stevenpoole Maybe Amplenote would fit your bill? They have:
- Web, desktop and mobile apps
- Web clipper
- Sync between all of your devices
- AI is part of a plugin, so you only add it if you want
- You can share notes, but it's hidden on a separate menu
@donvito I use Amplenote for capturing my tasks, since it allows me to easily capture and later plan it to be done soon in the calendar.
But now I'm testing using a small pocket notebook to avoid bringing my phone everywhere and making me remember things properly
@alexcloudstar@mattiapomelli Depends on what you mean by "past behavior" though. Is it about what you did inside the app, or what you did outside of it?
If the latter, the app could be a potential privacy risk. If it's the former, apps like Amplenote create a score for what you do to a task (like urgency)
@TRochesterian@KeepProductive@peterakkies Maybe @amplenote would fit your requirements?
- We plan to add auto OCR for PDFs soon
- We have some table functions
- We have tags and backlinking functionality
- Web, desktop, and mobile apps
- No folders, but tags fill the usecase of folders 95% of the time!
@BoxBoxeth@DBofficial125@Dexerto They can, but unlike a normal console, you're not tied to the Steam store or or operating system, so you could have users that will buy it and use it for workstations (its debatable if this would be reasonable, but people will do it)
@Vtorres69 I've used both, and they are different in philosophy and use cases - Obsidian favors long-form notes, while Logseq favors bullet point notes and making hierarchies.
Right now I use Amplenote, as I can have a task manager, notes and calendar in the same app.