Day One App For Mac
Using Day One journaling application on both the iPad and the iMac is really easy. I have it set to remind me every 4 hours during the work day that I should be creating an entry. Just found out that I can now add photos and also that I can connect it to FourSquare. I like to use it for productivity. I can see a record of what I have been doing and also I make notes about what I should be doing next. It is also handy that I can tweet out of the app as it hooks into the Mountain Lion Twitter posting.
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Jun 12, 2015 Day One is the easiest and best-looking way to use a journal / diary / text-logging application for the Mac. Day One is well designed and extremely focused to encourage you to write more through quick Menu Bar entry, a Reminder system, and inspirational messages.
I am Good and Geeky and make videos for iOS and Mac users to get the best out of the platform and be completely productive. Part of being a nerd is to drive the future - I have an electric car and I show what it is really like being an owner driver of a Nissan Leaf.
Following the launch of iPhone SE and 9.7' iPad Pro orders, Apple has begun offering popular journal app for free through the Apple Store app for a limited time. To take advantage of the promotion, open the Apple Store app, scroll down, and tap on the Day One 2 banner. Read the terms and conditions, tap on the green 'download now for free' banner, sign in to your Apple ID account, and tap on 'Redeem' in the top-right corner. The app will then begin downloading automatically. Day One 2, normally $4.99 on the App Store, allows you to create a journal your life, ranging from once-in-a-lifetime events to everyday moments. The app features a timeline for browsing through past photos and notes, while you can also record the location, weather, time, and date of your life experiences.
Day One 2 is available on the App Store [] for iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch. The app is not by Apple. According to their web site ('your data is stored by the maker of the app on AWS (Amazon) cloud servers, so it's not in Apple's hands.
Just like you are subject to Facebook's (and not Apple's) privacy policies when you use the Facebook app. I have no idea how trustworthy this company is, but I'd be very hesitant to store private journal entries in any cloud unless I can use true end-to-end encryption (which is not the case for Day One from what I can see). Get it free now, then wait for the 2.1 release which will provide Private-key Encryption: Private-key Encryption In 2016, we will develop and provide full private-key encryption on the server in our 2.1 release for iOS and Mac apps by May 2016. Our encryption features will utilize the user’s private key to encrypt all entries before they reach the server. In short, the server will have no access to the user’s unencrypted data. Neither iCloud ('nor Dropbox ('currently provide this level of security, thus making Day One Sync even more secure than these other sync/backup methods.
How is this better than just keeping a journal as a word processor document? If you want to share with friends you can keep it in a free Dropbox account or similar. With pictures in the document or on the side as separate items. I just keep a journal as a Pages document (actually a new document whenever the last one seems too long) accessible on my iMac and all my iOS devices. Pictures in my pictures folder, and the ones I want to share on Dropbox. (I don't share my journal.