this post was submitted on 07 Dec 2023
3 points (100.0% liked)

PKM Personal Knowledge Management

396 readers
1 users here now

Konzepte, Methoden und Tools des pkm; deutschsprachig

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

Cross-post from: https://lemmy.world/post/9282945

I'd like to sync my markdown notes between devices (laptop and phone), which service is better: Nextcloud or Syncthing? Any other important idea I should know?, like latency times, or maximum number of synced devices, what if I edit the same note from both places without internet and then both get connected to a network... For example, I know Nextcloud let me have a history of the notes.

top 3 comments
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
[–] exec4@discuss.tchncs.de 2 points 9 months ago

I am using Joplin on Syncthing with 3 devices I have edited one note on both devices before syncing, so the note got duplicated. (Joplin is syncing to a folder, then the folder gets synced). This takes a little longer to get synced if I boot and open Joplin directly (as Joplin's first sync still syncs the outdated files). But mostly works fine.

I am also using Joplin on 2 devices and sync them over WebDav (on NextCloud). As I am editing 99% on one device only, I cannot tell you much about it.

If you are working offline some time I would try syncthing first. I have set my phone to auto usb tether so it would always sync when connected.

[–] Optophonic@feddit.de 1 points 9 months ago

I am using Syncthing and am happy with it. Syncing my notes, and more, between my phone and two laptops without any issues. I like that I don't need a server like with nextcloud.

Depends on the PKM tool I would say. I used Joplin with its internal sync with Nextcloud without problems in the past. Then I switched to Logseq which does not have an integrated sync so I had to rely on the respective clients. On Windows and Linux this works fine with Nextcloud, but automatic sync on phones (at least Android) sucks. So I switched to Syncthing for this purpose as the phone sync is more reliable now. I have however a small "server" (RPi or similar is sufficient) running 24/7 to keep the notes in sync even if my devices would not be online in parallel.