Craft favicon

Craft

Also analyzed in: 5 other industries
Analyzed: 2026-04-22
Model: OpenAI GPT-5
Prompts run:
Total responses:
Overall AI Visibility?
2
/ 100
Known but Invisible

Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Penalises any single weak metric.

Latent Brand Association?
73
/ 100
Product-Strong

What the model believes about Craft without web search.

LLM Authority?
0
/ 100
Absent

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts.

Top of Mind?
19
/ 100
Weak-Recall

Unprompted recall on high-volume discovery prompts.

Metric 1 of 3 Latent Brand Association?

Measures what GPT-5 believes about Craft from training alone, before any web search. We probe the model 5 times across 5 different angles and score 5 sub-signals.

LBA Score
73/100
Product-Strong
Quality?
0.71
Meta-factor?
1.00
Familiarity?
0.68
Top associations for Craft
strong moisture management 3 running apparel 3 cycling apparel 3 moisture-wicking base layers 3 technical base layers 2 running and cycling gear 2 good moisture management 2 running gear 2 endurance sports apparel 2 high-performance technical sportswear 2 skiing apparel 2 inconsistent sizing 2 endurance sports focus 2 endurance sports gear 1 high-performance functional sportswear 1
Control prompt (category baseline)
organizing notes 3 syncing across devices 3 attachment support 2 quick note creation 2 powerful search 2 quick note capture 2 generic productivity app 1 reminders and attachments 1 notebooks and tags 1 checklists and tags 1

High overlap with brand prompts shows Craft is firmly in the model's "note-taking app" category.

Sample model responses
Prompt: What is Craft known for?
Craft is known for high-performance athletic apparel, especially technical base layers and sportswear for endurance sports like running, cycling, and cross-country skiing.
Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What is Craft known for?
Craft is best known for high-performance functional sportswear, especially moisture-wicking base layers and technical apparel for endurance sports like running, cycling, and skiing.
Iteration: 2 of 5

Metric 2 of 3 LLM Authority?

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts where users ask category questions and AI recommends brands. Measured both with and without web search, then averaged 50/50.

Authority Score
0/100
Absent
Recall mode (no web)?
0

What the model recalls from training without searching the web.

Retrieval mode (with web)?
0

What the model returns when it can search live web sources.

IntentPromptRecall pos.Retrieval pos.
discovery What are the best note-taking apps for meeting notes? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best note-taking apps for college lectures? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best note-taking apps for researchers? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best note-taking apps for writers? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best note-taking apps for teams? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best note-taking apps for project management notes? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What note-taking apps are best for syncing across devices? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What note-taking apps are best for offline access? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best note-taking apps for handwriting and stylus use? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best note-taking apps for voice notes? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What note-taking apps work best with markdown? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best note-taking apps for task tracking? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best note-taking apps for information management? #5 not mentioned
discovery What are the best note-taking apps for simple note capture? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best note-taking apps for long-term note organization? #7 not mentioned
discovery What note-taking apps are best for students who want to organize class notes? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What note-taking apps are best for managing research notes? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best note-taking apps for saving web clippings? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best note-taking apps for keeping personal journals? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best note-taking apps for minimalist note taking? #8 not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to the leading all-in-one note app? #5 not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a popular note-taking app for teams? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a note app that focuses on databases and pages? #2 #5
comparison What are the best alternatives to a note app built for fast capture and search? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a note app designed for markdown users? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a note app with strong web clipping features? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a note app for students and lectures? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a note app for handwriting and tablets? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a note app with strong collaboration tools? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a note app for personal knowledge management? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I keep all my notes in one place? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I organize notes so I can find them later? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I take better digital notes during meetings? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I sync my notes across phone and laptop? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I clip articles and save them for later? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I make my notes searchable? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I manage class notes and assignments together? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I build a personal knowledge base? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I keep handwritten notes on my tablet? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I share notes with my team? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is the best free note-taking app? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What note-taking apps have a free plan? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much do note-taking apps cost? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is the cheapest note-taking app for students? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What note-taking apps are worth paying for? #3 not mentioned
transactional What note-taking apps have a good free tier for individuals? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What note-taking apps include collaboration without extra cost? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What note-taking apps offer family or team pricing? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What note-taking apps are best value for money? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What note-taking apps have premium features without a high price? not mentioned not mentioned
Sample responses
Prompt: What are the best note-taking apps for information management? · discovery · recall mode
Here are the best note-taking apps for **information management**, depending on how you work: ### Best overall - **Notion** — best for databases, wikis, project tracking, and team knowledge bases. - **Obsidian** — best for personal knowledge management, linking ideas, and long-term note systems. ### Best for simple, fast notes - **Apple Notes** — great if you’re in the Apple ecosystem. - **Microsoft OneNote** — very good for freeform notes, notebooks, and mixed media. ### Best for structured knowledge management - **Craft** — clean, polished, great for organizing docs and notes visually. - **Evernote** — strong web clipping and search, though pricier than before. ### Best for GTD / task + notes - **Notion** or **ClickUp** — good if you want notes tied to tasks and workflows. - **Todoist** with a notes workflow — if tasks are the priority. ### Best for researchers / power users - **Obsidian** — with plugins, backlinks, and local-first storage. - **Logseq** — great for outlining and linked thinking. ### Best cross-platform / collaboration - **Notion** - **OneNote** - **Google Keep** for very lightweight shared notes ### My quick picks - **Personal knowledge base:** Obsidian - **All-in-one workspace:** Notion - **Simple reliable notes:** Apple Notes / OneNote - **Web clipping and archive:** Evernote If you want, I can also give you the **best app for Mac, Windows, Android, iPhone, or teams**.
Prompt: What are the best note-taking apps for long-term note organization? · discovery · recall mode
For long-term note organization, the best apps are usually the ones with strong search, backlinks, tags, and reliable export. ### Best overall - **Obsidian** — best for personal knowledge bases, linked notes, and long-term control. Files are plain Markdown, so you own your notes. - **Notion** — best for organized databases, project notes, and a polished all-in-one workspace. - **Microsoft OneNote** — best if you want free-form notebooks, handwriting, and easy clipping. ### Best for “future-proofing” - **Obsidian** - **Logseq** - **Joplin** These store notes in open formats and are better if you care about longevity and portability. ### Best for structured organization - **Notion** — databases, tags, templates, filters - **Evernote** — still strong for clipping, OCR, and searching older notes - **Craft** — clean writing experience with good organization ### Best for simple, low-maintenance note systems - **Apple Notes** — excellent if you’re all-in on Apple devices - **Google Keep** — quick capture, but not ideal for deep long-term organization - **OneNote** — flexible and easy to use ### My short recommendation - **Best overall:** Obsidian - **Best for teams/databases:** Notion - **Best freeform notebook:** OneNote - **Best private/open-source option:** Joplin If you want, I can also rank them for **Windows/Mac**, **mobile use**, or **research note-taking**.

Metric 3 of 3 Top of Mind?

Unprompted recall on 15 high-volume discovery prompts, run 5 times each in pure recall mode (no web). Brands that surface here are baked into the model's training, not borrowed from live search.

TOM Score
19/100
Weak-Recall
Discovery promptVolumeAppearedPositions (5 runs)
What are the best note-taking apps for everyday use? 1,600 0/5
What are the top note-taking apps right now? 210 2/5 10, 8
Which note-taking apps are the most popular? 210 0/5
What note-taking apps are most recommended? 0 0/5
What are the best note-taking apps for students? 0 0/5
What are the best note-taking apps for work? 0 0/5
What are the best note-taking apps for iPhone? 0 1/5 7
What are the best note-taking apps for Android? 720 0/5
What are the best note-taking apps for Windows? 20 0/5
What are the best note-taking apps for Mac? 1,300 5/5 7, 7, 6, 6, 6
What are the best note-taking apps for organizing notes? 0 0/5
What are the best note-taking apps with cloud sync? 0 0/5
What are the best note-taking apps with collaboration features? 0 0/5
What are the best note-taking apps with tags and search? 0 0/5
What are the best note-taking apps for personal knowledge management? 0 4/5 6, 8, 6, 6
Sample recall responses
Prompt: What are the top note-taking apps right now? (no web search)
Top note-taking apps right now: - **Notion** — best all-around for docs, databases, and team/workspace notes - **Obsidian** — best for personal knowledge management and Markdown/local-first notes - **Apple Notes** — best simple option on iPhone, iPad, and Mac - **Microsoft OneNote** — best free “notebook” style app, especially for Windows/Office users - **Evernote** — still strong for clipping, search, and cross-platform note capture - **Bear** — best polished writing app for Apple-only users - **Google Keep** — best quick sticky-note app and reminders - **Joplin** — best open-source, privacy-focused alternative - **Roam Research** — best for linked thinking / daily note workflows - **Craft** — best for beautiful documents and note organization on Apple platforms Quick picks: - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for personal knowledge base:** Obsidian - **Best simple everyday notes:** Apple Notes - **Best free heavy-duty option:** OneNote If you want, I can also rank them by **best for students, teams, privacy, or Android/iPhone**.
Iteration: 3 of 5
Prompt: What are the top note-taking apps right now? (no web search)
Top note-taking apps right now, by use case: - **Notion** — best all-in-one workspace for notes, docs, tasks, databases - **Obsidian** — best for power users who want local files, backlinks, and a knowledge base - **Apple Notes** — best simple option for iPhone/Mac users - **Microsoft OneNote** — best freeform notebooks and handwriting - **Evernote** — still strong for clipping, search, and organizing web notes - **Google Keep** — best lightweight, fast sticky-note style app - **Bear** — beautiful writing app for Apple users - **Craft** — polished docs/notes with great design and collaboration - **Goodnotes** — best for handwritten notes on iPad - **Reflect** — strong modern PKM app with AI and backlinks Quick picks: - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for thinking/linked notes:** Obsidian - **Best simple free app:** Apple Notes or Google Keep - **Best handwriting:** Goodnotes or OneNote If you want, I can also give you the **best note app for Windows, Mac, iPhone, Android, or students**.
Iteration: 4 of 5

What to do next Recommendations for Craft

Generated automatically from gaps and weaknesses in the analysis above, ranked by potential impact on the AI Visibility Score.

Enter the category conversation

Your Authority is low across category queries. Users asking about your category do not see you. Priority: get listed in "best of" and "top N" articles for your category on domains with strong training-data crawl presence.

+10 to +25 on Authority

Close the gap on broad category queries

Your TOM is solid on specialty queries but weaker on broad category questions. Seed content that frames your brand in the exact phrasing users use in broad queries, not just your specialty sub-category.

+5 to +15 on TOM

Protect and reinforce your LBA

Your LBA is strong. Focus on maintaining authoritative coverage and ensuring new product launches get independent reviews within 12 months of release.

Maintain current LBA

How is this calculated? Methodology

Every score on this page is reproducible. Below is exactly what we ran and how we computed each number.

Overall AI Visibility Score
Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM: (LBA × Authority × TOM)^(1/3). Geometric mean is used so that any single weak metric pulls the overall score down, rather than being masked by strength elsewhere.
Latent Brand Association (LBA)
5 brand probes + 1 control prompt, each run 5 times in recall mode (no web search). LBA = quality × meta × stability × share × recognition × 100. Each sub-signal is on a 0-1 scale. Read the full LBA methodology →
LLM Authority
50 organic category prompts (discovery, comparison, problem and transactional intents), each run once in recall mode and once in retrieval mode. Score = frequency × log-decayed prominence × intent weight, then 50/50 averaged across the two modes. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full Authority methodology →
Top of Mind (TOM)
15 high-volume discovery prompts (sourced from Keywords Everywhere search-volume data), each run 5 times in pure recall mode (no web). Score = frequency × (0.5 + 0.5 × log-prominence), volume-weighted. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full TOM methodology →

Analysis run on April 22, 2026 at 6:46 PM

All 210 AI responses for Craft

Click a prompt to expand its responses. 210 total responses across 72 prompts.

LBA — Latent Brand Association (7 prompts)

On a scale of 1-10, rate your familiarity with the brand "Craft" in the note-taking app category. 1 = I've never heard of this brand 4 = I'm aware of the name but know little specific 7 = I know the brand well including its main products 10 = Deep, confident knowledge including specific features, differentiators, pricing tier, competitor positioning Return JSON: { "familiarity": <1-10 integer>, "justification": "<one sentence>" }
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 7, "justification": "I know Craft as a note-taking/document app fairly well, including its general positioning and core collaborative/document features, but not enough to claim deep, up-to-date pricing or niche details." }
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 7, "justification": "I know Craft as a polished note-taking/docs app with document-based workflows and collaborative features, but not every current pricing or product-detail nuance." }
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":6,"justification":"I’m familiar with Craft as a note-taking/document app and its general positioning, but I don’t have deep, current detail on its full feature set, pricing, or competitive nuances."}
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":7,"justification":"I know Craft as a polished note-taking/document app with core collaboration and publishing features, but I’m not confident on all current pricing and positioning details."}
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 7, "justification": "I know Craft as a polished note-taking/document app and am familiar with its main product direction and core features, though not enough for deep pricing or current competitive details." }
What is Craft known for?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Craft is known for high-performance athletic apparel, especially technical base layers and sportswear for endurance sports like running, cycling, and cross-country skiing.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Craft is best known for high-performance functional sportswear, especially moisture-wicking base layers and technical apparel for endurance sports like running, cycling, and skiing.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Craft is known for high-performance technical sportswear, especially moisture-wicking base layers and apparel for endurance sports like running, cycling, skiing, and training.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Craft is best known for high-performance sportswear and technical base layers, especially for endurance activities like running, cycling, and skiing.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Craft is best known for high-performance technical sportswear, especially moisture-wicking base layers and apparel for endurance sports like running, skiing, and cycling.
What are Craft's main strengths and weaknesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Craft’s main strengths are technical performance, strong moisture management, and lightweight, ergonomic apparel built for endurance sports like running, skiing, and cycling. It’s also well regarded for layering systems and cold-weather gear. Its main weaknesses are that it’s less fashionable and less broadly recognized than bigger sportswear brands, and some items can feel pricey for a niche brand. Availability and style variety can also be more limited depending on the market.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Craft’s main strengths are its strong focus on technical performance, especially for running, cycling, skiing, and layering; lightweight, breathable, moisture-wicking materials; and generally solid quality for endurance use. Its main weaknesses are that the design is usually more functional than stylish, the fit can run narrow/athletic for some people, and some items can feel pricey relative to the brand’s broader lifestyle appeal.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Craft’s main strengths are performance-focused apparel, especially for running, cycling, and cold-weather training: strong moisture management, good layering systems, and reliable technical fabrics. The brand is also well regarded for fit and function over fashion, with solid durability and Scandinavian minimalism. Main weaknesses: it can be pricey for what is essentially specialist gear, the styling is often plain, and some items fit quite snug/tight. It’s best for athletes who prioritize technical performance, less so for casual wear or standout design.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Craft’s main strengths are high-performance technical apparel, especially for running, cycling, and skiing; good moisture management and layering; and a strong reputation among endurance athletes. Its weaknesses are that it can be expensive, sizing and fit can be inconsistent for some people, and the style tends to be more functional than fashion-forward.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Craft’s main strengths are technical performance and comfort: it’s known for functional base layers, running gear, and endurance apparel with good moisture management, layering, and fit. It’s also generally well-regarded for quality and durability in cold-weather and high-activity use. Main weaknesses: it can be pricey for what is often fairly specialized gear, style/branding is usually more utilitarian than fashion-forward, and product availability/selection can be narrower than bigger sportswear brands depending on region. Some items are very performance-focused, so they may feel less versatile for casual wear.
Who should use Craft? Who should avoid it?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Craft is best for people who want a beautiful, lightweight note-taking and document app for personal knowledge, project notes, and polished sharing. It’s a good fit if you like writing, organizing ideas visually, and working across Apple devices with sync and collaboration. Avoid it if you need heavy-duty team docs, advanced databases/spreadsheets, strict enterprise controls, or a very cheap/free all-in-one workspace—tools like Notion, Confluence, or Google Docs may fit better.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Craft is best for people who want a beautiful, easy note-taking and document app for personal use, team docs, brainstorming, and sharing polished pages. It’s a good fit if you like a clean writing experience, simple organization, and strong visual presentation. You should avoid it if you need very advanced knowledge-base features, heavy database-style organization, deep automation, or an enterprise system with lots of customization and admin controls. It may also be a poor fit if you want the most powerful offline-first or open-ended note system.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Craft is a good fit for people who want performance-oriented sportswear—especially runners, cyclists, skiers, and other endurance athletes who value technical fabrics, layering, and a close athletic fit. It’s also a strong choice for anyone who trains outdoors in cold or variable weather. It may not be the best choice for people who want very casual, fashion-first clothing, prefer a loose/relaxed fit, or are mainly looking for the cheapest basic activewear. If you need super rugged workwear-style durability or minimalist everyday basics, Craft may feel too specialized.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
If you mean Craft (the note-taking/doc app): Should use it: people who want beautiful, simple, writing-first documents, lightweight knowledge management, and easy collaboration across Apple devices. Should avoid it: users who need heavy database/project management features, deep automation, highly customizable workflows, or a fully platform-agnostic / Windows-first tool.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Craft is best for people who want a polished, fast note-taking and document app for writing, organizing ideas, meeting notes, planning, and sharing clean docs. It’s a good fit for individuals, teams, students, and creators who value design and an easy reading/writing experience. You should avoid it if you need a deeply customizable power-user system, heavy database-style project management, advanced automation, or offline-first/workflow-critical features with minimal cloud dependence.
How does Craft compare to its main competitors?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
If you mean the Craft note-taking app, it’s generally strongest for polished writing and beautiful document sharing. Compared with Notion, Craft is simpler and faster but less powerful for databases, workflows, and team systems. Compared with Obsidian, Craft is much more visual and beginner-friendly, but it lacks Obsidian’s deep linking, plugins, and offline/local-first flexibility. Compared with Apple Notes, Craft is far more capable for structured docs and collaboration, but Apple Notes is cheaper, simpler, and tightly integrated with Apple devices. In short: Craft is best if you want a clean, elegant writing workspace; its competitors usually win on advanced customization, database power, or ecosystem depth.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Craft (the Swedish performance sportswear brand) is generally positioned as a specialist rather than a broad lifestyle giant. Compared with main competitors like Nike, Adidas, Under Armour, Salomon, and Helly Hansen, Craft usually stands out for: - Better focus on endurance/technical gear: especially running, cycling, and cross-country skiing. - Strong performance-to-price value: often less expensive than premium outdoor brands. - More niche recognition: respected by serious athletes, but far less mainstream than Nike or Adidas. - Less fashion/lifestyle appeal: its designs are usually more functional than trend-driven. In short: Craft is strongest for technical, sport-specific apparel; it is less dominant in brand power and lifestyle marketing than the biggest competitors.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
If you mean Craft Sportswear, it generally sits in the premium performance/endurance niche. Compared with its main competitors: - Nike/Adidas: Craft is more specialized and technical, especially for running, skiing, and base layers. Those brands have bigger style/lifestyle appeal and broader product ranges. - Under Armour: Craft is usually stronger in cold-weather, layering, and endurance-focused performance; Under Armour is stronger in general athletic apparel and team sports. - Salomon/Helly Hansen: Craft is comparable in outdoor/technical credibility, but Craft is often more focused on high-performance training and base-layer systems. - Swix/Patagonia: Craft leans more toward pure sport performance than lifestyle or sustainability-led outdoor branding. Overall: Craft is best if you want technical, functional gear for endurance and cold conditions. Its downside versus larger rivals is less fashion appeal and smaller brand recognition.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Craft (Craft Sportswear) is generally positioned as a technical, performance-first brand, especially strong in running, cycling, cross-country skiing, and training base layers. Compared with its main competitors: - Nike/Adidas/Under Armour: Craft is usually more specialized and more technical, while the big athletic brands are broader, trendier, and more mainstream. - Salomon/Patagonia/The North Face: Craft is less focused on lifestyle/outdoor fashion and more on pure sports performance. - Odlo/Helly Hansen/Swix: Craft is very comparable, but often seen as especially strong in moisture management, layering, and endurance-sport apparel. In short: Craft is a niche but respected performance brand—often valued for function, comfort, and technical fabrics more than fashion or brand hype.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
If you mean Craft Sportswear, it sits in the premium endurance/apparel niche. Compared with main competitors like Salomon, ODLO, Patagonia, and Nike/Adidas: - Performance: Craft is very strong in technical base layers, cycling, running, and Nordic/endurance gear; often more specialized than Nike/Adidas. - Fit/feel: Usually slim, functional, and race-oriented, similar to ODLO or Salomon, with less lifestyle focus than Patagonia. - Innovation: Strong in moisture management, layering, and cold-weather performance, but not as broad or trend-driven as the biggest global sports brands. - Price: Generally premium, though often competitive versus other technical brands. - Brand position: More niche and athlete-focused than mass-market competitors; best for people who prioritize technical performance over fashion. In short: Craft is a respected specialist brand—less mainstream than Nike/Adidas, more performance-focused than lifestyle brands, and often comparable to the best technical endurance labels.
What do people typically complain about with Craft?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain that Craft can be a bit expensive, has limited collaboration and offline features compared with some competitors, and can feel restrictive if you want very advanced formatting or customization. Some users also mention occasional sync or performance hiccups.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
People commonly complain that Craft can be pricey, sizing runs a bit inconsistent, and some items feel less durable than expected. Others mention limited style/color options and that performance varies by product line.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
People commonly complain that Craft products run small or have inconsistent sizing, can be pricey for the quality, and sometimes have durability issues like seams, zippers, or fabric wear.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain that Craft is a bit expensive for what it offers, can feel limiting for very large or complex documents, has fewer advanced features/integrations than some competitors, and that collaboration/export options aren’t always as flexible as users want.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
People commonly complain about Craft’s pricing/subscription, occasional syncing or stability bugs, limited collaboration features, and weaker search/export/customization compared with alternatives like Notion or Obsidian. If you meant a different Craft, tell me which one.
What is a typical note-taking app known for? control
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical note-taking app is known for quickly creating, organizing, syncing, and searching notes, often with support for checklists, tags, reminders, and attachments.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical note-taking app is known for quickly capturing, organizing, and syncing notes across devices, often with features like notebooks/tags, search, checklists, and reminders.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical note-taking app is known for helping users quickly create, organize, and search notes, often with features like lists, tags, reminders, syncing, and attachments.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical note-taking app is known for quickly capturing ideas, organizing notes, and syncing them across devices. Many also include search, tags, reminders, checklists, and attachment support.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical note-taking app is known for quickly capturing, organizing, syncing, and searching notes, often with features like checklists, tags, reminders, and attachment support.

Authority — LLM Authority (50 prompts)

