@sumudu It’s because Indigo is generally already taken in anywhere that already has lots of people.
// @kdfrawg
@sumudu It’s because Indigo is generally already taken in anywhere that already has lots of people.
// @kdfrawg
@sumudu Yes, stored locally. If you set up syncing, you can choose which databases you sync to each computer. The size just depends on how much you put in.
@ukhaiku I think the problem with mine is that although the computer is supposed to support HS, I replaced the HD, and I think there’s something about the combination that caused it to start the upgrade, then abandon it half way through.
Apple’s decision not to make Sierra available meant that I could only download El Capitan or earlier, and my Time Capsule backup wouldn’t restore to that, because it was made with Sierra.
// @matigo
@sumudu I don’t sync everything to the mobile version, just pick out certain folders that I actually want to have there. All the recipes; current travel plans; articles on my reading list — that sort of thing.
@sumudu I don’t really do workflows, but Devonthink is a good place to store information. We have a recipe database, and I have one that I use as a sort of “read later” service, and a big miscellaneous one. I use it for gathering information when I’m planning to travel, for collecting articles on subjects that interest me. I have a database with a big collection of info on art and literature.
Apart from the sorting and finding capabilities, I like the fact that whatever you put in there is stored in its original format, so even if DT dies, you still have all your files.
@matigo It’s something anyway. And providing real coffee gets quite a bit more complicated, so you can see why they’d go for instant.
@ukhaiku I’m holding off till I get a new computer, since my attempt to install it on this one didn’t work out very well.
// @matigo