Macworld: Review: Yojimbo 1.1
Popularity Report
![]() |
|||
![]() |
|||
![]() |
|||
![]() |
|||
![]() |
|||
![]() |
URL Tag Cloud
Bookmark History
Saved by 1 people (0 private), first by anonymouse user on 2007-03-25
- Mattkramer on 2007-03-25 - Tags notetaking
Public Sticky notes
Yojimbo exports notes, passwords and serial numbers as RTF files, and Web archives and PDFs as those types of files. However, it doesn’t export bookmarks as .webloc files—double-clickable URLs that open automatically in your browser.
You can add items to Yojimbo’s database in many ways. Besides creating items from within the program or dragging selected text or files to Yojimbo’s window, you can drag data to the “drop dock,” a translucent tab that peeks out from the edge of your screen. You can also copy text or a URL to the clipboard, then press a keyboard shortcut to show a quick input panel at the top right of your screen, though that location may be less than convenient for some users. Select a type of item, add comments, type a title, then press Return to add it to Yojimbo’s database. Finally, you can add a PDF to Yojimbo from any application’s Print dialog: click the PDF button and select Save PDF in Yojimbo.
Items automatically display in the default collections (the five types of items, plus Library, Flagged Items and Recent Items). You can create custom collections, adding items to them by dragging; items can appear in multiple collections. You can flag items, and you can set colored labels to further sort them. Searching for items and their content in Yojimbo is easy, either from its search bar, or using Spotlight. However, I’d like to see user-defined smart collections, analogous to OS X’s Smart Folders.
If you work on a desktop and laptop, Yojimbo’s .Mac syncing is a welcome feature. The program syncs intelligently, copying only the items that have changed since the last sync. So even a large database will sync quickly, if you haven’t made many changes.
Yojimbo enters a market full of competition, with programs such as Chronos’ StickyBrain (
), DEVONtechnologies’ Devonthink (
), Circus Ponies’ Notebook (
), and others. Each of these programs appeals to a certain approach to storing information—StickyBrain appeals to those who want to store everything, Devonthink targets users who want to tweak their repositories in many ways, while Notebook offers a page-based storage and outlining system. With Yojimbo, Bare Bones puts the emphasis on simplicity as opposed to feature bloat. Yojimbo may not do as much as some of its competitors, but at times, simplicity is more powerful than a wider range of features.
Highlighted by mattkramer


Public Comment