![]() I added whole NP folder to obsidian’s vault. I find NotePlan great for day-to-day task planning and, well, you don’t need me to tell you what Obsidian is great for. I can work either in Obsidian or NotePlan and they both share the same content. It’s all working pretty nicely and I haven’t hit any conflicts yet. I now I have my Obsidian folder in Dropbox syncing with the NotePlan folder which then syncs automatically with CloudKit. Chronosync also lets you schedule to activate when a change is made in either folder which essentially keeps sync realtime.I’ve also set Chronosync to exclude my Attachments folder which is unnecessary overhead.I can exclude the Obsidian.css and navigate around the two different folder structures. Chronosync is great because it allows you to specify the parameters of how the two folders are kept in sync, i.e.Instead I’ve been experimenting with using Chronosync (which is a solid app I’ve used for years) to keep the two folders up-to-date when changes are made. NotePlan and Obsidian manage attachments slightly differently, I don’t really need to access attachments on mobile so not a big issueīecause of the above I’ve found it not ideal to try and have Obsidian and NotePlan use the same dataset.css file as a note which will mess up tags on the NotePlan side NotePlan’s folder structure is /Calendar (for daily notes) and /Notes (for everything else) so you if you want Obsidian to read it directly you have to have all your Obsidian content in /Notes which isn’t ideal.While the two apps can share a common data set relatively easily there are a few caveats and things I’ve discovered along the way that you might want to consider. NotePlan now has CloudKit integration which I’ve been testing and seems to work very well.It doesn’t use it’s own proprietary database and reads files off your file system (good for us Obsidian users).NotePlan is a Mac / iOS calendar led task manager / note taker, it’s particularly suitable for those that like to bullet journal.NotePlan has been covered on this thread before but if you need a quick refresher: I’ve been working with these two apps side by side for a month or two now and I think they work as great companion apps. md files which is one step closer to a more seamless integration between Obsidian and NotePlan. So instead of wearing ourselves down with writing connection modules for each individual service we’re focusing on improving our applications.The developer of NotePlan just pushed a v3 beta update over the weekend that enables support for. The answer is that there are simply too many services out there that all have their own, special way of connecting to them. You might wonder why DEVONthink doesn’t support other popular services. ![]() Here’s a long and complete list of services they support. You can even “cloudify” your old-fashioned but reliable FTP server in your basement. OneDrive, Google Drive, or Amazon S3, to it. You sign up for one of their solutions and connect your favorite service, e.g. If you already have a good storage plan but your service of choice doesn’t support WebDAV then StorageMadeEasy’s CloudDAV might be an option. And DEVONthink (To Go) has even a direct option for CloudMe because we’ve found it to be a fast and reliable service. Free Online Backup Services has a great list for you to choose from. It’s a solid standard and DEVONthink can use it for managing its sync stores, folders containing all the files needed for synchronizing one or more databases between multiple devices.īut what if you’ve just paid for a OneDrive plan? Or if you haven’t signed up for an internet-based storage service at all yet? Option 1: Sign Up for a File Service with WebDAVįor one you can sign up for a free or paid account, usually depending on your storage needs, at one of the many file service providers that offer also WebDAV access. You can mount WebDAV servers in the Finder just like a remote hard drive, upload and download files, or move things around. WebDAV is a standard protocol for connecting to file services over the internet. Our synchronization technology for DEVONthink and DEVONthink To Go supports direct connections via the local network, Dropbox, and WebDAV. ![]()
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