What a coincidence, was just looking for a replacement of Simplenote!
With hundreds of note taking apps coming and going, is there any single performant cross-platform non-Electron app with great conflict resolution for simple notes? Just to be more useful than an overpowered code editor + a file cloud?
Checked just 2 of these conditions here (native Windows and macOS and some iOS startup benchmarks) and there is literally not a single app!!! (to be fair, not every app is likely tested, but even without those it's 6 apps)
Obsidian is great and highly performant, even though it's using Electron. Electron is a huge advantage, faster development and the option to customise it easily with plugins.
I don't think even Simplenote was native on Windows (despite what noteapps.info says), there is no simplenote-windows repo and all signs point to simplenote-electron
I use Ticktick for my Markdown notes and todos. I can add tasks from my lockscreen. I have a single view of notes and tasks. Costs me 5 biriyanis per year, yes its localized pricing.
Been meaning to switch to an open source app out of principle, one which can handle rich notes too.
Works well on all paltforms, desktop and mobile. The sync works also great. It also backs up to text files on your computer, so that you can back up your files with your regular backup process and you can also easily move away if you would like to one day.
That‘s the notetaking app that has several "editors", isn‘t it?
So that if you want to use feature A you need a different view inside the app than if you want to use feature B. And if you use both, you constantly switch?
The illustrations on the home page are some of the most hideous slop I've ever seen. Terrible first impression, and it really doesn't inspire trust in the quality of security of the service. Eventually companies will learn. But for now, eww.
Wow, I thought you were exaggerating / being the usual AI hater, so I opened the page expecting a some product screenshots with a few too many em dashes or something like that, fully intending to tell you to calm down. But dammmn it's bad! You weren't exaggerating at all!
Wow, it is really awful. This is such a pointless misstep given that Standard Notes has been around for years, was not vibe coded, is not an AI app - but this landing page makes me immediately assume it’s slop.
Isn't Simplenote partially (or maybe entirely?) opensource? Would've been nice if they'd linking to the repos if so, and perhaps put out a call for new maintainers rather than just archiving.
Just use plain text files. Anything backed by a service is going to hurt over a long enough time frame. And it seems that time frame gets shorter every year.
I still use email drafts for a lot of notes. Looking at my email draft folder the oldest one I have is from 2002 and I can still access it just fine, even on mobile.
That’s a shame, though I do see that it is difficult to make any money from what it is. I’m glad they didn’t sell it to someone big for all the user’s data, though it is still early
It makes me miss the shareware era, back before races to the bottom and free corporate giant competition had all but eliminated any kind of profit margin on simple, but thoughtfully designed and well-built software.
How many of us have had ideas for little utilities and such that were never followed through on because the chances of even breaking even on them was so low? I know I have several.
It's owned by Automattic, isn't it? I assume they're simply keeping the lights on for whoever wants to use it.
For about a year I've noticed that it tends to quit on its own on my Mac. Whenever I need to look for a note I realize the app is inactive and I need to re-launch it. Then it works perfectly well, until somehow, at some point, it quits without me realizing.
It's sad that they're not fixing it, and that eventually it probably won't work with newer Mac OS and iOS versions. I should start looking for a way to migrate off of it.
It's been my go-to since 2009! That's longer than I had thought. It just did what it said on the sticker and has always been unobtrusive and respectful of the user when adding a few features every now and then. Thankful to have been able to use it for so long and without it getting enshitified like almost everything else.
I used to love nvALT. Want to check out https://hashy.ink. It's an open source markdown editor inspired by nvALT. Still rough around the edges, but it's coming together.
From Simplenote to Simplynot. I liked it, it was like a popular app on Gnome or KDE, but available on mobile devices. It was well designed and privacy respecting. However, the walled gardens are hostile to such apps.
If you're looking for alternatives that you control, there are several self-hosted note-taking apps worth considering:
- Joplin Server: supports Markdown, end-to-end encryption, and syncs across devices. The server component runs in Docker and acts as a sync target for the Joplin clients (desktop, mobile, CLI).
- Memos: lightweight, open source, designed for quick notes and personal memos. Single Docker container, SQLite by default. Closest to Simplenote in philosophy — simple and fast.
- Standard Notes: encrypted by default, has first-party apps for every platform. You can self-host the sync server, though the hosted version has a free tier too.
- Obsidian + self-hosted sync (via CouchDB or Livesync plugin): if you want local-first Markdown files with optional sync. More powerful than Simplenote but steeper learning curve.
For something closest to Simplenote's simplicity, Memos is probably the best fit. It's just a place to quickly jot things down without the overhead of Notion or Obsidian's feature set.
With hundreds of note taking apps coming and going, is there any single performant cross-platform non-Electron app with great conflict resolution for simple notes? Just to be more useful than an overpowered code editor + a file cloud?
Checked just 2 of these conditions here (native Windows and macOS and some iOS startup benchmarks) and there is literally not a single app!!! (to be fair, not every app is likely tested, but even without those it's 6 apps)
https://noteapps.info/features?group=performance
The website's idea is great, but unfortunately it's not comprehensive/reliable, otherwise finding an alternative would be much easier.
Been meaning to switch to an open source app out of principle, one which can handle rich notes too.
Works well on all paltforms, desktop and mobile. The sync works also great. It also backs up to text files on your computer, so that you can back up your files with your regular backup process and you can also easily move away if you would like to one day.
So that if you want to use feature A you need a different view inside the app than if you want to use feature B. And if you use both, you constantly switch?
I still use email drafts for a lot of notes. Looking at my email draft folder the oldest one I have is from 2002 and I can still access it just fine, even on mobile.
How many of us have had ideas for little utilities and such that were never followed through on because the chances of even breaking even on them was so low? I know I have several.
For about a year I've noticed that it tends to quit on its own on my Mac. Whenever I need to look for a note I realize the app is inactive and I need to re-launch it. Then it works perfectly well, until somehow, at some point, it quits without me realizing.
It's sad that they're not fixing it, and that eventually it probably won't work with newer Mac OS and iOS versions. I should start looking for a way to migrate off of it.
- Joplin Server: supports Markdown, end-to-end encryption, and syncs across devices. The server component runs in Docker and acts as a sync target for the Joplin clients (desktop, mobile, CLI).
- Memos: lightweight, open source, designed for quick notes and personal memos. Single Docker container, SQLite by default. Closest to Simplenote in philosophy — simple and fast.
- Standard Notes: encrypted by default, has first-party apps for every platform. You can self-host the sync server, though the hosted version has a free tier too.
- Obsidian + self-hosted sync (via CouchDB or Livesync plugin): if you want local-first Markdown files with optional sync. More powerful than Simplenote but steeper learning curve.
For something closest to Simplenote's simplicity, Memos is probably the best fit. It's just a place to quickly jot things down without the overhead of Notion or Obsidian's feature set.