Android Writeily Open-source, local-first Markdown note-taking app that is no longer being maintained unfortunately.
Android Notes by Bill Farmer and 1K subs! Notes is a fast, local-first, free, open-source note-taking app that supports Markdown!
Android Mind Notes Mind Notes is a #fail but could be one of the best note-taking apps if they fixed the bugs, implemented autocorrect, and removed annoying upgrade dialogs
Android MarkNote MarkNote is a local-first, open-source, Markdown app with a ton of functionality and all for free. You can back up and restore your files, synchronize them with OneDrive, and export them to PDF, HTML, or an image.
Android Leaf Note A great, fast, cheap, local-first, and customizable Android app that supports Markdown and sync via WebDAV.
Back in 15 minutes I'm going to skip working on the app review and break my 59-week trend of sending one out each Saturday. It's been an odd past 5 weeks starting with losing my job of 10 years in mid-Sep. I've been busy closing off with the
Android Epsilon Notes Epsilon Notes is incredible, landing at the top of all of the apps that I've reviewed. It's well worth CAD 6.49, supports Markdown, and SD card access, local text files, and AES encryption
Android Note to Self A completely free, local first, ad-free, and fast note-taking app using chat-style messaging to yourself.
Android Graphite Graphite combines a Journal with note-taking and uses buckets to store files, supports images, hyperlinks, book notes, and movie notes.
Android Logseq Logseq is an open-source, local-first, block-based, outliner and task manager. It's fairly structured and notes and tasks are stored in a "graph". Notes can be linked together, you can record audio attachments, and include inline images which are all really nice features.
Android Wondr Note Wondr Note is perfect for a student, an event planner, a garage sale goer, a parent with kids into sports or crafts, or a small business owner.
Android jtx Board jtx Board is an Open-Source, standards-based app with calendar integration, Markdown-based notes, and tasks.
Newsletter My note taking adventures Sep 10 2022 💡Edit: This post was originally titled "Is the 54th note app the best one?" and sent as part of my weekly newsletter with the review of jtx Board. I've split that post into two so the app review has it's own page. Thanks again
Newsletter Stone's note-taking week in review #4 Welcome 7 new subscribers, Samsung Gallery tips, my home screen, subscribed to JotterPad, amazed by a $30 tablet, and 53rd app review: Clipto
Newsletter Stone's note-taking week in review #3 I explain my `no love` for Apple, tell my payphone story, reflect on using one or multiple Obsidian vaults, and deliver my 52nd note-taking app review: GNotes!
Stone's note-taking week in review #2 Finished my 51st note-taking app review, welcomed 8 new subscribers, sinned by going analog, and summarized Dan Allasso's new book: a good week!
Newsletter Stone's note-taking week in review #1 I improved my `people.md` Markdown template, updated 230+ people files, welcomed 6 new subscribers, and celebrated my 50th review: Notesnook.
Android Clipto 💡Clipto is no longer on Google Play Clipto's name is deceiving as it's so much more than a clipboard manager. It's one of the best note-taking apps that I've used. You can use it local-only or signup using email, Facebook, or SMS.
Android GNotes GNotes is great for quick capture, it has so much functionality for free, plus a nice subset of features to entice you to upgrade. If it supported Markdown and rich text editing it would be a 9/10. That said, the Web UI has issues. It's super fast
Android Notally If you need a fast, simple, minimalistic, extremely functional, free and local-first note-taking app with a lot of export formats, then Notally is refreshing!
Android Notesnook Notesnook is a privacy-first, zero-knowledge, open-source app that is well-designed and easy to use. It has almost every feature you could want in a note-taking app and then some.
Android Anytype A cross-platform, crazy fast, "open" app with a good looking UI, linking of notes, graph view, inline images, cool bookmarking, templates and a lot more. But is it a note-taking app?
Android Grafobook Grafobook is very good considering it was built in 10 days. It's open-source and free but unfortunately it appears that the development was a one-time thing and there have been no changes for a year.
Android EZ Notes In earlier reviews, my "exec summaries" were very brief and for some reason I've been writing more lately. Send me a note and let me know if you prefer brief summaries or this extra verbiage. This week I played with a really interesting app called EZ
Android SilentNotes SilentNotes is a great, fast, Open-Source, secure, text-only note taking app that supports Markdown and tags and has many public cloud or private sync options. If it had image and audio attachments and sharing options it would be near the top of my list. Screenshots Meta * Score: 7/10 * Version: