I don’t want anyone or any algorithm to be able to read my medical documents, or to see the pictures of my cat. I don’t want anyone to discover that I’m the author hiding behind the pen name of dear « Dulcinea Von Liebe, Duchess of Hot Steamy Romance ». But I don’t want anyone else accessing my files–be it on purpose, in order to offer me some service, or because of a security breach–to be able to read them. I’ll gladly open all my files and folders to any legit authority asking me to do so, provided they have a reason and the right to ask. “ Abandon privacy all ye who enter the cloud” is something that should be engraved over the entrance of most, if not all, cloud services.Īt least this is what it feels like to me, having to relinquish all notion of privacy and intimacy knowing my files will be analysed-some cloud providers being more invasive than other in that regard. Or you can define your own custom keyboard shortcut in the Filter window. From now, with any video you play in IIna, you just need to go to Video-> Saved Video Filters, and click your filter. Click the Save button that is next to the new line with your filter and give your filter a name. In the window that opens, click the + sign at the bottom left and select Negative.Open the video you want to invert and go to Video->Video Filters.Install IIna, a free fork of VLC optimized for macOS.Here is how I invert only the colors of a video under macOS (see here for Windows). Under macOS, I could easily invert colors of the whole screen, but that’d be impractical as that’d also invert colors in all my other windows that are already dark. To read this slide, I need the background to be dark and the text to be light. Text is printed in red on a white background. And it lacks a few features to replace Ulysses in my toolbox–give me inline images (not in Preview), first-line indentation (it’s a visual clue I rely on a lot to navigate my prose), and give me a Split/Merge tool–but nonetheless I’m so tempted as it’s such a pleasant experience to use it on the iPad and the iPhone, and now on the Mac too.ĭrafts is free–like in free beer, no string attached to fully enjoy the fastest notebook on iOS–or subscription based (20€/year) if you need its advanced features.īTW, if you read French and want to find some real world use cases, it might be a good idea to go read my old friend Urbanbike: he is a long time Drafts user and share a lot of advice □Įdit: Some precisions in what I’d love to see in Drafts.Ī slide from Dario Mantovani’s lecture “Usages juridiques du passé (dans la pensée des juristes romains)”. So much, I can hardly believe it myself.ĭrafts stays lightweight and fast (it now contains a tad less than 700 notes, as I imported quite a lot of research in it, some very short or very long), while offering me as many–or as few–advanced features as I need to organise my notes, without ever turning itself into an ugly, cumbersome monster.Īdvanced features like Workspaces (think ‘saved smart folders’), Tags and now Actions that let me organise my notes and projects like I want them to be, with only the tools I need within each project (this is amazing), and with an almost instant-on search engine to find whatever I need within a specific project or through all of them, with the tools to do whatever I need to do with my notes–and that includes publishing content to WordPress, though I’ve not tested it yet.ĭrafts is lean, it’s fast, it’s powerful, and it’s well-thought. So, even though the Mac version still has a few rough edges, for the last two weeks I’ve been almost only using Drafts to write on the iPad, the iPhone and on the Mac. That’s no more the case since its latest update: the Mac version now fully supports Actions–in short, Actions are the scripting thingy that comes with Drafts, that let you do many, many funny things to and with your notes. Alas, it was lacking some advanced features that would make me consider using it. Since then, the dev has released a Mac version. It was just that I had no need for more features in an iOS app… that had no Mac companion app to let me, well, access my texts and notes outside of iOS. But merely as a quick notepad as it’s lightening fast to open and to let you write anything and then, much later or immediately after jotting something down, to let you decide what to do with it–making Drafts the perfect and fastest ‘everything bucket’ there is on iOS: no need to hesitate, just write everything, anything, down in Drafts knowing you’ll decide what to do with all your notes later on.īut Drafts is much more capable than being the fastest note-taking app.
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