![]() ![]() Has a nice content block with top headings in bold for easy reading All content must be in the noteĬomments are good, but I like to see them all, Todoist hides them. Seems to have a very wide choice of block types and embeds AyoaĪyoa is another one that is effective at scheduling, that I reviewed separately here in my Evaluation of Ayoa. The others seem to think they are storage systems, but over time I have found the need to action stored and working documents. However, all three of the above, Nimbus, Notion and Evernote are all beaten by Todoist when it comes to syncing with the calendar and thus effective scheduling. And requires a few tweeks as I set out below. ![]() But the interface is a little behind, only just. Databases are fast and flexible, records can be merged. Nimbus note is a great editor, with great formatting tools (toolbar), an excellent table of content, inline tasks. Although it has its failings – exporting from Nimbus is hard. They are a smaller less corporate team with a down to earth roadmap. The Nimbus team are very busy, keep the product updated and inform users. The company seems very corporate, with, it seems, decreasing attention paid to user input. While Evernote was the goto note tool ten years ago, the new architecture is slow and the roadmap is slow to evolve. I use Evernote as the document library, but increasingly I use Notion for all things archive, for collections and databases, issues. This comparison of Evernote, Nimbus, Notion and Todoist is based on quite extensive usage. ![]()
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