Worth noting that this is put together by AmpleNote. As of now it’s very robust and trustworthy. But they day may come that they decide to cash in on this to boost their own offering. As of now I 100% believe in the content. It hasn’t failed me yet.
ALSO, if you see something that isn’t right, or that it’s missing a product you’d like to see listed, you can make suggestions here:
https://nextnoteapps.featureupvote.com/
https://noteappsfeatures.featureupvote.com/
Quick peek at the UI
Haven’t heard about it until now. Seems fairly similar to AmpleNote or some others which I forget the name of. It’s good that a lot of these ideas are becoming more prominent in PKMS. For example, AmpleNote’s calendar and task integration is fantastic. You can import your google and other calendars, and then drag tasks onto the calendar to give your day a general plan. Seems like NotePlan is onto something similar
One big factor for me when choosing an app that I’m going to run 24x7 is whether or not it uses electron. Electron is the reason Obsidian will never meet my needs. I was a heavy Craft user and recently switched to NotePlan because, like Craft, NotePlan doesn’t use Electron.
Oh yeah Electron has some massive shortcomings. Though it gets updated fairly often. That said I totally hear you. Literally right now Logseq is not getting the current time correctly for me because of an Electron bug with timezones.
Do you have a filter for electron based apps on your site?
Logseq journals and always outline mode are killer feature. However performance is an issue as of now as size grows.
Oh yes, logseq isn’t without it’s weaknesses. Primarily that it seems you need an engineering degree to get what you need out of it. It’s freeing but almost overwhelmingly so. That’s what the polished corporate open source offerings have that logseq doesn’t. Luckily the we’re seeing a proliferation of solutions in this space and that can only make things better for all of us. I’m excited to see how all the offerings grow. Personally, I’d like to make my own open source, maybe piggybacking off logseq, but with a lot more polish