On the upside, Notability will record audio that links to your notes, which makes it excellent for note-taking during lectures. And when it comes to that, there are a ton of iPad choices like Goodnotes, Noteshelf, and my favorite, Notability. It has excellent integration with iOS and macOS. On the hardware handwriting side, I’ve been playing with the expensive but nicely designed, Remarkable2 e-ink tablet. On the web Roam and Notion are, I think, very exciting tools with a new paradigm that works quite well. I maintain my markdown-based blog with emacs and Tramp-mode, or with Panic’s Nova, which is a great Mac-ish all-in-one solution (markdown editor, terminal, sftp, etc.) It’s in active development and is feature rich but easy to get started with.Īs an old-schooler, I really like emacs’s org-mode. It’s cross-platform and supports a number of cloud services for storage. I would take a look at the free and open-source Joplin. Microsoft’s OneNote is powerful, but maybe overkill. A lot of people like Bear - it’s very simple, as is SimpleNote or even the free Google Keep, which keeps getting better. Both are based on an older tool called Zettlr, which is inspired by (rabbit-hole warning) the Zettlekasten method.Įvernote used to be a good choice, but it’s become pretty expensive and I fear for its future. ![]() Ulysses is great, but so is another Andy favorite, Scrivener. ![]() I’ve spent a lot of time on this subject, looking for the perfect tool.
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