Fluski

Fluski

The note manager that adapts to you

112 followers

Fluski is a minimalist notes manager. You can organize your notes in an infinite tree structure however you want. Plus, all blocks are collapsible! Coming soon bi-directional links, offline mode, databases, and much more!
Fluski gallery image
Free
Launch Team

What do you think? …

Germán Jabloñski
Hey! I have been using many note managers for years: Onenote, Workflowy, Notion... but none of them were perfect for me. That's why I made Fluski. Some of its characteristics are an infinite outline of pages, and that all blocks are collapsible and expandable. Additionally, I will add support for databases, offline mode, real-time collaboration, bidirectional links, and much more!
Chris Justine
@germanjablo wow, impressive
Julian Fleig
Looks like a cleaner version of notion. I would chance font. Upvote :)!
Germán Jabloñski
@useai Thank you! We wait for you in the app :)
Oguz Gelal
Loved the minimalistic look. In what format are the notes kept in? Is it a proprietary format or a standard like markdown? If it’s the latter, it’d be interesting to set the directory to a folder inside an icloud drive to have it sync to my phone, and installing an app that i can read them on the go.
Germán Jabloñski
@oguzgelal Thanks for your feedback! We are thinking about allowing export to the most important formats. Probably markdown and html. Regarding synchronization with another app, perhaps we could support that through an API if we see that it is requested by users. Any reason you would want to read your Fluski notes in another app and not in Fluski itself?
Oguz Gelal
@germanjablo It’s really more about being able to read and edit on mobile than reading it in another app, if Fluski has a mobile app that’ll do :) Another thing is the vendor lock-in issue of course. For instance I used to use Obsidian at some point, then switch over to simply editing my markdown files with vs code on mac, and an app called mweb on ios (ssot being the md files sitting inside my icloud drive). I appreciated being able to move away from Obsidian without losing all my data.