On 10/25/07, Nagarjuna G. nagarjun@gnowledge.org wrote:
On 10/24/07, Kamaleshwar Morjal [कमलेश्वर मोरजाल] kamaleshwar.morjal@gmail.com wrote:
Keynote is a Tabbed notebook and personal information manager, with tree structure and strong encryption; its open source and its free. (free as in free beer as well as free as in freedom :) More info about it here: http://www.tranglos.com/free/keynote.html
Earlier I used the outline mode in Emacs, but now I switched to another mode in Emacs called org mode. This is out of the world product inheriting all the power of emacs and is simply a great app.
ust try this out. It is an outliner, office application. I write essays, books, plan, agenda items, tables, spreadsheets, track progress and everything. This also keeps the data always in text mode, but interpreted neatly and very fast at the run time. Encryption is always possible in Emacs using gpg, which applies to this as well. It exports the files into html, latex, and others. Considering that it is one of the recent Emacs apps it is gaining more userbase and soon more features will be available.
read more about it from orgmode.org. If you want graphical applications consider vym and kdissert.
Thank you very much for replying. Will surely try out the above mentioned softwares but as i said, i have lot of data in the keynote's native file format; can the above mentioned editors be extended easily to support more open file formats?
Thanks and regards.