4/15/2023 0 Comments Ios notes simplenote![]() ![]() I’d be happy to hear about someone’s experiences in particular with any of these latter four. 1Write is inexpensive and seems intresting.But it complies with my one-time-purchace policy. Intersting piece of software I think, just expensive, very expensive indeed. iA Writer is presumably the best when it comes to simple&clean, focus-oriented, minimal, distranction-free, however you wanna call it.The intersting functionalities are behind the paywall, though, and for the base version there is too much distraction going on in my opinion. Taio is in principle apt for my use case as is.tried Markology-perhaps the only candidate I deem too minimalist.Would be great if someone wrote a programm for converting Simplenote’s output to Obsidian-friendly input like did for Evernote. I can continue using this for my purporse for a while but I want to leave Evernote behind completely rather sooner than later. I’m still subscribed to Evernote and in the process of migrating all my notes there to Obsidian.In the long run, I might opt for that but for the time being, I need to do the trick on Windows… There’s an exporter for the Apple notes.no subscription, however, so if not free, there must at least be an option to purchase a lifetime licence.ideally free, open source and encrypted-but these are not necessary.I don’t need any sophisticated functionalities for my use case. Cross-platform synching should be secure, reliable and convenient. So it’d be nice to have a dedicated desktop app, too (should support both macOS and Windows). There must be a way to export to markdown obviously.If I were willing to swallow the inconvenience and settle for a web app, I could just as well and would rather stay with Obsidian mobile. The service must include a native mobile app (iOS).Therefore, I’ve come to the conclusion that I want to use a different service while I’m on the go during the day (or whenever) to quickly capture my thoughts and then transport those notes to Obsidian in the evening (or whenever the occasion arises) when I’m at my PC. I feel the mobile interface is too similar to the desktop’s for small screens and use cases on the go. After your file downloads, you get a confirmation message. Touch and hold the file, tap Share, then tap Notes. I’ve also been using the iOS app (syncing works fine for me), but this part has been less of a pleasing experience. Open the Files app and go to the file that you want to import to Notes. I have just started my journey with Obsidian and I love to use it on desktop and laptop systems. ![]()
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