Privacy-focused
Turtl prioritizes user privacy by offering end-to-end encryption, ensuring that your data remains confidential and secure.
Open-source
Being an open-source application, Turtl allows users to inspect, modify, and contribute to the codebase, fostering a transparent and collaborative environment.
Cross-platform support
Turtl is available on multiple platforms including Windows, macOS, Linux, Android, and iOS, making it accessible from a variety of devices.
User-friendly interface
The application offers an intuitive and clean interface, making it easy for users to organize and manage their notes and tasks.
Collaborative features
Turtl supports sharing and collaboration features, allowing teams to work together efficiently on projects and tasks.
> No note application does this Yes, the app Turtl (https://turtlapp.com) does do this and it’s not slow at all really. It only decrypts data upon viewing, and immediately re-encrypts when saving data. So this is actually entirely reasonable and entirely doable. The benefits are that malicious applications can’t read data just sitting on the hard drive, which removes an entire class of attacks. An encrypted hd…
– Source: Hacker News
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9 months ago
Https://turtlapp.com/ – “Turtl”. Open source, allows you to share stuff, client-side encryption, but dont believe its real time. Only issue I could see is that seemingly the only way to access it is to download it.
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over 1 year ago
Maybe this. It can be Self Hosted.
Https://turtlapp.com/.
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over 1 year ago
I use TurtlApp – https://turtlapp.com – although they do not have an iOS version yet.
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over 1 year ago
If you want a “Second” step if you feel that a parent or partner will attempt to gain access to your database and read your contents, you can utilize an online service called Turtl which allows you to generate encrypted notes that only the logged in user can see. How is this more secure? Well back to your password manager, you can disguise the entry for Turtl in your password manager as something irrelevant (Have…
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almost 2 years ago
To keep track of logins/passwords other stuff about machines in the office, I use Turtl. Turtl has boards you can put notes on boards. This helps me organize things a bit better. There is also the ability to do attachments and notes sharing with others.
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almost 2 years ago
I’ll also shoutout Turtl an encrypted note store (including arbitrary files). I wouldn’t use it for general knowledge sharing, but its been nice for sharing some more sensitive content.
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almost 2 years ago
If you looking for something with encryption (I have a lot of passwords that I save), go with Standard Notes or Turtl.
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almost 2 years ago
Try Turtl (https://turtlapp.com). Disclosure: I built it. It’s actually end-to-end encrypted (ie, don’t lose your password) and has collaboration features. I’ve mentioned elsewhere in this post that the conflict resolution is terrible, and also I haven’t done a release in quite some time, but I’m (slowly) working on an updated version at the moment (hopefully with better conflict resolution).
– Source: Hacker News
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about 2 years ago
I have a social notes app (Turtl: https://turtlapp.com/) and it is end-to-end encrypted. It takes a bit of architecting, but the concept is completely doable.
– Source: Hacker News
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about 2 years ago
Turtl is also a block style note system: https://turtlapp.com/.
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about 2 years ago
Turtl does everything one- and evernote does, except it’s end-to-end encrypted.
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over 2 years ago
You mean, something like Ever/OneNote? How about turtle? Run your own sync server, or not. There are a few others, but this is one I like. :).
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over 2 years ago
I’m trying to run the lovely software turtl on my new installation of Fedora 36. The installation goes smoothly but when I try to run it this error pops up:.
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over 2 years ago
There are also secure note-taking apps available, like Turtl or Laverna. But those are full-blown writing apps, good if you’re making lots of notes and want complete security. It sounds to me like you just want to store some basic info, including passwords. That’s what password managers are for.
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over 2 years ago
Could Turtl be useful to you? You can’t draw in it per se, but you can add images and links. You can set it up so you both have access to the same account or create your own spaces and share them.
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over 2 years ago
My go to is Standard Notes, I made the jump from Keep to that when de-Google-ing. Joplin and Turtl are also good options, from what I understand.
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over 2 years ago
I’m rather fond of turtlapp (self-hosted sync server, even!).
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almost 3 years ago
The first link is to https://turtlapp/ which is broken; I think it should be https://turtlapp.com/.
– Source: Hacker News
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almost 3 years ago
I mentioned economic protocols. I’m actively working on one: https://basisproject.net/. I can’t stress enough that it’s a work in progress, but many of the mechanisms described are fairly solid at this point. Beyond that, I find myself building things that resist cultural currents I take issue with (such as mass surveillance or siloed identity systems).
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almost 3 years ago
Turtl allows you to take notes, bookmark websites, and store critical project data. From exchanging passwords with coworkers to recording research for an article you’re writing, Turtl keeps everything safe from anyone but you and those you share it with.
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about 3 years ago