![]() ![]() Cloud solutions seem fantastic to them, and they don't have the energy to fight with someone in marketing who introduces a rogue solution because they don't understand how the current Wiki works.īitwarden is a niche application which handles very sensitive data. Most IT managers are under pressure to cut costs, reduce staff, modify accounting (review vs capital budgets), coexist with shadow IT, etc. ![]() Sometimes relationships with big organizations force this reality and threats get addressed, but it's not the norm. Many IT people in small/medium organizations don't have the time to consider this. Many folks that post to HN seem to miss this even though they are probably very technically capable. > Suppose your company handles a fair bit of confidential information, and some of that information ends up in Notion as part of your general project management workflow. > It's possibly something many of us should care more about, though.ĭefinitely, but I'd argue that even with containers etc., we don't yet have the capabilities to make what we know is right, as easy to operate as SaaS. It is up to the developers, if they read it, to gauge how representative I am of the target audience and therefore how relevant my concerns are I'm assuming somebody like Pateo11 would quickly setup A/B switch - signup with and without asking for contact permissions, and see the impact :) My post is meant to provide feedback: I'm currently not trying their product (and I've explicitly provided why - the seemingly minor request to share my contacts), and I may not become paying customer once I figure out a way to try it (because the jump to my desired level of service is too high). Specifically, however, I am indicating by my post that I'm not willing to pay 4x the price, for privilege of sharing - it does not have that value to me and it's not where my expectations were level-set :). I absolutely agree with your general principle, as I read it: price is not necessarily determined by your cost (which goes up only incrementally with added users), but by the value (what the customer is willing to pay, which may go up more significantly). You can chose that path or not, but understand what this very important element of Apple's philosophy means because it affects so much of the past couple decades of our industry. It's about taking the extra time and care to do it native. "And while sacrifices were often made of money, time and frustration, users of Apple products often reaped the rewards." This is definitely not the Electron approach. Back of the fence is the fine touches on the unseen internals, but reflect a general care and pride in your craft that will probably pay off in the long run. It is a very distinct concept from focusing on user-visible details, which I think is what you're referencing here. It's why they invested so much in the OS X internals and stuck with a native focus that helped iOS be so fast and nimble out of the gate on extremely resource-constrained mobile devices. ![]() The Steve Jobs quip about painting the back of the fence sought to explain why the Apple II and Mac teams cared so much about the inside of the box and even signed it. I am not judging Electron so please relax. This has been downvoted so let me expand on this. Other than that I love the idea of your service, which can turn a blank canvas into a simple text document or a fully featured Airtable-like application, or anything inbetween. I think text, regardless of the number of paragraphs or format, should be one single block until it's actually interrupted by inline data structures like tables or galleries. It leads to side effects like "Select all" on iOS actually not select all, but just the current block/paragraph. this is a very minor issue, but since I often use Notion as a note taking tool the rigid separation of paragraphs into multiple isolated content blocks is rather annoying. Unfortunately the difference in user experience is night and day. I'd like to make Notion a central part of my daily, essential tools - similarly to an app like Things. while the browser-based webapp is mostly fine, the mobile apps feel really subpar and somewhat out of place on iPad and iPhone alike: Sluggish, slow animations, inconsistent keyboard behavior, unnecessarily large fullscreen modals on iPad - it's very noticeable that it isn't a native app. Boostnote allows you create folders, tag notes, and export Markdown files to HTML and PDF file format.īoostnote provides support for the following Markdown elements.I see a lot of potential for Notion and really enjoy the service, but currently it still feels a little rough. The application’s interface is polished and intuitive, and open source clients are available for macOS, Windows, and Linux operating systems. Boostnote bills itself as a note taking application for developers, but anyone in need of a Markdown application for notes would be happy with this application. ![]()
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