

The markdown file is then converted to latex/pdf using pandoc + pandoc-citeproc (for citations using a bibtex-file).

She could use the ipad to write a few minutes here and there during transit and was able to complete it. Except well, short story: joplin is awesome for that. So hardware was there, but looking for a markdown editor that supported sync and that old device + her windows laptop was not fruitful.

So at some point I figured she could use my old ipad mini 1 with a size-fitted logitech "ultrathin keyboard" (that magnetically holds onto the ipad, making it one piece for storage) that I impulse bought and never used. Her work laptop is too bulky to carry around every day unfortunately. My Ex needed to write a big dissertation that she just couldn't make progress on (unsurprisingly). One great aspect is that joplin supports iOS 8+. Notes in Bear really are beutiful and pleasant to write and read. If I only could change the caret to a non-blinking, block everything would be great.
Boostnote bold code#
This, together with nice rendering of quotes, code etc makes making complex notes possible. I now read and write journal notes etc on desktop, iPad and mobile. Bear renders markdown nicely, has nice themes. But it is a standard, open SQL DB you can talk to if needed. Yes, it stores notes in a DB, not as files. I've now moved to Bear, and the experience is much better. Instead often accidentally creating new cells that had to be fixed. I also never felt a benefit of the cell concept. Headings of the same type end up having different sizes for example. But the rendering engine in Quiver is flaky. I really want to get header rendered in different sizes, bold really looking bold etc. The reason for converting was to get better typography and layout. I converted to it from Org-mode in Emacs. I really tried to use Quiver for almost a year. for personal and business use.ĪDDED: forgot to mention that the lack of dark mode on Windows EN client was a constant source of irritation. I'd like to be able to have separate DBs, e.g. The fact that Joplin is WIP and open source is encouraging.
Boostnote bold android#
Win10 and Android clients seem to chug along just fine, but the Linux client shows weird errors in the log - trying to hunt down the root cause. My early attempts at synchronizing encrypted notes over OneDrive experienced repeated hiccups (stopped syncing for no apparent reason), so currently trying without encryption. The idea of owning my notes is very appealing. Text diagramming such as PlantUML is a big plus.
Boostnote bold free#
My requirements: multi-platform, multi-device, auto-sync (more than 2 devices in free ver.), tags, webclip-ability, preferably markdown format with code rendering. I felt that Evernote was becoming increasingly constraining and slow/flaky, so after trying a few alternatives (text files/dirs, SimpleNote, Apple Notes, BoostNotes, Zim, etc), I've made a leap of faith to Joplin.
