![]() I would never trust Outlinely with important data or an important writing project. Within a day or two I came to the realization that the software is actually very buggy and crashed more frequently than I was comfortable with. I thought Outlinely was awesome (and subscribed for a year) until I moved my active projects into it and started to really work with it. >bothered about the lack of development if it really was the polished app >regretted it and eventually stopped using it altogether. >great at first - which is why I paid for a lifetime account, but I soon >developer), but there is a reason I stopped using it. I don’t have a list anymore (I once sent a long list to the ![]() I wouldn’t be bothered about the lack of development if it really was the polished app it seems at first…Įxcept it’s buggy as hell and some features were never properly Yes, it seems great at first - which is why I paid for a lifetime account, but I soon regretted it and eventually stopped using it altogether. I don’t have a list anymore (I once sent a long list to the developer), but there is a reason I stopped using it. It’s quite a nice outliner, very much a Workflowy/Dynalist for the desktop, modern and local.Įxcept it’s buggy as hell and some features were never properly implemented. So I installed, and put it through its paces again. I hauled out my old 2011 MacBook Pro (it works with Webinex when Chromebook and Linux don’t), and saw the Outlinely update. The 30% cut, the lack of discoverability in the App store, the drive towards cheap apps, as well as other problems developers complain about seem to have hurt apps like this which used to survive in the old days of Apple shareware. Maybe, but I also think that Apple deserves some of the blame. Of course, a great app can make a small market grow. As evidence, I’d take that even the multi-platform options (WorkFlowy, Dynalist) only seem to be able to support very small teams, and it looks as if OmniGroup determined that their energy was better spent on OmniFocus, OmniGraffle, and OmniPlan rather than OmniOutliner. I suspect this is due to the market not being large enough to sustain even a small team doing an iOS+macOS only outliner. >with good sync, you are stuck with electron apps. >actively developed Workflowy-like outliner that works on MacOS and iOS >they might be nice for some users, my point remains, if you want an It takes us a lot of efforts to support both platforms. Why the pricing is different across platforms iOS and macOS technically have differents APIs and User Interface Idioms. We craft the app with C++, Objective-C and Swift programming languages. >of outliners inspired by Workflowy, of which Outlinely is one. Outlinely for Mac, iPhone, iPad is built with 100 native code. Apart from creating outlines in Outlinely, you can customize how you work with. >Neither OmniOutliner nor Tinderbox are particularly similar to the raft Artists were asked to propose art works that speak to themes related to.
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