
It doesn’t allow you to set “sub tasks.” A nice feature is that with Amplenote you can choose to hide a task until a specific date. It also allows you to make a task repeat. The task detail window in Organizedly allows you to tag the task, add more detail in the description, create subtasks, add to a Collection (in this case “Personal”), set a priority, set a start date and a due date and time.Īmplenote collects meta data that allows it to set a “task score,” which it uses to prioritize the task among all the other tasks. In Amplenote this feature is called a “daily-jot” and in Organizedly it is simply called “Daily.” Daily NotesĪmplenote and Organizedly each provide a daily note feature (much like Obsidian, NotePlan and Roam). There is no word on what the subscription will be, but the developers promise to provide early access users a discount. As I write this, Organizedly is released as “early access” for free.
#AMPLE NOTEA PRO#
The subscription fee for Amplenote is $5.84 for the Basic plan and $10 a month for the Pro plan. Organizedly is currently exclusively available through your browser, while Amplenote has mobile apps - which I haven’t tried. Because an article like this could be very, very long, I am not going to go into too much depth.īoth are web-based apps that aspire to be the center of your note-taking and task-planning universe. I was going to write reviews of each individually, but they are so similar in their functionality that I though it might be more interesting to introduce them and then discuss their differences.

Over the past few weeks I’ve learned about and have been trying out two browser-based organizers, Amplenote and Organizedly.