What are the best note-taking apps for meeting notes? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for meeting notes: - **Notion** — best all-around for organized meeting docs, agendas, action items, and team wikis. - **Microsoft OneNote** — best for freeform handwritten-style notes and Office/Teams users. - **Evernote** — best for quick capture, search, and clipping reference material. - **Otter.ai** — best if you want live transcription and meeting summaries. - **Google Keep** — best for fast, simple notes if you live in Google Workspace. - **Obsidian** — best for personal knowledge management and linked meeting notes. - **Coda** — best for structured meeting notes that turn into workflows. If you want the **best single choice for most teams**, I’d pick **Notion**. If you want **automatic meeting transcripts**, pick **Otter.ai**. If you want, I can also give you the **best apps for Zoom/Teams meetings specifically** or **best free options**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Here are the best options, depending on how you take meeting notes: - **Otter** — best all-around for automatic meeting transcripts, summaries, and searchable notes. It can join Zoom/Teams/Meet calls and make follow-ups easier. ([otter.ai](https://otter.ai/?utm_source=openai)) - **Fireflies** — great if you want AI summaries, action items, and strong meeting search across lots of calls and integrations. ([fireflies.ai](https://fireflies.ai/?utm_source=openai)) - **Fellow** — best for teams that want agendas, notes, action items, and recaps in one place. ([fellow.app](https://fellow.app/features/ai?utm_source=openai)) - **Microsoft Teams + Copilot / OneNote** — best if your team already lives in Microsoft 365; Copilot can generate meeting notes and OneNote is strong for organized manual notes. ([cdn-dynmedia-1.microsoft.com](https://cdn-dynmedia-1.microsoft.com/is/content/microsoftcorp/microsoft/final/en-us/mcaps/dau/documents/fy25/Copilot-Generate-meeting-notes.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — best for flexible, customizable meeting docs and team wikis, especially if you want notes tied into broader project docs. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/NoteLLM-4ae99ad603884e828561972c5e48ce59?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Solo / fast AI notes:** Otter - **Sales / customer calls:** Fireflies - **Team meetings / agendas:** Fellow - **Microsoft shop:** Teams Copilot + OneNote If you want, I can narrow this to **free apps**, **best for Zoom**, or **best for teams**.
What are the best note-taking apps for college lectures? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for college lectures: - **Notion** — Best all-around for organized class notes, study hubs, and project planning. Great for linking lecture notes, assignments, and reading lists. - **Microsoft OneNote** — Best for handwritten notes and freeform lecture pages. Excellent if you use a stylus or like mixing typing, drawing, and screenshots. - **Goodnotes 6** — Best for iPad users who want handwritten notes, PDF annotation, and clean notebook-style organization. - **Notability** — Best for recording lectures while taking notes. Very popular for syncing audio with your written notes. - **Google Docs** — Best for fast typing and easy sharing/collaboration. Simple, reliable, and works well on any device. - **Evernote** — Best for clipping articles, organizing research, and keeping everything searchable in one place. - **Obsidian** — Best for deep note-linking and long-term knowledge building if you like markdown and don’t mind a steeper learning curve. **My quick picks:** - **iPad + Apple Pencil:** Goodnotes 6 or Notability - **Windows/macOS + typing:** Notion or OneNote - **Need lecture audio recording:** Notability - **Want simple and free:** Google Docs or OneNote If you want, I can also recommend the best app for **iPhone, Android, iPad, or Windows laptop** specifically.
retrieval Not mentioned
Best picks for college lectures: 1. **OneNote** — best all-around free option on Windows/iPad. It supports audio recording with synced notes and transcription, plus ink/handwriting and embedded media. ([techcommunity.microsoft.com](https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/t5/microsoft-365-insider-blog/transcribe-and-ink-experience-in-onenote-on-windows/ba-p/4217122?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Goodnotes** — best for handwritten lecture notes on iPad. It supports audio recording tied to your notes, searchable handwriting, and flashcards for review. ([support.goodnotes.com](https://support.goodnotes.com/hc/en-us/articles/6005897125647-Add-Audio-Recordings-to-your-Notebooks?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Notability** — best if you want audio + handwritten notes in one place. Its audio recording links to what you wrote, and it can turn notes into summaries/quizzes/flashcards. ([blog.notability.com](https://blog.notability.com/post/become-an-audio-pro-how-to-record-lectures-in-notability?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Otter** — best for pure lecture transcription. It focuses on real-time note-taking, lecture summaries, and study guides. ([otter.ai](https://otter.ai/education-agent?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Apple Notes** — best simple built-in choice for iPhone/iPad users. It can scan documents, annotate PDFs, record audio, and lock notes. ([support.apple.com](https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT210336?utm_source=openai)) 6. **Obsidian** — best for serious organizing and linking class notes. It uses local Markdown files and internal links to build a knowledge base. ([help.obsidian.md](https://help.obsidian.md/Linking%20notes%20and%20files/Internal%20links?utm_source=openai)) **My quick recommendation:** - **iPad + Apple Pencil:** Goodnotes or Notability. ([goodnotes.com](https://www.goodnotes.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Windows laptop:** OneNote. ([cdn-dynmedia-1.microsoft.com](https://cdn-dynmedia-1.microsoft.com/is/content/microsoftcorp/microsoft/final/en-us/microsoft-product-and-services/microsoft-education/downloadables/Microsoft-Onenote-Desktop-Quick-Guide.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **Need transcripts:** Otter. ([otter.ai](https://otter.ai/education-agent?utm_source=openai)) - **Want free and built-in:** Apple Notes. ([support.apple.com](https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT210336?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to **the best app for iPhone**, **iPad**, or **Windows/Mac**.
What are the best note-taking apps for researchers? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For researchers, the best note-taking apps are usually the ones that handle **PDFs, tags, cross-linking, search, and citations** well. ### Top picks - **Obsidian** — best for linked thinking, knowledge bases, and long-term research notes. - **Zotero** — best for collecting papers and making annotated library notes; essential for citation management. - **Notion** — best for organized project notes, collaboration, and dashboards. - **Evernote** — best for clipping web pages and quick searchable notes. - **Microsoft OneNote** — best for freeform note capture, especially if you use a stylus or Windows. - **Roam Research** — best for networked notes and idea connections. - **Logseq** — best open-source alternative to Roam, good for outlining and backlinks. - **DEVONthink** — best for Mac researchers managing large document archives. ### Best overall combos - **Paper-heavy research:** Zotero + Obsidian - **Team/workflow-heavy research:** Notion + Zotero - **Handwritten + lecture/interview notes:** OneNote - **Deep personal knowledge base:** Obsidian or Logseq ### My quick recommendation If you want the safest all-around choice: **Obsidian + Zotero**. If you want, I can also give you the **best app by use case**: literature review, field notes, interview transcripts, or collaborative research.
retrieval Not mentioned
For most researchers, the **best setup is Zotero + Obsidian**: Zotero for collecting papers, PDF highlights, and citations; Obsidian for building a connected knowledge base with backlinks, graph view, and lots of plugins. Zotero’s PDF reader and note editor let you pull annotations into notes, and Obsidian’s core features include backlinks, graph view, search, and sync. ([zotero.org](https://www.zotero.org/support/pdf_reader?utm_source=openai)) **Top picks** - **Zotero** — best for literature management, citations, and PDF annotation. ([zotero.org](https://www.zotero.org/support/pdf_reader?utm_source=openai)) - **Obsidian** — best for linked notes, literature notes, and long-term personal knowledge bases. ([help.obsidian.md](https://help.obsidian.md/plugins?utm_source=openai)) - **Microsoft OneNote** — best for freeform note capture, handwriting, OCR, and mixed media notes. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/onenote-options-advanced-928d1b3f-f580-479b-aa0b-47ac512bd827?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — best for collaborative research wikis, databases, and project tracking. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/Notion-778fe7207b784fa192f5e905a422cce6?utm_source=openai)) - **Logseq** — best for local-first, outline-based note-taking with strong research workflows and Zotero integrations via community tools. ([discuss.logseq.com](https://discuss.logseq.com/t/comprehensive-zotero-plugin/8571?utm_source=openai)) - **DEVONthink** — best for macOS users who want a research archive and document management system. ([devontechnologies.com](https://www.devontechnologies.com/download/extras?utm_source=openai)) **If you want one recommendation:** - **Quantitative / literature-heavy researcher:** Zotero + Obsidian. - **Team/lab collaboration:** Notion. - **Handwritten brainstorming:** OneNote. - **Mac archival workflow:** DEVONthink. If you want, I can give you a **ranked list by use case** or a **“best free options only”** shortlist.
What are the best note-taking apps for writers? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best note-taking apps for writers: - **Obsidian** — Best for connected ideas, outlining, and building a private writing system. Great if you like markdown and linking notes. - **Scrivener** — Best for long-form writers working on books, essays, or scripts. Combines notes, research, and drafting in one place. - **Notion** — Best for organizing research, story bibles, and collaborative writing. Very flexible, though a bit heavier. - **Evernote** — Best for clipping web research and keeping simple notes synced across devices. - **Apple Notes** — Best for Apple users who want fast, easy note capture with minimal setup. - **Microsoft OneNote** — Best for freeform note-taking, especially if you want notebook-style organization. - **Google Keep** — Best for quick ideas and lightweight reminders. - **Bear** — Best for Mac/iPhone writers who want a clean, elegant markdown note app. If you want the shortest recommendation: - **Best overall for writers:** **Obsidian** - **Best for drafting a book:** **Scrivener** - **Best for all-purpose organization:** **Notion** If you tell me your device (Mac, Windows, iPhone, Android) and whether you write fiction, nonfiction, or blog content, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.
retrieval Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for writers, by use case: - **Best for idea webs / long-term writing projects: Obsidian** — strong Markdown workflow, backlinks, and graph view for connecting characters, scenes, research, and themes. ([publish.obsidian.md](https://publish.obsidian.md/eriktuck/base/Obsidian/Obsidian?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for focused drafting: iA Writer** — distraction-free editor, Focus Mode, Markdown, and clean export options. ([ia.net](https://ia.net/writer?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for Apple users who want simple and fast: Apple Notes** — syncs through iCloud, supports shared folders/notes, Smart Folders, scanning, and quick capture. ([support.apple.com](https://support.apple.com/guide/icloud/share-folders-mmbc2b562111/icloud?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for beautiful Markdown notes: Bear** — clean writing experience, tags, backlinks, and strong export options. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/in/app/bear-markdown-notes/id1091189122?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for all-in-one planning + notes: Notion** — combines notes, docs, wikis, projects, tasks, and collaboration in one workspace. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/Notion-Startup-Pack-c03bd9cc8c944b5d9b749d6c5d3b1ae8?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for research-heavy writers: Evernote** — Web Clipper, tagging, AI search, and AI note tools are good for collecting and retrieving sources. ([evernote.com](https://evernote.com/features/webclipper?utm_source=openai)) - **Best free minimalist option: Simplenote** — free, cross-platform, Markdown support, tags, pins, and instant sync. ([simplenote.com](https://simplenote.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for handwriting/audio/collab: OneNote** — ink, voice transcription, collaboration, and broad device support. ([microsoft.com](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/onenote/digital-note-taking-app?utm_source=openai)) If you want a single recommendation: **Obsidian** if you build lots of interconnected writing material, or **iA Writer** if you mainly want to draft prose without distractions. ([publish.obsidian.md](https://publish.obsidian.md/eriktuck/base/Obsidian/Obsidian?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to **Mac/iPhone**, **Windows/Android**, or **free only**.
What are the best note-taking apps for teams? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best team note-taking apps, by use case: - **Notion** — Best all-around for shared docs, wikis, meeting notes, databases, and lightweight project tracking. - **Coda** — Great if you want docs that behave like apps, with stronger workflows and automation. - **Microsoft OneNote** — Best for Microsoft 365 teams; simple, familiar, and easy for meeting notes. - **Google Docs** — Best for real-time collaboration and commenting if your team already lives in Google Workspace. - **Confluence** — Best for larger teams that want a structured internal knowledge base, especially with Jira. - **Slab** — Clean, fast team wiki for company knowledge and onboarding. - **Evernote Teams** — Good for personal-style note capture shared across a small team. - **ClickUp Docs** — Best if your team already uses ClickUp for tasks and wants notes tied to work. **My quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for enterprise/IT teams:** Confluence - **Best for Microsoft shops:** OneNote - **Best for Google-first teams:** Google Docs - **Best for workflow-heavy teams:** Coda If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **ease of use**, or **best for remote teams**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Here are the best team note-taking apps right now, depending on what you need: 1. **Notion** — best all-around for docs + wiki + meeting notes. It’s built as a connected workspace, and its AI Meeting Notes can capture Zoom, Google Meet, and Teams meetings, then generate summaries/action items inside your workspace. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/en-gb/product/ai-meeting-notes?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Confluence** — best for larger teams and formal documentation. Atlassian positions it as team documentation software for meeting notes, team processes, inline comments, and shared spaces, with strong fit if you already use Jira. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/team-documentation?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Slite** — best for simple, adoption-friendly team knowledge bases. Slite focuses on easy documentation, AI search, meeting notes, templates, and permissions, with a “single source of truth” angle. ([slite.com](https://slite.com/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Coda** — best if you want notes that can turn into workflows. Coda combines docs, tables, automations, and team hubs, so it’s strong for meeting notes that connect to trackers and decisions. ([coda.io](https://coda.io/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Microsoft OneNote / Loop** — best for Microsoft 365 shops. OneNote is Microsoft’s dedicated note app and integrates with Teams channel notes; Loop adds collaborative notes/components in Teams for live co-editing and action items. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-gb/office/manage-your-team-s-notes-with-onenote-13fd630e-cf97-4779-b94c-f8e55fdeb075?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for engineering/product orgs:** Confluence - **Best for easy team adoption:** Slite - **Best for structured docs + lightweight automation:** Coda - **Best if you live in Microsoft 365:** OneNote or Loop If you want, I can also give you a **“best for small teams / startups / enterprise”** shortlist.
What are the best note-taking apps for project management notes? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for **project management notes**, depending on how you like to work: 1. **Notion** Best all-around choice for project notes, docs, databases, checklists, meeting notes, and lightweight task tracking. Great if you want everything in one place. 2. **Microsoft OneNote** Best for freeform note capture, especially if you like section/tab organization and handwritten notes. Good for teams already using Microsoft 365. 3. **Evernote** Best for fast note capture, web clipping, and searchable archives. Strong if your project notes include lots of reference material. 4. **Obsidian** Best for personal project knowledge bases and linked notes. Excellent if you want a powerful, private, markdown-based system. 5. **ClickUp Docs** Best if your notes need to live directly alongside tasks, goals, and project timelines. Good for teams using ClickUp already. 6. **Coda** Best for turning project notes into interactive docs with tables, buttons, and workflow-style pages. Great for more structured project management. ### My quick picks - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for teams using Microsoft:** OneNote - **Best for task-linked project notes:** ClickUp Docs - **Best for personal knowledge management:** Obsidian If you want, I can also give you the **best app for solo use, team use, or free options only**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **project management notes**, my top picks are: 1. **Notion** — best all-around if you want notes + docs + databases in one place. Its docs are built for “notes & docs,” and it can turn project info into databases, which is great for turning meeting notes into trackable work. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/product/docs?utm_source=openai)) 2. **ClickUp Notepad** — best if you want notes that can become tasks immediately. ClickUp says notes can be converted into tasks or Docs, with assignees, due dates, and priorities attached. ([clickup.com](https://clickup.com/features/notepad?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Microsoft OneNote** — best for teams already in Microsoft 365. Microsoft says OneNote is its dedicated note-taking app, supports rich editing, collaboration, and can create Outlook tasks from notes. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/manage-your-team-s-notes-with-onenote-13fd630e-cf97-4779-b94c-f8e55fdeb075?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Evernote** — best for structured meeting notes and lightweight task tracking. Evernote’s tasks live inside notes, and its help docs say tasks stay in context with project ideas, meeting notes, and documents. ([help.evernote.com](https://help.evernote.com/hc/en-us/articles/1500003792141-Tasks-Overview?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Obsidian** — best if you want a more personal, connected knowledge base. Its graph view helps visualize relationships between notes, which is useful for complex projects and research-heavy work. ([help.obsidian.md](https://help.obsidian.md/plugins/graph?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for turning notes into tasks:** ClickUp - **Best for Microsoft users:** OneNote - **Best for deep linked notes:** Obsidian If you want, I can narrow this down to **free apps only**, **Mac/iPhone**, or **team collaboration**.
What note-taking apps are best for syncing across devices? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best cross-device note apps: - **Microsoft OneNote** — best free all-around sync; works on Windows, Mac, iPhone, Android, web. - **Evernote** — strong search and clipping; good if you want a polished all-purpose notes app. - **Apple Notes** — best for iPhone/Mac users; fast, simple, and reliable via iCloud. - **Google Keep** — best for quick notes and reminders; syncs instantly across Google devices and web. - **Notion** — best for organized notes + docs + databases; solid sync across platforms. - **Bear** — great writing app for Apple devices, but not ideal if you need Windows/Android. - **Obsidian** — best for power users; sync via **Obsidian Sync** or cloud services. If you want the safest picks: - **Best free:** OneNote - **Best simple:** Google Keep - **Best Apple-only:** Apple Notes - **Best power user:** Obsidian - **Best all-in-one workspace:** Notion If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your devices (iPhone/Android/Mac/Windows).
retrieval Not mentioned
Best choices for syncing across devices: - **OneNote** — strongest free cross-platform pick; Microsoft says it automatically syncs changes across devices and works on Windows, Mac, iPhone/iPad, and Android. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/et-ee/office/work-offline-in-microsoft-onenote-for-ipad-or-iphone-d75e8b4d-fd37-4fd7-afbf-4ec285fe76c3?utm_source=openai)) - **Evernote** — good if you want a polished all-in-one notes app; it automatically saves notes online and syncs them to all your devices, with offline access too. ([evernote.com](https://evernote.com/features/notessync?utm_source=openai)) - **Obsidian + Obsidian Sync** — best for local Markdown notes and more control; Obsidian Sync is an add-on that privately syncs notes across devices and supports selective sync/version history. ([help.obsidian.md](https://help.obsidian.md/sync?utm_source=openai)) - **Apple Notes** — best if you’re all-in on Apple; Apple says iCloud Notes lets you view and edit notes on all your Apple devices and iCloud.com. ([support.apple.com](https://support.apple.com/guide/notes/about-using-icloud-notes-on-mac-apda3f8513ed/mac?utm_source=openai)) - **Google Keep** — best for very simple, fast notes and lists, especially if you live in Google’s ecosystem; Google’s help pages show notes can be accessed on the web and synced on mobile. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/keep/answer/6102239?co=GENIE.Platform%3DAndroid&hl=en&utm_source=openai)) If you want one recommendation: **OneNote** for most people, **Obsidian** if you care most about ownership/privacy, and **Apple Notes** if you use only Apple devices.
What note-taking apps are best for offline access? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best offline note-taking apps: - **Obsidian** — best for fully offline, local files, markdown, great sync optional. - **Apple Notes** — best for iPhone/Mac users; solid offline, simple and reliable. - **Microsoft OneNote** — good offline support, especially if you use Office/Windows. - **Joplin** — strong offline-first open-source option; sync is optional. - **Notion** — usable offline, but less reliable than the apps above. If you want the safest offline-first choices, pick **Obsidian** or **Joplin**. If you’re in Apple’s ecosystem, **Apple Notes** is the easiest.
retrieval Not mentioned
Best bets for **offline access**: 1. **Joplin** — probably the strongest “offline-first” pick. It stores notes locally on your device, so your notes stay accessible even without internet. ([joplinapp.org](https://joplinapp.org/help/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Obsidian** — also excellent for offline use. Your notes are plain-text Markdown files stored in a local vault, so you always have local access. ([help.obsidian.md](https://help.obsidian.md/data-storage?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Apple Notes** — great if you’re in the Apple ecosystem; Notes is available in the Notes app and via iCloud web access, but the best offline experience is on-device in the Apple app. ([support.apple.com](https://support.apple.com/en-mide/102447?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Microsoft OneNote** — solid offline support, especially on desktop; on iPhone/iPad you can keep attachments available for offline use. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/work-offline-in-microsoft-onenote-for-ipad-or-iphone-d75e8b4d-fd37-4fd7-afbf-4ec285fe76c3?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Evernote** — works offline on desktop, but on mobile it only keeps limited cached data unless you set up offline notes/notebooks. ([help.evernote.com](https://help.evernote.com/hc/en-us/articles/209005917-Access-notes-offline?utm_source=openai)) **My quick recommendation:** - **Best overall offline:** **Obsidian** - **Best free/offline-first:** **Joplin** - **Best if you want simple + Apple devices:** **Apple Notes** ([help.obsidian.md](https://help.obsidian.md/data-storage?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you the **best offline note app for Windows, Mac, iPhone, or Android**.
What are the best note-taking apps for handwriting and stylus use? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Made for handwriting + stylus: mainly these unaimed(e) tests. Droals/printing from the y + in **spon** of the container for using that "advancing" or "area" **meeti ng**: - 1st favorite/medà into [philan?] Why "drawing notes" or "writing"? More shrite. For 1st stage: to use at **homem**: The phonperty? type1. Letaryd: - **Goodnotes 6** — best all-around for handwriting, PDFs, and organization - **Nebo** — best handwriting-to-text conversion - **Noteshelf 3** — very natural writing feel - **OneNote** — best free cross-platform option - **Samsung Notes** — best for Galaxy Tab + S Pen - **Notability** — great for audio + handwritten notes - **CollaNote** — strong free option for iPad - **Concepts** — best for sketching/infinite canvas notes If you want to prefer **iPad/Apple Pencil**, pick **Goodnotes 6** or **Notability**. If you want **Android/Galaxy Tab**, pick **Samsung Notes**. If you want **Windows + Mac + web**, pick **OneNote** or **Nebo**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Here are the strongest picks for handwriting + stylus note-taking right now: - **Best overall on iPad:** **Goodnotes** — great for handwritten notes, lecture PDFs, audio sync, and flashcards. ([goodnotes.com](https://www.goodnotes.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for students who want audio + handwriting + organization:** **Notability** — supports handwritten notes, PDF markup, audio recordings synced to your writing, handwriting recognition, and math conversion. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/notability-take-notes-annotate/id360593530?utm_source=openai)) - **Best handwriting-to-text engine:** **Nebo** — built around very strong handwriting recognition, pen gestures, searchable handwritten notes, and stylus-first writing. ([nebo.app](https://www.nebo.app/features/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best free cross-platform option:** **Microsoft OneNote** — good ink tools, lasso selection, handwriting-to-text, and it works across Microsoft’s ecosystem. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/select-handwriting-and-ink-with-the-lasso-tool-7545119f-4ac9-457c-b520-3618d3ef96cb?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for Samsung tablet/phone users:** **Samsung Notes** — excellent with S Pen, handwriting-to-text, and newer Galaxy AI note tools. ([samsung.com](https://www.samsung.com/us/support/answer/ANS10003634/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best built-in iPad option:** **Apple Notes** — with iPadOS 18 it adds Smart Script, handwriting refinement, spellcheck, and math features designed for Apple Pencil. ([support.apple.com](https://support.apple.com/en-us/121259?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule of thumb** - **iPad:** Goodnotes or Notability - **Need best handwriting conversion:** Nebo - **Need free/cross-platform:** OneNote - **Samsung device:** Samsung Notes - **Just want simple and built-in:** Apple Notes If you want, I can also rank them for **students**, **work meetings**, or **tablet-specific picks** like iPad vs Android vs Windows.
What are the best note-taking apps for voice notes? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for voice notes, depending on what you want: - **Otter.ai** — Best overall for **speech-to-text transcription** and searchable meeting notes. Great for interviews, lectures, and calls. - **Notta** — Best for **accurate transcription** and easy sharing; good cross-platform option. - **Apple Voice Memos + Notes** — Best for **iPhone users** who want simple, fast recording with no fuss. - **Microsoft OneNote** — Best for **mixing audio with typed notes** in a more organized notebook style. - **Evernote** — Best if you want **voice notes plus full note organization** and syncing across devices. - **Google Keep** — Best for **quick, lightweight voice notes** on Android and web. If you want the best single pick: **Otter.ai**. If you just want the easiest phone-native option: **Apple Voice Memos** or **Google Keep**. If you want, I can also rank these for **iPhone**, **Android**, or **students/business use**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want the **best apps for voice notes**, I’d shortlist these: - **Otter** — best for **live transcription**, speaker labels, and meeting-style voice notes. It works on iOS, Android, and web, and supports importing audio files. ([otter.ai](https://otter.ai/features?utm_source=openai)) - **Apple Notes** — best if you’re on **iPhone/Mac** and want the simplest built-in option. It can record audio in a note, transcribe it, and even summarize with Apple Intelligence on supported devices. ([support.apple.com](https://support.apple.com/en-lamr/guide/iphone/iphbe11247b5/ios?utm_source=openai)) - **Evernote** — best for people who want voice notes plus a full note system. It now has AI Meeting Notes, transcription, speaker recognition, and audio uploads/recording. ([help.evernote.com](https://help.evernote.com/hc/en-us/articles/45695698380563-AI-Meeting-Notes?utm_source=openai)) - **OneNote** — best if you already use Microsoft 365. Microsoft says it supports voice transcription, and its transcription tools also work with recorded/uploaded audio in the Microsoft ecosystem. ([microsoft.com](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/onenote/digital-note-taking-app?utm_source=openai)) - **Goodnotes** / **Notability** — best for **handwriting + voice notes** on tablet. Both support recorded audio tied to notes, and both offer transcription-related features. ([goodnotes.com](https://www.goodnotes.com/?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Otter - **Best iPhone default:** Apple Notes - **Best for organized all-in-one notes:** Evernote - **Best for students with handwriting:** Goodnotes or Notability If you tell me your device (**iPhone, Android, Mac, Windows**) and whether you want **transcription**, I can narrow it to the top 2.
What note-taking apps work best with markdown? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best markdown-friendly note apps: - **Obsidian** — best overall for markdown power users; local files, backlinks, plugins, sync optional. - **Bear** — best for Apple users; very polished, fast, great markdown support. - **Logseq** — best for outlining and linked notes; markdown/Org mode style, local-first. - **Typora** — best pure markdown editor; live preview, simple, clean. - **Joplin** — best free/open-source option; markdown notes, sync, notebooks, web clipper. - **Simplenote** — best lightweight basic markdown notes; fast and minimal. If you want a quick pick: - **Power + flexibility:** Obsidian - **Apple simplicity:** Bear - **Plain writing:** Typora - **Free/open-source:** Joplin If you want, I can also recommend the best one for **Windows**, **Mac**, or **cross-platform**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Best markdown-first note apps: - **Obsidian** — best overall if you want local `.md` files, portability, and lots of plugins. Obsidian stores notes as plain-text Markdown files on your device and supports Markdown natively. ([help.obsidian.md](https://help.obsidian.md/create-note?utm_source=openai)) - **Joplin** — best free/open-source option. Joplin’s notes are in Markdown, it supports Markdown extras, and it works on Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, and Android. ([joplinapp.org](https://joplinapp.org/help/?utm_source=openai)) - **Bear** — best for a clean writing experience on Apple devices. Bear explicitly markets itself as a Markdown app, keeps notes in plain text, and supports Markdown plus tags, backlinks, and export to Markdown. ([bear.app](https://bear.app/faq/how-to-use-markdown-in-bear/?utm_source=openai)) - **Logseq** — best if you like outliner-style notes with Markdown files. Logseq works with Markdown text files and emphasizes local, portable files. ([blog.logseq.com](https://blog.logseq.com/logseq-and-the-rise-of-the-integrated-thinking-environment/?utm_source=openai)) Quick pick: - **Mac/iPhone only:** Bear - **Cross-platform + power/user ecosystem:** Obsidian - **Free/open-source + sync/encryption options:** Joplin - **Outliner / Zettelkasten style:** Logseq If you want, I can narrow it down to the **best for writing**, **best for knowledge base**, or **best for syncing across devices**.
