![]() ![]() Glad to hear this is catching on! I think they're perfect for the privacy and security industry.Īt first, my intention was to take Evernote on head to head. Ha! Love this! Thank you for the feedback and the kind compliments.įirst off! Yay for progressive apps. I'm unsure if this is meant to be part of the aesthetic or if it's just the way it looks on my phone. ![]() My only gripe is that on mobile the menus, buttons and text is a bit too small almost like it's been shrunk to 80% of the optimal size. I can really tell you put a lot of effort into the application and commend you. My only concern is the fact that Crypt.ee is new which makes me feel a little bit like a guinea pig which is why I'm poking around for other's opinions. I'm biased towards crypt.ee because I appreciate the progressive app approach and the invisibility it provides as well as the interface which feels slightly more "enterprise ready" than SN due to a particular focus on support for photos. Because of my haphazard note taking habits it's hard for me to decide which one makes the most sense even if I know which one I WANT to make the most sense. Ha! I guess I'll go ahead and admit that I actually have crypt.ee but was fishing for feedback from others :PĬrypt.ee definitely seems focused on the Evernote crowd while Standard Notes feels like a feature-rich Google Keep alternative. I just put the database (which is in a JoplinProfile folder) in a Veracrypt container.Īnother open-source service which I very much like and use more regularly is write.as. So you should probably give some thought as to what your risk case is for Joplin and how you want to handle that local situation. Otherwise putting the profile on a USB key.could be a solution too." source When the app closes, you'll re-encrypt the file again from the same script. Then with a bash or batch script, you would unzip the file (at which point you will be asked a password) and then run the app. You could for instance put the profile directory in a password-protected ZIP file. "The SQLite database is not encrypted, even when E2EE is enabled. This is what the developer says about that: However on your local drive, there is an important security detail to understand: there is an sqlite3 database storing your notes and encryption password in plaintext. Security-wise, when syncing to/from remote storage, your data is end-to-end encrypted and is stored encrypted remotely. ![]() There are many features I very much like about it, including markdown, Katex, and inline html/css styling support (with preview) syncing to cloud storage such as Dropbox, OneNote, NextCloud import/export searchable notes tags ability to work offline and then sync embed images and attach files multiple profiles etc. Joplin is a cross-platform desktop and mobile app only (with a portable desktop app option). To get markdown, hyperlinks, and other features, you'll need an Extended subscription. In the free version, you are limited to plain text. StandardNotes is accessible both from the web and an app. * No discussions of specific VPNs – please visit r/VPN or our PrivacyGuides coverage of VPNs.
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