Notae - 2.2.1notebook that can handle text, pdf, and web archives |
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Feedback Summary:
| This Version: | |||||
| Overall Rating: | Not rated (0.0) | Features: | Not rated (0.0) | Support: | Not rated (0.0) |
| Ease of Use: | Not rated (0.0) | Quality / Stability: | Not rated (0.0) | Price: | Not rated (0.0) |
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Featured Reviews
All Feedback: 1 - 5 of 5
Works Great...Instant Support 



- Version: 1.2.2, 10/8/2006 07:02PM PST
jjreynol
This is simply a nifty little application which does what it advertises. I use it primarily to save news clippings. The clippings can be tagged and can easily be searched by keyword. I recently had a question and contacted the developer via his web site. Within minutes, I had his reply. Problem solved. I recommend Notae highly.
A stroke of brilliance 



- Version: 1.0.4, 5/11/2006 11:21PM PST
(5 of 5 users found this comment useful)
matterman
Notae is a minor stroke of brilliance. It is not a notebook app that tries to be all things to all people, nor is it an outliner or glorified to do list. The easiest way to think of it is TextEdit on steroids (doctor prescribed) without any of the harmful side effects that steroids often have. It's not bloated, doesn't have mood disorders (its totally stable) or have an interface that gets in the way of doing things. Because it is based on CoreData, searches are instantaneous across all of your notes. Tags let you add as many category markers to a note as you want, and then sort on these with the tag palette. Being able to lock a note stops you from accidentally deleting or changing things. One of my favorite features is auto naming of notes (your first line becomes the note name).
For a 1.0 product it is remarkably mature and nearly all of its features work exactly as you would expect them to. The exception to this is using the search bar to search for a tag, but since you can do the same thing with the tag palette that is not a big deal. The developer is responsive, and gets bug fixes out fairly rapidly, he is also aware of features that need to be implemented like viewing only the columns you want like the Finder, Mail and iTunes allow. At $15 Notae is worth every penny.
For a 1.0 product it is remarkably mature and nearly all of its features work exactly as you would expect them to. The exception to this is using the search bar to search for a tag, but since you can do the same thing with the tag palette that is not a big deal. The developer is responsive, and gets bug fixes out fairly rapidly, he is also aware of features that need to be implemented like viewing only the columns you want like the Finder, Mail and iTunes allow. At $15 Notae is worth every penny.
?? - Version: 1.0.2, 4/23/2006 10:01AM PST
(2 of 2 users found this comment useful)
W-Creative
One must register at a web site to get information on this application?
Most Recent Replies: View All 1 Replies
- ??
Notae Rocks 



- Version: 1.0, 1/16/2006 11:05AM PST
(4 of 6 users found this comment useful)
doce
This app rocks - I've moved all my stickies and random text and web clippings from my desktop, and everything works as advertised. This will easily replace stickies, textedit, and even bbedit for me.
No crashes, every feature works, probably the best 1.0 release of a product I've used in many, many years.
Rock on, developer. Rock on.
No crashes, every feature works, probably the best 1.0 release of a product I've used in many, many years.
Rock on, developer. Rock on.
Alpha Release? - Version: 1.0, 1/15/2006 11:04PM PST
(1 of 5 users found this comment useful)
Steven P. Jobs
I'm running a pristine 10.4.4 system, and this app is buggy seven ways to Tuesday. The biggest showstoppers:
- Nothing from my entries shows up in Spotlight
- Webarchives generated from a URL given to the app show garbage text, not webpages.
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Once the easy bugs get squashed, there is an app of great promise here. OS X is in great need of a good lightweight Spotlight-enabled notes app, and codepoet should be able to deliver. A few needed interface improvements:
- Allow the user to eliminate columns from the source list.
- Provide a contextual menu to add pre-existing tags to entries from the source list.
- Nothing from my entries shows up in Spotlight
- Webarchives generated from a URL given to the app show garbage text, not webpages.
-----
Once the easy bugs get squashed, there is an app of great promise here. OS X is in great need of a good lightweight Spotlight-enabled notes app, and codepoet should be able to deliver. A few needed interface improvements:
- Allow the user to eliminate columns from the source list.
- Provide a contextual menu to add pre-existing tags to entries from the source list.
Most Recent Replies: View All 1 Replies