Obsidian is great to handle your own thoughts. You can Tag and link your notes, which would allow you to order them. It uses simple markdown files, so no vendor lock-in. One of its biggest strength is the extension system, where you can find almost any kind of feature. Including complex data processing.
Running a VPN costs money, so most of the "free" ones sell your data.
The only legitimate one I know of with a free tier is ProtonVPN. Just don't say anything illegal in Sweden or Switzerland, wherever they're based out of.
TOR is kinda a VPN, but you'll have a bad time using it for Netflix.
We just launched the app we've been working on of the last year+.
Please follow the link, download it and let us know what you think! Users that fill out the form on the link will get a free month of LucidPix Super User.
Hey y'all,
I'm one of the co-founders of Space Browser :)
After one year of intensive work Space Browser has officially launched today.
It'd mean a lot to get your support today to help us get the word out, or maybe even give a recommendation on Product Hunt.
Please go here and get Space for free:
I used to use 1Password until they started to charge a subscription for cross-platform capability. I switched to KeePass (on PC) and KeePass Touch (on iOS) - other clients are available. This is an open-source password manager with clients for just about every platform you can think of. It also lets you securely store documents, images, etc. and I keep a copy of my Drivers License, Passport, and other key documents that I want to keep securely (i.e. encrypted and) sync'ed across my multiple PCs, iPhone, and iPad...
No affiliation - just a happy user.
That seems really odd. I asked the DarkSky folks on Twitter about the availability of the App Store, so hopefully they answer.
It sure looks like they have weather data for your country though. https://darksky.net/
I believe Expensify does exactly what we need as a family. The pricing on the other hand is not family friendly. If reading that page correct, to work as a group, we would each have to pay $5 a month. That is $120 a year for only my wife and I. Paying for good software is something I am willing to do, but that seems a bit excessive.
Thank you for pointing that out, though. For an individual it is likely a great option.
Have you checked out Nomie? I have trackers like “change AC filter”. I can see a history of when I changed the filter (similar to your grass cutting example). I also keep up with coffee, water, medicine... It is a pretty flexible app.
Why do you have to sign up / log in with an account to track your own viewing? I just had a look at their privacy policy and it looks pretty scary, basically they can use your data in many ways (including selling your “internet and network activity” - whatever that means - to third parties)... I guess I won’t sign up for that. It’s a pity that you can’t test it without having an account.
There's 2 apps I've seen that work one is Clipboard - Paste Anywhere and the other is Raindrop.io try them out Clipboard just lets you paste links to the app and Raindrop.io is like a bookmarker
It’s not free but I’m currently using something called NotePlan2 https://noteplan.co/noteplan-2/ It’s basically like a digital bullet journal. It Combines your calendar with your reminder and daily tasks / notes.
Hi, guys!
I am FSNotes author https://fsnot.es – subscription free, open source app.
File system notes manager is modern "notational velocity" (nvALT) on steroids for macOS and iOS.
Application respects open formats: plain/text, markdown, rtf, and stores data in file system. Sync with macOS works through iCloudDrive, but Dropbox support planned too.
Spike! You can find them at www.spikenow.com. They have a conversational email format so your email threads look like an iMessage or Whatsapp feed so you don't need to deal with annoying separation headers. It also bundles all emails from each contact so all emails from that person show up in one continuous feed. When you want to unsubscribe or delete mass emails, Spike also makes it super easy. I use it to manage multiple emails from my freelance clients and it saves me so much time with all the tools it has.
You could also give Zenkit a spin.. we're actually working on a little to-do app that'll be the perfect WL alternative, but for now Zenkit itself can do the stars. Alternatively you could use checkmarks and sort classes by list or label. There's direct import from WL too so you wouldn't need to re-create your lists :)
I would recommend Quire. Free, user friendly, has both the desktop version and app, and has a Kanban board. It's one of the best productivity apps I used so far. Not interested in paying to use a todo list, so this is pretty much what I need.
Depending where you located and for what purpose/the amount of data you like to move through it, there is quite a lot you can choose from: Windscribe, Hotspot Shield, Proton, ... Google is probably your best friend here 😁
Yup, it's closed-source. And we do actually have an Android version of the mobile app! You can get it on Google Play here: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.averi.iden_t_fy
Both versions function identically and access the same data, so no need to worry about cross-phone compatibility.
You could give meditation teacher a try. It's a simple breath in-breath out meditation app, which gives auditory feedback if you wander off.
Give me feedback pls.. Android and Iphone links are here Android: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=xdk.intel.ad.circle IOS : https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/my-circle-local-craigslist/id970232536?l=tr&ls=1&mt=8