![]() There's got to be a better way out there.that one can count on. Also not sure if I can drop email links into it, which is the single reason I've hung on to MacJournal in spite of the repeated disasters. ![]() I'm trying out Evernote now, but not in love with it since images are saved as little boxes that have preveiw buttons-not the actual full images themselves. code I am currently developing for the 2.6 Mac OS compatibility update. Opening those resulted in blank files too-my guess is that something in the program itself is "wiping" pages clean upon opening copies of the data. Contribute to phildow/Journler development by creating an account on GitHub. to create additional backups on my hard drive and a flash drive. The worst of it is that, based on my justifiable paranoia with the program, I routinely use File > Save a copy as. Moved my content to Dropbox as suggested by Mariner.Īnd have now lost everything yet again. For a similar software for your Mac, check out previously mentioned Journler, or just quick-log your work day to a plain text file. The third time, was told the culprit was MobileMe, so I stopped using that as a backup. iDailyDiary is a free download for Windows only. I have now officially lost all my content in MacJournal for the fourth time in under eight months. ![]() Does anyone know if MacJournal (or another contender) supports this? Journler 2.5.2 turns the basic word processor into a tool you can use to connect and organize your thoughts and. Memories looks simple and straightforward (which is how I prefer my software), but perhaps TOO simple, particularly for $29 (when MacJournal is only $39).Īnother thing I'd like to have is syncing between 2 computers (I use a laptop too), even if I have to use something like a dropbox workaround. I want something as straight forward for journaling as possible, so w/ a name like MacJOURNAL, I probably can't go wrong. I use free evernote as my digital shoebox, and not even extensively enough to warrant anything I'd have to pay for (like Yojimbo, Together or even a premium evernote subscription). I really like Journler and could stick with it, but before I get too deep, I'd rather learn software that has a reasonable change of growing with me instead of having to break all my habits later on (and since I've always been a bleeding edge OS updater, I want to avoid the day when Journler "breaks" for good). I'm going to give MacJournal a shot, although I don't like that the trial is only 15 days.
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