Should You Try Craft? | DETAILED Review | Part 4
This is the fourth and final part of our Craft review. We covered the basics in the first part of this review, items we can add in the second one, and the third helped us get organised in the app.
This is the fourth and final part of our Craft review. We covered the basics in the first part of this review, items we can add in the second one, and the third helped us get organised in the app.
The best part of using Craft, or similar apps, is how they organise your notes, bringing all your thoughts and ideas together. You get more out of your notes when you take advantage of all the organisational tools you have in the app.
The first part of our review ended on a low note, but we are hoping to get our smiles back as we go through all the different items you can add to your notes to make them more fun in Craft.
Craft is a text-based note-taking app that lets you create, style, organise, and share your notes with others.
I’m always on the lookout for a new note-taking app, and recently Capacities caught my attention. It looks like Anytype and Notion.
So, when they say offline first, they really just mean you can access your Anytype notes offline. That’s to be expected, no?
If you care about your privacy and hate the idea that there might be a chance (no matter how small) that you might lose your notes, then you should probably not use Notion.
We especially love Joplin makes sure that users’ notes are private and that we can sync with any cloud service we choose.
Apple Notes is a free note-taking app that comes pre-installed on most
Google Keep is a free, simple note-taking and planning app from Google.
Google Keep is a free note-taking and planning app by Google. You