Hey all, I’m a Linux baby and just discovered all my Onenote notes for DnD aren’t transferable to my new machine 🙃

I’ve seen a few alternatives, specifically Joplin, mentioned, but what I’m looking for is an editor that lets me move notes all around or type in random places like Onenote. I found Spiral, but it’s not my favorite, though it does have what I need so far, if at a very bare and basic level.

Can anyone recommend anything with the ‘type anywhere’ functionality? I’m not even wholly invested in it being FOSS, but this seemed like the best place to ask. Thanks y’all

25 points

Not FOSS but I see so many YouTubers that DM talk about Obsidian for notes. I use it and love it myself, just not for DnD stuff.

Logseq and Joplin are FOSS and are often brought up. Joplins android app is garbage, if that matters to you.

Acreom isn’t FOSS yet, but it’s on the roadmap and I liked that one.

Notesnook is FOSS but has some features behind a paywall that might be deal breakers for some folks.

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4 points

It doesn’t look like any of those have the basic feature of placing things where you want inside a page like onenote does.

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18 points

My big takeaway from this thread is that, wow, people actually use that feature. I use OneNote at work, and I absolutely loathe that if I click a bit too low, I end up outside my note.

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4 points

It’s basically the main feature of onenote that I use, being able to make technical notes and tables about circuits or cabling that I’m designing and drag them around to arrange it all is really nice.

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3 points

Yeah, that’s my #1 reason to not use it. I’ve got a long list of reasons to dislike OneNote, but that’s the big one.

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6 points

Logseq has a “whiteboard” feature which is the closest I’ve seen.

OneNote has been the only tool Ive failed to find a close alternative to, which is a shame because I hate the new simplified versions of OneNote.

I will say though, the linking available on Obsidian and Logseq is fantastic for d&d notes and worth ditching OneNote anyway (for me it was at least).

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4 points

I haven’t used One Note but Obsidian lets you make canvases which you can freely place things on, kind of like a cork board.

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3 points

Obsidian does… sorta. They call it “canvas”. But I think it’s more for visually connecting notes to other notes, not to connect different things within a given note.

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2 points

I’m not sure what OneNote’s feature does, but in Logseq you can make a whiteboard and embed other pages and text boxes.

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2 points

You can use the excalidraw plugin maybe? I guess I’m not understanding the placement work flow you’re speaking of. All the options I listed are free so you can download and try them. Big feature of Obsidian is the plugin marketplace. But hey, if it doesn’t work, it doesn’t work.

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3 points

Basically in onenote you can drag any box of text, table, image, excel table, pdf embed, and so on and place it anywhere you want on the page. It’s really nice for making notes because you can make a quick note in a box and just drag it around to arrange things.

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I’m planning on switching from Joplin to Logseq

based on the stalled development and lack of support for mods on Joplin it seems like Logseq is the best path forward to getting a FOSS version of Obsidian and Onenote

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1 point

Being platform agnostic was important to me, which is what lead me to Obsidian in the first place. Joplin stores the markdown files in a SQL db that requires additional steps to export or convert. I believe Logseq also does flat Markdown like Obsidian, but it just didn’t click with me for some reason.

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14 points
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Good luck, people are just going to recommend bare bones note apps that use markdown or something and don’t allow placing things where you want them.

I’ve looked and looked and nothing comes close to Onenote.

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7 points

Obsidian effectively let’s you do it through window panes. Literally lay out any content in any fashion. There are trade-offs but the graph view makes up for a good portion I think.

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2 points

Obsidian supports canvases now, which seems very much like OneNote.

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6 points

I wouldn’t say barebones, but you’re right in there is no direct alternative to OneNote I have ever found. It remains the product I haven’t been able to directly replace.

A lot of the products people will suggest are very feature rich, just not all the same features as OneNote. For me, the ability to draw on the page freestyle with a stylus is what I love about OneNote. So easy to annotate notes. But linking and plugins are things others have which I love that OneNote lacks.

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13 points

Obsidian is my favourite. It’s not FOSS, but it is totally plaintext-based, which is close to just as good.

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10 points

+1 for logseq and its whiteboard. It’s the reason I switched. +It’s blocks(notes/paragraphs) can be reordeded. You can pay for sync between your phone and PC. But you can use sync thing which is free and once you set it up it’s pretty much set and forget. I tried obsidian and anytype, but logseq just clicked for me.

+You can write with a stylus on the whiteboard if that’s your thing.

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3 points

This is what I came here to recommend. Logseq is amaze balls and it’s completely free and libre unless you want to donate to the project to use their built in sync.

I pay for it since I use it on 5 devices, 2 of which I can’t install things on. Logseq doesn’t need Admin rights to install since it’s always a portable app, but syncing is complicated without Admin rights on a device.

Plus, it’s a small team with an ethical business model building this product in beta; I’d probably donate anyway to help ensure it keeps getting development.

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8 points

Maybe check out xournal++, has the type anywhere functionality

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1 point

This is the answer. Joplin and obsidian are excellent for markdown notes, but theyr arent suitable for “jot whatever, anywhere”.

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1 point

also has pressure sensitive pen support

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