![]() Collaboration - does it enable easy note collaboration, sharing, or live editing?.Support & backing - is it backed by a company or team with an impetus to maintain the product?.Tagging - are you able to easily tag your notes for later filtering?.Organization - how well are you able to structure and organize your notes?.CLI - does it provide access via the command line, even by a 3rd party tool?.Programmatic Search - can you search using features such as tags, or choosing AND/OR search?.Full Text Search - are you able to search the entire contents of your notes?.Voice notes - can you take or save voice notes with the tool?.OCR - does it perform image recognition and detect handwriting within photos?.Web clipping - does it allow you to save web pages or parts of pages?.Export accessibility - does it export into a format that is easy to manipulate, such as JSON or CSV?.Export - does it allow you to export your content into a usable, non-proprietary format?.Image handling - can it include images?.Markdown - does it handle markdown formatting & previewing?.Proprietary sync - is it capable of syncing using a company's platform? (I.e.Dropbox sync - is it capable of syncing via a synced folder such as Dropbox?.Open sync - is it capable of syncing via an open source protocol or server?.Mobile - are there mobile applications for the tool?.Platforms - is it widely available on a broad range of platforms?.In other words, if a product has a feature that is only available when you purchase the software or an account, it will receive full marks for that feature. While these could never be completely unbiased, I hope that the simple trinary scoring alleviates much of this concern.Īdditionally, a product will never be judged for charging its customers. That's a valid choice on the part of the tool. For example, the tool might prefer rich text over markdown and thus receive a -1 on markdown. 1: the feature does not exist, or exists in such a manner that it is unusable.Ġ: the feature exists, but is sub-par, difficult to use, or lacks a critical componentġ: the feature exists and is sufficient for typical use casesĪ -1 on a feature is not necessarily a bad thing - it might simply not fit in the grand scheme of that tool. I'm scoring each entry on the list based on criteria that are important to me, or that I feel would be important to others when deciding between them. So when they look back and question why we, the Franklins of our generation, chose the komputer over the trusty quill and papyrus, they'll catch a glimpse into this milestone of humanity. Thus I am writing this document for the sake of posterity, in an effort to lend an unbiased opinion to future generations. The agony of decision making is nigh on unbearable. We are faced with more choices than ever for our venerable note taking medium, which is both a curse and a blessing. Yet I'm becoming the hipster I swore I would never be and falling for this new medium called a komputor. I have some 30 notebooks in my closet, begging me to fill them up. When Benjamin Franklin sat down to write in his diary what would eventually become the Gettysburg Address, he agonized over his choice of medium - stick with the tried and true stone tablet with hammer and chisel, or lend credence to this new fangled paper and pen? Here I am, 972 years later, faced with a similar decision. Tachijs (Project owner) : Highly testable dead simple web server written in Typescript □.Remark.js (Contributor) : Markdown processor library.Prismy (Project owner) : Simple server library written in Typescript.Boostnote (Project owner) : Note app for developers.Undergraduate student of Kyushu University (Majored in Aerospace Engineering) (2012.4-2017.3).I listen to everything from Rachmaninoff to Machine Gun Kelly. Listening to random playlists from Apple music.I've been playing Apex Legends a lot recently. So don't hesitate to contact to me in English! But I'm using it every day with my girlfriend, an American from VA, and co-workers. I've been staying in Japan off and on since 2012. I've been practicing Korean for 30 years. ![]() I also contribute to several OSS projects. I mainly develop web applications with Typescript. I'm Junyoung Choi, a developer located in Busan(Gimhae) and Tokyo, and also working as CTO of BoostIO and CEO of Manotech.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |