4 Results for tomboy

Notational Velocity Gets High Marks For Mac Note-Taking

TheAppleBlog has an interesting item up about Notational Velocity, a note-taking application for the Mac. Years ago ? even before Getting Things Done was all the rage ? a powerful note-taking application named Notational Velocity, was, says the post. And then it lay nearly dormant. The application is open source now, and its developers say it scrapes away the tartar of convention that handicaps information retrieval. Notational Velocity captures your notes in a way that?s so simple, you really need to try it out to grasp its brilliance, adds TheAppleBlog. That's a lot of superlatives. Check out the new features in the updated version of Notational Velocity here. Also check out Lisa's post on the Tomboy note-taking application.


Tomboy Update Syncs Your Notes Across Multiple Computers

Tomboy

Tomboy, one of my favorite note-taking apps, previews a really great upcoming feature with it's new update this week. Tomboy 0.15.1's new Web synchronization add-in allows users to sync notes across multiple computers and share them with others. The heavy lifting is done by Snowy, a new Web app that's being designed specifically with Tomboy in mind.



OStatic Buffer Overflow

10 top Linux applications. Banshee (music management), Tomboy (note-taking), and F-Spot (online photos) make this list of top apps, and you'll find 10 more good offbeat Linux apps here.

Bruce Perens: Combining GPL and proprietary software. Thoughts from the creator of the Open Source Definition.

Fedora as a basis for Russia's national OS? Red Hat has spoken with senior government officials.

Monty Widenius talks about why he left Sun Microsystems. The MySQL development organization was not functioning well under it?s capacity.

Mozilla doesn't need an EU bail-out. It has the market share to prove it.

Fennec rising. Here's video of Mozilla's mobile browser handling gestures.

 

 



Zim: A Wiki For Your Desktop

If you're looking for a way to take and organize notes, hardcore Linux users will tell you that Vim or Emacs is the only way to go. While they're both excellent solutions, neither are for the faint of heart. There are plenty of note management options out there -- Tomboy and BasKet, for instance -- but why not ratchet things up a notch and create a digital journal instead.