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Never heard of it before. However:
End-to-end encryption keeps your notes secure. Our export and API keeps your notes accessible.
I’m not relying on any ‘export’ feature for my personal notes. If they aren’t using an open format I can access with other software, it’s a hard pass for me. Personally, I want the data separate from the application, so I can choose my own sync provider and switch editor any time.
TL;DR If it doesn’t support plain markdown files, it’s not an option for me.
Never heard of it before. However:
End-to-end encryption keeps your notes secure. Our export and API keeps your notes accessible.
I’m not relying on any ‘export’ feature for my personal notes. If they aren’t using an open format I can access with other software, it’s a hard pass for me. For me, I want the data separate from the application, so I can choose my own sync provider and switch editor any time.
TL;DR If it doesn’t support plain markdown files, it’s not an option for me.
Nice shot!
JavaScript, 93 characters:
l=console.log,r='repeat',b=n=>{for(i=0;i++<n;l(' '[r](n-i)+'* '[r](i)));l(' '[r](n-2)+'| |')}
This looks pretty cool!
My recommendation? No. Don’t.
I’m an ex Windows user, current Linux and Mac user. Keyboard shortcuts on Linux are much closer to Windows conventions compared to macOS. I wouldn’t recommend using a Mac keyboard with Linux. I’d only recommend it if you want to use both Linux and macOS with the same keyboard (you will be happier in this case, because using macOS with a Windows keyboard sucks, vice versa).
If you don’t like the Windows key design, get a keyboard with a custom one.