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Dave Pearson
Developer, Emacs addict, geek. Hangs out with bioinformaticians as his day job.
Late on last year I stumbled on an article about dnote. Annoyingly, I can't recall now where I saw it, but I made a reminder to look at it over my Christmas break. Dnote looked like a tool that would fill a hole I had in how I work. When it comes to ...
cedric simon
Web dev
Great article.I spotted a little typo near the beginning:
keeping thins for future
thins -> things ?
I also use different tools, org-capture, keep, oneNote...But I feel that with that method, I need to remember where is the note I want.
Still looking for the perfect solution, dNote seems promising.
Good spot! Thanks. Fixed.
Yeah, remembering where stuff is can be half the battle. This is one of the reasons why I try and keep things broken up by "class" of note. Doesn't always work perfectly, but does tend to help.
cedric simon
Web dev
Great article.
I spotted a little typo near the beginning:
thins -> things ?
I also use different tools, org-capture, keep, oneNote...
But I feel that with that method, I need to remember where is the note I want.
Still looking for the perfect solution, dNote seems promising.