Note-Taking Software I’m Currently Using
- The Archive (macOS) • Zettelkasten Method
- Gingko App
- Drafts (to take quick notes)
- Workflowy (for interviews and other miscellaneous notes)
#update 07-05-22: I’ve been using Thunk | July 5, 2022 quite a lot for writing. Here is a list of other apps that I’ve enjoyed trying out.
- Thunk 202207051659 (as mentioned above). I really liked using the app — the interface was extremely intuitive, and it had most of the features that I would want from my note-taking app. 202207051347. However, the expensiveness of it combined with the fact that it was completely closed 202207051341 (there doesn’t seem like there’s any way to import notes, and you can only export notes as a JSON instead of actually usable Markdown files) really turned me off.
- Capacities — I stopped using this because it was glitchy and hard to use, although the core idea (specific, templated notes for different concepts 202207051412 that I could organize in a Notion/Airtable format) was really appealing to me.
- I experimented with Dendron at some point. I didn’t like how centered it was around previews — it just felt a little unnecessary. At the same time, there were many parts of it that I really liked. Specifically, it also has the notion of having schemas for different notes and note types 202207051412, that feels so much more categorical and organized than having ad-hoc notes.
- I’ve also been using Nota 202207051532, which has a lot of awesome things going for it. In fact, I think I’m much more inclined to use it than Obsidian, because of amazing the keyboard shortcuts are.
Created from: Note-Taking (index) 202204102124
uid: 202204102217 tags: #notetaking #writing #update