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Joplin 3.3.13 by Razvan Serea 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. Notes exported from Evernote can be imported into Joplin, including the formatted content (which is converted to Markdown), resources (images, attachments, etc.) and complete metadata (geolocation, updated time, created time, etc.). Plain Markdown files can also be imported. The notes can be securely synchronised using end-to-end encryption with various cloud services including Nextcloud, Dropbox, OneDrive and Joplin Cloud. Full text search is available on all platforms to quickly find the information you need. The app can be customised using plugins and themes, and you can also easily create your own. 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. Features Web Clipper for Firefox and Chrome. End To End Encryption (E2EE). Note history (revisions). Synchronisation with various services, including Nextcloud, Dropbox, WebDAV and OneDrive. Offline first, so the entire data is always available on the device even without an internet connection. 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. Sort notes by multiple criteria - title, updated time, etc. Support for alarms (notifications) in mobile and desktop applications. 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. Choice of both Markdown and Rich Text (WYSIWYG) editors. File attachment support - images are displayed, other files are linked and can be opened in the relevant application. Inline display of PDF, video and audio files. Goto Anything feature. Search functionality. Geo-location support. Supports multiple languages. External editor support - open notes in your favorite external editor with one click in Joplin. Extensible functionality through plugin and data APIs. Custom CSS support for customisation of both the rendered markdown and overall user interface. Customisable layout allows toggling, movement and sizing of various elements. Keyboard shortcuts are editable and allow binding of most Joplin commands with export/import functionality. Joplin 3.3.13 changelog: Fixed: Fix printing (#12244) (#12240 by @personalizedrefrigerator) Download: Joplin 3.3.13 | Joplin Portable | ~300 MB (Open Source) Download: MacOS | Android | Linux | iOS View: Joplin Home Page | GitHub project page Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
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By Patrick888 · Posted
Apple: lets take our inspiration from Windows 7/Vista and call it innovative -
By Nas · Posted
Nice! My $100 refurbished iPad 8 that I bought last year for a small project (and still runs like new cuz it's been mostly in storage the past several months) will get this v26 upgrade. I'm definitely gonna scope out OS26 on this device before upgrading my also-supported refurbished iPhone SE 3rd Gen (only got it for the 5G UW support). -
By goretsky · Posted
Hello, The separate discussion about VLC has been moved to its own thread at Regards, Aryeh Goretsky -
By goretsky · Posted
Hello, I am guessing this is the result of using a third-party tweaking tool instead of changing things within Windows settings. Windows 11 has a decent set of configuration options for the display, but they tend to be scattered throughout the operating system due to fragmentation of product ownership/inconsistent standards being applied by Microsoft. There are a few places in Windows 11 where you can modify the various display settings in order to get them to your liking: Under Settings → System → Display you can stroll down to the Scale & layout section and change the Scale and Display resolution settings to whatever you prefer. For the Scale option, you can click on the text box to choose between the various pre-populated settings. If none of those are exactly what you are looking for, click on the caret ("") caret to open the Custom scaling setting (also available under Settings → Display → Custom scaling). I would recommend this as an option of last resort as this can cause display issues in various programs. I strongly recommend using the screen's native Display resolution here; it should show up as the "(Recommended)" resolution. If it does not, you may need to install your monitor's profile information file (basically, a device driver for your monitor) to get the correct setting. Another place to look at making changes to fonts is under Accessiblity → Text size. There is a slider bar for changing the text size from 100% to 225% there. You can try making changes to the ClearType settings. It's a little bit finer-grained than the others, but it may make the text easier to view on the display. Run the ClearType Text Tuner (filename: CTTUNE.EXE) and go through the wizard. You may want to do this several times under different lighting conditions or times of the day to figure out what works best for you overall. Lastly, you may want to look into using a dedicated assistive screen technology program from a third-party. Microsoft provides a Screen Magnifier and a Narrator for text-to-speech, but they provide only basic functionality, and you may find that a third-party program works a lot better. The pros of this is that third-party assistive technology programs tend to work quite well under Windows; Microsoft has historically worked closely with third-party developers of assistive technologies. The cons of this are that such tools tend to be on the expensive side, since they are often sold to schools, businesses, or paid for by insurance companies, not individuals. Regards, Aryeh Goretsky
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datr
My current web host just wiped out my site (due to a hardware failure) so I decided to start again and implement a few ideas I?ve been thinking about. For the past year I?ve been using postnuke and have found it reliable, however a lot of people recently have been putting it down, so I was wondering if someone could recommend a better CMS and give reasons for why it is better.
I was intending on using the multi-site feature of postnuke (which allows one instance of the script to run multiple sites through detecting variations in the domain) so I would like a CMS that had a similar feature to this.
Also I was intending to write a lot of add-on modules for postnuke to provide free services like image hosting, so if I were to use another CMS an advanced plug-in development system would be very useful. Anything like the recent postnuke one would be great, which implements SMARTY templates.
Thank you for any guidance you can offer, unfortunately I?ve found it hard trying to compare the features of CMS that people have recommended in other threads so if you could include why you think its better I would be very grateful.
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