NotePlan

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NotePlan helps you to capture important details and keep track of things at work. Manage your calendar, todos and notes in one place. 14 Days Free Trial NotePlan is available for Mac ($29.99, sold separately). NotePlan aims to help you better plan your day without wasting too much time creating events, to-do lists, formatting notes, and so on. The NotePlan utility integrates a calendar, a note taking. 210 likes 1 talking about this. Lean task calendar and backlog notes - Plan tasks with dates in mind using a calendar, notes and a markdown editor.

  1. NotePlan is organized around notes – one note per day, plus any number of undated notes that you can set up in parallel. Jot down notes and additional to-dos as they occur to you. At the end of the day or first thing tomorrow review the note and prioritize for the next day.
  2. NotePlan is designed to make your task planning more productive. It solves problems like bloated, ever-growing to-do lists. Modern Writing – Enjoy a full writing area with Markdown.

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Posted by Drewster
Jan 7, 2020 at 12:55 PM

I own both Agenda and NotePlan, across macOS and iOS.

NotePlan

I recently wrote a short blog post attempting to outline the challenge faced choosing between these apps - https://canion.me/agenda-and-noteplan

Noteplan App

I thought it might be of interest to CRIMPers here on the forum.

Posted by satis
Jan 8, 2020 at 10:47 PM

FYI a new version of NotePlan just came out with live Markdown rendering. Looks good.

Posted by MadaboutDana
Jan 9, 2020 at 10:20 AM

Noteplan Calendar

I like your review of the two apps, Drewster, but agree above all with your conclusions about Agenda: it’s slow. Nice, good-looking, but confused and slow.

Whereas NotePlan (speaking from my own experience, which is primarily text-based, so I’m not so interested in the ability to display images/attach files) is fast. In several senses of the word: it is fast to update, fast to sync - and also continues to make rapid progress, driven by the enthusiastic Eduard.

The recent advances, including nested tagging, savable filters/smart searches and rendered markdown, have made it a very attractive, very usable environment. The simple, user-friendly interaction of the Notes and Calendar components is outstanding. There are other multi-component task managers that interact in similar ways, but in my experience none are as immediately and practically easy to use as NotePlan (not even the exceptional but relatively complex Pagico). What I’m particularly impressed by is the way NotePlan has made steady, sensible progress from a very simple initial premise (which I looked at a couple of years ago but wasn’t especially impressed by) to a powerful, flexible information management machine. The recent expansion of Apple Calendar/Reminders integration is a great step forward.

I have no doubt that at some time in the near future, Eduard will add the ability to attach files and display images. NotePlan’s simple folder/file-based architecture make that step an obvious one.

Agenda, by contrast, started off with some impressive goals, and achieved a number of them at an early stage. But in doing so, managed to restrict its architecture in ways that are, I suspect, now hampering the developers as they struggle to implement things like multi-window viewing. I’m moving remnants of personal data away from Agenda and will be unsubscribing as soon as I have done so. Stuff that involves graphics is going straight into Notebooks. Stuff that involves calendaring will go straight into NotePlan.

Cheers!
Bill

Posted by Drewster
Jan 9, 2020 at 10:55 AM

Thanks for your enthusiastic reply, Bill!

You’ve inspired me to take another serious go with NotePlan. I agree with you about its pace of development being rapid; the latest Markdown rendering update is another example.

I do find myself futzing too much with Agenda - I’m going to try to use tags and saved searches with NotePlan to try to bring the Agenda timeline feature to it. The wiki linking feature is also intriguing. It’s not something I’ve used in NotePlan, but I find myself using it quite often in The Archive, so I’m getting in the habit now.

I would like to use Notebooks (in fact, I’ve pre-ordered the new iOS version) but since I’ve removed myself from the clutches of Dropbox I’ve not found a sync solution that works well. I tried using WebDAV to my Fastmail account. While it works, it was too clunky.

Posted by MadaboutDana
Feb 10, 2020 at 01:27 PM

And as predicted, good ole’ Eduard has upgraded NotePlan again to support attached images.

You can also adjust line lengths.

Isn’t he lovely!?

Cheers,
Bill

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