![]() ![]() Though Joplin has improved enough that I would use it for quick notes as well. Now, if we’re talking about ‘sticky notes’ like quick notes experience like Google Keep, I’d say Standard Notes or Simple Notes. I’ve tried Turtl and cherrytree but found them to be clunky for my use case, but they are good options to look at too. If you use their own Joplin Cloud syncing option, that’s probably not going to become an issue again, but otherwise it’s something to remember whenever they change the way sync works. I would advice periodic back-up, however, as I recently decided to try it again and while appreciate all the improvements, it nuked all of my old notes synced via OneDrive. It’s what I would recommend if you’re used to OneNote. The ability to toggle between markdown mode and rich text editor mode is great (I’m more used to markdown syntaxes, but sometimes I just want to make quick edits so the rich text mode is good for that). ![]() It has that similar sidebar with workbooks and sub-pages structure, and you can modify how it treats some syntaxes. ![]() For me, if we’re talking as a journal / detailed notes, then I would say Joplin has worked the best for me - it used to be really slow and heavy (that it makes more sense to go full OneNote) but it has gotten pretty fast, though I haven’t filled it with too much notes yet. Leanote is described as provides services for note and blog.You can use 'note' as your personal notebook, if you want to share with friends, just publish note or notebook to the blog and is a popular Note-taking tool in the office & productivity category. ![]()
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