Joplin is a free, open source note taking and to-do application, which can handle a large number of notes organised into notebooks. The notes are searchable, can be copied, tagged and modified either from the applications directly or from your own text editor. The notes are in Markdown format.
The notes can be synchronised with various cloud services including Nextcloud, Dropbox, OneDrive, WebDAV or the file system (for example with a network directory). In our case, we will want to use CERNBOX to store and synchronise the notes, notebooks, tags and other metadata.
All bookmarks tagged evernote on Diigo. 「 Joplin 」也和 Evernote 一樣,可以在筆記中插入各式各樣的檔案,基本上沒有限制(但插入的檔案太大,用手機 App 開啟時目前容易當掉)。 方法不難,在「 Joplin 」電腦端軟體,選擇上方的迴紋針按鈕,就可以在左方編輯區的指定位置,插入自己需要的檔案。. Joplin uses.enex files to upload notes from Evernote. One.enex file, one Joplin notebook. If you have no more than ten notebooks, it is worth to export them from Evernote by Right-Mouse-Click on the notebook and choosing export as.enex. Each notebook to separated.enex file.
The application is available for Windows, Linux, macOS, Android and iOS. A Web Clipper, to save web pages and screenshots from your browser, is also available for Firefox and Chrome.
Disclaimer
We recently found a bug that is affecting fresh installation of Joplin which are upgraded to the last version WITHOUT any account configured : KB0007152
If you installed Joplin from CMF/Mac Self-Service, please configure it to sync your notes BEFORE accepting the automatic update to the last version !
Availability
A description of Joplin and it's availability for different platform can be found here :
Windows
Joplin is available in CMF
Mac
Joplin is available in the Mac Self-Service
Linux
Here is the link to download Joplin for your favourite platform : https://joplinapp.org//
Mobile Application
Joplin exist also on Android and iOS, here are the link to install it. Acdsee photo studio ultimate 2019 license key.
Features
- Desktop, mobile and terminal applications.
- Web Clipper for Firefox and Chrome.
- End To End Encryption (E2EE)
- Note history (revisions)
- Synchronisation with various services, including NextCloud, Dropbox, WebDAV and OneDrive.
- Import Enex files (Evernote export format) and Markdown files.
- Export JEX files (Joplin Export format) and raw files.
- Support notes, to-dos, tags and notebooks.
- Goto Anything feature.
- Sort notes by multiple criteria - title, updated time, etc.
- Support for alarms (notifications) in mobile and desktop applications.
- Offline first, so the entire data is always available on the device even without an internet connection.
- Markdown notes, which are rendered with images and formatting in the desktop and mobile applications. Support for extra features such as math notation and checkboxes.
- File attachment support - images are displayed, and other files are linked and can be opened in the relevant application.
- Search functionality.
- Geo-location support.
- Supports multiple languages
- External editor support - open notes in your favorite external editor with one click in Joplin.
Installation
Installation is passive using the above mentioned CMF package called 'Joplin'
Configuration
Creating your CERNBOX Joplin folder
The goal here is to help you configure Joplin so you can keep all your notes safe on CERNBOX
The first thing to do is to create a “Joplin” folder in your CERNBOX home directory, be careful of the case .
If you are not familiar with CERNBOX, please check this KB0003174
You should obtain the following screenshot :
Configuring Joplin to manage your notes at CERN
Once the Joplin folder has been creatd on CERNBOX, install the application, execute it, and search for the Synchronisation panel where you can select the target (storage) of your notes:
Joplin menue -> Preferences -> Synchronisation
Select NEXTCLOUD and enter the following address (be careful the path is case sensitive):
https://cernbox.cern.ch/cernbox/desktop/remote.php/webdav/home/Joplin/
Enter your CERN username and password when requested…
Click on the “test configuration” button to perform a check of your configuration.
Warning
Joplin Evernote Replacement
The Joplin Nextcloud App is an integration which is still under development and not yet supported at CERN. It is NOT related to the synchronization. For the time being, just ignore the 'The Joplin Nextcloud App is either not installed or misconfigured..' message.
If it is a success, then you can start create notes and tasks in Joplin.If you are blocked, please open a ticket by sending a mail to service-desk@cern.ch.
