Acts of Volition

Comments

Steven Marshall -

xPad is very good - I tried it out for a while on a friend's old G3 iBook.

Personally, I prefer <a href="http://office.microsoft.com/assistance/topcategory.aspx?TopLevelCat=CH79001812&CTT=6&Origin=ES790020011033" title="Microsoft Office OneNote 2003">Microsoft's OneNote</a>, which forms part of Office 2003. But then, I don't use it just for "notes" - I use it for organising tasks, managing "resources" for reports (for example, links to references, quotables, etc.), and it lets me manage all of this in exactly the way I want.

I will conceed, however, that it costs substantially more than xPad, and is Windows only.

Garrett Murray -

I remember hearing about OneNote a while back. Luckily, since I'm appealing to a niche market that doesn't involve Windows, I don't have to compete with that product in this case.

And yes, OneNote costs 20 times more than xPad (199 vs. 9.99). Then again, if you're using Windows perhaps OneNote would be a viable alternative. At least for the price it offers a few more features (assigning tasks via Office).

Robert Castelo -

Have you tried MacJournal yet?

Great features, great interface and great price (free) - and even includes a taco feature (built in quotes from Homer J. Simpson)!

Daniel Von Fange -

I use VoodoPad ( http://www.flyingmeat.com/voodoopad.html ) for notes. I keep a Voodoo Pad always open, and type things into it as I learn them during the day. At the end of the day I export to HTML and upload. Then when I have misunderstood someone, they come over and correct me. :)

teo -

Here's why I don't use Outlook notes in the way you describe using notepad:

"The messaging interface has encountered an unknown error. This note will be closed without saving changes."

Just happened to me, and not for the first time. Gee, I like Microsoft.