What are the best note-taking apps for task tracking? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **note-taking + task tracking**, the best apps are usually the ones that combine **notes, checklists, reminders, and links between tasks and projects**: 1. **Notion** Best overall for flexible task tracking inside notes. Great for databases, boards, to-dos, templates, and project pages. 2. **Evernote** Best for classic note-taking with reliable task features. Strong for web clipping, search, attachments, and simple task lists. 3. **Microsoft OneNote** Best free option for messy, freeform notes with checkboxes. Good if you already use Microsoft 365. 4. **Todoist** Best if task tracking matters more than notes. You can add notes to tasks, use labels/filters, and keep everything clean. 5. **Obsidian** Best for power users who want linked notes and lightweight task tracking. Excellent if you like Markdown and local files. 6. **Apple Notes** Best for iPhone/Mac users who want simple notes + checklists. Fast, easy, and built-in. **My quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best simple choice:** Apple Notes - **Best power-user choice:** Obsidian - **Best pure task app with notes:** Todoist If you want, I can also give you the **best app by device** (iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac) or by use case like **student, work, or personal planning**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If **task tracking is the priority**, my top picks are: 1. **Evernote** — best all-around for notes + tasks in one place. Tasks live inside notes, with due dates, recurrences, reminders, assignment, and filters. ([evernote.com](https://evernote.com/features/tasks?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Notion** — best for custom workflows. It lets you build task systems with databases, kanban boards, calendars, and reminders alongside notes. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/notion/Getting-Started-with-Notion-f0e1a6d326d84d6984d948da96965045?utm_source=openai)) 3. **OneNote** — best for Microsoft users. You can turn lines into to-do checkboxes, extract task lists with Copilot, and flag notes for Outlook follow-up. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/topic/create-a-to-do-checklist-in-onenote-8f745fe6-8905-be92-ba05-223c5f5987cd?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Obsidian** — best for power users who want local, private notes and flexible task tracking via plugins; it stores notes on-device and supports task tracking across your vault. ([obsidian.md](https://obsidian.md/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Apple Notes + Reminders** — best for Apple-only, low-friction task tracking. Notes supports checklists, tags, and pinned notes, while Reminders supports subtasks, notes, due dates, and alerts. ([support.apple.com](https://support.apple.com/en-is/118442?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - Want the simplest “notes + tasks” app? **Evernote**. ([evernote.com](https://evernote.com/features/tasks?utm_source=openai)) - Want the most customizable system? **Notion**. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/Notion-Startup-Pack-c03bd9cc8c944b5d9b749d6c5d3b1ae8?utm_source=openai)) - Already live in Microsoft 365? **OneNote**. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/topic/create-a-to-do-checklist-in-onenote-8f745fe6-8905-be92-ba05-223c5f5987cd?utm_source=openai)) - Want privacy/offline control? **Obsidian**. ([obsidian.md](https://obsidian.md/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank them for **personal use, work, or students**.
What are the best note-taking apps for information management? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for **information management**, depending on how you work: ### Best overall - **Notion** — best for databases, wikis, project tracking, and team knowledge bases. - **Obsidian** — best for personal knowledge management, linking ideas, and long-term note systems. ### Best for simple, fast notes - **Apple Notes** — great if you’re in the Apple ecosystem. - **Microsoft OneNote** — very good for freeform notes, notebooks, and mixed media. ### Best for structured knowledge management - **Craft** — clean, polished, great for organizing docs and notes visually. - **Evernote** — strong web clipping and search, though pricier than before. ### Best for GTD / task + notes - **Notion** or **ClickUp** — good if you want notes tied to tasks and workflows. - **Todoist** with a notes workflow — if tasks are the priority. ### Best for researchers / power users - **Obsidian** — with plugins, backlinks, and local-first storage. - **Logseq** — great for outlining and linked thinking. ### Best cross-platform / collaboration - **Notion** - **OneNote** - **Google Keep** for very lightweight shared notes ### My quick picks - **Personal knowledge base:** Obsidian - **All-in-one workspace:** Notion - **Simple reliable notes:** Apple Notes / OneNote - **Web clipping and archive:** Evernote If you want, I can also give you the **best app for Mac, Windows, Android, iPhone, or teams**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for **information management**, depending on how you work: - **Notion** — best all-in-one workspace for notes + docs + databases + team wikis/projects. Great if you want one system for structured information. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/notion/Getting-Started-with-Notion-f0e1a6d326d84d6984d948da96965045?utm_source=openai)) - **Obsidian** — best for personal knowledge management if you want local Markdown files, backlinks, and graph view, with low lock-in. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/Obsidian-980efca0666d4cd0b0d67e67e21dbd86?utm_source=openai)) - **Microsoft OneNote** — best free-form digital notebook for mixed media, handwritten notes, audio, OCR/search, and collaboration. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/introducing-onenote-38be036d-5b5a-49ad-83be-292fe53ad7b3?utm_source=openai)) - **Apple Notes** — best simple choice for Apple users; it supports tags, smart folders, PDF/scanned-doc markup, and collaboration. ([support.apple.com](https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT212507?utm_source=openai)) - **Evernote** — best for clipping and searching lots of web content, PDFs, and meeting notes; it also has AI features and web clipper support. ([evernote.com](https://evernote.com/features/webclipper?utm_source=openai)) - **Amplenote** — best if your notes need to turn into tasks and calendar items; it combines notes, tasks, and scheduling. ([amplenote.com](https://www.amplenote.com/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick picks:** - **Best overall for knowledge work:** Notion - **Best long-term personal knowledge base:** Obsidian - **Best for students / handwriting / brainstorming:** OneNote - **Best for Apple-only simplicity:** Apple Notes - **Best for web research:** Evernote - **Best for notes + tasks:** Amplenote If you want, I can also give you a **“best app by use case” shortlist** (student, researcher, executive, ADHD-friendly, team wiki, etc.).
What are the best note-taking apps for simple note capture? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **simple note capture**, the best apps are usually the ones that open fast, sync reliably, and don’t get in your way. ### Best picks - **Apple Notes** — best if you’re on iPhone/Mac; super fast, easy, free. - **Google Keep** — best for quick capture across Android, web, and iPhone; simple and lightweight. - **Microsoft OneNote** — best if you want free-form notes and cross-device sync, though it’s a bit heavier. - **Standard Notes** — best for privacy and plain-text simplicity. - **Notion** — best if you want simple notes plus a bit of organization, but it’s more feature-rich than “minimal.” ### My top recommendation If you want **the simplest possible note capture**: 1. **Apple Notes** (Apple users) 2. **Google Keep** (everyone else / cross-platform) 3. **Standard Notes** (privacy-focused) ### Quick rule - **Fastest note dumping:** Google Keep - **Best built-in on iPhone/Mac:** Apple Notes - **Best for privacy:** Standard Notes - **Best if you want more structure later:** Notion If you want, I can also give you the **best note app for iPhone, Android, Windows, or Mac specifically**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **simple note capture**, I’d pick these: - **Apple Notes** — best if you’re on iPhone/Mac and want the fastest built-in capture; it supports quick thoughts, checklists, scanning, attachments, and locking notes. ([support.apple.com](https://support.apple.com/en-mo/118442?utm_source=openai)) - **Google Keep** — best for fast, lightweight notes and reminders, especially if you live in Google Workspace. ([workspace.google.com](https://workspace.google.com/products/keep/?utm_source=openai)) - **Simplenote** — best for pure text notes with almost no clutter; it syncs across iOS, Android, Mac, Windows, Linux, and web, and focuses on speed. ([simplenote.com](https://simplenote.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Microsoft OneNote** — best if you want quick sticky-note style capture plus better organization later. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/create-quick-notes-0f126c7d-1e62-483a-b027-9c31c78dad99?utm_source=openai)) - **Bear** — best if you want a clean writing app with simple Markdown-based note capture on Apple devices. ([bear.app](https://bear.app/faq/how-to-use-markdown-in-bear/?utm_source=openai)) **My quick ranking for “just capture stuff fast”:** 1. Apple Notes 2. Google Keep 3. Simplenote If you want, I can narrow this to **iPhone**, **Android**, **Windows**, or **cross-platform** only.
What are the best note-taking apps for long-term note organization? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
For long-term note organization, the best apps are usually the ones with strong search, backlinks, tags, and reliable export. ### Best overall - **Obsidian** — best for personal knowledge bases, linked notes, and long-term control. Files are plain Markdown, so you own your notes. - **Notion** — best for organized databases, project notes, and a polished all-in-one workspace. - **Microsoft OneNote** — best if you want free-form notebooks, handwriting, and easy clipping. ### Best for “future-proofing” - **Obsidian** - **Logseq** - **Joplin** These store notes in open formats and are better if you care about longevity and portability. ### Best for structured organization - **Notion** — databases, tags, templates, filters - **Evernote** — still strong for clipping, OCR, and searching older notes - **Craft** — clean writing experience with good organization ### Best for simple, low-maintenance note systems - **Apple Notes** — excellent if you’re all-in on Apple devices - **Google Keep** — quick capture, but not ideal for deep long-term organization - **OneNote** — flexible and easy to use ### My short recommendation - **Best overall:** Obsidian - **Best for teams/databases:** Notion - **Best freeform notebook:** OneNote - **Best private/open-source option:** Joplin If you want, I can also rank them for **Windows/Mac**, **mobile use**, or **research note-taking**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **long-term note organization**, my top pick is **Obsidian**: it stores notes as plain-text Markdown files in a local vault, supports internal links/backlinks, and has graph view—great for keeping your notes portable and future-proof. ([help.obsidian.md](https://help.obsidian.md/data-storage?utm_source=openai)) **Best options by use case:** - **Obsidian** — best overall for personal knowledge bases, linked notes, and long-term portability. ([help.obsidian.md](https://help.obsidian.md/data-storage?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — best if you want a flexible wiki/database system for structured organization and collaboration. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/help/intro-to-databases?utm_source=openai)) - **OneNote** — best for freeform capture, handwriting, and searching across lots of notebooks. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-gb/office/find-onenote-notes-pages-or-tabs-32cb2bd7-afe7-44d2-a711-398a88421287?utm_source=openai)) - **Evernote** — best for heavy search/OCR and scanning a lot of documents. ([evernote.com](https://evernote.com/en-us/features/search?utm_source=openai)) - **Logseq** — best if you want a local-first, non-linear outliner for linked thinking. ([blog.logseq.com](https://blog.logseq.com/contribute/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick recommendation:** - Want **ownership + longevity** → **Obsidian** - Want **all-in-one docs/wiki** → **Notion** - Want **Microsoft ecosystem** → **OneNote** - Want **powerful search of messy archives** → **Evernote** - Want **local-first outlining** → **Logseq** ([help.obsidian.md](https://help.obsidian.md/data-storage?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **“best app for students / researchers / ADHD / teams”** version.
What note-taking apps are best for students who want to organize class notes? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best picks for students: - **Notion** — best all-in-one organizer for class notes, to-do lists, calendars, and databases. - **Microsoft OneNote** — great for handwritten notes, freeform pages, and organizing by notebook/section. - **GoodNotes 6** — best for iPad students who like writing with Apple Pencil and annotating PDFs. - **Evernote** — strong for clipping web articles, searchable notes, and keeping everything in one place. - **Google Keep** — simple, fast, and great for quick notes and reminders, especially if you use Google tools. If you want the shortest recommendation: - **iPad + handwriting:** GoodNotes 6 - **Best overall organization:** Notion - **Best free/classic school notebook style:** OneNote If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your device, major, and whether you prefer typing or handwriting.
retrieval Not mentioned
Best picks for students organizing class notes: - **Microsoft OneNote** — best all-around for school. It has notebooks, search, cross-device access, and works well with handwritten notes, images, audio, and Microsoft Teams/Class Notebook workflows. ([microsoft.com](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/education/products/onenote?utm_source=openai)) - **Goodnotes** — best if you take notes on an iPad/tablet with a stylus. It supports handwriting, typed notes, PDFs, searchable notes, and study tools like flashcards and audio sync. ([goodnotes.com](https://www.goodnotes.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — best for students who want notes + assignments + planning in one place. It combines pages, databases, to-dos, and templates like student note systems. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/notion/Getting-Started-with-Notion-f0e1a6d326d84d6984d948da96965045?utm_source=openai)) - **Apple Notes** — best for a simple, built-in option on iPhone/iPad/Mac. It supports folders, tags, Smart Folders, PDFs, scans, and collaboration. ([support.apple.com](https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT212507?utm_source=openai)) - **Obsidian** — best for power users who want linked notes and a local Markdown-based system. It’s built around connections between notes and local-file storage. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/Obsidian-980efca0666d4cd0b0d67e67e21dbd86?utm_source=openai)) - **Bear** — best for Apple users who like clean writing and tag-based organization. It uses tags, search, and quick capture/scanning. ([blog.bear.app](https://blog.bear.app/2020/05/getting-started-with-using-and-organizing-tags-in-bear/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick recommendation:** - **Most students:** OneNote - **iPad + Apple Pencil:** Goodnotes - **Assignments + notes together:** Notion - **Simple and free on Apple devices:** Apple Notes If you want, I can also give you the **best app for your device** (Windows, Mac, iPad, Android) or a **free-only list**.
What note-taking apps are best for managing research notes? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best research note-taking apps depend on how you work: - **Obsidian** — best for serious research notes, linking ideas, and building a personal knowledge base. - **Notion** — best if you want notes + databases + project tracking in one place. - **Evernote** — best for clipping articles, PDFs, and quick capture across devices. - **Logseq** — great for outline-based, interconnected research notes with local-first storage. - **Microsoft OneNote** — best for freeform, notebook-style note-taking and handwriting support. - **Zotero** — best for managing research sources and citations; pair it with Obsidian or Notion for notes. **Best combo for research:** - **Zotero + Obsidian** if you want strong source management and deep note connections. - **Zotero + Notion** if you want a cleaner all-in-one workspace. If you tell me your workflow—PDF-heavy, citation-heavy, or brainstorming-heavy—I can recommend the best one.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **research notes**, the best choices are usually: - **Zotero** — best if you read lots of papers. It can turn PDF annotations into notes, keep citations attached, and show the source in context. ([zotero.org](https://www.zotero.org/support/pdf_reader)) - **Obsidian** — best for building a long-term personal research vault. It stores notes as local Markdown files, supports backlinks, and works offline. ([help.obsidian.md](https://help.obsidian.md/data-storage?utm_source=openai)) - **Logseq** — best if you like outlining and daily journal-based note capture. Its core strength is bi-directional linking at both page and block level. ([blog.logseq.com](https://blog.logseq.com/logseq-and-the-rise-of-the-integrated-thinking-environment/)) - **Notion** — best for collaborative research or a shared lab/team wiki. It centralizes docs, notes, tasks, and databases in one workspace. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/product/wikis)) **My quick pick:** - **Solo academic research:** Zotero + Obsidian - **Team research:** Notion - **Daily capture / outlines:** Logseq If you want, I can also give you a **best-by-use-case ranking** (students, academic papers, qualitative research, lab teams, etc.).
What are the best note-taking apps for saving web clippings? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best note-taking apps for web clippings: 1. **Evernote** — best overall for clipping full articles, PDFs, and screenshots. - Strong browser clipper, search, tags, annotations - Good if you want a “digital filing cabinet” 2. **Notion** — best if you want clippings inside a bigger workspace. - Easy to clip pages into databases or notes - Great for research, project boards, and organization - Web clipper is solid, but not as polished as Evernote’s 3. **OneNote** — best free option for clipping and note organization. - Microsoft’s web clipper works well - Good for mixed media notes and handwritten annotations - Especially nice if you use Microsoft 365 4. **Pocket** — best for saving articles to read later, not full note-taking. - Clean saving, highlights, tags, offline reading - Better for article storage than structured notes 5. **Raindrop.io** — best for clipping and bookmarking links visually. - Great for organizing web pages, screenshots, and PDFs - More bookmark manager than note app, but excellent for web saves 6. **Apple Notes** — best simple option for Apple users. - Quick share-sheet clipping from Safari - Fast, easy, and built into iPhone/Mac - Not as powerful for large-scale clipping **My quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Evernote - **Best for work/research:** Notion - **Best free:** OneNote - **Best for read-it-later:** Pocket - **Best for bookmarks + clippings:** Raindrop.io If you want, I can also recommend the **best one for Mac/iPhone, Windows/Android, or the cheapest option**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Best picks for saving web clippings: - **Obsidian + Obsidian Web Clipper** — best if you want local-first, Markdown notes, templates, and lots of control. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/obsidian-web-clipper/id6720708363?utm_source=openai)) - **Evernote** — best for a classic “save anything from the web” workflow, with clipping, screenshots, highlights, tags, and easy organization. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/evernote-web-clipper/id1481669779?utm_source=openai)) - **Microsoft OneNote** — best if you’re in the Microsoft ecosystem; the Web Clipper can save full pages or article/recipe/product views into notebooks. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/getting-started-with-the-onenote-web-clipper-5696609d-c5ae-4591-b3af-1f897cb6eda6?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — best if you want clippings to live inside a broader workspace for notes, databases, and projects; Notion includes a Web Clipper. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/Notion-APP-f5108091f906487ab238c4a524000ee9?utm_source=openai)) - **Raindrop.io** — best if your main job is collecting links, highlights, and readable previews; it’s more bookmark manager than note app, but very strong for clipping web content. ([help.raindrop.io](https://help.raindrop.io/browser-extension?utm_source=openai)) **My quick ranking:** 1. **Obsidian** for power users 2. **Evernote** for easiest all-around clipping 3. **OneNote** for Microsoft users 4. **Notion** for workspace + notes 5. **Raindrop.io** for bookmark-heavy research If you want, I can narrow this down to **best free**, **best for research**, or **best for iPhone/Mac**.
What are the best note-taking apps for keeping personal journals? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best note-taking apps for personal journaling: 1. **Day One** - Best overall for journaling - Clean interface, daily prompts, photos, audio, location, and strong privacy features - Great if you want a true digital journal 2. **Journey** - Good cross-platform journaling app - Syncs across devices, supports photos/mood tracking, and feels easy to use - Nice balance of journaling and note-taking 3. **Bear** - Best for Apple users who want a beautiful writing app - Simple, distraction-free, great tagging system - Better for text-heavy journals than multimedia 4. **Evernote** - Best if you want journaling plus broader note organization - Strong search, web clipping, attachments, and structure - Less “journal-like,” but very capable 5. **Microsoft OneNote** - Best free option for flexible note-based journaling - Works well for mixed media, handwriting, and organization - Good if you already use Microsoft tools 6. **Notion** - Best for customized journal systems - You can build trackers, templates, and databases - Powerful, but more setup than the others **My quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Day One - **Best free:** OneNote - **Best for customization:** Notion - **Best for Apple-only users:** Bear If you want, I can also rank them by **privacy, price, or simplicity**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for personal journaling: - **Day One** — best overall for journaling. It’s built for private journaling, has end-to-end encryption by default, and works on iPhone, Android, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, and web. ([dayoneapp.com](https://dayoneapp.com/features/end-to-end-encryption/)) - **Apple Notes** — best simple option if you’re in the Apple ecosystem. You can lock notes with a device passcode or custom password, plus Face ID/Touch ID. ([support.apple.com](https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT205794)) - **Bear** — best for Apple users who want a beautiful writing app. It supports note encryption and uses iCloud/Advanced Data Protection for syncing. ([bear.app](https://bear.app/faq/syncing-privacy/)) - **Journey** — best cross-platform alternative. It’s available on Android, iOS, Mac, PC, Linux, web, and email, with end-to-end encryption and shared-journal options. ([help.journey.cloud](https://help.journey.cloud/en/article/what-is-journey-1cmxhui/)) - **Daylio** — best if you want mood tracking plus light journaling. It supports quick entries, charts, and app-level locking with PIN, fingerprint, or Face ID. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/)) - **Notion** — best if you want a highly customizable journal system with templates. Notion has a personal journal template in its marketplace and supports apps for iOS/Android/Mac/Windows plus web access. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/templates/personal-journal-878)) If you want, I can also give you: 1. **best free options**, 2. **best private/secure options**, or 3. **best for iPhone vs Android**.
What are the best note-taking apps for minimalist note taking? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
If you want **minimalist note-taking**, the best apps are usually the ones that stay out of your way: ### Best overall - **Apple Notes** — simplest if you’re on iPhone/Mac. Fast, clean, surprisingly capable. - **Google Keep** — great for ultra-quick notes, checklists, and reminders. ### Best for writing-focused minimalism - **Bear** — beautiful, distraction-free, Markdown-based, excellent on Apple devices. - **iA Writer** — best for very focused plain-text writing and clean organization. ### Best cross-platform minimalist option - **Simplenote** — lightweight, free, syncs across devices, very bare-bones. - **Standard Notes** — minimal interface with strong privacy/security. ### Best if you want a tiny bit more structure - **Notion** — not as minimal as the others, but can be kept clean if you use only a simple notes setup. - **Craft** — polished and elegant, with a more minimal feel than Notion. ### My quick picks - **iPhone/Mac:** Apple Notes or Bear - **Android/Windows/Web:** Google Keep or Simplenote - **Privacy-first:** Standard Notes - **Writing-first:** iA Writer If you want, I can narrow it down to the **best 3 for your device**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **minimalist note taking**, my top picks are: 1. **Simplenote** — best if you want the cleanest, no-frills app. It’s free, cross-platform, syncs automatically, supports Markdown, and is built around fast text notes. ([simplenote.com](https://simplenote.com/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Apple Notes** — best if you’re already in the Apple ecosystem. It’s built into Apple devices and is great for quick capture with very little setup. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/notes/id1110145109?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Bear** — best if you want minimalist *and* pretty. It’s Apple-only, but very polished for distraction-free writing. ([blog.bear.app](https://blog.bear.app/2025/01/go-paperless-with-bear/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Obsidian** — best if you want minimalist writing on the surface, but with room to grow later. It stores notes locally, works offline, and uses open file formats. ([obsidian.md](https://obsidian.md/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick recommendation:** - **Simplenote** = simplest overall - **Apple Notes** = easiest on iPhone/Mac - **Bear** = nicest minimalist design - **Obsidian** = simplest “serious” option if you may expand later ([simplenote.com](https://simplenote.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **1-app recommendation based on your device** (iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac, or web-only).
What are the best alternatives to the leading all-in-one note app? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
If you mean **Notion**, the best alternatives are: - **Obsidian** — best for power users, backlinks, local-first, Markdown - **Evernote** — best for simple capture + web clipping - **Microsoft OneNote** — best free-form notebook style and handwriting - **Craft** — best polished writing and docs on Apple devices - **Anytype** — best privacy-focused, local-first Notion-style app - **Capacities** — best for object-based knowledge management - **UpNote** — best lightweight, affordable note app - **Notesnook** — best encrypted notes with a clean UI - **Coda** — best for docs + databases + lightweight workflows - **Tana** — best for structured notes and advanced knowledge graphs **Quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Obsidian - **Best Notion-like:** Anytype or Capacities - **Best free:** OneNote - **Best for privacy:** Notesnook or Anytype - **Best for writing:** Craft If you want, I can also give you the **best alternative by use case** (work, personal, students, teams, privacy, etc.).
retrieval Not mentioned
Assuming you mean **Notion**, the best alternatives are: - **Microsoft OneNote** — best free all-rounder for messy, flexible notes, research, and sketching. Microsoft says it’s a single place for notes, research, plans, and information across devices. ([microsoft.com](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/onenote/digital-note-taking-app?utm_source=openai)) - **Obsidian** — best for personal knowledge management if you want local Markdown files, strong linking, and a graph view. Obsidian’s help docs show internal links, graph view, and sync/publish options. ([help.obsidian.md](https://help.obsidian.md/plugins/graph?utm_source=openai)) - **Evernote** — best if your workflow is web clipping, tasks, and calendar-connected notes. Evernote’s official pages highlight Web Clipper, Tasks, and Calendar/Home features. ([evernote.com](https://evernote.com/features/webclipper?utm_source=openai)) - **Google Keep** — best for quick capture and simple lists. Google says it supports notes, lists, photos, drawings, audio, reminders, and real-time sync. ([workspace.google.com](https://workspace.google.com/products/keep/?utm_source=openai)) My quick pick: - **Best overall:** OneNote - **Best for power users:** Obsidian - **Best for web clipping:** Evernote - **Best for simplicity:** Google Keep If you want, I can narrow this to **best for students / teams / ADHD / privacy / free use**.
What are the best alternatives to a popular note-taking app for teams? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you mean **Evernote/Notion-style team notes**, the best alternatives are: - **Notion** — best all-around for docs, wikis, tasks, and databases - **Coda** — best for teams that want docs + lightweight app-like workflows - **Confluence** — best for larger companies already using Jira/Atlassian - **Slite** — best for simple team knowledge bases and meeting notes - **Nuclino** — best for fast, minimal, easy-to-use team wiki docs - **Guru** — best for company knowledge that needs verification and search - **Dropbox Paper** — best for lightweight collaborative notes **Quick pick:** - **Small teams/startups:** Notion or Slite - **Engineering/product teams:** Confluence or Coda - **Simple internal wiki:** Nuclino or Slite - **Knowledge base with approvals:** Guru If you want, I can also give you the **best alternative by team size, budget, or feature set**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you mean **Notion**, the best team alternatives are usually: - **Confluence** — best for structured company docs, wikis, and meeting notes, especially if your team already uses Jira. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/team-documentation?utm_source=openai)) - **Coda** — best if you want docs that behave more like lightweight apps, with strong collaboration and team hubs. ([coda.io](https://coda.io/product/docs-and-team-hubs?utm_source=openai)) - **Slab** — best for a clean, wiki-first knowledge base that’s easy for teams to maintain. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/features/?utm_source=openai)) - **Evernote Teams / Enterprise** — best for note-heavy teams that want shared notebooks, tasks, and strong search. ([evernote.com](https://evernote.com/en-us/teams?utm_source=openai)) - **ClickUp Docs** — best if you want notes tied tightly to tasks, wikis, and work management in one place. ([clickup.com](https://clickup.com/features/knowledge-management?utm_source=openai)) - **Google Docs + Drive + Keep** — best if your team wants the simplest, most familiar collaboration stack. ([workspace.google.com](https://workspace.google.com/essentials/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall for teams:** Confluence - **Best for flexible docs + workflows:** Coda - **Best for a simple internal wiki:** Slab - **Best for task-heavy teams:** ClickUp If you want, I can narrow this down by team size, budget, or whether you need a wiki, meeting notes, or project docs.
What are the best alternatives to a note app that focuses on databases and pages? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
If you mean **Notion-style apps with pages + databases**, the best alternatives are: - **Coda** — best overall if you want powerful docs, tables, formulas, and automation in one app. - **Craft** — best for beautiful pages and polished writing, with lighter database features. - **Anytype** — best privacy-focused local-first alternative with objects/pages and linked databases. - **Capacities** — best if you like “objects” instead of folders, with strong linking and database-like organization. - **ClickUp Docs** — best if you also want task/project management alongside notes and databases. - **Obsidian + Dataview** — best for power users who want Markdown notes with database-like views via plugins. Quick picks: - **Closest to Notion:** Coda - **Best design:** Craft - **Best privacy:** Anytype - **Best for linked knowledge bases:** Capacities - **Best if you want full control:** Obsidian If you want, I can also narrow it down by **personal use, team use, or self-hosted options**.
retrieval Mentioned