Migrating from MS OneNote 2016 to Joplin
Unfortunately there is no straight forward method to migrate from OneNote to Joplin, it is necessary to use Evernote as a gateway.We don't recommend to do it as Evernote will have knowledge of the data you will export to their cloud.If you think this risk is acceptable, here is the method to do it.
Exporting OneNote 2016 notes to Evernote
You can export an entire notebook to a single Evernote XML (.enex) file. This is useful for quickly moving content from one Evernote account to another. You can only export notebooks using Evernote for Mac or Windows.
Windows
The new Evernote for Windows
Older version of Evernote for Windows
Mac
The new Evernote for Mac
Evernote Joplin 移行
Older version of Evernote for Mac
Importing Evernote files into Joplin
Joplin was designed as a replacement for Evernote and so can import complete Evernote notebooks, as well as notes, tags, resources (attached files) and note metadata (such as author, geo-location, etc.) via ENEX files. In terms of data, the only two things that might slightly differ are:
Recognition data - Evernote images, in particular scanned (or photographed) documents have recognition data associated with them. It is the text that Evernote has been able to recognise in the document. This data is not preserved when the note are imported into Joplin. However, should it become supported in the search tool or other parts of Joplin, it should be possible to regenerate this recognition data since the actual image would still be available.
Colour, font sizes and faces - Evernote text is stored as HTML and this is converted to Markdown during the import process. For notes that are mostly plain text or with basic formatting (bold, italic, bullet points, links, etc.) this is a lossless conversion, and the note, once rendered back to HTML should be very similar. Tables are also imported and converted to Markdown tables. For very complex notes, some formatting data might be lost - in particular colours, font sizes and font faces will not be imported. The text itself however is always imported in full regardless of formatting.
In the desktop application, open File > Import > ENEX and select your file. The notes will be imported into a new separate notebook. If needed they can then be moved to a different notebook, or the notebook can be renamed, etc.
Known bugs
- Resources larger than 10 MB are not currently supported on mobile. They will crash the application so it is recommended not to attach such resources at the moment. The issue is being looked at.
- Non-alphabetical characters such as Chinese or Arabic might create glitches in the terminal on Windows. This is a limitation of the current Windows console.
- It is only possible to upload files of up to 4MB to OneDrive due to a limitation of the API being currently used. There is currently no plan to support OneDrive 'large file' API.
I’ve been an Evernote user for as long as I can remember. I’ve used it for collecting story ideas, write chapters while on the go, outline ideas, write first drafts of blog posts and so much more. Yesterday, I said good-bye to Evernote.
Yep, I’ve finally decided to get rid of the application I’ve used for years.
Why would I do that?
There are a number of reasons, really, but the primary thing is really the Evernote business model. For years, I’ve worked within the limitations imposed on free accounts. Being limited to just a set number of devices has been annoying and considering I work across multiple devices, this has always introduced some compromises in one way or another.
When my hard drive went belly up a couple of weeks ago forcing me to start over with a blank slate, I seemed like a good time evaluate all the software I use and whether to use alternatives. I hadn’t planned on replacing Evernote but as I was trying to remember the name of the Linux client I used, I instead stumbled across something else.
That something else is an application called Joplin.
Before today, this app was completely unknown to me. As I looked at it closer, I discovered that it is intended as an Evernote replacement. It’s open source, not tied to any service tiers and it can sync with Dropbox. Add to that a Linux client, a Windows client and an Android app. Oh, and no device limitations and a user interface that looks pretty much the same as Evernote. Star wars battlefront 2015 mac os.
Moving from Evernote to Joplin wasn’t difficult either. I exported the notes for each notebook using the built-in export feature in Evernote, then imported each one into Joplin. All together, this process took about five minutes.
Although I’m sure there are other differences as well, the only limitation that affects me is that there is no hosted web version of Joplin (although there appears to be one you can host yourself). It doesn’t matter. I only every used the web version of Evernote when device limitations forced me to use it. It was a hazzle that I always wished I could eliminate. Now I have.
Good-bye Evernote.
Hello Joplin.
If you’re interested in giving Joplin a shot, check out their website here: