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michelemarconi1974
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One of Bear’s strengths is that it works well with a greater community of apps, large and small, thanks to features like support for Apple Shortcuts, x-callback-URLs, and standard file formats.

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Today, PDF Expert is likely the best option for power PDF users.
New with PDF Expert 3 for Mac is a new pricing model.
PDF Expert 3 for Mac brings OCR to PDFs with images (rather than text). Once OCR is applied to the PDF, you can search for individual words in that PDF and you can select and highlight the text found in that PDF.

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Craft includes excellent sharing options to other formats: a nicely formatted email, PDF, Microsoft Word, Markdown, and Textbundle, which allows a complete export of your database to other apps like Bear or Obsidian. In addition, notes can be shared between apps like Ulysses, Day One, DevonThink, and Things.
I use Craft as a Zettelkasten-style note-taking system fed by a healthy reading habit.
The steps to export your Craft data really couldn’t be more straightforward. Select all your notes and use the export to Markdown function. This creates a nested folder of all your notes in Markdown text format alongside images, PDFs, or other files stored in Craft. Next, open the folder as a vault in Obsidian. That’s it.

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And if you opt-in to automatically renewing every year, you will get a 15% discount!

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Transforms a URL to markdown view if the website allows it.

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Thank you Yaser! I've not tried HistoryHound myself, thanks for the link. From reading their website, it looks like they focus just on searching your browsing history and bookmarks. It's really cool they support all browsers. Histre on the other hand is "Effortless Knowledge Base". The idea is that we throw away a lot of the signal we generate while doing things online and this can be put to good use for ourselves. Histre aims to help with the whole "knowledge funnel", if you will. It aids the casual online research we all do (ie the explore -> filter -> decide loop). For example, it removes friction in taking notes on links you're looking at, with free-form tags that you don't have to create first and other such niceties that add up. And it easy to group notes into notebooks and share with teams. In short, when you have to look at a bunch of links for something (decide on your next vacation -- after this virus is behind us of course, people to hire, material for your next blog post, etc) Histre makes your life easier. But this is just the starting point for what Histre intends to do. IMHO the biggest problem with apps like Evernote, Notion, Pocket etc is that it becomes digital hoarding, and not a knowledge base. And the knowledge base focused apps out there involve a lot of manual upkeep, which almost never happens, especially at work. Things start out okay and quickly fall into disrepair. I'm differentiating from the other note taking apps by automatically putting together a knowledge base (grouped by topic etc).
Yes, please do use Histre for history visualization and search through it. That's one of my favorite features of Histre, if I may say so myself :-) I use that all the time.
I'm working on full text search on the content of the pages visited. The search right now is pretty primitive. But I'll be fixing this soon.
I built and use https://histre.com/ for this. It goes way beyond bookmarks.
Obsidian obsidian.md

A second brain, for you, forever.

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Being so extensible and personalizable, Obsidian is, quite simply, a dream come true for Markdown writers.
I don’t give app of the year awards, but I would 100% give it to Obsidian for slowly taking over almost everything I do that has anything to do with text files.
Obsidian is life changing.