
This plug-in just picks out various edges making them more expressive. Way too basic, slow-scrolling with large outlines, no image attachments (important for this thread), and the choice of only night/day themes with no adjustments is annoyng since I don’t like either one.It gives a user the easiest way to get image contouring with desired quality.
Cloud outliner 2 pro for mac#
I have Cloud Outliner Pro for Mac and iOS and - well, I bought them, and deleted them. Todoist, one of the best multiplatform task managers, is also a mean outliner, and worth considering for its sheer flexibility. Not as powerful as Outlinely or OmniOutliner, but fast and efficient. It’s a little simplistic, but works pretty well. The other outliner worth considering is Cloud Outliner 2. It’s a very powerful outliner, however (much better and much faster IMHO than OmniOutliner), with a good search function. I’ve been very happy with Outlinely, not least because of its Mac/iOS support, but there are a few irritations. I’m thinking of putting the images in OneNote or Apple’s Notes app… For my purposes I am currently outlining in text (using OO Elements, though I’m learning to use TaskPaper) with images references separately in folders. I never settled on a Mac outliner with the image handling I wanted. Last year when Elements/Pro came out I asked them about any limitations (slowdowns, etc) in adding image attachments to individual Pro outlines and the answer was nothing more specific than It Depends. I thought Omni’s implementation wasn’t that great. I bought OO Elements for my Mac but never upgraded to Pro, despite having a need for an app that handled lots of in-line image attachments. OmniOutliner is a well-supported app with an active dev team, and an active support board at Heck, they have a diabolical licensing system.
Cloud outliner 2 pro license#
Had their license be fair, Atlas Ti would have been the ultimate solution for me-it includes the whole process of reading PDF, writing notes, tagging, mind mapping…everything. Even if Tinderbox is the best tool for this kind of task, it is still very difficult to come up with a consistent system that could work all the time. Often times, I don’t even know where to put a certain note. But, I sometime lose track of the whole organization. I also don’t find organizing my notes in outline that simple task. I use tags and saved searches to group notes on a specific topic within Devonthink and Keepit. I really don’t have much problem with this since I usually write less number of notes. >restaurants, travel plans, people, ideas, recipes, and such?įor personal stuff, about travel, restaurants and like stuff, I used to use DayOne (now, MacJournal). >solutions to keep track of notes about notes about books, articles, Have you found a good solution or combination of

Like you said, it doesn’t support infinite nesting, and overall doesn’t work like an outliner.Īlso, if I can ask a follow-up question: what do you do for the use case I have a mind? Have you found a good solution or combination of solutions to keep track of notes about notes about books, articles, restaurants, travel plans, people, ideas, recipes, and such?

But I still feel somewhat uneasy about the way it shows attachments and the somewhat outdated look of the whole user interface.Ĭhris, it looks like Dynalist is a great option its $96/year is just a turn-off, but I should maybe reconsider.ĭellu, I hadn’t considered OneNote, as I would put it more in the Evernote, Bear, or Google Keep category. Paul, I agree, OmniOutliner seems like the best out of the 3 I mentioned. Outliner with support for image attachments
