I’m a big fan of apps that embrace constraints such as Tot does. Other features of Tot include Markdown support, keyboard commands, Dark Mode integration, rich and plaintext support, and the ability to share your notes as. The idea here is to use this constraint to prevent you from accumulating countless pages of random notes, many of which you’ll never go back to after creation. Each note is represented by a small circle. With Tot, the most important thing is the content, not how it looks.Īcross Mac, iPhone, and iPad, Tot is a single-view application that limits you to only keeping seven “pages” of notes.
The text is displayed in just one font (which you can customize). The formatting is purposefully simple: there’s only italic and bold (with ⌘I and ⌘B keyboard shortcuts). The easiest way to describe Tot is as a set of digital Post-it Notes or a whiteboard on your Apple devices. I’ve chosen to keep it in the menu bar for easy access without giving up a space in my dock. On the Mac, Tot can act like a normal application with a dock icon and everything, or you can move it to the menu bar. The Iconfactory describes Tot as “your tiny text companion” and an “elegant, simple way to collect and edit text.” Whereas other note taking applications generally focus on packing in as many features as possible, Tot takes a different approach. Tot is available on Mac, iPhone, and iPad, and there’s iCloud support to keep everything in sync across your devices.
The latest entry into this crowded field is called Tot, and it comes from The Iconfactory - which you may know best as the developers of popular apps such as Twitterrific and Linea Sketch. There are dozens of note taking applications for iOS and Mac, including Apple’s Notes app that continues to get more powerful almost every year.