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  • Boone, NC in Photos

    This past weekend, we took a trip to Boone, NC for the changing leaves and cooler weather. Was an awesome experience to hike around Grandfather Mountain up to the peak. Here’s the journey around there in photos. Most of these photos were taken on a Canon R5, but a handful on the iPhone 14 Pro (hard to tell which ones were taken on which device).

    → 12:46 PM, Oct 17
  • May 2022 Vacation Photos

    These are photos that I took while on vacation over the past week with my Canon R6 camera along the low country coastal region of South Carolina.

    → 9:57 PM, May 13
  • If you’re on Mastodon, you can also follow me there: mastodon.social/@coryboho… I’m currently cross-posting to Twitter, Mastodon, Micro.blog. We’ll see how things shake out with Twitter, but will likely continue this for the time being.

    → 3:58 PM, Apr 25
  • You can follow my posting on micro.blog here: micro.blog/cory — if you’re already on that platform, feel free to follow me!

    → 3:01 PM, Apr 25
  • I’ve been hosting by blog for years on micro.blog and now I’m going to give it a try for social posting. Will still be cross-posting to Twitter for the time being.

    → 2:59 PM, Apr 25
  • Shortcut for creating meeting notes in Apple Notes

    The Apple Shortcuts app icon on the iOS Home Screen.

    Shortcuts is an amazing tool that I’ve been using to create custom automations for years on iOS. I’m so happy that it’s finally made its way to the Mac in macOS Monterey, where I’ve been putting it to good since its inception.

    I have roughly 90 Shortcuts in my library, but one that I use frequently throughout the day is one that I built when I migrated back to Apple Notes from Craft. This shortcut tries to replicate the functionality I missed from the migration: Being able to stand up a note from a calendar event.

    Download the Shortcut here

    This Shortcut I created searches through your calendar events to find events occurring “today,” that are not all day events (you can change this if you find yourself needing to create notes around all day events), then it presents a list of these events, and lets you choose one to create a note for it.

    The Shortcut editor showing the meeting notes shortcut opened.

    The Title, Start Date, End Date, and Attendees list are all retrieved from the calendar item, then a Note is created using those fields, and finally the Note is shown inside of Apple Notes and you’re off to the races and ready to begin typing.

    To configure this shortcut, be sure to select a new location to store the new note inside of Apple Notes (currently I have a “Meeting Notes” folder where I store all of these).

    Header Photo by Dimitri Karastelev on Unsplash.

    → 12:00 PM, Feb 2
  • Where my notes stand now

    Picture of a notebook

    Last year I promised that I would update everyone on how my Craft Notes deep dive went. Well, it’s been nearly a year, and I think we’re overdue on an update.

    Craft Notes has a lot of great features, and I really appreciate the straight-forward approach the company takes to announcing new features (nearly every week) to users, and generally keeping everyone in the know with where the product stands. Not many company’s take this stance, and it’s a breath of fresh air when users who like and back your product are kept up to date.

    Last year I migrated everything over from Apple Notes to Craft Notes. I really enjoyed the ability to link notes to other notes, and the ability to design very nice notes almost like designing a web page to house your thoughts. The general design and feature set was great, and I was able to successfully transfer my nearly 1,000 Apple Notes over to the Craft app.

    I never could fully wrap my head around the block editor, and more often than not the experience ended up being more frustrated than fun. If I had an option to disable the block-based editing, I would have immediately. I understand the power that could come with block-based editing, but it just wasn’t for me.

    The disadvantaged of block-based editing really came full circle when copying and exporting — often times I’d find that pasting copied blocks of text would paste in reverse order, be missing formatting, or have other major issues. All of these things added up to just additional frustration and often times kept me from even taking notes.

    To give Craft credit; however, they continue releasing regular updates, have fantastic support, and their apps are great on all platforms. All of my issues added up, coupled with limited export options, left me no choice but to choose another note taking app, unfortunately.

    I do still like Craft notes, however, especially the recent addition of the ability to create notes based on calendar events, and I hope that the exporting and editor functionality can be improved in the future and I can revisit the app.

    I alluded that I’m no longer using Craft notes, so what did I end up going back to? Well, I finished the migration last month back to Apple Notes. Honestly, Apple Notes has most of what I need in a notes app: It’s got an inline editor, it’s got Apple Pencil support, it’s got scanning support and file integration, and I can encrypt specific notes that I choose. I also enjoy using the Quick Note feature on iPadOS and macOS that, unfortunately, can only be used within Apple’s own Notes app.

    The things Apple Notes is missing are the things that made Craft so great: I’d still love the ability to link to specific notes within other notes, have better designed notes with more graphics and customization options, and I’d love the ability to create notes based on specific calendar events (though I do have a workaround using a Shortcut I created that I’ll share eventually).

    All in all, there’s no perfect notes app, but the one that comes built-in is pretty great. If you’re using Apple Notes, however, and it doesn’t have enough features, and you’re looking for something else, then be sure to give Craft notes a try — I doubt you’ll be disappointed and they are continually improving the product.

    Header Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash.

    → 7:00 PM, Jan 30
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