As InfoQube becomes more suitable for the purposes for which I use it I find myself relying on it more and more.
This was not always the case, I tried InfoQube several times before I finally understood it. Those first attempts were frustrating.
With the advent of a decent customisable editor (this was before the new 'Item Editor' dialog) which supports CSS sheets I find myself using it for the composition of documents and as such it has taken over from Scrivener. Of course InfoQube does not have all the formatting and publishing facilities of Scrivener but it has enough to be useful and the tables are now better than in Scrivener. Having the note taking and document editing in the same application is useful, the whole is greater than the sum of it's parts. In my opinion reading, writing and taking notes are inextricably linked, they are not separate activities.
My notes are now spread between InfoQube and ConnectedText, this is a bit of a problem but it is helped by the fact that InfoQube and ConnectedText both support universal links, if InfoQube didn't support universal links then my notes would have remained in ConnectedText. MyInfo is now no longer used, it was still in use because it contained historical notes I wished to keep but they have migrated to InfoQube now. Right Note was never really a contender, it has a very pretty user interface (some of the skins are amazing) but it doesn't support transclusion at all.
Moving many of my notes to InfoQube I was able to re-organise them properly. The notes themselves are in a single grid called 'Zettel', they are in a simple non heirarchical list in chronological order. However I am able to extract clusters of notes and place them in other grids in any arbitrary arrangement without affecting the 'Zettel' grid, which is useful. You may have heard of a German sociologist called Niklas Luhmann who used a paper card index to store his notes. I follow his zettelkasten method but with software.
I follow the Zettelkasten Method as described by Sönke Ahrens in his book How to take Smart Notes. In my opinion this book should be made compulsory reading for anyone doing a university degree.
At the moment my calendar is still handled by Thunderbird but I have no doubt that at some point InfoQube will eventually handle that as well.
Meanwhile InfoQube continues to improve and I hope it continues to do so.
Pierre has put a lot of time and effort into this program, I hope he gets a good return on his investment. However I fear the market for note taking software is too small at the current time for anyone to make a decent living out of just selling a note taking program. I hope I am wrong.
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