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Agenda vs noteplan
Agenda vs noteplan




agenda vs noteplan agenda vs noteplan agenda vs noteplan

I decided it wouldn’t hurt to try out the current beta edition of NotePlan 3. (NotePlan’s task management is far more sophisticated than either RR or Obsidian at this time.) As with RR and Obsidian, NP is built around daily notes, and has clever linking and task management. NP has some significant similarities to those two inovative projects even in its earlier versions. Too expensive, I thought, for something I will admire, but not use… like a fine vase on a shelf in my home.īut I did follow development of NP3 and the more I saw, the more interested I became, especially after I had tried out Roam Research and Obsidian. When I learned that NP3 was going to be a $60/year subscription, I initially wrote it off. If you don’t, you can see more at the app’s website.) (Note: I am writing this review with the approach that readers will already have some familiarity with version 2. NotePlan 2 did this, but just didn’t hold me. TR allowed me to manage four types of information: Events, Tasks, Notes and Contacts, as if each was an index card, but all had date fields and could be reviewed in a calendar. Side Note: This conviction dates back to an old DOS application called Total Recall that I relied upon in the 1980s. All its features really appealled to me, because I have long thought the ideal app would allow you to combine notes, events and tasks. I’ve been a fan of NotePlan for some time, but I never really used it extensively, and I didn’t know why. I only recently started to try out the beta version of NotePlan 3.






Agenda vs noteplan