

VoodooPad is still around, but hasn’t been updated in a while. Flying Meat sold VoodooPad to Primate Labs, but that was long after I had stopped using it. Unfortunately, there wasn’t any iOS app for VoodooPad.
Taskpaper nvalt software#
I later started using VoodooPad from Flying Meat software as my main notes “ database”.
Taskpaper nvalt pro#
Filemaker Pro was, and is still really expensive for this purpose. It was quick, reliable and easily searchable. Each new record or note contained an auto-generated date and time stamp with a title/subject field and a notes field. He had a database he created in Filemaker Pro called Vinyl Rolodex. I copied the idea from Ron Knowlton, who was my supervisor at my college job. The very first app I ever used for note storage was Filemaker Pro back in 1993. This made me ponder my note taking app journey over the years… All of them have interesting features, strengths and weaknesses, and some feel like a bit overkill for what I’d use it for. Over the past year, I’ve explored Craft, Notion, Taio, and Obsidian. Speaking of text editing, every few months, there’s a new text editor app or system that I’ll see someone rave about online, so of course, I have to check it out. While I’m no longer someone that lives in the terminal shell, I still frequently use Pico or nano for text editing when I’m in a terminal window. No fonts, styling, images or data tracking. Maybe, it’s more that I miss how simple email used to be. I’m starting to realize that I’m at that tail end of a generation that is probably considered “old”, yet young enough to remember using the Unix system for email during college. While I enjoy interacting with these birds, its’ still no substitution for Handsome myna. There’s also Corn and Chowder, the two Red-crested Cardinals that come by the kitchen door asking for Pringles.


I throw them into the air and it catches them in mid-flight. As I mentioned in prior weeks, there is a Red-vented Bulbul that I named Booboo that comes by daily for small balls of rolled up bread.