If you want **Notion-like databases + pages**, the best alternatives are usually: - **Coda** — best if you want docs that also behave like mini-apps, with tables, views, cross-doc sync, and links between pages/tables. ([help.coda.io](https://help.coda.io/hc/en-us/articles/39555955457165-Navigate-your-doc-via-the-doc-map?utm_source=openai)) - **Capacities** — best for a more modern “objects” model: notes become structured items with properties and multiple views. ([capacities.io](https://capacities.io/product?utm_source=openai)) - **Anytype** — best if privacy/local-first matters; it supports pages/docs plus collections and queries for structured organization. ([doc.anytype.io](https://doc.anytype.io/?utm_source=openai)) - **Tana** — best for power users who want a knowledge graph with supertags, fields, and views instead of rigid databases. ([tana.inc](https://tana.inc/knowledge-graph?utm_source=openai)) - **Craft** — best if you want beautiful pages and nested docs, but with less database complexity than Notion/Coda. ([support.craft.do](https://support.craft.do/hc/en-us/articles/360019555537-Documents-Pages-and-Blocks?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Most similar to “databases + pages”**: Coda - **Best structured personal knowledge app**: Capacities - **Best privacy-first option**: Anytype - **Best for graph-style thinking**: Tana - **Best for elegant docs/pages**: Craft If you want, I can narrow this to **free**, **offline-first**, or **best for teams**.
What are the best alternatives to a note app built for fast capture and search? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want **fast capture + great search**, the best alternatives are: - **Obsidian** — best if you want a fast, local, plain-text note system with strong search and links. - **Drafts** — best for instant capture on iPhone/Mac; then send notes anywhere. - **Bear** — very fast, clean, excellent tagging and search on Apple devices. - **Apple Notes** — surprisingly strong for quick capture, scanning, and search; simplest if you’re in Apple’s ecosystem. - **Google Keep** — best for ultra-fast, lightweight notes, lists, voice, and quick search. - **Evernote** — still one of the strongest for search, web clipping, and mixed content. - **OneNote** — good if you want freeform note-taking and Microsoft integration. - **Simplenote** — minimal, fast, and good for plain-text search. **Best picks by use case:** - **Fastest capture:** Drafts, Google Keep - **Best search:** Evernote, Obsidian - **Best simple Apple option:** Bear, Apple Notes - **Best all-around power user option:** Obsidian If you tell me your device setup (iPhone/Mac, Android/Windows, etc.), I can narrow it to the top 3.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **fast capture + strong search**, the best alternatives are: 1. **Drafts** — best pure capture app. It opens ready to type, and has quick capture via Siri/widgets/share extension/dictation plus a fast search/command palette. ([docs.getdrafts.com](https://docs.getdrafts.com/gettingstarted/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Bear** — best if you want a clean writing app with very fast search and quick open for notes/tags/sections. It also supports advanced search operators. ([bear.app](https://bear.app/faq/how-to-search-notes-in-bear/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Obsidian** — best if you want local Markdown, keyboard-driven search, tags, and powerful automation/URI workflows. ([help.obsidian.md](https://help.obsidian.md/plugins/quick-switcher?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Apple Notes** — best default option on iPhone/Mac for simple quick thoughts and built-in search. ([support.apple.com](https://support.apple.com/en-mo/118442?utm_source=openai)) 5. **OneNote** — best if you need search across lots of notes, handwriting, images, and Microsoft 365 integration. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/search-notes-in-onenote-539c3b56-accb-4e16-834d-61a6252ad65b?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Fastest capture:** Drafts - **Best all-around for search + writing:** Bear - **Best power-user knowledge base:** Obsidian If you want, I can narrow this to **iPhone-only**, **Mac-only**, or **cross-platform**.
What are the best alternatives to a note app designed for markdown users? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best markdown-friendly note app alternatives: - **Obsidian** — best overall for local Markdown vaults, backlinks, plugins. - **Logseq** — great for outlining, daily notes, and knowledge graphs. - **Joplin** — solid open-source option with sync and good Markdown support. - **Typora** — best for distraction-free writing and clean Markdown editing. - **Bear** — polished and simple, great if you use Apple devices. - **Anytype** — strong if you want a private, offline-first personal knowledge base. - **Notion** — best if you want databases and collaboration more than pure Markdown. If you want, I can narrow this down by **Windows/Mac/mobile**, **offline-first**, or **best for heavy Markdown writing**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **Markdown-first note apps**, the best alternatives are usually: - **Obsidian** — best all-around if you want fast local Markdown files, backlinks, graph view, plugins, and sync options. ([help.obsidian.md](https://help.obsidian.md/plugins?utm_source=openai)) - **Joplin** — best if you want open source, Markdown notes, offline-first access, and built-in end-to-end encryption. ([joplinapp.org](https://joplinapp.org/help/?utm_source=openai)) - **Logseq** — best for local-first, outliner-style note taking with Markdown files and bidirectional linking. ([blog.logseq.com](https://blog.logseq.com/logseq-raises-4-1m-to-accelerate-growth-of-the-new-world-knowledge-graph/?utm_source=openai)) - **Standard Notes** — best for privacy/security; it supports Markdown and is centered on encrypted notes across devices. ([standardnotes.com](https://standardnotes.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Bear** — best if you’re on Apple devices and want a polished writing experience with Markdown and easy export. ([bear.app](https://bear.app/faq/how-to-use-markdown-in-bear/?utm_source=openai)) - **Zettlr** — best for academic/research writing and Markdown-heavy workflows, with strong citation and project support. ([zettlr.com](https://www.zettlr.com/features?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - Most people: **Obsidian** - Privacy-first: **Joplin** or **Standard Notes** - Outline / knowledge graph: **Logseq** - Apple-only writing app: **Bear** - Research / Zettelkasten: **Zettlr** If you want, I can narrow this to **the best 3 for your exact workflow** (privacy, syncing, mobile, or knowledge graph).
What are the best alternatives to a note app with strong web clipping features? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are the best Evernote-style alternatives if **web clipping** is a top priority: 1. **Notion** Best all-around if you want clips to become part of a flexible workspace. - Good web clipper for full pages, simplified articles, screenshots - Great for databases, projects, and team use - Less ideal for “offline-first” note-taking 2. **OneNote** Best for freeform clipping and mixed media. - Strong clipper for pages, screenshots, and annotated snippets - Very good if you’re already in Microsoft 365 - Search and organization are solid, though less modern than some rivals 3. **Readwise Reader** Best for saving and reading articles, newsletters, and highlights. - Excellent web clipping for articles and long-form content - Powerful highlighting, tagging, and export to note apps - Best if your workflow is “clip → read → export” 4. **Obsidian + Web Clipper** Best for people who want local Markdown notes and serious knowledge management. - New Obsidian Web Clipper works well for pages and selections - Highly customizable with plugins - Best if you like owning your files and don’t need a polished all-in-one cloud app 5. **Raindrop.io** Best for clipping and bookmarking websites, not full note-taking. - Excellent save/bookmark workflow - Great tagging, collections, and visual preview - Pair it with another note app if you want deeper note-taking 6. **Evernote** Still worth mentioning if clipping is your main need. - One of the strongest web clippers available - Good OCR and search - Expensive compared with newer options **Quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for reading/clipping articles:** Readwise Reader - **Best for local control:** Obsidian - **Best for pure bookmarking:** Raindrop.io If you want, I can also rank these by **price**, **privacy**, or **best mobile clipper**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If web clipping is the main requirement, my top picks are: - **Evernote** — best all-around replacement for a classic note app with a mature Web Clipper for full pages, articles, PDFs, screenshots, tags, and notebooks. ([evernote.com](https://evernote.com/features/webclipper?utm_source=openai)) - **Obsidian** — best if you want local files and long-term control; its free, open-source Web Clipper can capture pages, highlight, use templates, and save straight into your vault. ([obsidian.md](https://obsidian.md/clipper?utm_source=openai)) - **OneNote** — best free Microsoft-friendly option; the Web Clipper can save full pages, regions, or article/recipe/product views, and you can annotate them. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/getting-started-with-the-onenote-web-clipper-5696609d-c5ae-4591-b3af-1f897cb6eda6?utm_source=openai)) - **Readwise Reader** — best for serious reading workflow; it’s designed for saving articles, highlighting, annotating, and syncing reading highlights across web, PDFs, newsletters, and more. ([readwise.io](https://readwise.io/reader?utm_source=openai)) - **Raindrop.io** — best if clipping/bookmarking is the priority more than note-taking; it saves pages, supports browser extensions, full-text search, and permanent copies. ([raindrop.io](https://raindrop.io/?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — good if you want clipping inside a broader workspace; Notion Web Clipper can save pages and links directly into databases/lists. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/Notion-APP-f5108091f906487ab238c4a524000ee9?utm_source=openai)) **Quick recommendation:** - Want the closest Evernote-style experience? **Evernote** - Want best ownership/local-first? **Obsidian** - Want best reading/highlighting workflow? **Readwise Reader** - Want free + simple? **OneNote** If you want, I can narrow this to **best free**, **best for research**, or **best for personal knowledge management**.
What are the best alternatives to a note app for students and lectures? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best alternatives depend on *how* you study: - **Audio recorder** — great for lectures you want to replay - **Sony ICD-UX570** - **Zoom H1n** - **Philips VoiceTracer** - **Tablet + stylus** — best all-around replacement for paper notes - **iPad + Apple Pencil** - **Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 FE + S Pen** - **Microsoft Surface Go / Pro + Surface Pen** - **Smart pen + paper** — writes on paper but saves digital copies - **Livescribe Symphony** - **Neo Smartpen M1+** - **Scanner app / document camera** — for capturing handouts, whiteboards, slides - **Microsoft Lens** - **Adobe Scan** - Hardware: **Ipevo V4K** document camera - **Voice-to-text tools** — good if you prefer speaking over typing - **Otter.ai** - **Notta** - **Apple Voice Memos + transcription tools** - **Paper notebook + organized binder system** — still one of the best for retention - **Rocketbook Fusion** - **Muji notebooks** - **Leuchtturm1917** + tab dividers If you want, I can also rank these by **budget**, **best for medical/law lectures**, or **best for ADHD/distraction-free studying**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you mean **alternatives to typing notes by hand in one app**, the best options for students/lectures are: 1. **Otter** — best for **lecture transcription + searchable audio notes**. It records conversations and creates transcripts, speaker IDs, and key phrases, and it’s explicitly aimed at lectures and classes. ([otter.ai](https://otter.ai/assistant?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Microsoft OneNote** — best for **audio + written notes together**. OneNote can record audio/video notes, and on Windows it supports transcription with ink playback so your handwriting syncs with the recording. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/record-audio-or-video-notes-b90fa4a2-253b-47ec-99bd-c9b368268465?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Notability** — best for **handwritten lecture notes and PDF annotation**. It supports handwritten notes, PDF markup, audio recording/transcription, and study tools like quizzes and flashcards. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/cy/app/notability-smarter-ai-notes/id360593530?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Quizlet** — best for **turning class material into flashcards** instead of long notes. Its Flashcards mode and Learn mode are built for active recall and review. ([quizlet.com](https://quizlet.com/features/study-modes?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Apple Notes / a document scanner like Notebloc** — best for **quick capture of slides, handouts, and paper notes**. Apple Notes can scan documents on iPhone/iPad, and Notebloc scans pages to PDF with OCR text extraction. ([support.apple.com](https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT210336?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - Mostly lectures? **Otter** - Handwriting on iPad? **Notability** - Want one flexible workspace? **OneNote** - Studying for exams? **Quizlet** - Mostly scanning slides/handouts? **Apple Notes** or **Notebloc** If you want, I can narrow this to the **best free options**, **best iPad options**, or **best for STEM vs humanities**.
What are the best alternatives to a note app for handwriting and tablets? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best alternatives depend on what you want from handwriting: - **For distraction-free handwriting:** **reMarkable 2** or **reMarkable Paper Pro** - **For full-featured note taking:** **iPad Air / iPad Pro + Apple Pencil + Goodnotes or Notability** - **For Android tablets:** **Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 FE / S9 + S Pen + Samsung Notes** - **For e-ink + cloud sync:** **BOOX Note Air3 C** or **BOOX Tab Ultra C Pro** - **For simple digital notebooks:** **Moleskine Smart Writing Set** or **Rocketbook Core** Quick picks: - **Best overall:** iPad Air + Apple Pencil - **Best for paper-like writing:** reMarkable 2 - **Best Android option:** Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 FE - **Best if you read a lot of PDFs:** BOOX Note Air3 C If you tell me your budget and whether you want color, I can narrow it to 2–3 best options.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **something better than a generic note app for handwriting**, the best alternatives are: - **reMarkable Paper Pro / reMarkable 2** — best for a distraction-free, paper-like writing experience. reMarkable positions these as “paper tablets” with a very paper-like feel and note-taking focus. ([remarkable.com](https://remarkable.com/products/remarkable-paper/pro/details/compare?utm_source=openai)) - **iPad + Apple Pencil** — best all-around if you also want a normal tablet. Apple supports handwritten notes, Scribble handwriting-to-text, and handwriting refinement on recent iPads. ([support.apple.com](https://support.apple.com/en-afri/guide/ipad/-ipada87a6078/ipados?utm_source=openai)) - **Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 / S9 + S Pen** — best Android option for handwriting, PDF markup, and note features in Samsung Notes. Samsung says the S Pen supports writing/drawing and handwriting-to-text, and the Tab S10 series adds Note Assist features. ([samsung.com](https://www.samsung.com/us/support/answer/ANS10003772/?utm_source=openai)) - **Microsoft Surface Pro + Slim Pen** — best if you want a tablet that can also replace a laptop. Microsoft highlights handwritten notes, PDF annotation, and handwriting-to-text with Surface Slim Pen and OneNote. ([microsoft.com](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/surface/do-more-with-surface/touchscreen-laptop-with-pen-support-a-more-natural-way-to-work?utm_source=openai)) - **Nebo** — best handwriting-to-text app if you still want an app, but a much more handwriting-first one. Nebo emphasizes highly accurate recognition, search across handwritten notes, and export to Word/PDF. ([nebo.app](https://www.nebo.app/features/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Just handwriting, no distractions:** reMarkable - **Best overall tablet:** iPad - **Best Android tablet:** Galaxy Tab S10/S9 - **Best laptop-tablet hybrid:** Surface Pro - **Best handwriting conversion:** Nebo If you want, I can narrow this to **best budget**, **best for students**, or **best for sketching**.
What are the best alternatives to a note app with strong collaboration tools? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are the best note-app alternatives if you want **strong collaboration**: 1. **Notion** Best all-around collaborative notes/wiki app. Great for shared docs, databases, task tracking, comments, mentions, and permissions. 2. **Coda** Best for teams that want notes + lightweight project management in one place. Strong real-time collaboration, tables, automations, and docs that act like apps. 3. **Google Docs + Google Drive** Best simple choice for live co-editing. Extremely reliable for comments, suggestions, sharing, and version history. 4. **Microsoft OneNote** Best if your team uses Microsoft 365. Good shared notebooks, section structure, and easy collaboration inside Outlook/Teams workflows. 5. **Confluence** Best for bigger teams and internal knowledge bases. Strong permissions, team spaces, page history, and Jira integration. 6. **Slite** Best lightweight team knowledge base. Clean, easy collaboration, good for meeting notes, docs, and onboarding. 7. **Evernote Teams** Best if you already like Evernote’s note style. Shared notebooks, search, and decent team organization. **Quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for live co-editing:** Google Docs - **Best for team documentation:** Confluence - **Best Microsoft option:** OneNote - **Best simple team wiki:** Slite If you want, I can narrow this down by **team size**, **budget**, or whether you need **tasks + notes** or just **collaborative note-taking**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want a **note app with strong collaboration**, my top picks are: 1. **Notion** — best all-around for shared notes, docs, and team hubs. It supports page sharing, advanced permissions, and real-time comments. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/Help-Center-42e9c365194e49b2a7acd651f12c8cf7?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Coda** — best if you want notes plus workflows/tables. It’s built as a collaborative workspace with docs, hubs, and real-time collaboration features. ([coda.io](https://coda.io/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Nuclino** — best lightweight team wiki/note system. It has real-time editing, comments, mentions, and comment-only roles. ([nuclino.com](https://www.nuclino.com/use-cases/docs?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Slite** — best for team notes and meeting/wiki workflows. Its editor is real-time and designed for collaborative writing. ([slite.com](https://slite.com/editor?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Google Docs / Workspace** — best for pure collaboration and external sharing. It supports simultaneous editing, comments, suggestions, and version history. ([workspace.google.com](https://workspace.google.com/intl/en_ph/resources/real-time-editing/?utm_source=openai)) 6. **OneNote** — best if your team already lives in Microsoft 365. Microsoft supports sharing notebooks and co-authoring/collaboration in OneNote and Office apps. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/use-a-screen-reader-to-share-and-collaborate-on-notebooks-in-onenote-5d24979d-4243-431d-bf19-a2157476d5ca?utm_source=openai)) **Quick recommendation:** - **Most flexible:** Notion - **Most collaborative “doc as app”:** Coda - **Simplest team wiki:** Nuclino - **Best for meetings/knowledge base:** Slite - **Best for live co-editing with outsiders:** Google Docs If you want, I can also narrow this down by **team size**, **budget**, or **personal vs. team use**.
What are the best alternatives to a note app for personal knowledge management? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best alternatives depend on what you want PKM to do: - **Outliner / thinking tool:** - **Workflowy** - **Dynalist** Great for structured thinking, nested ideas, and quick capture. - **Task + knowledge hybrid:** - **Todoist** - **Things 3** (Mac/iOS) - **TickTick** Better if your “knowledge” is mostly action-oriented. - **Document / file-based PKM:** - **DEVONthink** (Mac) - **Google Drive / Dropbox + folders** Good for PDFs, clippings, scans, and long-term archive organization. - **Bookmarking / web knowledge:** - **Raindrop.io** - **Pocket** Best if most of your source material is from the web. - **Mind mapping / idea synthesis:** - **MindNode** - **XMind** Useful for connecting concepts visually. - **Personal wiki / structured reference:** - **Notion** - **Coda** - **Obsidian** These are still note-adjacent, but better as knowledge systems than simple notes. - **Read-it-later + highlights:** - **Readwise Reader** - **Readwise** Strong for building a searchable knowledge library from articles/books. If you want the **best non-note-app setup**, I’d usually suggest: **Raindrop.io + Readwise Reader + Workflowy or DEVONthink**. If you tell me whether you want **capture, retrieval, or synthesis** most, I can narrow it to the best 3 options.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **PKM that goes beyond a plain note app**, the best alternatives are: - **Obsidian** — best for a local-first, markdown-based personal knowledge base with links, graph view, plugins, and a lot of customization. ([help.obsidian.md](https://help.obsidian.md/?utm_source=openai)) - **Logseq** — best if you like outliners, block references, and a local-first “networked thinking” style. ([blog.logseq.com](https://blog.logseq.com/logseq-raises-4-1m-to-accelerate-growth-of-the-new-world-knowledge-graph/?utm_source=openai)) - **Capacities** — best for an “objects, not files” model: people, books, projects, ideas, with backlinks and structured properties. ([capacities.io](https://capacities.io/?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — best if you want PKM plus docs, wikis, databases, and collaboration in one workspace. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/notion/Getting-Started-with-Notion-f0e1a6d326d84d6984d948da96965045?utm_source=openai)) - **Amplenote** — best if your PKM needs to merge notes with tasks and scheduling. ([amplenote.com](https://www.amplenote.com/subscriptions/new?utm_source=openai)) - **Evernote** — best if you want notes tightly integrated with tasks and strong search. ([help.evernote.com](https://help.evernote.com/hc/en-us/articles/1500003792141-Tasks-Overview?utm_source=openai)) Quick pick: - **Most flexible:** Obsidian - **Best structured thinking:** Capacities - **Best for outlines:** Logseq - **Best all-in-one team/wiki:** Notion - **Best for notes + tasks:** Amplenote If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **best-by-use-case shortlist**, or 2. a **“switch from Apple Notes / OneNote / Notion” comparison**.
How do I keep all my notes in one place? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Use **one “home” app** and make everything else funnel into it. ### Good all-in-one note apps - **Apple Notes** — best if you’re mostly in Apple devices - **Microsoft OneNote** — great for mixed devices and freeform notebooks - **Notion** — best if you want notes + tasks + databases - **Obsidian** — best for plain-text, local files, and long-term control - **Evernote** — easy web clipping and scanning, but less popular now ### Simple system 1. **Pick one main app** 2. **Create 4 folders/notebooks**: - Inbox - Work - Personal - Reference 3. **Capture everything immediately** into Inbox 4. **Review once a week** and move notes into the right place 5. **Keep a consistent title format** - Example: `2026-04-Project meeting` 6. **Use tags sparingly** - Example: `#idea`, `#receipt`, `#todo` ### If you want the easiest setup - **iPhone/Mac:** Apple Notes - **Windows/Android/Mac mix:** OneNote - **All-in-one life/work system:** Notion - **Privacy/control:** Obsidian If you want, I can recommend the **best one for your devices and style**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Pick **one “home base” app** and make everything flow into it. A simple system: - **Use one notes app**: Apple Notes, Notion, Obsidian, Evernote, or OneNote. - **Create a few folders only**: Inbox, Personal, Work, Reference. - **Capture first, sort later**: dump every note into Inbox. - **Set a weekly cleanup**: move notes into the right folder/tag. - **Use search instead of nesting too much**. - **Stop duplicating notes** across apps; archive old ones into your main app. Best all-around picks: - **Apple Notes** if you’re on iPhone/Mac and want simplicity. - **Notion** if you want databases, docs, and projects. - **Obsidian** if you want plain-text, local files, and long-term control. - **OneNote** if you live in Microsoft/Windows. If you want, I can recommend the **best single app** for your devices and style.
How do I organize notes so I can find them later? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Use a simple system you’ll actually keep using: 1. **Pick one main app** - **Obsidian** = best for linking notes, local files - **Notion** = best for databases and project notes - **Apple Notes** = simplest if you use Apple devices - **Microsoft OneNote** = great for notebooks/sections style - **Evernote** = solid web clipping and search 2. **Use a 3-part structure** - **Inbox** = quick dump for new notes - **Topics/Projects** = active stuff - **Archive** = finished/old notes 3. **Name notes clearly** - Good: `2026-04-22 Meeting with Alex` - Good: `Budget ideas for apartment` - Bad: `Notes`, `Stuff`, `Misc` 4. **Add 3 kinds of tags max** - `#project` - `#idea` - `#reference` Keep tags limited so they stay useful. 5. **Start every note with a short summary** - 1–2 lines at the top: what it is and why it matters. 6. **Link related notes** - In **Obsidian** or **Notion**, link from one note to another instead of duplicating info. 7. **Review weekly** - Move inbox notes into the right place - Delete junk - Rename unclear notes If you want the easiest setup: **Apple Notes + folders + smart titles** is simplest. If you want the best long-term system: **Obsidian**. If you want, I can give you a **ready-made folder/tag setup** for your work, school, or personal notes.
retrieval Not mentioned
Use a simple system you’ll actually maintain: - **One home**: keep all notes in one app or one folder. - **3–7 top-level categories**: e.g. Work, School, Health, Money, Ideas, Personal. - **Strong titles**: `Project — topic — date`, e.g. `Taxes — Q1 receipts — 2026-04-22`. - **Tags for cross-cutting topics**: use a few, not dozens. - **Search-friendly bullets**: write keywords naturally so search works. - **Archive old notes** instead of deleting them. - **Review weekly**: move, rename, or merge notes. A good structure: ```text Notes/ Work/ Personal/ Projects/ Reference/ Archive/ ``` If you want, I can suggest a system for **paper notes**, **Apple Notes**, **Notion**, or **Obsidian**.
How do I take better digital notes during meetings? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
A good digital note system for meetings is simple: ### 1) Use a consistent template Keep the same sections every time: - **Date / meeting name** - **Attendees** - **Agenda** - **Key points** - **Decisions** - **Action items** (owner + due date) - **Follow-ups** ### 2) Capture less, structure more Don’t try to transcribe everything. Focus on: - decisions - action items - numbers, dates, names - unresolved questions ### 3) Use fast note tools Good options: - **Notion** — best if you want organized meeting databases and templates - **Microsoft OneNote** — great for quick, flexible handwritten + typed notes - **Apple Notes** — simple and fast for Apple users - **Google Docs** — best for shared live notes - **Obsidian** — great if you want linked, searchable knowledge notes ### 4) Consider meeting transcription If you want to stay focused, use auto-transcription: - **Otter.ai** — solid live transcription and summaries - **Fireflies.ai** — good for searchable meeting notes - **Zoom AI Companion** — useful if you already use Zoom - **Microsoft Teams Copilot** — strong for Teams meetings ### 5) Use the right device If typing is slow or distracting: - **iPad + Apple Pencil + Goodnotes** — excellent for handwritten notes - **Surface Pro** — great hybrid laptop/tablet for meetings - **Remarkable 2** — very distraction-free if you prefer handwriting ### 6) End every meeting with a 30-second recap Before leaving, write: - 3 key takeaways - 3 action items - who owns each action If you want, I can give you a **meeting note template** for Notion, OneNote, or Google Docs.
retrieval Not mentioned
Use a simple meeting-note system: - **Before the meeting:** write the agenda, goal, and 1–3 questions you need answered. - **During the meeting:** capture only: - decisions - action items - owners - deadlines - key facts / blockers - **Use a template** like: - **Topic** - **Decision** - **Action item** - **Owner** - **Due date** - **Write in shorthand** and skip full sentences. - **Highlight next steps immediately** so they don’t get buried. - **Review within 10 minutes after** and clean up typos, assign tasks, and add context. - **Keep one system** for all meetings so notes are searchable. If you want, I can give you a **meeting-notes template for Notion, Google Docs, or OneNote**.
How do I sync my notes across phone and laptop? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Use a notes app that syncs to the cloud on both devices. **Easy options:** - **Apple Notes** — best if you use iPhone + Mac - **Google Keep** — simple and free on phone/laptop via browser - **Microsoft OneNote** — good for Windows, Mac, Android, iPhone - **Evernote** — strong cross-platform syncing - **Notion** — good if you want notes + docs + databases **How to set it up:** 1. Install the app on your **phone** and **laptop**. 2. Sign in with the **same account** on both. 3. Turn on **sync** / **iCloud** / **Google account** / **Microsoft account**. 4. Make sure your device has internet access. 5. Create a test note on one device and check it appears on the other. **My quick pick:** - **iPhone + Mac:** Apple Notes - **Android + any laptop:** Google Keep or OneNote - **Best all-around:** OneNote If you tell me your phone and laptop models, I can recommend the best app for your setup.
retrieval Not mentioned
Use a notes app that supports cloud sync, then sign in on both devices. Common options: - **Apple Notes** → sync with **iCloud** - **Google Keep** → sync with your **Google account** - **Microsoft OneNote** → sync with **OneDrive** - **Evernote / Notion / Obsidian Sync** → app-specific syncing Basic steps: 1. Install the same notes app on your phone and laptop. 2. Sign in with the same account on both. 3. Turn on sync in the app settings. 4. Make sure both devices have internet access. 5. Wait a minute or two for notes to upload/download. If you want, tell me: - your **phone type** (iPhone or Android) - your **laptop** (Mac or Windows) - which **notes app** you use and I’ll give exact steps.
How do I clip articles and save them for later? problem 10/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Use a **read-it-later app** or a **clipping tool**. Best options: - **Pocket** — simplest for saving articles from the web. - **Instapaper** — clean reading view, great for long articles. - **Readwise Reader** — best if you want saving + highlighting + later review. - **Evernote** — good if you want to clip articles into notebooks with notes. - **Notion Web Clipper** — best if you already use Notion for organizing. How to do it: 1. Install the app or browser extension. 2. When you find an article, click **Save to Pocket / Instapaper / Clip to Notion**. 3. Add tags or folders if the app supports it. 4. Open the app later to read it offline or in a clean format. Quick pick: - **Easy + free:** Pocket - **Best reading experience:** Instapaper - **Best for serious research:** Readwise Reader If you want, I can recommend the best one for **iPhone, Android, or desktop**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Use a **read-it-later** app or browser bookmark system. **Quick options:** - **Pocket** or **Instapaper**: save articles from the web to read later. - **Browser bookmarks**: simplest if you just need a folder. - **Browser reading list**: built into Chrome, Safari, Edge, etc. - **Notion / Evernote / OneNote**: if you want notes plus clipping. **Typical workflow:** 1. Open the article. 2. Click **Share** / **Save** / **Clip** / browser extension. 3. Choose your destination app or folder. 4. Add tags if available. 5. Read later on phone, tablet, or desktop. **If you want the easiest setup:** - Install **Pocket** browser extension + mobile app. - Save with one click. - Use tags like `work`, `research`, `fun`. If you want, I can recommend the best option for **iPhone, Android, Chrome, Safari, or Notion**.
