12/21/2023 0 Comments Nvalt archiving notesA smart naming system helps keeping NValt notes organized (e.g. NValt is for taking very fast random notes on the fly. These features differentiate Ulysses from both NValt and Byword. A great export function (just press ⌘6) to pdfs, Word, or email to share with others.Įditing window in Ulysses with various types of markdown syntax.Smooth naming of sheets: the title (the first line) of each sheet is also its name.The possibility of navigating longer documents (pressing ⌘8 brings up a navigation window that allows you to jump to any Heading marked with # in the document).Organization of sheets (notes) in hierarchical folders.Colourful visualization of markdown (see picture) it may distract creative writing but it’s great for structured texts containing various elements.Ulysses has five features best suited for such tasks: I think Ulysses works very well for systematic, but not necessarily very creative, writing, especially if it has to be organized and/or shared with others. For example, for drafting grading rules, evaluating research proposals, writing a report for an Academic Board, preparing a response to a reviewer of a publication, taking notes at oral exams, and summarizing ideas on an website. Somewhat surprisingly, I have used it quite often. ![]() Once I get all of the above sorted out, my next quest will be the import of selected email… but I’ll save that for another post.Following Csaba’s post on Ulysses, I have been trying it for over one month. Is this DTP feature only able to read your Evernote files if they’re in the native Mac app?Īny way of monitoring and auto-importing these? I have never used the native Mac app… only the iOS app and the web client on Mac. I expected a pop up asking me for credentials or something. I used the built-in import feature and nothing happened. If tag = design then archive.)įollow up: If I continue to use Pinboard (without archiving), can DTP auto-download my bookmarks? (Say, ping 1x/hour for updates?) I would like to save web archives or more bare HTML versions of some of these bookmarks, which I can designate by tag. ![]() Summary: I want to import all my Pinboard bookmarks. I stumbled over a Pinboard import script, but no docs to tell me how it works (with 6500 bookmarks, nearly 6000 of those archived I don’t want to experiment blindly). ![]() I currently pay Pinboard for this feature, but I’d like to replace that with DevonThink’s capabilities locally. However, for at least some subset of my saved bookmarks, I’d prefer to capture their corresponding pages, not just list a link like a browser bookmark does. I am looking to import my links from Pinboard. Here are the key things I haven’t figured out, that are key to my success with DTP: Right now I’ve made two DBs: “Personal” “Professional”. Going forward, I want DTP to be the first step for me to store personal or professional knowledge. My goal is to unite my Markdown and plain text notes I have on my Mac (some from NValt, but stored as plain text), some notes I have in Evernote (not much, very sundry) and my significant archives on Pinboard (which itself imports my Instapaper articles). ![]() I’ve spent about 10 hrs with it so far, and quite some time in these forums. I could really benefit from some of your experience with this deep and complex product. I’m a newbie on a trial of DevonThink Pro.
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