
$24.99/year isn't much, but I really don't want to use two apps. If I end up really liking this, paying for Day One (which has been very stable and good) will be something I have to think about.
MACJOURNAL 7 PDF
I export my monthly daily logs to a PDF - so I'll be testing this over the next month. I'm also really against a subscription $ if I can help it. Seriously going to consider using this as my primary journalism tool just because I'm becoming an old fart and don't like the idea of (even my encrypted) daily logs going out on some cloud server. That said, I like an app that I don't have to pay for that doesn't rely on other people's cloud syncs and what not. My word processor and some folders can do. I have never been super comfortable with Day One's cloud sync, but I'm sure it made sense to them to sync without problems to mobile devices - and they do it very well. Now my thoughts were, what can this thing do that Mac Journal or NeoOffice cant The short version is nothing.
MACJOURNAL 7 HOW TO
I haven't figured out how to change the white background of the default editor yet, but I'll figure it out.

It imports from Day One perfectly (as long as you export one journal at a time). Love the focused writing mode - green text on a black screen that fills the entire screen. The app handles photos very well and text entry is pleasant. You can encrypt your entries and lock them. Positives: Very well designed application that feels solid. I can't find a way to sort ascending vs descending (an issue when you have many thousands of entries). The mobile app gets data but seems to be broken a bit. The location screen has to slowly count through all your entries every time you go to it and it takes a long time to count through. Negatives: There is no "Entries on this day in past years" - putting several photos on an entry makes the scrolling jaggedy. Wish there was a typewriter mode where it kept your text in the middle of the screen (yeah, I write a lot).
MACJOURNAL 7 FULL
Love the focus mode where it is green text on a full screen. But I think the mobile app is still the old bad one, hasn't been updated in a year.ĭesktop app is great. Syncing just freezes - though it appears to sync everything, it never ends, so you have to kill it. This most recent version adds minor interface enhancements and assorted bug fixes.OK I've spent more time with it. The only major issue we can fault MacJournal for is the 15-day trial period, which is a little short for this sort of application, especially given its rich and complex feature set. You also get password protection and encryption, integration with Apple's Mail, and a wide variety of export options, such as PDF, HTML, Word, and even iPod Notes.


Weitere Neuerungen umfassen die Synchronisation von.
MACJOURNAL 7 MAC OS X
You can include nearly any sort of content, from movies to PDFs to podcasts, and bloggers will like that its formatting translates well to HTML, with support for TypePad, Blogger, LiveJournal, and more. In der aktuellen Version 5.2 wurde die preisgekrönte Tagebuch- Software MacJournal speziell für Mac OS X 10.6 (Snow Leopard) optimiert. MacJournal gives you a fairly intuitive, feel-good interface (especially its green-text-on-black, full-screen writing mode), and a ton of tools for organizing your thoughts and words, including a built-in calendar, good search function, a system of nested entries and journals, and keyword tags, labels, priorities, and other opportunities for annotation. Aside from the fact that Armstrong would probably still kick butt on a Wal-Mart bike, they've got a point: MacJournal is one of the best journaling programs available for the Mac, with a huge range of features that are useful whether you're keeping a journal for yourself, taking notes for classes or meetings, organizing random snippets of info, or prepping blog posts offline. The developers behind MacJournal admit that you can use a traditional word processor or text editor for journaling-but they say that's like Lance Armstrong using a bike from Wal-Mart to race in the Tour de France.
