I'd recommend using VoodooPad simply because you can more or less mold notes the way you want and also because it's easy to add anything to it. VoodooPad also includes a search box at the top right and lets you open up elements in a tabbed view. This means that you can really organize notes according to your own way of thinking. ![]() You can literally create your own network, into which each elements have their own place and logic. The best thing about VoodooPad is probably how you can link up elements though. You can sketch up drawings, which you'll associate to your notes and add links, bookmarks or even images, video, audio files and applications. I'm sorry about how I put together the blog post above.Yet the application is incredibly intutive and is great to jot down any sort of notes and sort them by categories and pages. But 'proprietary,' as a word, is a strong one, making things appear black and white, and I used it recklessly. There's also room in my life for this super simple, plain text wiki directory thing, because I know its wikiness can be easily implemented again in the future. I like it even more now Gus Mueller has pointed out how to make it save in plain text. I love VoodooPad and won't stop using it. Update: Hey, I want to clarify something here. Grab the Plain Text Wiki bundle (get the zip it's unpacked there too so you can browse) and double click to install. but if you want it, feel free to download. There are a bunch of things still to do (some helper command to create a new wiki folder would be great, and also to give different formatting to the words if the wiki page doesn't exist yet), but this is my first TextMate bundle and I'm not sure how to do those yet.Īnyway, there's barely anything there. This is exactly what I need: A bunch of text documents that I'll be able to read at any point in the future, in a wiki structure that will be simple to implement in most extensible text editors.
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