Several of my transferred notes clipped from Wikipedia were illegible, with images overlapping text.With 2.5 Gb data and three devices to sync, I blew through 5 Gb of traffic fast. Its pricing is based on total traffic rather than simply on upload traffic.Its price point was apparently lower than Evernote. And it was fast (or faster than EN is now-a pretty low bar). Its editor is not bad for a block editor. This is the one I ought to have liked best, based on my research prior to testing. Nimbus Notes: Web, Mac, PC, Android, iOS. With these priorities in mind, here’s how the candidates stacked up: I have vast amounts of data-2,200 notes and counting, a total of about 2.5 Gb.I use big obvious buckets-”Recipes” “Writing” “Everything else”-yet sometimes I still miscategorise (I found a chapter outline in my Recipes folder yesterday.) Search needs to “just find it,” fast, no matter where I put it. In short, I need a lot of different ways to get information in, plus fast, legible retrieval. But everything- everything-goes into my notes. As long as typing doesn’t suck, I’m fine. My primary need in a notes app is not writing-related.Somewhat to my own surprise, I’ve settled on Bear.Īs an ADHD non-student adult, I have some different needs for a notes app. I tested Ulysses, OneNote, and Bear as well. I gave it a thorough trial, but I didn’t neglect to test other possibilities. I wrote about considering Nimbus Note as an Evernote (EN) replacement in my last post, and you’ll get the detailed review I promised in my next post.
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