How do I make my notes searchable? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Make your notes searchable by using **digital text**, **OCR**, and **good organization**. ### Best methods - **Type notes instead of handwriting** when possible. - If you scan or photograph notes, use an app with **OCR (text recognition)** so it can search inside images/PDFs. - Use **consistent titles** and **tags** like `#taxes`, `#meeting`, `#recipe`. - Keep one note per topic and add a **summary at the top**. - Store files in apps that support **full-text search**. ### Good apps for searchable notes - **Evernote** — strong OCR and search - **Apple Notes** — simple, great if you’re in Apple’s ecosystem - **Microsoft OneNote** — good for handwritten notes + search - **Notion** — great for structured notes and databases - **Google Drive / Google Keep** — easy search for docs and quick notes ### If you have paper notes - Scan them with: - **Adobe Scan** - **Microsoft Lens** - **Scanbot** These can make handwritten or printed notes searchable, depending on quality. ### Quick setup 1. Pick one app. 2. Scan/import your old notes. 3. Add tags and clear titles. 4. Use OCR if notes are images or PDFs. 5. Back everything up. If you tell me whether your notes are **paper, handwritten, Apple Notes, OneNote, Notion, or PDFs**, I can recommend the best setup.
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Make them **text-based, consistent, and indexed**. Quick wins: - **Type notes instead of scanning handwriting** - Use a note app with **search** and **OCR** for images/PDFs - Add **titles, tags, and keywords** - Keep **one idea per note** - Use a simple structure like: - `#topic` - `#project` - `#date` - short summary at top If you use paper notes: - **Scan them** with OCR (e.g. Apple Notes, Google Drive, OneNote, Evernote, Notion) - Save files with clear names like `2026-04-22_meeting_notes.pdf` If you want, I can suggest the best setup for: - **iPhone/Mac** - **Android/Windows** - **paper notes**
How do I manage class notes and assignments together? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Use **one system for notes + tasks**: ### Simple setup 1. **Make one page/notebook per class** - Keep lecture notes, reading notes, and assignment info in the same place. 2. **Turn every assignment into a task** - Add: due date, class, priority, and link to the related notes. 3. **Review weekly** - Check upcoming deadlines, update notes, and break big assignments into smaller tasks. ### Good tools - **Notion** — best all-in-one for class pages, notes, and assignment trackers - **Microsoft OneNote** — great if you want freeform notes and section tabs - **Google Calendar** — best for due dates and reminders - **Todoist** — simple task manager for assignments and study steps - **Apple Notes** / **Google Keep** — quick capture if you want lightweight notes ### Easy workflow - In your notes app, create: - **Class Notes** - **Assignments** - **Exam Dates** - In your task app, add each assignment and paste the note link. - Use one color or tag per class so everything stays connected. ### Best combo - **Notion + Google Calendar** for organized students - **OneNote + Todoist** for a cleaner, simpler setup If you want, I can make you a **ready-to-use class notes + assignment template**.
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Use **one system with two parts**: **notes** and **tasks**. **Simple setup** - **Notes:** organize by class and date/topic. - **Assignments:** keep a separate task list with due dates. - Link them together by adding the assignment name in the relevant notes. **Easy workflow** 1. After class, write notes in that class’s folder/notebook. 2. At the bottom, add: - **Homework** - **Quiz/test** - **Questions to ask** 3. Put every assignment into a master list or planner. 4. Review both every day for 5 minutes. **Best tools** - **Paper:** one binder with dividers + a planner - **Digital:** Notion, OneNote, Google Docs + Google Calendar - **Hybrid:** handwritten notes, assignments in a calendar app **Good habit** - Use the same format every time: - Class - Date - Topic - Assignment - Due date If you want, I can make you a **simple template** for paper or digital notes.
How do I build a personal knowledge base? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
A good personal knowledge base is simple, searchable, and easy to maintain. ## 1) Pick one home base Best options: - **Obsidian** — best if you want files on your own device and strong linking. - **Notion** — best if you want a polished all-in-one workspace. - **Evernote** — best for fast clipping and scanned docs. - **Logseq** — best if you like outliner-style notes. If you’re unsure, start with **Obsidian**. ## 2) Use a basic structure Keep it shallow: - **Inbox** — quick capture - **Projects** — active work - **Areas** — ongoing responsibilities - **Resources** — reference notes - **Archive** — old stuff This is often called **PARA**. ## 3) Capture everything quickly Save: - ideas - book highlights - meeting notes - links - reminders Useful tools: - **Readwise Reader** for article highlights - **Pocket** for reading later - **Apple Notes** / **Google Keep** for fast mobile capture ## 4) Turn notes into useful notes For each note: - one topic per note - write in your own words - add links to related notes - include a short summary at the top Good note types: - **Atomic note**: one idea - **Source note**: notes from a book/article - **Project note**: goals, tasks, decisions ## 5) Make it easy to find Use: - clear titles - tags only when necessary - links between notes - search-friendly words Example titles: - `How to run weekly reviews` - `SQL joins explained` - `2026-04-Meeting with Alex` ## 6) Review regularly Set a weekly review: - process inbox - delete junk - link related notes - update active projects ## 7) Keep the system lightweight Don’t overbuild folders, tags, or templates. If it takes effort to file, you won’t use it. ## Simple starter setup If you want the easiest setup: - **Obsidian** - folder structure: Inbox / Projects / Resources / Archive - use **Readwise Reader** for highlights - use **Google Calendar** or **Todoist** for tasks If you want, I can give you a **ready-to-use Obsidian setup** with folder names, templates, and tags.
retrieval Not mentioned
Build it like a **second brain**: 1. **Pick one home** - Use one tool only: Notion, Obsidian, Apple Notes, OneNote, or a plain folder of markdown files. 2. **Define what goes in** - Notes from reading - Work references - Ideas - How-tos - Decisions - Meeting notes 3. **Use a simple structure** - `Inbox` for raw captures - `Projects` for active work - `Areas` for ongoing responsibilities - `Resources` for reference material - `Archive` for old stuff 4. **Capture first, organize later** - Don’t over-file in the moment. - Dump everything into Inbox, then process weekly. 5. **Write atomic notes** - One idea per note. - Give each note a clear title. - Add a short summary at the top. 6. **Link related ideas** - Connect notes to other notes. - Use tags sparingly. - Prefer links + short context over lots of folders. 7. **Create templates** - Example: - Title - Summary - Key points - Links - Next action 8. **Review regularly** - Daily: capture - Weekly: clean Inbox - Monthly: prune/archive 9. **Make it searchable** - Good titles - Consistent keywords - Keep filenames readable 10. **Focus on retrieval** - A knowledge base is only useful if you can find things fast. If you want, I can give you: - a **Notion setup** - an **Obsidian setup** - or a **minimal folder-based system**.
How do I keep handwritten notes on my tablet? problem 10/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Use a tablet with a stylus and a note app made for handwriting. Best setups: - **iPad + Apple Pencil + GoodNotes 6** (or **Notability**) - **Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 / S9 FE / S6 Lite + S Pen + Samsung Notes** - **reMarkable 2** if you want a very simple “digital paper” experience How to keep notes neatly: - Create **notebooks by subject** - Use **folders/tags** - Write with a **stylus** and choose **lined/grid templates** - Turn on **cloud sync** so notes back up automatically - Export important notes as **PDFs** If you want the easiest all-around option: **iPad + Apple Pencil + GoodNotes 6**. If you want Android: **Samsung Galaxy Tab S6 Lite + S Pen + Samsung Notes** is a great budget pick. If you want, I can recommend the best tablet under your budget.
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Use a **notes app with pen/stylus support**. Best options: - **iPad:** Apple Notes, GoodNotes, Notability, OneNote - **Android/Windows tablets:** Samsung Notes, OneNote, Nebo, Squid Quick setup: 1. Get a **stylus** if your tablet supports one. 2. Install a handwriting-friendly app. 3. Create notebooks/folders by subject. 4. Write with the pen tool; most apps also let you: - convert handwriting to text - search handwritten notes - insert PDFs/images - sync to cloud Good simple choices: - **Apple Notes**: free, easy, good for casual use - **GoodNotes**: best for organized notebooks - **Notability**: great for class notes and audio - **OneNote**: best cross-platform - **Samsung Notes**: excellent on Samsung tablets If you want, tell me your tablet model and I’ll suggest the best app.
How do I share notes with my team? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
The easiest way is to use a shared note app that supports team permissions. Good options: - **Notion** — best for team docs, task notes, and knowledge bases - **Google Docs / Google Keep** — simple sharing and real-time editing - **Microsoft OneNote** — good if your team uses Microsoft 365 - **Apple Notes** — fine for small Apple-only teams - **Evernote Teams** — useful for shared notebooks and clipping Typical steps: 1. Open the note. 2. Click **Share** or **Invite**. 3. Add teammates by email. 4. Set permissions: **view**, **comment**, or **edit**. 5. Send the invite. If you want, I can recommend the best app based on whether your team uses **Google, Microsoft, Apple, or Slack**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Depends on the app, but usually you can: 1. Open the note 2. Click **Share** or **Collaborate** 3. Invite teammates by **email** or **link** 4. Set permissions: - **View only** - **Can edit** - **Can comment** 5. Send it If you tell me **which notes app** you use (Apple Notes, Google Keep, Notion, OneNote, Evernote, etc.), I can give exact steps.
What is the best free note-taking app? transactional 880/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
**Best overall free note-taking app: _Microsoft OneNote_** Why: - truly free - works on **Windows, Mac, iPhone, Android, and web** - great for **typing, handwriting, images, audio, and organizing notebooks** - no major paywall for core features Other strong free options: - **Google Keep** — best for quick sticky-note style notes and reminders - **Apple Notes** — best if you’re fully in the Apple ecosystem - **Obsidian** — best for people who want powerful markdown notes and local storage If you want one simple pick: **OneNote**.
retrieval Not mentioned
**Best free note-taking app overall: OneNote.** It’s free to download and use, works across Windows, Mac, web, iPhone, Android, and supports cloud sync and collaboration. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/what-s-the-difference-between-the-onenote-versions-a624e692-b78b-4c09-b07f-46181958118f?utm_source=openai)) **If you use Apple devices:** **Apple Notes** is probably the easiest best free choice. It’s built in, free, and syncs with iCloud. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/notes/id1110145109?utm_source=openai)) **If you want the best free power-user option:** **Obsidian**. It’s free to use, stores notes locally as Markdown, and doesn’t require an account. ([obsidian.md](https://obsidian.md/blog/free-for-work/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you the **best free app by use case** (students, work, ADHD, offline, Apple-only, etc.).
What note-taking apps have a free plan? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are popular note-taking apps with a free plan: - **Apple Notes** — free on Apple devices - **Google Keep** — free - **Microsoft OneNote** — free - **Notion** — free personal plan - **Evernote** — free basic plan - **Simplenote** — free - **Obsidian** — free for personal use - **Zoho Notebook** — free - **Joplin** — free and open source - **Standard Notes** — free plan available If you want, I can also recommend the **best free note app for iPhone, Android, Windows, or cross-platform use**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes—some popular note apps with free plans are: - **Apple Notes** — free on Apple devices. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/notes/id1110145109?utm_source=openai)) - **Microsoft OneNote** — free apps/web access available. ([microsoft.com](https://www.microsoft.com/en-US/microsoft-365/onenote/digital-note-taking-app?utm_source=openai)) - **Google Keep** — Google’s note app for notes, lists, photos, and audio. ([workspace.google.com](https://workspace.google.com/products/keep/?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — has a Free plan. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Obsidian** — free for personal, commercial, and nonprofit use. ([obsidian.md](https://obsidian.md/license?utm_source=openai)) - **Evernote** — offers a Free plan with current limits. ([evernote.com](https://evernote.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Zoho Notebook** — offers a free plan. ([zoho.com](https://www.zoho.com/notebook/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also narrow these down by **best free option for students, syncing, collaboration, or offline use**.
How much do note-taking apps cost? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Most note-taking apps are **free to start**, with paid plans usually around **$3–$15/month**. Examples: - **Apple Notes** — free - **Google Keep** — free - **Microsoft OneNote** — free - **Notion** — free; paid starts around **$10/user/month** - **Evernote** — free; paid often around **$8–$15/month** - **Bear** — about **$3/month** or **$30/year** (Mac/iPhone) - **Obsidian** — free for personal use; optional paid sync/collab - **GoodNotes** — usually a one-time purchase or subscription depending on platform/version - **Notability** — typically subscription-based, around **$15/year** or similar If you want, I can recommend the **best cheap note app** for **iPhone, Android, Windows, or students**.
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It varies a lot: - **Free:** many apps are free for basic use, including **Apple Notes/iCloud Notes** and **Joplin**’s core app/sync options. ([help.apple.com](https://help.apple.com/icloud/sv.lproj/mm6704cac5.html?utm_source=openai)) - **Low-cost paid:** **Joplin Cloud** starts at **€2.99/month** (Basic), with Pro at **€5.99/month** and Teams at **€7.99/month per user**. ([joplinapp.org](https://joplinapp.org/de/plans/?utm_source=openai)) - **Mid-range:** **Obsidian Sync** starts at **$4/month**. ([obsidian.md](https://obsidian.md/blog/standard-plan?utm_source=openai)) - **Higher-priced:** **Evernote** currently lists **Starter**, **Advanced**, and **Enterprise** tiers; its public pricing page shows paid plans and an enterprise custom quote. ([evernote.com](https://evernote.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Bundled apps:** **OneNote** is included with Microsoft 365, which starts at **$9.99/month** for Personal. ([microsoft.com](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/onenote/digital-note-taking-app?utm_source=openai)) So a practical answer is: **$0 to about $10/month for most people**, with more advanced team/cloud plans going higher. ([help.apple.com](https://help.apple.com/icloud/sv.lproj/mm6704cac5.html?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **best free options list** or a **best paid apps under $5/month** list.
What is the cheapest note-taking app for students? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For most students, the **cheapest** note-taking app is **free**: 1. **Google Keep** — completely free, simple, great for quick notes and checklists. 2. **Microsoft OneNote** — free on all major platforms, best if you want full notebooks and class organization. 3. **Apple Notes** — free if you use an iPhone, iPad, or Mac. 4. **Notion Free Plan** — free for personal use, better for organized study pages and databases. **Best cheap pick:** **Microsoft OneNote** — free, powerful, and student-friendly. If you want, I can also rank them by **best for handwritten notes**, **PDF annotation**, or **Android/iPhone**.
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The **cheapest** note-taking app for students is a **free** one. My top pick is **Microsoft OneNote** because it’s free, cross-platform, and Microsoft says students/educators can get Office 365 Education for free, including OneNote. ([microsoft.com](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/education/products/onenote?utm_source=openai)) Other free options: **Apple Notes** (free on Apple devices), **Google Keep** (free), and **Joplin** (free/open source). ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/notes/id1110145109?utm_source=openai)) If you want the simplest answer: **OneNote** for most students.
What note-taking apps are worth paying for? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Best paid note-taking apps, based on use case: **Recommended by balance of features + price** - **Notion** — best if you want notes + docs + tasks + databases in one place. - **Obsidian** — best for personal knowledge management and linking notes; worth paying for **Sync** and **Publish**. - **Craft** — best if you want beautiful, fast, polished document-style notes. **Best for handwritten notes** - **GoodNotes 6** — worth it for iPad/Apple Pencil users. - **Notability** — also strong for lecture/audio-heavy note-taking. **Best simple writing app** - **Bear** — excellent if you’re on Apple devices and want clean, distraction-free writing. **Best “old school” all-rounder** - **Evernote** — still worth paying for if you rely on web clipping, search, and mixed media capture. **If you use Windows/Android and want the best value** - **Obsidian** or **Notion**. **Important note** For many people, **Apple Notes**, **Google Keep**, or **Microsoft OneNote** are enough for free. Pay only if you need sync, collaboration, handwriting, backlinks, or better organization. **Still unsure?** The best paid setup for most people is: - **Obsidian** for serious personal notes - **Notion** for work/team docs - **GoodNotes 6** for handwriting If you tell me your device and how you take notes, I can make a three-app shortlist.
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Yes—if you actually use them, these are the note apps I’d pay for: - **Obsidian** — best for a personal “second brain” if you want local-first notes, privacy, and optional paid sync/publish. Sync is **$4/month billed annually** or **$5/month billed monthly**; Publish is **$8/$10**; Catalyst is **$25 one-time**. ([obsidian.md](https://obsidian.md/pricing.html)) - **Goodnotes** — best for handwriting, PDF markup, and tablet note-taking. It has a paid **AI Pass at $9.99/month** plus core note tools like unlimited notebooks, audio recording, and transcription. ([goodnotes.com](https://www.goodnotes.com/pricing)) - **Evernote** — worth paying for if you want strong capture/search/AI features across devices. Its paid plans now include **Starter** and **Advanced**, with features like advanced search, offline notes, AI Assistant, and AI meeting notes. ([evernote.com](https://evernote.com/pricing)) - **Notion** — worth paying for if notes are part of a bigger workspace for docs, databases, wikis, and collaboration; its paid plans include **Plus, Business, and Enterprise**. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/notion-champions-20f977eb5fdd40d4a7a396f1742c3ea5?utm_source=openai)) - **OneNote** — I’d only pay indirectly, via Microsoft 365, if you already want the Office bundle; Microsoft 365 Personal includes OneNote desktop apps plus 1 TB storage and costs **$9.99/month**. ([microsoft.com](https://www.microsoft.com/en-US/microsoft-365/onenote/digital-note-taking-app)) **My quick take:** - **Best overall:** Obsidian - **Best handwriting:** Goodnotes - **Best all-in-one team/workspace:** Notion - **Best if you live in Microsoft Office:** OneNote - **Best “just works” paid organizer:** Evernote ([obsidian.md](https://obsidian.md/pricing.html)) If you want, I can narrow this to **best for iPad**, **best for students**, or **best under $10/month**.
What note-taking apps have a good free tier for individuals? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Good free-tier note apps for individuals: - **Obsidian** — great for plain-text, linked notes, local-first. Free for personal use. - **Notion** — flexible all-in-one docs + notes + databases. Free tier is solid for individuals. - **Microsoft OneNote** — generous free note app, especially if you’re in the Microsoft ecosystem. - **Google Keep** — very simple, fast, and fully free; best for quick notes and lists. - **Evernote** — usable free tier, but limited and more restrictive than before. - **Joplin** — open-source, free, and good if you want privacy + sync options. - **Apple Notes** — excellent free choice if you use iPhone, iPad, or Mac. - **Zoho Notebook** — polished and free, with a nice interface. If you want the best free tier overall: - **Obsidian** for power users - **Notion** for organization/workspaces - **OneNote** for classic note-taking - **Google Keep** for quick capture If you want, I can also rank these by **best for students**, **best for work**, or **best for privacy**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Good free-tier options for individuals right now: - **Microsoft OneNote** — solid all-around choice; the app is free, and Microsoft lists **OneNote (web and mobile only)** in its free offering. ([microsoft.com](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/onenote/digital-note-taking-app?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — good if you want notes + docs + light databases; its **Free** plan is $0 and has **unlimited pages/blocks for individuals**, with file uploads capped at **5 MB each**. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Obsidian** — best if you want local-first, markdown notes; it’s **free for personal use** and your data is stored locally unless you opt into paid sync/publish services. ([obsidian.md](https://obsidian.md/license?utm_source=openai)) - **Simplenote** — great for plain-text, distraction-free notes; it says **apps, backups, syncing, and sharing are completely free**. ([simplenote.com](https://simplenote.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Standard Notes** — strong privacy pick; the free plan includes **end-to-end encryption**, **unlimited device sync**, and **plain text notes**. ([standardnotes.com](https://standardnotes.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Google Keep** — best for quick notes and lists; Google’s app listing shows it as **Free** and supports notes, lists, photos, audio, and reminders. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/google-keep-notes-and-lists/id1029207872?utm_source=openai)) - **Apple Notes** — if you’re in Apple’s ecosystem, the app is **Free** and syncs with iCloud. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/notes/id1110145109?utm_source=openai)) **My quick picks:** - **Best overall free tier:** Notion - **Best simple/free forever:** Simplenote - **Best power user / local files:** Obsidian - **Best fast capture:** Google Keep - **Best Microsoft ecosystem:** OneNote If you want, I can narrow this to **Windows/Mac/iPhone/Android** or **best for students**.
What note-taking apps include collaboration without extra cost? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
These note-taking apps include collaboration on a free plan: - **Google Keep** — share notes and lists with others for free. - **Microsoft OneNote** — free collaboration through shared notebooks. - **Apple Notes** — free shared notes on iPhone, iPad, and Mac via iCloud. - **Notion** — free plan includes team sharing and collaboration, with some limits. - **Dropbox Paper** — free shared docs/notes and real-time collaboration. - **Zoho Notebook** — free sharing/collaboration features on notes. If you want the best “easy and free” picks: **Google Keep** and **Microsoft OneNote**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes—these include collaboration at no extra cost: - **Google Keep** — free with a Google account; you can add collaborators who can edit the note. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/keep/answer/6101196?co=GENIE.Platform%3DiOS&hl=en&utm_source=openai)) - **Apple Notes** — free on Apple devices/iCloud; you can share notes or folders for collaboration with other Apple users signed into iCloud. ([support.apple.com](https://support.apple.com/en-al/guide/icloud/mm2d069f7097/icloud?utm_source=openai)) - **Microsoft OneNote** — free sharing/collaboration via shared notebooks on OneDrive. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/introducing-onenote-38be036d-5b5a-49ad-83be-292fe53ad7b3?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion (Free plan)** — includes collaboration, with up to 5 guests on the free personal plan. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to **best for cross-platform use** or **best for teams**.
What note-taking apps offer family or team pricing? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Yes — a few good options: **Notion** - **Plus / Business** plans work well for teams - Often the best value for shared notes, docs, and wikis **Evernote** - **Personal / Professional / Teams** tiers - **Teams** is the main team-pricing option **Microsoft OneNote** - No separate “family” plan, but it’s included with **Microsoft 365 Family** and **Microsoft 365 Business** - Good if you already use Microsoft apps **Apple Notes** - No dedicated note app pricing, but sharing works through **iCloud+ Family Sharing** - Best for Apple-only households **Coda** - Has **team pricing** - More doc/database than pure notes, but very good for shared knowledge bases **ClickUp** - Not just notes, but includes docs and team notes - Has **team plans** with better collaboration features **Milanote** - Has **team plans** - Great for visual note-taking, mood boards, and creative teams If you want a team-focused pick: **Notion** is usually the best all-around choice. If you want a family setup on Apple: **Apple Notes + iCloud+ Family Sharing** is the simplest. Would you want to pair this down by **best for families**, **best for small teams**, or **cheapest**?
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes—these note apps have **family or team-oriented pricing/sharing**: - **Goodnotes** — supports **Apple Family Sharing** for premium access on iOS/iPadOS/macOS subscriptions/purchases. ([support.goodnotes.com](https://support.goodnotes.com/hc/en-us/articles/10233548824335-Share-your-premium-Goodnotes-6-with-your-family?utm_source=openai)) - **Microsoft OneNote / Microsoft 365** — **Microsoft 365 Family** can be shared with up to **six people**, and Microsoft also offers business plans for teams; OneNote is included in those plans. ([microsoft.com](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/upgrade-microsoft-365-family/?utm_source=openai)) - **Evernote** — has **team plans** (Evernote Teams / Enterprise Flexible), with team collaboration features and pricing starting at **$10/seat/month** for Enterprise Flexible. ([evernote.com](https://evernote.com/enterprise-plans?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — has **team plans**: **Plus** at **$10 per seat/month** and **Business** at **$20 per seat/month**. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Obsidian** — not a classic family plan, but you can buy **Obsidian Credit for friends, family, and coworkers**; it also has a **Sync** plan at **$4/user/month billed annually** for collaboration on shared vaults. ([obsidian.md](https://obsidian.md/pricing.html?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also narrow this down to: 1. **best family sharing**, 2. **cheapest team plan**, or 3. **best for iPhone/iPad users**.
What note-taking apps are best value for money? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best value note-taking apps depend on what you need, but these are the usual winners: - **Obsidian** — best overall value if you want powerful notes and ownership. - Free for personal use, local files, huge plugin ecosystem. - Great if you like linking notes and long-term storage. - **Microsoft OneNote** — best free all-around option. - Fully featured, free, good on Windows/iPad/Android/web. - Best if you want notebooks, handwriting, and zero cost. - **Google Keep** — best for quick, lightweight notes. - Free, simple, fast sync. - Not for deep organization, but excellent for reminders and short notes. - **Notion** — best value for mixed notes + docs + databases. - Free tier is strong for personal use. - Great if you want one app for notes, tasks, and wikis. - **Simplenote** — best minimalist note app. - Free, clean, no clutter. - Good if you just want plain text notes. - **Apple Notes** — best value for Apple users. - Free, built-in, surprisingly capable. - Great if you live on iPhone/Mac/iPad. **Best picks by use case:** - **Most value overall:** Obsidian - **Best free:** OneNote - **Best simple notes:** Google Keep / Simplenote - **Best all-in-one workspace:** Notion - **Best for Apple users:** Apple Notes If you want, I can also rank them by **best for students, professionals, or teams**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Best value usually means **free core app + optional paid extras**. My picks: 1. **Obsidian** — best overall value for power users. The app is **free without limits**, and sync is optional at **$4/month billed annually** or **$5/month**. ([obsidian.md](https://obsidian.md/pricing.html)) 2. **Simplenote** — best pure free value. It’s **completely free**, including apps, backups, syncing, and sharing. ([simplenote.com](https://simplenote.com/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **OneNote** — best free mainstream option. Microsoft says OneNote is a **free stand-alone app**; Microsoft 365 is only for extra features/storage. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/what-s-the-difference-between-the-onenote-versions-a624e692-b78b-4c09-b07f-46181958118f?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Notion** — best if you want notes + databases + docs. The **Free** plan is **$0**, and Plus is **$10 per seat/month**. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/pricing)) 5. **Standard Notes** — best for privacy on a budget. The **Standard** plan is free, and the paid **Productivity** plan is **$90/year**. ([standardnotes.com](https://standardnotes.com/plans)) **My quick recommendation:** - **Most people:** Obsidian - **Simplest free app:** Simplenote - **Best for Windows/Microsoft users:** OneNote - **Best for “notes as a workspace”:** Notion - **Best privacy-first:** Standard Notes ([obsidian.md](https://obsidian.md/pricing.html)) If you want, I can narrow this to **free-only**, **best for students**, or **best for Apple/Android/Windows**.
What note-taking apps have premium features without a high price? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
A few good **low-cost premium note apps**: - **UpNote** — very affordable one-time purchase or cheap subscription; clean UI, folders/tags, markdown, cross-device sync. - **Notion** — free plan is strong; paid plan is still fairly low-priced for more sharing, collaboration, and file features. - **Obsidian** — free for personal use; premium is optional and reasonably priced if you want sync and publish. - **Joplin** — open-source and free; paid cloud sync is inexpensive if you want convenience. - **Zoho Notebook** — free and polished; good-looking notes, web/mobile sync, and solid features without much cost. - **Evernote** — premium features are better than they used to be, but pricing is less attractive than the options above. - **Google Keep** — free, very simple, excellent value if you just need lightweight notes and reminders. **Best value picks:** - **UpNote** for the best low-price premium feel - **Obsidian** if you want powerful notes with optional paid sync - **Notion** if you want notes + databases + collaboration If you want, I can narrow it down by **iPhone/Android/Windows/Mac**, or by **simple notes vs. power-user features**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Here are the best **low-price / high-value** note apps with premium-ish features: - **Obsidian** — free to use, with optional paid Sync at **$4/month billed annually** or **$5/month billed monthly**; it adds end-to-end encrypted sync, version history, and shared vaults. ([obsidian.md](https://obsidian.md/pricing.html?utm_source=openai)) - **UpNote** — a strong budget pick; Premium unlocks note locking, tables, attachments, unlimited notes, themes, and export to PDF/HTML/Markdown. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/upnote-notes-diary-journal/id1389634515?utm_source=openai)) - **Joplin** — free and open source, with powerful features like Markdown, plugins, and end-to-end encrypted sync; if you want hosted sync, Joplin Cloud starts at **€2.99/month**. ([joplinapp.org](https://joplinapp.org/help/?utm_source=openai)) - **OneNote** — all supported versions are free, and only some premium features require Microsoft 365. If you already have Microsoft 365, it’s one of the cheapest “premium” upgrades because it’s bundled. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/what-s-the-difference-between-the-onenote-versions-a624e692-b78b-4c09-b07f-46181958118f?utm_source=openai)) - **Bear** — great on Apple devices, with Bear Pro at **$2.99/month** or **$29.99/year**; you get sync, encryption for notes, and more export options. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/id1016366447?utm_source=openai)) - **Standard Notes** — free for the basics, with paid plans for more advanced editors and storage; the Productivity plan is **$90/year**. ([standardnotes.com](https://standardnotes.com/?utm_source=openai)) **Best overall value:** - **Obsidian** if you want the most powerful free core app. - **UpNote** if you want the cheapest polished all-rounder. - **Joplin** if privacy and open source matter most. If you want, I can narrow this to **iPhone**, **Android**, **Windows**, or **best for students**.

