Your reality, sir, is lies and balderdash… and I’m delighted to say that I have no grasp of it whatsoever!
It just stores them to the folder you choose as a vault for your notes. I have seen people put their vaults on a USB stick which they encrypt for security.
No web version of Obsidian as far as I know. Have you tried SimpleNote?
Have you tried Remote Save plugin?
I use it to sync from a webdav on my NAS at home to work computer if I ever need it. It also syncs from services like OneDrive, Dropbox, S3 etc.
There are other versions of similar syncing.
2nd vote for Obsidian.
I’ve moved from OneNote and Evernote about two years ago to Obsidian. I tried out (and still do look at) all the note-keeping apps and Obsidian beats hands down. For me, the major determiner was that it saves to plain text files that I can just transfer into any future app easily. The other aspect is that plug-ins enable you to tailor how Obsidian functions to your own working processes.
I’ve found keeping Obsidian in sync over iCloud pretty good as long as you keep the number of plug-ins on phone and iPad limited.
Thanks. I’ll take a look. I’ve wanted to move away from gmail for a while now and this is cheap enough to try out.
What’s PurelyMail like? They seem very cheap.
I don’t think that Note Station has been updated (other than maybe security patches) for years. I tried it when I was looking for an Evernote replacement and was shocked how basic it is.
Sure I’m not going to be the first one to ask you this but have you tried Obsidian?
Thank you. I’ll take a look. Your suggestion has also led to the Obsidian/Memos plug in which might also be a good link.
I just wish the devs would simply as a means of exporting/importing a JSON file or something. It would then open up the app to a much wider audience as it’s really good.
Let me know if you find it.
When I mentioned this on Discord to the devs, they didn’t seem to find the idea of SSH-ing into wherever Memos is served much of an issue. I ran it in a Docker container on a Synology NAS and lack the skill (or confidence) of poking around too much in parts of the NAS that aren’t readily accessible.
I’d love to use memos (and have tried using it) but the backup/export is virtually non-existent.
This looks great. I’ll have a go and let you know how it goes.
I’m fairly noob-ish but have run Tailscale like this for about a year:
Tailscale on your NAS runs as the host and when you open the Tailscale app on your phone you copy the IP it gives you and use that (plus the port that your services like Bitwarden, Calibre etc each use). Eg.
100.121.9.23:8081
THAT’s the sort of IP you the add to the Bitwarden app or type into your web browser.
I’m pretty amateur with tech but found Tailscale pretty easy to set up and run.
I do the same thing. I’ve tried Kavita and Audiobookshelf and ended up just keeping the books on a network share and then accessing them through Calibre. I am sideloading to a Kindle though.