• insaneduck@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    Started reading title and immediately thought “oh google closing another service” luckily it’s just an update

  • TheLastOfHisName@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I’m really enjoying Notesnook. It’s what Evernote should have been. Cross platform, e2e encryption, and has a web clipper browser extension.

  • A10@kerala.party@kerala.party
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    1 year ago

    Keep is one of those apps stopping me from degoogling. Very handy for syncing shopping 🛒 lists between family members

    Edit: Found quillpad from this thread. UI is a clone of Google keep. Can sync notes with nextcloud. Syncing is bit buggy though.

    • illi@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      For real.I was looking but couldn’t find any alternative that would function the same.

      • A10@kerala.party@kerala.party
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        1 year ago

        I just tried quillpad on fdroid, it is pretty good if you want to avoid using google service and use self hosted nextcloud to sync your notes

    • Ilikepornaddict@lemmynsfw.com
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      1 year ago

      I’m hoping for an option to pw protect certain notes. Currently my method is: write the note, take a screenshot, put screenshot into locked folder, delete the note. Would be nice if I could avoid all that.

      • exkira@reddthat.com
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        1 year ago

        You could look into cryptomator for that. It encrypts a certain folder and you can only view content through its app.

    • alansuspect@aussie.zone
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      1 year ago

      Hey Quillpad is great! Thanks for the suggestion. Keep is one of those small google apps that ‘just works’ so I’ve expecting them to get rid of it or something. Wish there was a way to export from Keep into Quillpad and we’d be good.

  • SubArcticTundra@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Honestly I don’t understand what Google gains from keeping it running. It’s not like you can use it to train an AI very well

      • SubArcticTundra@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Oh no, I fully expect them to be, I just think that tiny post-its of contextless information must make for a very noisy (ie. useless) dataset. I guess you could gague product popularity or something if people keep their shopping lists on there…

    • Jimmycrackcrack@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      I have found myself continuing to use Keep for the same reason I adopted it in the first place. It runs in the browser and it’s usable everywhere without me needing to do anything.

      I need to take notes on a computer at multiple different work places without taking time to install something nor asking anyone if I can, I need to also use it on my phone as well as my home machine, I need to be able to share it with others and have a reasonable chance they’ll be able to see and/or edit it without needing to know or do anything themselves to make that happen and I need it synchronise everything with no intervention or administration on any machine I may use it on whether I own it or not. It sounds entitled, but also, I really don’t want to pay for a glorified note pad even if something cloud based like this is inherently more expensive and complicated than that.

      SyncThing would be great if I only had to worry about my own hardware on which I can install the necessary things but that’s not practical when I don’t know what machines I’ll be using down the track and I most likely won’t own them.

      It’s a shame because I actually really don’t like Keep. I don’t like it for the privacy implications (though if I also don’t want to pay for what does then I don’t really have a leg to stand on there), but I also hate using it. The interface is annoying, needlessly, and I can only indent one level, which for a notetaking app is infuriating. It also limits the length of a note, which fits with the spirit of a quick note taking app rather than fully fledged word processor which Google also offers but, still, having any limit at all I super annoying. I also particularly dislike the touted feature of rich previews of weblinks because it becomes hard to see where my notes end and previews begin and ironically, despite my complaints mostly being about how basic Keep is, this is too sophisticated a feature for a notes app. I’m using it to make lists of things, if I want to see the page or information on the page I’ve linked to in a note, I’ll just go to the page.

      I use Keep as a product of necessity but I don’t like it. That said I found that I only started using it thinking it would help me be more organised at with and while it has helped a bit with everyday life, I eventually found that for work there were better ways of achieving the same thing, mainly with a spreadsheet, and I can do that using Google’s Sheets product with the same advantages that Keep had so I’ve been gradually moving away from Keep anyway.

      • AdmiralShat@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        I recommend Syncthing Fork, btw, it has a few more features.

        You can set up a versioning system, there’s like five different options but I don’t know what all the differences are. You can set up your own custom amount of versions and set how long they are kept.

        I have mine set to check for file changes, but you have a whole host of options for when it triggers. You can set it to run at intervals or just when changes happen, or when you do it manually. It uses damn near no battery life to keep on in the background for me.

        It even has a conflict resolution system that let’s you observe file timestamp conflicts and resolve them manually.

        • AdmiralShat@programming.dev
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          1 year ago

          Just tested it against the clock on my phone, with seconds turned on, it opened to my 20000 word canvas with 15 different notes in LESS than a single second.

          Unless you’re writing literal novels in a single files, you shouldn’t have an issue.

  • SirMaple_@lemmy.sirmaple.ca
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    1 year ago

    This looks very promising. Will have try out the free option. Looking forward to the self hosted option. Hopefully that comes out sooner than later.