TOM — Top of Mind (15 prompts)

What are the best note-taking apps for everyday use? 1,600/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for everyday use: - **Apple Notes** — best for iPhone, iPad, and Mac users; fast, simple, and great for syncing. - **Microsoft OneNote** — best free all-around option; flexible, powerful, and great for notebooks/projects. - **Notion** — best for organized notes, wikis, and task tracking in one app. - **Google Keep** — best for quick notes, checklists, and reminders; very lightweight. - **Evernote** — best for web clipping and searchable note archives, though it can feel heavier than others. - **Obsidian** — best for people who want linked notes and a personal knowledge base. - **Bear** — best for Apple users who want a clean writing-focused notes app. - **Samsung Notes** — best for Samsung phone/tablet users, especially with S Pen. If you want the simplest picks: - **iPhone/Mac:** Apple Notes - **Windows/Android/anywhere:** OneNote - **Quick reminders:** Google Keep - **Structured personal knowledge:** Notion or Obsidian If you want, I can also rank them for **students**, **professionals**, or **privacy**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best everyday note-taking apps, by use case: - **Apple Notes** — best for iPhone/Mac users; fast, simple, great scanning and sharing. - **Microsoft OneNote** — best free all-around option; great for typed + handwritten notes and organization. - **Notion** — best for organized work notes, databases, and wikis; more powerful, a bit less “quick.” - **Google Keep** — best for quick sticky-note style reminders and checklists; super lightweight. - **Evernote** — best for clipping web pages and searchable notes; polished, but pricier than before. - **Obsidian** — best for power users who want linked notes and local files; excellent if you like control. - **Bear** — best for Apple-only users who want a beautiful writing experience. - **Simplenote** — best for plain, distraction-free notes; very fast and minimal. If you want the safest picks: - **Best overall:** OneNote - **Best for Apple users:** Apple Notes - **Best for productivity/work:** Notion - **Best for simplicity:** Google Keep or Simplenote If you tell me your device (iPhone/Android/Windows/Mac) and whether you want simple notes or full organization, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best everyday note-taking apps, by overall usefulness: 1. **Apple Notes** — best for iPhone/Mac users Fast, simple, reliable, great syncing, scanning, checklists, and quick notes. 2. **Google Keep** — best for quick capture Super easy for sticky notes, reminders, voice notes, and color-coded lists across devices. 3. **Microsoft OneNote** — best free “all-in-one” notebook Great for organizing big projects, handwritten notes, and mixed media. 4. **Notion** — best for structured notes and personal organization Powerful for databases, tasks, templates, and building your own system. 5. **Evernote** — best for clipping and storing reference material Strong web clipping, search, and document organization, though pricier than before. 6. **Obsidian** — best for linked, long-term knowledge notes Excellent if you like markdown, backlinks, and keeping notes local. **My quick picks:** - **Simple daily notes:** Apple Notes or Google Keep - **Work/school:** OneNote - **Organized life system:** Notion - **Deep knowledge base:** Obsidian If you tell me your device (iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac) and how you take notes, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best everyday note-taking apps, depending on what you want: - **Apple Notes** — best for iPhone/Mac users; fast, simple, great sync. - **Microsoft OneNote** — best free all-around notebook; great for long notes, school, work. - **Notion** — best if you want notes + tasks + databases in one place. - **Google Keep** — best for quick sticky-note style capture and reminders. - **Evernote** — best for web clipping and organizing lots of mixed notes. - **Obsidian** — best for powerful personal knowledge management and linked notes. - **Bear** — best for clean writing on Apple devices. - **Simplenote** — best for plain, distraction-free text notes. **My top picks for most people:** 1. **Apple Notes** if you’re on Apple 2. **OneNote** if you want free and flexible 3. **Notion** if you like organizing everything in one app If you tell me your device (iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac) and how you use notes, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
For everyday use, the best note-taking apps are usually these: 1. **Apple Notes** Best if you’re in the Apple ecosystem. Fast, simple, great search, scan docs, and shared notes. 2. **Microsoft OneNote** Best for freeform note-taking, school, and work. Great on Windows, good cross-platform sync, and very flexible. 3. **Notion** Best if you want notes + tasks + docs in one place. Powerful, but a bit heavier than simpler apps. 4. **Google Keep** Best for quick sticky-note style notes, lists, and reminders. Super fast and easy. 5. **Evernote** Best for clipping web pages, organizing lots of notes, and strong search. Still one of the most polished options. 6. **Obsidian** Best for personal knowledge management and linked notes. Excellent if you like markdown and local-first storage. **Quick picks:** - **Simplest:** Apple Notes / Google Keep - **Best all-around:** OneNote - **Best for organizing everything:** Notion - **Best for deep note systems:** Obsidian If you tell me your device (iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac) and what you use notes for, I can narrow it to the top 2.
What are the top note-taking apps right now? 210/mo
2/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the top note-taking apps right now, depending on what you need: - **Notion** — best all-in-one for notes, docs, tasks, and wikis - **Microsoft OneNote** — best freeform notebook style, great for school and work - **Apple Notes** — best if you’re deep in the Apple ecosystem - **Google Keep** — best for quick, lightweight notes and reminders - **Obsidian** — best for personal knowledge management and linked notes - **Evernote** — strong for clipping, search, and cross-device note capture - **Notability** — best for handwritten notes on iPad - **Goodnotes** — excellent for handwriting, PDFs, and study notes - **Bear** — beautiful Markdown note-taking for Mac/iPhone users - **Simplenote** — best minimal, distraction-free text notes If you want the short answer: - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best handwriting:** Goodnotes or Notability - **Best free:** OneNote or Apple Notes - **Best for power users:** Obsidian If you want, I can also rank them by **best for students**, **professionals**, or **Android/iPhone**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the top note-taking apps right now, depending on what you want: 1. **Notion** — best all-around for notes + databases + projects Great if you want your notes to also handle task lists, docs, and knowledge bases. 2. **Obsidian** — best for power users and local markdown notes Excellent for linking ideas, building a personal knowledge system, and keeping everything offline. 3. **Evernote** — best for web clipping and general note capture Still strong for saving articles, scans, PDFs, and quick searchable notes. 4. **Microsoft OneNote** — best free-form notebook style Good for handwriting, drawing, and organizing notes like digital binders. 5. **Apple Notes** — best for Apple users Simple, fast, and surprisingly capable on iPhone, iPad, and Mac. 6. **Google Keep** — best for quick sticky-note style capture Lightweight and fast for reminders, checklists, and short notes. 7. **Bear** — best elegant writing app for Mac/iPhone Clean Markdown-based note-taking with a beautiful interface. 8. **Simplenote** — best minimal text notes Very lightweight, fast, and distraction-free. If you want, I can also rank them for: - **students** - **work/personal productivity** - **best free apps** - **best apps for Windows/Android/iPhone**
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Top note-taking apps right now: - **Notion** — best all-around for docs, databases, and team/workspace notes - **Obsidian** — best for personal knowledge management and Markdown/local-first notes - **Apple Notes** — best simple option on iPhone, iPad, and Mac - **Microsoft OneNote** — best free “notebook” style app, especially for Windows/Office users - **Evernote** — still strong for clipping, search, and cross-platform note capture - **Bear** — best polished writing app for Apple-only users - **Google Keep** — best quick sticky-note app and reminders - **Joplin** — best open-source, privacy-focused alternative - **Roam Research** — best for linked thinking / daily note workflows - **Craft** — best for beautiful documents and note organization on Apple platforms Quick picks: - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for personal knowledge base:** Obsidian - **Best simple everyday notes:** Apple Notes - **Best free heavy-duty option:** OneNote If you want, I can also rank them by **best for students, teams, privacy, or Android/iPhone**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Top note-taking apps right now, by use case: - **Notion** — best all-in-one workspace for notes, docs, tasks, databases - **Obsidian** — best for power users who want local files, backlinks, and a knowledge base - **Apple Notes** — best simple option for iPhone/Mac users - **Microsoft OneNote** — best freeform notebooks and handwriting - **Evernote** — still strong for clipping, search, and organizing web notes - **Google Keep** — best lightweight, fast sticky-note style app - **Bear** — beautiful writing app for Apple users - **Craft** — polished docs/notes with great design and collaboration - **Goodnotes** — best for handwritten notes on iPad - **Reflect** — strong modern PKM app with AI and backlinks Quick picks: - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for thinking/linked notes:** Obsidian - **Best simple free app:** Apple Notes or Google Keep - **Best handwriting:** Goodnotes or OneNote If you want, I can also give you the **best note app for Windows, Mac, iPhone, Android, or students**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the top note-taking apps right now, by general popularity and usefulness: - **Notion** — best all-in-one workspace; great for notes, docs, databases, and project tracking. - **Apple Notes** — best for iPhone/Mac users; fast, simple, and very polished. - **Microsoft OneNote** — best free form note app; great for handwriting, clipping, and big notebooks. - **Obsidian** — best for power users and linked notes; excellent for personal knowledge management. - **Evernote** — still strong for web clipping, search, and document storage, though pricier than before. - **Bear** — best for clean writing on Apple devices; elegant and distraction-free. - **Google Keep** — best for quick sticky-note style capture and reminders. - **GoodNotes** / **Notability** — best for handwritten notes on iPad. - **Coda** — good if you want notes mixed with docs and lightweight workflows. If you want the simplest picks: - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for Apple:** Apple Notes - **Best for deep knowledge notes:** Obsidian - **Best for handwriting:** GoodNotes If you tell me your device and whether you want simple notes, handwriting, or a full system, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.
Which note-taking apps are the most popular? 210/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the most popular note-taking apps are: - **Microsoft OneNote** — very popular for school/work, free and feature-rich - **Evernote** — one of the classic note apps, strong search and organization - **Apple Notes** — hugely popular for iPhone, iPad, and Mac users - **Google Keep** — simple, fast, and popular for quick notes and reminders - **Notion** — very popular for notes + docs + project organization - **Obsidian** — popular with power users for linked, local markdown notes - **Bear** — popular on Apple devices for clean writing and note-taking - **Simplenote** — lightweight, minimal, and easy to sync If you want, I can also rank them by **best overall**, **best free**, or **best for students/work**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the most popular note-taking apps are: - **Microsoft OneNote** — very widely used, especially in schools and workplaces - **Apple Notes** — extremely popular on iPhone, iPad, and Mac - **Google Keep** — simple, popular for quick notes and reminders - **Evernote** — one of the classic note apps, still well known - **Notion** — hugely popular for notes + docs + task management - **Obsidian** — very popular with power users and “second brain” fans - **Simplenote** — lightweight and straightforward - **Bear** — popular among Apple users for clean writing If you want, I can also rank them by **ease of use**, **best for students**, or **best overall**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the most popular note-taking apps are: - **Microsoft OneNote** — very popular for freeform notes, notebooks, and Office integration - **Evernote** — long-time favorite for clipping, search, and organization - **Google Keep** — simple, fast, and great for quick notes and reminders - **Apple Notes** — hugely popular for iPhone, iPad, and Mac users - **Notion** — popular for notes, docs, wikis, and project organization - **Obsidian** — popular with power users for linked notes and local files - **Bear** — well-liked on Apple devices for clean writing and markdown - **Zoho Notebook** — free, polished, and cross-platform If you want, I can also rank them by **best for students**, **work**, or **iPhone/Android**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the most popular note-taking apps are: - **Evernote** — long-running, feature-rich, strong web clipping and search - **Microsoft OneNote** — very popular for students and Office users - **Apple Notes** — widely used on iPhone, iPad, and Mac - **Google Keep** — simple, fast, and popular for quick notes - **Notion** — popular for notes + task/project organization - **Obsidian** — popular with power users for linked notes and Markdown - **Simplenote** — lightweight, minimalist note app - **Bear** — popular on Apple devices for clean writing and Markdown - **Samsung Notes** — common on Samsung phones and tablets - **GoodNotes** / **Notability** — very popular for handwritten notes on iPad If you want, I can also rank them by **best overall**, **best for students**, or **best free options**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the most popular note-taking apps are: - **Microsoft OneNote** — very popular for free-form notes, school, and work - **Evernote** — long-time classic for organizing notes and web clips - **Apple Notes** — huge on iPhone, iPad, and Mac - **Google Keep** — simple, fast, and popular for quick notes - **Notion** — very popular for notes + docs + task management - **Obsidian** — popular with power users and linked-note fans - **Simplenote** — lightweight, clean, and free - **Bear** — popular among Apple users for elegant writing If you want, I can also rank them by **best for students, professionals, or personal use**.
What note-taking apps are most recommended?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
The most recommended note-taking apps are usually: - **Notion** — best all-around for notes + docs + databases - **Microsoft OneNote** — best free-form notebook style, especially on Windows - **Apple Notes** — best for Apple users who want simple, fast syncing - **Google Keep** — best for quick sticky-note style capture - **Evernote** — still strong for web clipping and searchable notes - **Obsidian** — best for power users who want local, linked Markdown notes - **Bear** — great writing app for Mac/iPhone - **Joplin** — good open-source alternative, privacy-friendly - **Simplenote** — lightweight, minimal, fast - **Anytype** — newer Notion-like app with offline/local-first focus Quick picks: - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for school/work notebooks:** OneNote - **Best for Apple-only:** Apple Notes - **Best for knowledge management:** Obsidian - **Best simple app:** Google Keep If you want, I can narrow it down by **iPhone/Android/Windows/Mac** or by **simple vs advanced**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
The most recommended note-taking apps are usually: - **Notion** — best all-in-one for notes, docs, databases, and project planning - **Obsidian** — best for personal knowledge management and linked notes - **Microsoft OneNote** — best free-form notebook style, especially for students and Office users - **Evernote** — still solid for clipping web pages and organizing notes, though pricier than before - **Apple Notes** — best simple option on iPhone, iPad, and Mac - **Google Keep** — best for quick notes, reminders, and lightweight lists - **Bear** — great for clean writing on Apple devices - **Standard Notes** — best if privacy and encryption matter most If you want the **most broadly recommended overall**, I’d say: 1. **Notion** for most people 2. **Obsidian** for power users 3. **OneNote** for school/work note-taking If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on **your device** or **how you plan to use it**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
The most recommended note-taking apps are: - **Apple Notes** — best for iPhone/Mac users; simple, fast, and free - **Microsoft OneNote** — best for organized notebooks and school/work - **Notion** — best for all-in-one notes, docs, and project planning - **Obsidian** — best for power users who want local files and linked notes - **Evernote** — still strong for clipping web pages and search, though pricier - **Google Keep** — best for quick notes and reminders - **Bear** — great-looking writing app for Apple users **Quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best simple app:** Apple Notes - **Best for deep knowledge management:** Obsidian - **Best for Microsoft users:** OneNote If you want, I can also recommend the best one for **students, work, or personal use**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Most recommended note-taking apps: - **Notion** — best all-in-one for notes, docs, wikis, and project tracking - **Obsidian** — best for local files, linked notes, and personal knowledge management - **Evernote** — best for classic note capture, web clipping, and search - **Microsoft OneNote** — best free-form notebook-style notes, especially for Windows/Office users - **Apple Notes** — best simple option for iPhone/Mac users - **Google Keep** — best quick sticky notes, reminders, and light organization - **Bear** — best clean writing app for Apple-only users - **Simplenote** — best minimal, fast, distraction-free notes - **Roam Research** — best for networked thinking and daily notes - **Joplin** — best open-source alternative with sync and encryption Quick picks: - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for serious note systems:** Obsidian - **Best free simple app:** Apple Notes or Google Keep - **Best for work/school:** OneNote If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your device and how you take notes.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the most commonly recommended note-taking apps, by use case: - **Apple Notes** — best if you’re all-in on Apple; simple, fast, great sync. - **Microsoft OneNote** — best free all-purpose option; very flexible for school/work. - **Notion** — best for organized notes + databases + projects; powerful but a bit complex. - **Obsidian** — best for local files, backlinks, and “second brain” note systems. - **Evernote** — still a solid classic for clipping web pages and storing lots of notes, though pricier than before. - **Google Keep** — best for quick notes, checklists, and reminders. - **Bear** — great-looking notes app for Mac/iPhone users who want clean Markdown notes. - **Joplin** — best open-source alternative; good if you want control and privacy. If you want the safest picks overall: - **Best free:** OneNote - **Best for Apple users:** Apple Notes - **Best for power users:** Obsidian - **Best for productivity/workspaces:** Notion If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your device and how you take notes.
What are the best note-taking apps for students?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best note-taking apps for students: 1. **Notion** — Best all-around for organizing notes, tasks, and class materials in one place. Great if you like building custom systems. 2. **Microsoft OneNote** — Best free option for handwritten notes, lecture notes, and school use. Works especially well with a stylus. 3. **Goodnotes** — Best for iPad users who want handwriting, PDF annotation, and neat digital notebooks. 4. **Notability** — Great for lecture recording + notes on iPad/Mac. Very popular for class notes. 5. **Obsidian** — Best for connected text notes and long-term knowledge building. Ideal if you want a powerful, local-first app. 6. **Evernote** — Good for clipping web articles and keeping searchable notes, though it’s less student-friendly than it used to be. 7. **Apple Notes** — Best simple option for iPhone/iPad users who want fast, built-in note-taking. 8. **Google Keep** — Best for quick reminders, checklists, and short class notes, especially if you use Google Workspace. **Quick picks:** - **Best free:** OneNote - **Best for iPad handwriting:** Goodnotes - **Best for lecture recording:** Notability - **Best for organization/planning:** Notion - **Best for deep study notes:** Obsidian If you want, I can also recommend the **best one for your device** (iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac, iPad).
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best note-taking apps for students: - **Notion** — Best all-in-one for class notes, task lists, and study dashboards. - **Microsoft OneNote** — Best free option for handwritten + typed notes, especially with a stylus. - **Goodnotes** — Best for iPad users who want handwritten notes and PDF annotation. - **Notability** — Great for lecture notes, audio recording, and annotating slides on iPad. - **Google Keep** — Best for quick, simple notes and reminders. - **Evernote** — Strong for organizing lots of notes and web clippings. - **Obsidian** — Best for building connected study notes and long-term knowledge management. - **Apple Notes** — Excellent if you’re fully in the Apple ecosystem. **Best overall picks by student type:** - **Most flexible:** Notion - **Best free:** OneNote - **Best for handwriting:** Goodnotes - **Best for lecture recording:** Notability - **Best for deep study/linked notes:** Obsidian If you want, I can also give you the **best one based on your device** (iPhone, iPad, Android, Windows, or Mac).
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best note-taking apps for students: - **Notion** — Best all-around for class notes, task lists, and project planning. Great if you want everything in one place. - **Microsoft OneNote** — Best free option for handwritten notes, typing, and organizing by notebook/section/page. - **GoodNotes 6** — Best for iPad handwriting, PDF annotation, and neat digital notebooks. - **Notability** — Great for lecture notes, audio recording, and annotating slides on iPad/Mac. - **Evernote** — Good for clipping articles, organizing research, and searchable notes. - **Obsidian** — Best for students who want linked notes and long-term knowledge building. - **Google Keep** — Simple, fast, and great for quick reminders or short notes. - **Apple Notes** — Excellent if you’re in the Apple ecosystem and want a free, easy option. **Best picks by use case:** - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best free:** OneNote - **Best for iPad handwriting:** GoodNotes 6 - **Best for lecture recording:** Notability If you tell me your device (iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac, iPad), I can narrow it down to the best 2–3 for you.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best note-taking apps for students: 1. **Microsoft OneNote** — Best overall for class notes - Free, great for organizing by notebook/section/page - Works well with typed notes, handwriting, audio, and images 2. **Notion** — Best for organizing coursework - Excellent for databases, checklists, class schedules, and study hubs - More flexible than a typical notes app, but a bit more setup 3. **Goodnotes** — Best for handwritten notes on iPad - Great with Apple Pencil - Ideal for annotating PDFs, lecture slides, and writing by hand 4. **Notability** — Best for lecture recording + notes - Strong audio recording features that sync with your notes - Very popular for students using iPad 5. **Evernote** — Best for clipping and searching content - Good for web articles, PDFs, and searchable notes - Not as student-focused as others, but still solid 6. **Google Keep** — Best for quick, simple notes - Fast, minimal, and easy to use - Good for reminders and short study lists, but not ideal for long class notes **My quick picks:** - **Most students:** OneNote - **iPad users:** Goodnotes or Notability - **Best all-in-one organizer:** Notion - **Simple and fast:** Google Keep If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your device: **iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac, or iPad**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best note-taking apps for students: - **Notion** — best all-around for class notes, task lists, and organizing study materials. Great if you like templates and databases. - **Microsoft OneNote** — excellent for freeform note-taking, handwriting, and stylus use. Very good for lecture notes. - **GoodNotes** — best for handwritten notes on iPad. Strong for annotating PDFs and organizing notebooks. - **Apple Notes** — simple, fast, and great if you use iPhone, iPad, or Mac. - **Google Keep** — best for quick notes, reminders, and checklist-style studying. - **Evernote** — strong for clipping web articles and keeping research notes in one place. - **Obsidian** — best for students who want linked notes and long-term knowledge building. **My quick picks:** - **iPad + stylus:** GoodNotes - **Windows/Mac + freeform notes:** OneNote - **All-in-one organization:** Notion - **Simple, fast, free:** Google Keep or Apple Notes If you want, I can also rank the best apps by **free vs paid**, or by **iPad, Android, or Windows**.
What are the best note-taking apps for work?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for work, by type: - **Microsoft OneNote** — best for teams in Microsoft 365; great freeform notebooks, searchable handwritten notes, good for meetings. - **Notion** — best all-in-one workspace; notes + docs + tasks + wikis, very popular for teams and knowledge bases. - **Evernote** — best for clipping web content and personal/work note organization; strong search and quick capture. - **Google Keep** — best for quick, simple notes if you use Google Workspace; lightweight and fast. - **Apple Notes** — best for Mac/iPhone users; simple, reliable, and surprisingly capable for work notes. - **Obsidian** — best for power users and knowledge management; local-first, markdown-based, excellent linking between notes. - **Coda** — best if you want docs that act like mini-apps; useful for project planning and team workflows. - **ClickUp Docs** — best if your team already uses ClickUp for project management. **My quick picks:** - **Best overall for work:** **Notion** - **Best for Microsoft users:** **OneNote** - **Best for personal + work knowledge base:** **Obsidian** - **Best simple option:** **Apple Notes** or **Google Keep** If you want, I can also give you the **best note app for your specific setup** (Windows/Mac, solo/team, meeting notes, tasks, etc.).
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for work, by use case: - **Microsoft OneNote** — Best overall for most workplaces, especially if you use Microsoft 365. Great for meetings, freeform notes, and team sharing. - **Notion** — Best for organized workspaces, docs, wikis, and project tracking. Excellent if you want notes plus lightweight databases. - **Evernote** — Best for clipping web pages, searchable notes, and personal knowledge management. Still strong for mixed content capture. - **Google Keep** — Best for quick, simple notes and reminders. Works well if your company uses Google Workspace. - **Obsidian** — Best for power users who want linked notes and a personal knowledge base. Great if you like markdown and local storage. - **Apple Notes** — Best for Apple-only users who want fast, simple, built-in notes with solid sync. - **Todoist** or **TickTick** — Best if your “notes” are really task-heavy work lists with reminders. If you want a quick pick: - **Most work teams:** OneNote or Notion - **Simple and fast:** Google Keep - **Best for personal knowledge management:** Obsidian - **Best web clipping:** Evernote If you tell me your setup (Windows/Mac, Microsoft 365 or Google Workspace, solo or team), I can narrow it to the best 2–3.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
The best note-taking apps for work depend on how you work, but these are the top picks: - **Microsoft OneNote** — best for most office teams; great if you use Microsoft 365, Outlook, and Teams. - **Notion** — best for organizing notes, docs, wikis, and lightweight project tracking in one place. - **Evernote** — best for simple, reliable note capture and search across devices. - **Google Keep** — best for quick sticky-note style capture if you live in Google Workspace. - **Obsidian** — best for power users who want linked notes, markdown, and local-first storage. - **Apple Notes** — best for Mac/iPhone users who want fast, easy, built-in note-taking. Quick recommendations: - **Best overall:** Microsoft OneNote - **Best for teams/docs:** Notion - **Best for simple personal work notes:** Evernote or Apple Notes - **Best for advanced knowledge management:** Obsidian If you want, I can also give you the **best note app by job type** (manager, sales, engineer, student, etc.).
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Top picks for work note-taking: 1. **Microsoft OneNote** — best all-around for work, especially if you use Microsoft 365 - Freeform pages, strong organization, great search, good on Windows. 2. **Notion** — best for team docs + notes + lightweight project management - Great if you want notes, databases, tasks, and wiki-style pages in one place. 3. **Evernote** — best for capturing and searching lots of notes fast - Strong web clipper, OCR/search, and quick capture across devices. 4. **Obsidian** — best for personal knowledge management and linked notes - Local files, powerful backlinks, very customizable. 5. **Google Keep** — best for simple, fast, lightweight notes - Great for quick reminders and short lists, especially in Google Workspace. 6. **Apple Notes** — best if you’re fully in the Apple ecosystem - Very polished, fast, and solid for everyday work notes. 7. **ClickUp Docs** — best if your notes are tightly tied to tasks/projects - Useful when you want notes and work tracking in one place. **Quick recommendation:** - **Best for most professionals:** OneNote - **Best for teams:** Notion - **Best for personal knowledge base:** Obsidian - **Best for quick simple notes:** Google Keep If you want, I can also rank them by **Windows/Mac**, **team vs solo**, or **free vs paid**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for work, depending on how you work: - **Microsoft OneNote** — Best overall for many workplaces. Great for meeting notes, freeform organization, and Microsoft 365 integration. - **Notion** — Best for teams and project-based work. Excellent for wikis, docs, task tracking, and databases. - **Evernote** — Best for classic note-taking with strong search and web clipping. Good if you want a polished all-around app. - **Obsidian** — Best for power users and personal knowledge management. Fast, markdown-based, and great for linking ideas. - **Apple Notes** — Best for Apple-only users. Simple, fast, and surprisingly capable for everyday work notes. - **Google Keep** — Best for quick notes and reminders. Lightweight, but not ideal for heavy organization. **My quick picks:** - **Best for most people:** Microsoft OneNote - **Best for teams:** Notion - **Best for deep personal organization:** Obsidian - **Best simple option:** Apple Notes or Google Keep If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your device setup: **Windows, Mac, iPhone, Android, or mixed team**.
What are the best note-taking apps for iPhone?
1/5 mention 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for iPhone, depending on what you need: - **Apple Notes** — Best overall for most iPhone users. Fast, free, great syncing with iCloud, scanning docs, checklists, and handwriting support. - **GoodNotes 6** — Best for handwritten notes and PDF annotation. Great if you use an iPhone + iPad combo. - **Notability** — Best for lecture/audio notes. Strong for recording, annotating, and organizing class notes. - **Obsidian** — Best for power users and linked notes. Great if you want a personal knowledge base and Markdown. - **Bear** — Best for clean writing and simple organization. Beautiful interface, tags, and strong Markdown support. - **Evernote** — Best for clipping, search, and cross-platform note storage. Good if you need lots of capture and organization. - **Microsoft OneNote** — Best free feature-rich option, especially if you use Microsoft 365. - **Google Keep** — Best for quick sticky-note style reminders and lists. **My quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Apple Notes - **Best handwriting:** GoodNotes 6 - **Best for students:** Notability - **Best for deep organization:** Obsidian - **Best simple writing app:** Bear If you want, I can also rank the **best free** note apps or the **best for students/business** specifically.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for iPhone, depending on what you want: - **Apple Notes** — Best free default option. Great for quick notes, scans, checklists, and syncing with iCloud. - **Goodnotes 6** — Best for handwritten notes, PDFs, and study notes. Very popular with Apple Pencil users. - **Notability** — Best for lecture notes and audio recording while writing. Strong for students. - **Bear** — Best for clean, beautiful text notes. Great for writing and organization with tags. - **Obsidian** — Best for power users and linked knowledge bases. Excellent if you want markdown and local files. - **Microsoft OneNote** — Best free all-around app for work, school, and long-form notes. - **Evernote** — Best for clipping web pages, document storage, and cross-device organization. - **Google Keep** — Best for super-fast sticky-note style reminders and simple lists. **My quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Apple Notes - **Best for handwriting:** Goodnotes 6 - **Best for students:** Notability - **Best for writing:** Bear - **Best for advanced note systems:** Obsidian If you want, I can also rank them for **students**, **work**, or **handwritten notes**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for iPhone, depending on what you want: - **Apple Notes** — best all-around for most iPhone users; free, fast, great sync with iCloud, scanning, checklists, and handwritten notes. - **Goodnotes** — best for handwritten notes, PDFs, and school/work notebooks. - **Notability** — great for audio recording + notes, especially lectures and meetings. - **Evernote** — strong for web clipping, search, and organizing lots of notes. - **Microsoft OneNote** — excellent free option if you use Microsoft 365 or Windows. - **Bear** — best for clean writing and markdown; simple, elegant, and fast. - **Obsidian** — best for linked notes and personal knowledge management. - **Google Keep** — best for quick, lightweight notes and reminders. **Quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Apple Notes - **Best for handwriting:** Goodnotes - **Best for lectures:** Notability - **Best for organized writing:** Bear or Obsidian If you want, I can also give you the **best free note app**, **best for students**, or **best for professionals**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Top note-taking apps for iPhone: - **Apple Notes** — best all-around for most people; fast, free, great iCloud sync, scans docs, scribbles, folders, and sharing. - **Goodnotes** — best for handwriting, PDFs, and study notes; excellent Apple Pencil support. - **Notability** — great for lecture notes and audio recording synced to notes. - **Bear** — best for clean, beautiful text notes and Markdown writing. - **Microsoft OneNote** — best if you use Windows or Microsoft 365; very flexible and free. - **Evernote** — good for clipping web content and organizing lots of mixed info, though pricier. - **Craft** — best for polished notes and docs if you like a modern, structured writing app. If you want just one pick: - **Apple Notes** for most iPhone users - **Goodnotes** if you handwrite a lot - **Notability** if you record lectures or meetings If you want, I can also give you the **best free options** or **best for students**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for iPhone, depending on how you work: - **Apple Notes** — Best all-around for most people. Fast, built-in, great sync with iCloud, scan docs, checklists, folders, and lock notes. - **Notion** — Best for organized workflows. Great for notes, databases, tasks, and team/shared docs. - **Bear** — Best for clean writing. Beautiful interface, simple Markdown, excellent tagging, and very easy to use. - **Obsidian** — Best for power users and linked notes. Great if you want a personal knowledge base and local-first storage. - **Evernote** — Best for clipping and archiving. Strong web clipping, search, and document organization. - **Goodnotes** — Best for handwritten notes and PDFs. Ideal if you use an iPhone with an Apple Pencil on iPad too. - **Microsoft OneNote** — Best free cross-platform option. Flexible notebooks, good for school/work, and works well with Microsoft 365. - **Drafts** — Best for quick capture. Opens fast and is excellent for turning quick notes into emails, tasks, or text elsewhere. **My quick picks:** - **Simple and free:** Apple Notes - **Best writing app:** Bear - **Best for deep organization:** Notion or Obsidian - **Best for handwriting/PDFs:** Goodnotes If you want, I can also give you the **best free note apps** or the **best note apps for students/business/personal use**.
What are the best note-taking apps for Android? 720/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Top Android note-taking apps: 1. **Google Keep** — best for quick notes, checklists, voice notes, and simple reminders. Free and very easy to use. 2. **Microsoft OneNote** — best all-around for organized notes, notebooks, drawings, and syncing with Windows/Office. 3. **Evernote** — strong for clipping web content, searchable notes, and cross-device sync; best if you want a mature premium app. 4. **Notion** — best for flexible notes + databases + project tracking; great if you want more than just notes. 5. **Samsung Notes** — best if you use a Samsung phone or tablet; excellent for handwriting and stylus support. 6. **Obsidian** — best for markdown notes, linking ideas, and local-first privacy; great for power users. 7. **Joplin** — best open-source alternative with strong privacy and sync options. 8. **Zoho Notebook** — simple, attractive, and free, with a clean interface. If you want the shortest recommendation: - **Simple notes:** Google Keep - **Best overall:** OneNote - **Best for Samsung:** Samsung Notes - **Best for power users:** Obsidian If you want, I can also rank them for **students**, **work**, or **handwriting/stylus** use.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for Android, depending on what you need: - **Google Keep** — best for quick notes, lists, voice notes, reminders, and simple syncing. Very fast and easy. - **Microsoft OneNote** — best for long notes, notebooks, handwritten notes, and cross-device syncing. - **Notion** — best for organized notes, databases, wikis, and project planning. - **Evernote** — best for clipping web articles, scanning documents, and keeping everything searchable. - **Obsidian** — best for personal knowledge management, linked notes, and Markdown users. - **Joplin** — best free/open-source option, with good privacy and sync support. - **Samsung Notes** — best if you use a Samsung phone or tablet, especially with S Pen. - **Standard Notes** — best for privacy-focused, encrypted note-taking. **My quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Google Keep - **Best for heavy note organization:** OneNote - **Best for power users:** Notion or Obsidian - **Best for Samsung users:** Samsung Notes If you want, I can also give you the **best free note apps** or **best apps for handwriting on Android**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best note-taking apps for Android: - **Google Keep** — Best for quick notes, checklists, voice notes, and simple syncing with Google. - **Microsoft OneNote** — Best for full-featured note-taking, notebooks, drawings, and school/work use. - **Notion** — Best for organized notes, databases, task tracking, and team collaboration. - **Evernote** — Best for clipping web pages, searchable notes, and cross-device syncing. - **Obsidian** — Best for markdown notes, linking ideas, and personal knowledge management. - **Samsung Notes** — Best for Samsung phone/tablet users, especially with the S Pen. - **Simplenote** — Best for lightweight, distraction-free text notes. - **Joplin** — Best open-source option with strong privacy and sync support. **Quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Google Keep - **Best powerful app:** OneNote - **Best for organized knowledge:** Notion or Obsidian - **Best for Samsung devices:** Samsung Notes If you want, I can also give you the **best free note apps**, **best for students**, or **best for handwriting**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best note-taking apps for Android: 1. **Google Keep** Best for quick notes, checklists, voice notes, and simple organization. **Why it’s good:** fast, free, syncs well with Google account, easy widgets. 2. **Microsoft OneNote** Best for detailed notes and notebooks. **Why it’s good:** great for school/work, supports handwriting, images, audio, and strong cross-device sync. 3. **Notion** Best for organized knowledge bases and project notes. **Why it’s good:** very flexible, databases, templates, good for teams and personal systems. 4. **Evernote** Best for clipping web content and managing lots of notes. **Why it’s good:** powerful search, note organization, document scanning. 5. **Obsidian** Best for markdown-based personal knowledge management. **Why it’s good:** local-first, links between notes, highly customizable, great for power users. 6. **Standard Notes** Best for privacy and simple secure notes. **Why it’s good:** encrypted, minimal, reliable. 7. **Samsung Notes** Best for Samsung phone/tablet users, especially with an S Pen. **Why it’s good:** excellent handwriting and drawing support, tightly integrated on Samsung devices. **Quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Google Keep - **Best for students/professionals:** OneNote - **Best for power users:** Obsidian - **Best for structured workflows:** Notion If you want, I can also give you the **best free note apps** or the **best apps for handwriting on Android**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for Android, depending on what you want: - **Google Keep** — best for quick notes, lists, reminders, and voice memos. Simple and fast. - **Microsoft OneNote** — best all-around for long notes, notebooks, drawing, and cross-device syncing. - **Notion** — best for organized notes, project planning, databases, and team use. - **Evernote** — best for clipping web pages, scanning docs, and searchable archives. - **Obsidian** — best for linked notes, markdown, and building a personal knowledge base. - **Samsung Notes** — best if you use a Samsung phone or tablet, especially with an S Pen. - **Simplenote** — best for minimal, distraction-free text notes. - **ColorNote** — best for lightweight sticky notes and checklists. **Best picks overall:** - **Best simple app:** Google Keep - **Best powerful app:** OneNote - **Best for organization:** Notion - **Best for thinkers/writers:** Obsidian If you want, I can also give you the **best free note apps**, **best for students**, or **best for Samsung phones**.
