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Father_Redbeard, (edited ) in Looking for Notes App for Android & Linux
@Father_Redbeard@lemmy.ml avatar

Obsidian is great, and I agree the sync is too much. It does work flawlessly but Im going to try Syncthing again after my one year is up.

Another newcomer that is promising is Acreom. Doesnt require an account on PC. Currently does on mobile though. But like Obsidian, it is a pile of markdown files. No weird database silliness like Joplin does.

G020B,

Or Logseq is a great Obsidian alternative with no account needed and apps for Linux and Android. You can sync it with Syncthing.

Father_Redbeard,
@Father_Redbeard@lemmy.ml avatar

I’ve tried to like Logseq but with it’s outline focused approach, it didn’t jive with what I use a pkm for.

AstridWipenaugh, in Thoughts on Post-Open Source?

This is exciting! He’s come up with an economic principle where entities engage in an equitable exchange of goods for money where the consumer of the good pays for the value they receive. This could really change everything! I wonder what they’ll call it?

Kushia, in Looking for Notes App for Android & Linux
@Kushia@lemmy.ml avatar

Joplin with any of the dozen or so sync services it supports out of the box.

kzhe, in Looking for Notes App for Android & Linux

Sync Obsidian with Syncthing.

redempt,

I do this too and it’s awesome

themadcodger, in Looking for Notes App for Android & Linux
@themadcodger@kbin.social avatar

I'm late, but I have Obsidian set up with Syncthing and it works flawlessly. I adore Syncthing and would be lost without it!

Depending on your note taking needs, if Obsidian is too much, you could do the same with Notable/Noteless and Syncthing.

tuhriel,

I’m syncing obsidian with Drive via my Synology NAS

Basically everything where you can sync files should work.
The only downside I saw was that I had to reconfigure all clients individually (plugins, themes, template settings etc)

AVengefulAxolotl,

Yeah, same. It just works™!

Syncthing is such an awesome app, it basically allows the usage of so many apps which just use plain files instead of the Cloud™. Obsidian, Signal, Aegis Auth, Grayjay to just name a few.

Auzy, in Thoughts on Post-Open Source?

Doesn’t make sense at all.

I keep seeing Redhat used an example, but they contribute a HUGE amount a source code and projects… Pipewire, systemd, rpm, DBUS and even the main XML addon for VSCode, etc.

I don’t think people realise how much poop linux would be swimming in if they went bankrupt…

Redhat are literally one of the big reasons why Linux is so seamless these days, and they’re solving a lot of the big problems. And from my understanding, they still contribute the code seperately anyway.

That being said, I agree money needs to go towards developers. However, a lot of them end up hired at major companies. And I don’t think this is the way to approach it

homesweethomeMrL, in Could we add alternativeto.net to the sidebar?

Second.

Sticker, in Looking for Notes App for Android & Linux

I’ve tried a lot of different note app. The best seamless solution I’ve found is Nextcloud + a simple notepad with the ability to autosave text to a txt file.

For example, suitable note-taking apps: Markor, Denkzettel, Lesser pad.

These applications have auto-save and auto-export to txt file. You can also select the Nextcloud folder to upload your notes to the cloud server.

Trent, in Looking for Notes App for Android & Linux

Using Obsidian with mega on desktop and FolderSync covering syncing the android side of it. Works fine.

cocolopez,
@cocolopez@lemmy.world avatar

O do this but with logseq

Lem453, (edited )

Obsidian-livesync works very well If you have some self hosting skill / hardware. The sync happens in realtime and is almost like Google docs. Allows excellent sync between all devices

hiramfromthechi, in Looking for Notes App for Android & Linux
@hiramfromthechi@lemmy.world avatar

Sounds like crypt.ee would be a good fit.

morriscox,

They’re allergic to the Shift key.

danie10, in Looking for Notes App for Android & Linux
@danie10@lemmy.ml avatar

I actually use Obsidian on my Linux desktop, synced with Syncthing to my Android phone, iPad, home server, etc (have version control also active to keep older copies of notes). Mainly because the volume of notes I do is on the desktop, and I need them for reference everywhere. But I’m not sure Obsidian is best as a phone app (bit busy), but you could test it with a simple UI.

tate, (edited ) in Looking for Notes App for Android & Linux
@tate@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Because of a different Lemmy post, I’m just now trying out Orgzly. It looks terrific so far, and I think it meets all your needs. It stores everything in plain text, so you just have to sync the text files.

edit: as noptys points out, Orgzly Revived is what you want to use (and what I meant to recommend).

danie10,
@danie10@lemmy.ml avatar

Interesting, I see Orgzly uses Org mode formatting in plain text - orgmode.org/features.html

noptys,

If you enjoy Orgzly, the updated fork is likely what you want - https://f-droid.org/packages/com.orgzlyrevived/ It has bug fixes, additional features, and is under active development.

mp3, in Looking for Notes App for Android & Linux
@mp3@lemmy.ca avatar

Joplin with Syncthing works well for me.

DeltaTangoLima,
@DeltaTangoLima@reddrefuge.com avatar

You can also self-host a Joplin sync server, which works exceedingly well too.

recursive_recursion, (edited ) in Looking for Notes App for Android & Linux
@recursive_recursion@programming.dev avatar

Logseq could be another option although I’m unsure about syncing, syncing might be possible via NextCloud/syncthing

procrastinare, (edited )

I sync all my notes on Logseq using synchting between 2 PCs and a phone. Working reliable for 7 months now

Xirup, in Looking for Notes App for Android & Linux

I like Notesnook, although it’s a bit expensive.

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