nanonote - Quickest way to take a note of everything in Chat-style. Write freely organise with #tag to filter your note. People are using this for saving links, creating to-do, daily journals, saving expenses and more. Features: - Copy text from any app and just open the nanonote it will automatically paste it in the input box. So just copy from anywhere and enjoy the magic - While writing notes adds Hashtags to organise notes for future use. - Scan any image to take Note - Export Note: You can export all your note to a file, save them on Apple files or wherever you want. (Setting > Export Note) - Improved reminder: With one click you can convert your note to a reminder. In the current version, you can choose when to set an alert (Long press on any note to start Reminder) - Contribution to app translation: Currently we support Chinese & English, from now on anyone can contribute to app translation (Setting > App translation)
Privacy issues - tracks across platforms
Forget a passcode lock feature, work on eliminating user data mining, ESP with 3rd parties… nobody wants their personal data shared, esp across websites..
It's been a year
I've been on a long search for a simple notes app to replace Apple native notes. It's not that I don't like Notes- it's that it crashes when I try to work within it. I can add to it but that seems to have changed recently. I feel like a lot of apps, stores (I’m looking at you Amazon, every app and the online interface too), UI, and even iPadOS are installing micro-aggressive functionality for no reason whatsoever other than they want to break the users. I returned to my search because Notes isn't going to improve.* Wading through app features is a challenge, trying to figure out how to use the dang apps is sometimes nigh impossible, interpreting the sometimes obscenely high rental rates- aka “subscriptions”- feels like an exercise in futility when what they might buy me are obscured or not even listed (because apparently the App Store has few requirements to make sure app descriptions are clear). I appreciate it when I can buy an app rather than rent, when the cost is reasonable, but there can be problems even after a user purchases it. There are the problems intentionally inflicted on users by the company: I’ve read reviews about apps because users still see ads after they purchased the full version or they still have charges for new filters, new colors, new sets of prettiness or coolness (that’s a high level of pettiness and coldness), or, instead of adding new features to an established app that plenty of users *already own*, a company will release a new app with all the new features. Sometimes the old app is left to moulder, abandoned, never updated. Sometimes it vanishes. Since there is no way I know of to assess the long, or heck, medium term viability of a development company or even individual apps within a company. A lifetime purchase, or access, sounds great and it is often better than rent, but what does it really mean? As users of an app we’re the ones taking the risks. We’re the supplicants of the developers we entrusted with our data and we approach, hats in hand, hoping that not only will we continue to have access to it but that we’ll also be able to manage it somehow, be it in another app or a straight up program on a PC or Mac. Another problem arises when a developer switches their focus or gets busy with other projects. It sometimes happens with podcasts- multiseason, often fictional, maybe with a full cast, music scores, exciting podcasts- but they usually don’t have the same consequences as when app developers drop or wander away from something people rely on. It’s one thing when it’s a game albeit an excellent one like Qat Xi and the developer quit updating it back when I had my iPhone 4S, quite another when it’s an organizational or writing app. The developer of NanoNote, Santu Dey, was excited about the app a year ago but the major update was never released. There were a few minor and one major bug fix and promises of features users specifically requested. I’m not suggesting they intentionally abandoned it but they functionally have. Ideally, the App Store would have the means to recruit someone else to maintain an abandoned but still useful app. The developer should have an opportunity to sell their app and transfer ownership at a reasonable cost. Of course, I’ve used a couple apps that were sold and destroyed beyond recognition, one by walmart when they bought one for prescription medication management. Ideally the original developer should maintain some rights to their idea and be able to release new versions if their original is damaged by new owners, subsumed into other apps, or if a certain amount of time has elapsed since the sale. My experiences are not unique to me. Ver . y ago ⚫︎ There are tons of exciting things ahead for *Structured* (?) for 2022 and I can't wait to get started. You can write to us via Setting to get early access to those features. ⚫︎ Export Note: You can export all your note to a file, save them on Apple files or wherever you want. (Setting > Export Note) ⚫︎ Improved reminder: With one click you can convert your note to a reminder. In the current version, you can choose when to set an alert (Long press on any note to start Reminder) ⚫︎ Contribution to app translation: Currently we support Chinese & English, from now on anyone can contribute to app translation (Setting > App translation) ⚫︎ Bug Fixes: Solved Note deletion problem & other minor fixes * I don't allow automatic updates, ever, but it looks like apps belonging to some excessively large companies do whatever they want wrt them.
Easy note
My favorite quick note. I can write random notes in no time. Whenever I have free times, I can edit and organize them with simple hashtags. Love it.
Simple note I need
Feel like chat. Feel like reminder. Feel like note. This is exactly what I need. Easy to organize by having hashtags. No mess. No missing info. Best app.
LOVE this app
I love the messages style display of this app. And the way you can view notes for a single hashtag or all notes at once. It definitely works very well with the way my brain operates! The ONLY downfall is that there’s no widgets — but I am hoping that’ll come with a future update!
Simple is good
This app reminds me of the beginning of the computer revolution and the internet. The applications, operating systems and computers that are most intuitive and not needlessly complex to use become the winners. They usually have a single visionary behind them. This app developer is from that mold.
Unfortunately
Great idea , clean and interface, unfortunately not support Arabic language
Minor bug fixes for tab & dark mode
Name
Price
Subscribe our newsletter and get useful information every week.