What are the best note-taking apps for Windows? 20/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for Windows, by use case: - **Microsoft OneNote** — best overall for most people; free, powerful, great with pen/stylus, and deeply integrated with Windows/Office. - **Obsidian** — best for knowledge management and linking notes; fast, local-first, Markdown-based, great for power users. - **Notion** — best for organized all-in-one workspace; excellent for docs, databases, project notes, and team use. - **Evernote** — best for clipping web pages and searchable note archives; polished, but pricier than most. - **Apple Notes** — not available natively on Windows, so skip it unless you mainly use Apple devices. Good alternatives: - **Joplin** — best free/open-source option; supports Markdown, syncing, and encryption. - **Simplenote** — best for lightweight, plain-text notes; very simple and fast. - **Zoho Notebook** — nice-looking free option with cross-platform sync. - **Sticky Notes** (Windows built-in) — best for quick reminders, not serious note-taking. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free note app**, 2. the **best for students**, or 3. the **best for handwritten notes**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best note-taking apps for Windows, depending on what you need: ### Best overall - **Microsoft OneNote** — Free, powerful, and built for Windows. Great for handwritten notes, clipping web pages, audio notes, and organizing notebooks. ### Best for simple text notes - **Simplenote** — Very lightweight, fast, and distraction-free. - **Notepad++** — Best if you want a simple but powerful plain-text editor. ### Best for markdown and writing - **Obsidian** — Excellent for linked notes, knowledge bases, and local-first storage. - **Typora** — Clean markdown writing experience, very polished. ### Best for collaboration and sync - **Evernote** — Good for clipping, search, and cross-device syncing. - **Notion** — Great for notes, docs, databases, and team collaboration. ### Best for handwriting / stylus - **Microsoft OneNote** - **Nebo** — Strong handwriting recognition and ink-to-text features. ### Best for privacy / local storage - **Obsidian** - **Joplin** — Open-source, syncable, and privacy-focused. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free note apps**, 2. the **best for students**, or 3. the **best for organizing lots of notes**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for Windows, by use case: - **Microsoft OneNote** — best overall, especially if you use Microsoft 365. Free, powerful, great for notebooks, handwriting, clipping, and syncing. - **Obsidian** — best for linked notes and personal knowledge bases. Fast, local-first, Markdown-based, very customizable. - **Notion** — best for organized docs + notes + task management. Great for teams and databases, but heavier and cloud-based. - **Evernote** — best for web clipping and searchable note archives. Still strong for capturing lots of mixed content. - **Joplin** — best open-source alternative. Local-first, sync options, supports Markdown and encryption. - **Simplenote** — best for minimal plain-text notes. Very light and easy. - **Google Keep** — best for quick sticky-note style capture, if you want something simple and cross-platform. **My quick picks:** - **Best free all-rounder:** OneNote - **Best for power users:** Obsidian - **Best for work/wiki style notes:** Notion If you want, I can also give you the **best note apps for Windows by category** (student, work, handwriting, offline, privacy, etc.).
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for Windows, depending on what you want: - **Microsoft OneNote** — best overall for most people Great for freeform notes, handwriting, web clippings, and Office integration. - **Obsidian** — best for personal knowledge bases Excellent for linking notes, Markdown, and local-first storage. - **Notion** — best for organized workspaces Best if you want notes plus databases, task tracking, and team collaboration. - **Evernote** — best for capture and search Strong web clipping, scan support, and powerful search, but pricier than others. - **Joplin** — best open-source option Simple, private, Markdown-based, and syncs well across devices. - **Logseq** — best for daily journaling and linked thinking Great for outlines, backlinks, and local notes. - **Simplenote** — best lightweight option Fast, clean, and easy if you just want plain text notes. If you want one pick: **OneNote** for general use, **Obsidian** for power users, and **Notion** for work/projects.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for Windows, depending on what you need: - **Microsoft OneNote** — best overall for most Windows users Free, great handwriting/drawing, strong organization, syncs well with Microsoft 365. - **Obsidian** — best for power users and knowledge management Markdown-based, fast, local-first, excellent linking between notes, highly customizable. - **Notion** — best for all-in-one notes + tasks + databases Great if you want notes, project tracking, and docs in one place; cloud-first. - **Evernote** — best for web clipping and document-heavy notes Strong search and capture tools, but pricier than alternatives. - **Joplin** — best free privacy-focused alternative Open-source, local-first, sync options, supports Markdown and encryption. - **Simplenote** — best for minimal, distraction-free text notes Very lightweight and easy to use, but limited features. If you want a quick pick: - **Best free:** OneNote - **Best for students/office:** OneNote - **Best for writing/PKM:** Obsidian - **Best for team/project organization:** Notion - **Best privacy-focused:** Joplin If you want, I can also give you the **best note app for your exact use case** (school, work, research, handwritten notes, or task management).
What are the best note-taking apps for Mac? 1,300/mo
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for Mac, depending on what you need: - **Apple Notes** — Best free option Simple, fast, great sync with iPhone/iPad, solid for everyday notes. - **Bear** — Best for elegant writing Beautiful interface, Markdown support, great tagging. Excellent if you want a clean, distraction-free app. - **Obsidian** — Best for power users / knowledge management Markdown-based, local files, backlinking, plugins, very flexible. Great for building a personal knowledge base. - **Notion** — Best for notes + projects/databases More of an all-in-one workspace. Great if you want notes, tasks, docs, and databases together. - **Evernote** — Best for web clipping and document organization Strong search and capture tools, but heavier and pricier than many alternatives. - **UpNote** — Best value paid app Lightweight, polished, cross-platform, and usually cheaper than Bear or Evernote. - **Craft** — Best for polished docs and sharing Great design, good for visually nice notes, outlines, and team-friendly docs. **My quick picks:** - Best free: **Apple Notes** - Best overall for writing: **Bear** - Best for deep organization: **Obsidian** - Best all-in-one workspace: **Notion** If you want, I can also give you the **best note app for students, writers, or researchers**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for Mac, depending on what you need: - **Apple Notes** — best free option for most Mac users. Fast, simple, syncs well with iPhone/iPad, and supports folders, attachments, scanning, and collaboration. - **Microsoft OneNote** — best for free-form, mixed-media notes. Great if you like notebooks/sections/pages and want solid cross-platform support. - **Notion** — best for organized knowledge bases and team notes. Excellent for databases, docs, and templates, but can feel heavier than a traditional notes app. - **Obsidian** — best for power users and linked notes. Markdown-based, very customizable, and great for building a personal knowledge system. - **Evernote** — best for clipping web content and document-heavy note libraries. Strong search and organization, though pricier than many alternatives. - **Bear** — best for clean writing on Mac. Beautiful interface, Markdown support, and excellent tagging; great if you want a focused writing experience. - **Craft** — best for polished documents and visual notes. Very Mac-friendly, stylish, and ideal for presentations, docs, and planning. - **Agenda** — best for date-based note-taking. Great for meeting notes and project timelines. If you want the shortest recommendation: - **Best overall:** Apple Notes - **Best for power users:** Obsidian - **Best for teams/docs:** Notion - **Best for writing:** Bear If you want, I can also give you the **best note-taking app for your exact use case** (school, work, research, journaling, or PKM).
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Top picks for Mac: - **Apple Notes** — best free default option; fast, simple, great sync with iPhone/iPad. - **Bear** — best for clean writing and Markdown; beautiful UI, easy tagging. - **Obsidian** — best for power users and knowledge bases; local files, backlinks, plugins. - **Notion** — best for all-in-one notes + tasks + databases; great for teams and structured docs. - **Evernote** — best for clipping and search-heavy note archives; mature but pricier. - **Craft** — best for polished documents and sharing; very Mac-native feel. - **Logseq** — best for outlines and daily notes; privacy-friendly, local-first. Quick recommendations: - **Most people:** Apple Notes or Bear - **Heavy note systems:** Obsidian - **Work/wiki-style use:** Notion - **Research/clipping:** Evernote - **Pretty, shareable docs:** Craft If you want, I can narrow it down to the best one for your use case.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for Mac, depending on what you need: - **Notion** — Best all-in-one workspace. Great for notes, wikis, databases, and project tracking. - **Obsidian** — Best for linking ideas and personal knowledge management. Fast, local-first, very flexible. - **Apple Notes** — Best simple built-in option. Clean, quick, syncs well with iPhone/iPad. - **Bear** — Best for beautiful writing on Mac. Excellent Markdown support and a polished interface. - **Evernote** — Best for clipping and archiving web content. Powerful search, but heavier and pricier. - **Craft** — Best for visually polished notes and documents. Great for sharing and presentation-style notes. - **Microsoft OneNote** — Best free-form notebook style. Good if you’re in the Microsoft ecosystem. - **UpNote** — Best lightweight paid alternative. Clean, affordable, and easier than Evernote. **Quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for thinking/writing:** Obsidian - **Best simple default:** Apple Notes - **Best design:** Bear If you want, I can narrow it down to the best **free**, **offline**, or **student** options.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for Mac, depending on what you need: - **Apple Notes** — Best free all-around choice Great for quick notes, scanning docs, checklists, and syncing across Apple devices. Simple, fast, and built-in. - **Bear** — Best for beautiful writing and organization Clean Markdown notes, tags, great Mac design, and easy exports. Ideal if you like a minimal writing app. - **Obsidian** — Best for power users and knowledge management Local files, backlinks, graph view, tons of plugins. Excellent if you want a personal wiki or long-term note system. - **Notion** — Best for notes + databases + collaboration More than a notes app: docs, task lists, tables, team workspaces. Great for work and projects, but heavier than others. - **Evernote** — Best for web clipping and document-heavy notes Strong search, clipping, notebooks, and attachment handling. Still solid if you want an all-in-one archive. - **Craft** — Best for polished, modern documents Very good writing experience, nice formatting, and strong Apple ecosystem support. Great for presentations and clean docs. - **Goodnotes** — Best if you use an iPad too and like handwriting Excellent for handwritten notes, PDFs, and sketching, with a Mac app for viewing/editing. **Quick picks:** - Simple + free: **Apple Notes** - Best writing app: **Bear** - Best for serious note systems: **Obsidian** - Best for work/docs: **Notion** - Best for handwriting: **Goodnotes** If you want, I can also give you the **best note-taking app for your specific use case** (school, work, journaling, research, etc.).
What are the best note-taking apps for organizing notes?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best note-taking apps for **organizing notes**: - **Notion** — Best all-around for databases, linked pages, templates, and powerful organization. - **Evernote** — Great for clipping web pages, search, notebooks, and tags; very strong for archiving. - **Microsoft OneNote** — Best free-form notebook style, especially if you use Office/Windows. - **Apple Notes** — Excellent for Apple users; simple, fast, and well-organized with folders, tags, and smart search. - **Obsidian** — Best for building a connected knowledge base with backlinks, folders, and tags. - **Google Keep** — Best for quick, lightweight organization with labels, colors, and reminders. - **Bear** — Great for clean writing and organization on Apple devices with tags and nested tags. **Best picks by need:** - **Most powerful:** Notion - **Best for research/archiving:** Evernote - **Best for Microsoft users:** OneNote - **Best for Apple users:** Apple Notes or Bear - **Best for connected thinking:** Obsidian - **Best for quick capture:** Google Keep If you want, I can also recommend the **best one for students, work, or personal notes**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best note-taking apps for **organizing notes**, depending on how you like to work: ### Best overall: **Notion** - Great for databases, tags, pages, templates, and linking ideas - Best if you want notes + tasks + projects in one place - Works well for personal knowledge bases and team use ### Best for simple organization: **Evernote** - Strong notebook/tag system - Good web clipping and search - Best if you want a mature, easy-to-use app for storing lots of notes ### Best for power users: **Obsidian** - Excellent for linked notes and long-term knowledge management - Local files, Markdown, highly customizable - Best if you like building your own system ### Best for Apple users: **Apple Notes** - Very fast, clean, and built into iPhone/Mac - Folders, tags, scans, checklists, and solid search - Best if you want something simple and reliable ### Best for Microsoft users: **Microsoft OneNote** - Freeform notebooks and section tabs - Great for school, meetings, and handwritten notes - Best if you already use Microsoft 365 ### Best for collaboration: **Google Keep** - Super quick note capture, labels, and reminders - Easy sharing and syncing across devices - Best for lightweight organization, not deep structure ## My quick recommendations - **Most people:** Notion - **Best deep organization:** Obsidian - **Best simple all-purpose app:** Evernote - **Best free built-in option:** Apple Notes or OneNote If you want, I can also rank these for **students, professionals, or ADHD-friendly organization**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best note-taking apps for organizing notes: - **Notion** — Best all-in-one organizer. Great for databases, linked notes, tasks, and wikis. - **Evernote** — Best for classic note organization. Strong web clipping, tags, and search. - **OneNote** — Best for freeform notebook-style organization. Great if you use Microsoft 365. - **Obsidian** — Best for linked knowledge management. Excellent for connecting notes and building a personal wiki. - **Apple Notes** — Best simple option for iPhone/Mac users. Fast, clean, and very easy to organize with folders and tags. - **Google Keep** — Best for quick capture. Good for short notes, reminders, and labels. - **Bear** — Best for writing on Apple devices. Beautiful, simple, and good tagging system. - **Simplenote** — Best minimal note app. Lightweight and distraction-free. **Best overall for organization:** Notion **Best for power users:** Obsidian **Best for simple everyday use:** Apple Notes or OneNote If you want, I can also recommend the best app based on your device: iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac, or cross-platform.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Top note-taking apps for organizing notes: - **Notion** — best all-in-one for databases, tags, wikis, and project-based organization. - **Evernote** — great for clipping web pages, searchable notes, and strong notebook/tag structure. - **Microsoft OneNote** — best for freeform organization with section tabs and notebook-style layout. - **Apple Notes** — best for Apple users who want simple folders, tags, and fast syncing. - **Obsidian** — best for linked notes and personal knowledge management with folders + backlinks. - **Bear** — clean, elegant option for Apple users with strong tagging and markdown. - **Joplin** — good open-source choice with notebooks, tags, and sync flexibility. - **Google Keep** — best for quick, lightweight notes and basic labeling. If you want the safest “best overall” picks: - **Notion** for structured organization - **Obsidian** for deep linking and long-term knowledge - **Evernote** for capture + search If you want, I can also give you the **best app for students, professionals, or Apple/Windows users**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best note-taking apps for **organizing notes**: - **Notion** — Best all-around for databases, pages, templates, and linking notes together. - **Evernote** — Great for search, web clipping, tags, and keeping lots of mixed notes organized. - **Microsoft OneNote** — Best for freeform organization with notebooks, sections, and pages. - **Obsidian** — Best for linked notes and personal knowledge management, with strong folder/tag structure. - **Apple Notes** — Best simple option for Apple users; easy folders, tags, and solid syncing. - **Google Keep** — Best for quick, lightweight notes with labels, colors, and reminders. - **Bear** — Great for clean writing and tag-based organization on Apple devices. - **Zoho Notebook** — Good free option with visually organized notebooks and cards. If you want the **best overall for organization**, I’d pick: 1. **Notion** for structured note systems 2. **Obsidian** for deep linking and long-term knowledge bases 3. **OneNote** for a flexible notebook-style setup If you want, I can also recommend the best app based on whether you use **iPhone, Android, Windows, or Mac**.
What are the best note-taking apps with cloud sync?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best note-taking apps with cloud sync: - **Microsoft OneNote** — Great free option for handwriting, audio notes, and big notebooks; syncs well across Windows, Mac, iPhone, Android, and web. - **Evernote** — Strong for clipping web pages, search, and organization; good if you want a polished all-in-one notes app. - **Google Keep** — Best for quick notes, checklists, and reminders; simple and fast, with easy Google account sync. - **Apple Notes** — Excellent if you’re in the Apple ecosystem; syncs through iCloud and is very easy to use. - **Notion** — Best for structured notes, databases, and team collaboration; cloud-first and highly flexible. - **Obsidian** — Great for markdown and linked notes; sync is available via **Obsidian Sync** or through your own cloud service. - **Bear** — Clean, elegant notes app for Apple users; syncs via iCloud and is popular for writing. - **Joplin** — Strong open-source choice with end-to-end encryption and sync via Dropbox, OneDrive, Nextcloud, etc. **Best picks by use case:** - **Best overall:** OneNote - **Best simple app:** Google Keep - **Best for Apple users:** Apple Notes - **Best for power users:** Notion or Obsidian - **Best for privacy:** Joplin If you tell me your device (iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac) and how you take notes, I can narrow it to the top 3.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best note-taking apps with cloud sync: - **Notion** — Best all-in-one for notes, docs, databases, and team collaboration. Syncs well across devices. - **Evernote** — Great for clipping web pages, scanned docs, and searchable notes. Strong cloud sync, though pricier. - **Microsoft OneNote** — Free-form note-taking with excellent handwriting support and deep Microsoft 365 sync. - **Apple Notes** — Best if you’re in the Apple ecosystem; simple, fast, and syncs via iCloud. - **Google Keep** — Best for quick notes, checklists, and reminders. Lightweight and easy to use. - **Obsidian** — Best for personal knowledge management and linked notes. Sync is optional via **Obsidian Sync** or other cloud services. - **Bear** — Clean, beautiful writing app for Apple users; syncs via iCloud. - **Joplin** — Strong privacy-focused option with end-to-end encryption and sync via Dropbox, OneDrive, Nextcloud, etc. **Best picks by use case:** - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for handwriting:** OneNote - **Best for Apple users:** Apple Notes or Bear - **Best for quick capture:** Google Keep - **Best for privacy:** Joplin - **Best for deep personal knowledge bases:** Obsidian If you want, I can also narrow this down to **free apps**, **best for students**, or **best for work**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Top note-taking apps with reliable cloud sync: - **Notion** — Best all-in-one for notes, docs, tasks, and databases. Great cloud sync across devices. - **Microsoft OneNote** — Best free option for handwritten notes, clipping, and deep Microsoft 365 integration. - **Evernote** — Best for web clipping, searchable notebooks, and cross-platform note storage. - **Apple Notes** — Best for iPhone, iPad, and Mac users who want simple, fast syncing via iCloud. - **Google Keep** — Best for quick notes, checklists, and reminders with instant Google account sync. - **Obsidian Sync** — Best for Markdown power users who want encrypted cloud sync and local-first files. - **Bear** — Best for elegant writing on Apple devices with iCloud sync. Quick picks: - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best free:** OneNote or Google Keep - **Best for Apple users:** Apple Notes or Bear - **Best for power users:** Obsidian If you want, I can narrow this down by **iPhone/Android/Windows/Mac** or by **simple notes vs. project management**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best note-taking apps with cloud sync: - **Notion** — Best all-around for notes, docs, databases, and collaboration. Great sync across devices. - **Evernote** — Best for clipping web pages, scanned docs, and searchable note archives. - **Microsoft OneNote** — Best free option for handwriting, meeting notes, and Office integration. - **Apple Notes** — Best for Apple users; simple, fast, and tightly synced with iCloud. - **Google Keep** — Best for quick notes, checklists, and reminders; very lightweight. - **Obsidian** — Best for power users who want Markdown notes, local-first storage, and optional sync. - **Bear** — Best for clean writing on Apple devices with elegant design and sync via iCloud. - **Joplin** — Best open-source option with end-to-end encryption and sync via Dropbox, OneDrive, etc. If you want, I can also give you the **best one for students, work, or personal notes**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps with cloud sync: - **Notion** — best all-around for notes, docs, wikis, and databases; strong collaboration and cross-device sync. - **Microsoft OneNote** — best free option for rich notes, handwriting, and office integration. - **Evernote** — best for clipping web pages, scanning documents, and searchable note archives. - **Apple Notes** — best for iPhone/Mac users who want simple, fast, built-in sync via iCloud. - **Google Keep** — best for quick notes, checklists, and reminders; very lightweight. - **Obsidian + Obsidian Sync** — best for power users who want local-first notes, Markdown, and optional cloud sync. - **Bear** — best for elegant writing on Apple devices with iCloud sync. - **Joplin** — best open-source choice; syncs with Dropbox, OneDrive, Nextcloud, etc. **Quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best free:** OneNote - **Best Apple-only:** Apple Notes or Bear - **Best for privacy/control:** Obsidian or Joplin If you want, I can also rank them for **students, professionals, or team collaboration**.
What are the best note-taking apps with collaboration features?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best note-taking apps with strong collaboration: 1. **Notion** — Best overall for teams - Shared pages, databases, comments, mentions, permissions - Great for meeting notes, wikis, project docs - Best if you want notes + task/project management in one 2. **Microsoft OneNote** — Best for freeform note-taking - Real-time coauthoring, section sharing, Office integration - Excellent for handwritten notes, clipboards, class/team notebooks - Best for Windows/Office users 3. **Google Docs / Google Keep** — Best simple collaboration - Easy sharing, live editing, comments, reminders - Docs is better for structured notes; Keep is great for quick shared lists - Best if your team already uses Google Workspace 4. **Evernote** — Best for personal notes with sharing - Shared notebooks, task features, web clipping - Strong search and organization - Collaboration is solid, but not as modern as Notion 5. **Coda** — Best for document-style team workflows - Collaborative docs, tables, automations, comments - Great for team knowledge bases and lightweight operations - Best if notes need to act like mini-apps 6. **Dropbox Paper** — Best for simple team docs - Clean interface, comments, mentions, task assignments - Great for meeting notes and brainstorms - Best if you want something lightweight **Quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best free:** OneNote or Google Docs/Keep - **Best for teams:** Notion or Coda - **Best for simple shared notes:** Dropbox Paper If you want, I can also narrow this down by **Mac/Windows/iPhone/Android**, **free vs paid**, or **best for school vs work**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best note-taking apps with strong collaboration features: 1. **Notion** Best all-around for teams. Real-time editing, comments, shared databases, and great organization. 2. **Microsoft OneNote** Best if you use Microsoft 365. Easy sharing, live co-authoring, and solid handwritten note support. 3. **Google Keep** Best for quick shared notes and checklists. Simple, fast, and works well with Google Workspace. 4. **Evernote** Good for personal + small team use. Shared notebooks, task features, and reliable cross-platform syncing. 5. **Coda** Best for collaborative docs that act like mini-apps. Strong for teams managing projects and structured notes. 6. **Dropbox Paper** Best for lightweight collaborative docs. Clean interface, easy sharing, and good for meeting notes. **Top pick:** - **Notion** for most teams - **OneNote** if you’re in Microsoft 365 - **Google Keep** for simple shared lists and notes If you want, I can also rank them by **best for students, teams, or personal use**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for collaboration: 1. **Notion** Best overall for team docs, wikis, tasks, and shared databases. Great real-time collaboration and commenting. 2. **Google Keep** Best simple option for quick shared notes and lists. Easy sharing, fast, and free. 3. **Microsoft OneNote** Best for Office users. Strong shared notebooks, handwriting support, and solid team editing. 4. **Evernote** Good for personal + shared note organization. Collaboration is decent, though not as strong as Notion. 5. **Apple Notes** Best for Apple users. Clean, reliable shared notes with solid syncing across iPhone, iPad, and Mac. 6. **Coda** Best for collaborative docs that act like lightweight apps. More powerful than a normal notes app. **Top pick:** **Notion** for most people. **Best simple pick:** **Google Keep**. **Best for schools/Office:** **OneNote**. If you want, I can also give you the best option based on **iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac, or team size**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best note-taking apps for collaboration: 1. **Notion** - Best for: teams, wikis, project notes - Collaboration: real-time editing, comments, @mentions, shared pages, permissions - Why it stands out: very flexible and great for organizing docs + tasks in one place 2. **Microsoft OneNote** - Best for: students, Office/Microsoft 365 users - Collaboration: shared notebooks, live co-authoring, section/page sharing - Why it stands out: free-form note-taking with strong cross-platform support 3. **Google Keep** - Best for: quick shared notes and checklists - Collaboration: easy note sharing, simple real-time updates - Why it stands out: very fast and lightweight, especially if you use Google Workspace 4. **Evernote** - Best for: personal knowledge management with some team sharing - Collaboration: shared notebooks, note sharing, comments - Why it stands out: strong search and clipping features 5. **Coda** - Best for: collaborative docs that mix notes, tables, and workflows - Collaboration: live editing, comments, mentions, permissions - Why it stands out: more powerful than a standard notes app 6. **Dropbox Paper** - Best for: simple team docs and meeting notes - Collaboration: real-time editing, comments, task assignments - Why it stands out: clean, distraction-free, easy for teams 7. **Apple Notes** - Best for: Apple-only users - Collaboration: shared notes, live updates, mentions, activity view - Why it stands out: excellent if everyone is on iPhone/Mac/iPad **Top picks by use case:** - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for Microsoft users:** OneNote - **Best simple shared notes:** Google Keep - **Best for Apple users:** Apple Notes If you want, I can also rank them for **students**, **teams**, or **personal use**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best note-taking apps with strong collaboration features: 1. **Notion** — Best overall - Real-time editing, comments, mentions, shared workspaces, databases - Great for teams, project notes, and wikis 2. **Google Docs** — Best for simple collaborative note-taking - Excellent real-time collaboration, comments, chat, version history - Less “note app,” more document-based 3. **Microsoft OneNote** — Best for Microsoft users - Shared notebooks, co-authoring, strong on Windows and Microsoft 365 - Great for meeting notes and freeform organization 4. **Evernote Teams** — Best for classic note-taking with team sharing - Shared spaces, task assignment, note commenting - Strong web clipping and search 5. **Coda** — Best for notes + lightweight workflows - Collaborative docs with tables, buttons, and automation - Good for team playbooks and living documents 6. **Dropbox Paper** — Best for clean, fast team docs - Simple collaboration, comments, task lists, easy sharing - Minimalist and easy to use If you want the **best all-around pick**, choose **Notion**. If you want the **easiest pure collaboration**, choose **Google Docs**. If you want, I can also recommend the best one for **students, teams, or personal use**.
What are the best note-taking apps with tags and search?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best note-taking apps with **tags + strong search**: - **Bear** (Mac/iPhone) — Best for clean writing, excellent tags (`#tag`), and fast search. - **Obsidian** (Windows/Mac/Linux/iOS/Android) — Best for power users; tags, backlinks, and very strong full-text search. - **Evernote** (Windows/Mac/iOS/Android/Web) — Best for clipping, OCR search in images/PDFs, and mature tagging. - **Notion** (Web/Desktop/Mobile) — Best for databases and team notes; tags via properties, good search. - **Joplin** (Windows/Mac/Linux/iOS/Android) — Best open-source option; supports tags and solid search. - **OneNote** (Windows/Mac/iOS/Android/Web) — Best for freeform notebooks; good search and section/page organization. - **UpNote** (Windows/Mac/iOS/Android) — Best lightweight alternative; tags, folders, and reliable search. **Quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Obsidian - **Best simple writing:** Bear - **Best for document scanning/OCR:** Evernote - **Best free/open-source:** Joplin - **Best for structured notes:** Notion If you want, I can narrow this down by **Apple only, Windows only, free apps, or privacy-focused apps**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Top picks for **tags + strong search**: 1. **Obsidian** - Best for: power users, local files, backlinks, tagging - Why: excellent full-text search, tags, filters, fast, highly customizable 2. **Evernote** - Best for: easiest all-around capture + search - Why: very strong search, tags, OCR for images/PDFs, good web clipping 3. **Notion** - Best for: organized databases + team/work notes - Why: tags via properties, decent search, flexible pages and templates 4. **Bear** (Mac/iPhone only) - Best for: beautiful writing + tagging - Why: simple tags, fast search, clean interface, great for personal notes 5. **Joplin** - Best for: open-source + privacy - Why: tags, solid search, local/offline-first, sync options 6. **Microsoft OneNote** - Best for: freeform notebooks and handwritten notes - Why: good search, tags, OCR, great if you use Windows/Office **Quick recommendation:** - **Best overall:** Obsidian - **Best easiest:** Evernote - **Best for Apple users:** Bear - **Best free/open-source:** Joplin If you want, I can also rank them for **student**, **work**, or **personal knowledge base** use.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps with **tags + strong search**: 1. **Notion** Best for: all-in-one notes, docs, databases Why: excellent tagging via properties, very powerful search, good for organizing lots of content. 2. **Obsidian** Best for: personal knowledge base, markdown notes Why: tags are easy, search is fast, and linking/searching across notes is great. Best if you want local-first. 3. **Evernote** Best for: classic note capture, web clipping, OCR search Why: strong search, reliable tagging, great at finding text in images/PDFs. 4. **OneNote** Best for: freeform notebooks, Microsoft users Why: search is solid, section/page organization works well, tags are useful for task tracking. 5. **Bear** (Mac/iPhone) Best for: clean writing and simple organization Why: excellent tag-based structure and fast search, very polished. 6. **DevonThink** (Mac) Best for: heavy-duty document and note management Why: top-tier search, tagging, and document indexing—very powerful, but more advanced. **Best overall:** Notion **Best for local/private notes:** Obsidian **Best for search across scans/PDFs:** Evernote or DevonThink If you want, I can also give you the **best free options** or the **best app for iPhone/Android/Windows/Mac**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps with **tags + strong search**: - **Bear** (Mac/iPhone) — best for simple, beautiful tagging. Fast search, nested tags, Markdown. - **Obsidian** (Windows/Mac/Linux/iPhone/Android) — best for power users. Excellent search, backlinks, tags, local files. - **Notion** (all major platforms) — best for organized databases + tags. Good search, flexible, great for teams. - **Evernote** (all major platforms) — best classic note app for search. Very strong full-text search, tags, web clipping. - **OneNote** (all major platforms) — best for freeform notes + Microsoft ecosystem. Search is solid, tag support is decent. - **Joplin** (all major platforms) — best open-source option. Tags, good search, sync options, local control. - **UpNote** (all major platforms) — best lightweight paid alternative. Clean tagging, fast search, affordable. Quick picks: - **Best overall:** Obsidian - **Best simple/tag-based:** Bear - **Best for teams/databases:** Notion - **Best search:** Evernote - **Best free/open-source:** Joplin If you want, I can narrow this down to **iPhone/Mac**, **Windows/Android**, or **privacy-first** choices.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Top picks for **tags + strong search**: - **Obsidian** — best for power users; excellent tagging, backlinks, and fast full-text search. - **Evernote** — best “all-in-one” mainstream option; robust tags, OCR search, web clipper. - **Notion** — best for databases + project notes; tags are flexible, search is solid. - **Bear** (Apple only) — beautiful and simple; great tags and very good search. - **Joplin** — best open-source/private option; supports tags, notebook structure, and search. - **DEVONthink** (Mac/iPad) — best for serious document/note search; extremely powerful indexing. Quick recommendations: - **Best overall:** Obsidian - **Best for simplicity:** Bear - **Best for organization/work:** Notion - **Best for scanned docs/PDF search:** Evernote or DEVONthink If you tell me your device (iPhone/Android/Mac/Windows) and whether you want free or paid, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.
What are the best note-taking apps for personal knowledge management?
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for **personal knowledge management (PKM)**: ### Best overall - **Obsidian** — best for local-first, linked notes, daily notes, graph view, and long-term knowledge building. - **Notion** — best if you want notes + databases + planning in one polished workspace. ### Best for simple, fast capture - **Apple Notes** — great on Apple devices, very quick, surprisingly capable. - **Microsoft OneNote** — best free-form notebook style, good for mixed media and handwriting. ### Best for power users / customization - **Obsidian** — most flexible with plugins, templates, and markdown. - **Logseq** — best if you prefer outlining and bullet-based thinking. ### Best for team + personal hybrid - **Notion** — strong collaboration and databases. - **Craft** — clean design, excellent writing experience, good for personal docs. ### Best for privacy / local-first - **Obsidian** — files stay in plain text on your device. - **Joplin** — open-source, encrypted sync, solid privacy-focused choice. ### Best for academics / research-heavy PKM - **Zotero** + **Obsidian** — best combo for research notes, citations, and source management. - **DEVONthink** — powerful for Mac users managing large research archives. ## My quick picks - **Best overall:** Obsidian - **Best easiest all-in-one:** Notion - **Best free:** OneNote or Apple Notes - **Best privacy:** Obsidian or Joplin If you want, I can also give you the **best app based on your device** (iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac) or your **style** (minimal, academic, Zettelkasten, second brain).
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best note-taking apps for personal knowledge management (PKM), depending on how you like to work: ### Best overall - **Obsidian** — Best for linking ideas, building a second brain, and owning your notes locally. Huge plugin ecosystem. - **Notion** — Best if you want notes + databases + task/project management in one place. Very flexible, more “workspace” than pure notes. ### Best for simplicity - **Apple Notes** — Great if you’re in the Apple ecosystem and want fast, frictionless note capture. - **Microsoft OneNote** — Best free-form notebook style with strong handwriting support and good cross-platform syncing. ### Best for structured knowledge - **Logseq** — Excellent for daily notes, backlinks, and outlining. Good if you like bullet-based thinking. - **Roam Research** — Still one of the strongest for networked thought, though pricier and less polished for some users. ### Best for writing + PKM - **Bear** — Beautiful and lightweight, especially good for Apple users who like Markdown. - **Craft** — Great for polished documents and connected notes with a clean interface. ### Best for power users / AI-heavy workflows - **Reflect** — Strong for personal knowledge, backlinks, and integrated AI features. - **Tana** — Very powerful for structured capture and knowledge graphs, but has a steeper learning curve. ### Best for search and clipping - **Evernote** — Still strong for web clipping, search, and scanning docs, though many users have moved on due to pricing. ## Quick picks - **If you want the best PKM system:** Obsidian - **If you want all-in-one productivity:** Notion - **If you want simplest Apple-friendly notes:** Apple Notes - **If you want outline-based thinking:** Logseq If you want, I can also recommend the best app for your device (iPhone/Android/Mac/Windows) or your style (writing, research, tasks, or brainstorming).
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for personal knowledge management (PKM), depending on how you like to work: ### Best overall: **Obsidian** - Local-first, fast, and great for linking ideas - Huge plugin ecosystem - Best for building a long-term “second brain” ### Best for simplicity: **Apple Notes** - Free, clean, and very easy to use - Excellent if you’re deep in Apple devices - Great for quick capture, less ideal for complex PKM systems ### Best for Microsoft users: **OneNote** - Strong for handwriting, clipping, and freeform organization - Great across Windows, iPad, and Office workflows - Less elegant for linked-note knowledge bases ### Best for collaboration: **Notion** - Combines notes, databases, tasks, and docs - Excellent for team/shared knowledge and structured PKM - Can feel slow or overcomplicated for personal use ### Best for power users: **Logseq** - Outliner-based and backlink-focused - Great for daily notes, Zettelkasten, and structured thinking - More niche, less polished than Obsidian ### Best for all-in-one workspace: **Craft** - Beautiful writing experience and solid organization - Good for personal docs, notes, and lightweight PKM - Strong on Apple platforms ### Best for research and academic work: **DEVONthink** - Powerful search, file management, and document organization - Excellent for PDFs, references, and large knowledge archives - Mac-only and more advanced ### Best for quick capture + AI features: **Evernote** - Still strong for web clipping, search, and scanning - Easier than ever, but less loved for deep PKM than Obsidian/Logseq ## My quick picks - **Best serious PKM:** Obsidian - **Best beginner-friendly:** Apple Notes - **Best structured workspace:** Notion - **Best for outlining:** Logseq - **Best for heavy research:** DEVONthink If you want, I can also give you the **best note-taking app based on your device** (iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac, Linux).
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Best PKM note-taking apps, by use case: - **Obsidian** — best overall for long-term personal knowledge bases; local files, backlinks, lots of plugins. - **Notion** — best for all-in-one workspace; great if you want notes + databases + projects. - **Logseq** — best for outliner-first thinking; strong for daily notes and linked ideas. - **Bear** — best for Apple users; clean, fast, beautiful writing experience. - **Capacities** — best for “objects” and knowledge graphs; good modern PKM feel. - **Roam Research** — best for bidirectional linking and networked thinking, but pricey. - **Evernote** — best for capture and search; less ideal for deep PKM than the above. - **Microsoft OneNote** — best if you already live in Microsoft 365; flexible freeform notebooks. **My short recommendations:** - **Most people:** Obsidian - **Best simplicity:** Bear - **Best team/work + notes:** Notion - **Best outline system:** Logseq If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your device, workflow, and whether you prefer folders, tags, or backlinks.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the best note-taking apps for personal knowledge management (PKM), depending on how you like to work: ### Best overall: **Obsidian** - Great for linked notes, local files, and long-term ownership - Excellent if you want a “second brain” with backlinks, graphs, and plugins - Best for power users and thinkers who like flexibility ### Best for simple organization: **Notion** - Best if you want notes, databases, tasks, and project tracking in one place - Very polished and easy to start with - Less ideal if you want fast, offline-first, plain-text note ownership ### Best for Apple users: **Apple Notes** - Fast, built-in, and surprisingly powerful - Great for quick capture, scanning, and syncing across Apple devices - Best if you want minimal setup ### Best for networked thinking: **Roam Research** - Strong for daily notes and connecting ideas - Excellent for building an interconnected knowledge base - Expensive and a bit more niche than Obsidian ### Best for plain-text minimalists: **Logseq** - Open-source, local-first, and great for outlining - Strong for journaling, tasks, and backlinks - Good alternative to Obsidian if you prefer block-based notes ### Best for visual thinkers: **Craft** - Beautiful writing experience and clean structure - Great for elegant notes, docs, and personal knowledge spaces - Less technical than Obsidian ### Best for heavy task + notes workflows: **Evernote** - Mature app with strong capture and search - Still useful if you want easy web clipping and document storage - Not as popular for modern PKM as Obsidian/Notion ## Quick recommendation - **Most people:** Obsidian - **All-in-one workspace:** Notion - **Apple-only simplicity:** Apple Notes - **Outliner and backlinks:** Logseq If you want, I can also give you the **best app for your specific workflow** (student, researcher, writer, executive, or ADHD-friendly).

All 72 prompts run for Craft

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6)

  • 1 What is Craft known for?
  • 2 What are Craft's main strengths and weaknesses?
  • 3 Who should use Craft? Who should avoid it?
  • 4 How does Craft compare to its main competitors?
  • 5 What do people typically complain about with Craft?
  • 6 What is a typical note-taking app known for? control

Authority — LLM Authority (50)

  • 1 What are the best note-taking apps for meeting notes? discovery
  • 2 What are the best note-taking apps for college lectures? discovery
  • 3 What are the best note-taking apps for researchers? discovery
  • 4 What are the best note-taking apps for writers? discovery
  • 5 What are the best note-taking apps for teams? discovery
  • 6 What are the best note-taking apps for project management notes? discovery
  • 7 What note-taking apps are best for syncing across devices? discovery
  • 8 What note-taking apps are best for offline access? discovery
  • 9 What are the best note-taking apps for handwriting and stylus use? discovery
  • 10 What are the best note-taking apps for voice notes? discovery
  • 11 What note-taking apps work best with markdown? discovery
  • 12 What are the best note-taking apps for task tracking? discovery
  • 13 What are the best note-taking apps for information management? discovery
  • 14 What are the best note-taking apps for simple note capture? discovery
  • 15 What are the best note-taking apps for long-term note organization? discovery
  • 16 What note-taking apps are best for students who want to organize class notes? discovery
  • 17 What note-taking apps are best for managing research notes? discovery
  • 18 What are the best note-taking apps for saving web clippings? discovery
  • 19 What are the best note-taking apps for keeping personal journals? discovery
  • 20 What are the best note-taking apps for minimalist note taking? discovery
  • 21 What are the best alternatives to the leading all-in-one note app? comparison
  • 22 What are the best alternatives to a popular note-taking app for teams? comparison
  • 23 What are the best alternatives to a note app that focuses on databases and pages? comparison
  • 24 What are the best alternatives to a note app built for fast capture and search? comparison
  • 25 What are the best alternatives to a note app designed for markdown users? comparison
  • 26 What are the best alternatives to a note app with strong web clipping features? comparison
  • 27 What are the best alternatives to a note app for students and lectures? comparison
  • 28 What are the best alternatives to a note app for handwriting and tablets? comparison
  • 29 What are the best alternatives to a note app with strong collaboration tools? comparison
  • 30 What are the best alternatives to a note app for personal knowledge management? comparison
  • 31 How do I keep all my notes in one place? problem
  • 32 How do I organize notes so I can find them later? problem
  • 33 How do I take better digital notes during meetings? problem
  • 34 How do I sync my notes across phone and laptop? problem
  • 35 How do I clip articles and save them for later? problem
  • 36 How do I make my notes searchable? problem
  • 37 How do I manage class notes and assignments together? problem
  • 38 How do I build a personal knowledge base? problem
  • 39 How do I keep handwritten notes on my tablet? problem
  • 40 How do I share notes with my team? problem
  • 41 What is the best free note-taking app? transactional
  • 42 What note-taking apps have a free plan? transactional
  • 43 How much do note-taking apps cost? transactional
  • 44 What is the cheapest note-taking app for students? transactional
  • 45 What note-taking apps are worth paying for? transactional
  • 46 What note-taking apps have a good free tier for individuals? transactional
  • 47 What note-taking apps include collaboration without extra cost? transactional
  • 48 What note-taking apps offer family or team pricing? transactional
  • 49 What note-taking apps are best value for money? transactional
  • 50 What note-taking apps have premium features without a high price? transactional

TOM — Top of Mind (15)

  • 1 What are the best note-taking apps for everyday use? 1,600/mo
  • 2 What are the top note-taking apps right now? 210/mo
  • 3 Which note-taking apps are the most popular? 210/mo
  • 4 What note-taking apps are most recommended?
  • 5 What are the best note-taking apps for students?
  • 6 What are the best note-taking apps for work?
  • 7 What are the best note-taking apps for iPhone?
  • 8 What are the best note-taking apps for Android? 720/mo
  • 9 What are the best note-taking apps for Windows? 20/mo
  • 10 What are the best note-taking apps for Mac? 1,300/mo
  • 11 What are the best note-taking apps for organizing notes?
  • 12 What are the best note-taking apps with cloud sync?
  • 13 What are the best note-taking apps with collaboration features?
  • 14 What are the best note-taking apps with tags and search?
  • 15 What are the best note-taking apps for personal knowledge management?