Show HN: Journelly for iOS: like tweeting but for your eyes only (in plain text)
26 comments
·May 4, 2025kleinishere
Nice to see this on HN from the app creator. Intrigued to try it (vs BeOrg) after seeing coverage at irreal, one of my usual emacs oriented blogs.
xenodium
> Nice to see this on HN from the app creator
Glad to hear!
> Intrigued to try it (vs BeOrg)
Both apps speak org on iOS. It just so happens the apps offer different targeted experiences. While Beorg is perhaps more geared toward task lists and calendars, Journelly focuses on short and quick notes.
I use it a lot for saving links for all sort of things like movies, music, videos, restaurants. You can share from letterboxd, shazam, youtube, google maps, etc. into Journelly. You get link previews in the app and in the case of youtube, play from app.
asadm
This looks very nice but $15 oof. I use logseq ios + mac app (with db in icloud) and it has been serving me well and is free.
xenodium
I really struggled to settle on pricing, but landed on this as one-off payments are far more desireable than where apps are gravitating to (subscriptions).
ps. I've now gone full-time indie and hoping to make a living off my projects.
edit: typo
criddell
$15 is cheap. Probably unsustainably cheap being a one-time purchase.
It always surprises me when people who know how hard it is to make and support great software, complain about a price like $15.
allenu
Congratulations on the launch! It looks very polished and easy to use.
Coincidentally, I've come up with same idea independently with my own journaling app with a social media interface (Minders). I've seen at least a couple of other apps that go for this kind user experience, which is fun, as there's lots of ways to tackle this type of app. For me, I put in some ideas consistent with social media that may or may not work (still figuring it out), like being able to "retweet" earlier posts, quote them, and reply to them, so it's kind of like having a conversation with yourself across time.
I've found that the social media-like UI really does help with recording quick notes to myself. It seems to promote more browsing than, say, a list of notes, and hashtags make it fun to jump around and see related notes, etc.
Best of luck on your app!
xenodium
Thank you! Minders looks lovely! Been thinking about the space for a little while https://xenodium.com/an-ios-journaling-app-powered-by-org-pl... Amazing to see how we both arrived to a similar approach cross-pollinating social with notes/journaling. Nice work!
freeone3000
$20? Just once? This is the best pricing scheme I’ve been for an app this year!
xenodium
Not sure what country you're visiting from, but it's USD $14.99. One time only.
edit: typo
dlehman
It is indeed $19.99 here in Canada.
While a one-time fee seems preferable from a customer-standpoint, I personally prefer annual subscription fees. It allows for a potentially lower initial cost, making it more accessible to potential customers, but--more importantly--provides an obvious recurring revenue model for the author, hopefully implying on-going development. Ideally you would retain access to the app if your annual subscription lapses, but could receive upgrades after reviving your subscription. Whenever there is a one-time fee for an "average" app (no offense intended), I always wonder how the author can afford to keep updating it in the future.
xenodium
Thank you. This is encouraging to hear from a potential user. There may be a middle ground where new features are sold separately (specially feature requests). Having said that, everything you get today with v1 will remain covered by what you paid for the app. No rug-pulling ever to force folks into a subscription.
roxolotl
This looks amazing and fills a niche that I’d love to have filled. Also totally willing to pay the cost. I appreciate that good software is worth money.
One question I do have though is how freely available is your data? The post makes it sound like it’s accessible but how does that work?
xenodium
A couple of ways:
1. Change the storage location to some place outside the app (pick a directory or use iCloud Drive). You can peek at this directory at any time and open the plain text file (Journelly.org).
2. Export a backup archive (zip), which includes both plain text file and all assets (images).
Eric_WVGG
This is very intriguing… I'd love to see some integration with the built-in Reminders app, as I think I would mostly be jotting down ideas or tasks that I'd want to pursue later.
xenodium
Nice idea! I keep hearing the app is versatile, with folks using it in all sorts of different ways.
Adding Reminders to the backlog and think about.
fattybob
Wish it were cheaper - but I bit already - I think at a lower price you would move multiple times more
xenodium
I appreciate that. Will also be monitoring price. Thanks!
tarboreus
I'm interested. But I think the sync story outside of iCloud needs to be fleshed out.
xenodium
Journelly uses standard iOS file access and relies on iCloud (or third parties) to handle syncing via related infrastructure.
Theoretially, any third party app that is a file provider https://developer.apple.com/documentation/fileprovider should be able available to Journelly.
The reality is that reliability and provider completeness by third parties varies drastially. For example, many of them don't offer directory access to other apps (Nextcloud as an example https://github.com/nextcloud/ios/issues/3283#issuecomment-27...), which is a show-stopper for Journelly. It needs a directory to save images.
Here's a thread with some third party options some folks are using with Journelly https://framapiaf.org/@marczz/114369575100101184
Working Copy, SyncTrain, and Möbius Sync are amongst the ones I've heard working from users. For v1, I'm officially supporting iCloud (but still leaving it open for folks to try other providers). I'm just not able to do what's necessary to implement or fix what's needed in those providers (their app/codebase).
criddell
Is this solving a different problem than Apple's Journal app?
xenodium
The UX itself is a unique strength. It feels more like a microblogging app. Easy to post, search, and browse your private feed.
Also, it feels much less like a journaling app and more of whatever you want it to be. Or as jcs from irreal puts it https://irreal.org/blog/?p=12908:
"As more and more users have started using the beta, I’ve come to realize that Journelly is a bit of a shape shifter that adapts itself to your needs."
Unlike Apple, Journelly is entirely offline by default (with optional iCloud syncing). It stores your data to a single plain text file (much friendlier for data preservation).
You can see it all in more detail at the blog post https://xenodium.com/journelly-like-tweeting-but-for-your-ey...
Hope that answers your question.
oulipo
Nice! what would be the main differences compared to DayOne?
xenodium
I would say:
- No account needed for anything.
- Usability (feels more lightweight yet familiar to posting on social media).
- Share anything from other apps (Safari, Google Maps, Twitter, Reddit...) and have it rendered in app. I use this a lot to save things like places I want to eat, music (share from Shazam), movies (share from letterboxd), etc.
- YouTube video links are rendered (and playable from Journelly).
- Simplicity of where your data is stored (single plain text file). Easily accessible and friendly to data preservation.
Apocryphon
There's something heartwarming that despite journal apps being such a huge category on the App Store, people are still trying to come up with better experiences. Gives hope for the platform.
xenodium
Glad to hear it. I was also in two minds about how to position my app. Journaling as a concept may not sound very appealing to many (sometimes associated with keeping a diary).
Having said all that, Journelly can be used in all sorts of ways, including quick-note taking, shopping list, or even sending things to the app for me to save (a link to web, music, movie, etc).
null
On iOS, I've flip-flopped back and forth between a bunch of note-taking and journaling apps. None would stick.
My initial attempts at building such an app faded just the same, until I realized I wanted the same level of low-friction posting and browsing offered by social media apps, but for my quick notes. Not social, just easy posting, search, and a familiar feed.
This is how Journelly came to be. I like to describe it as: tweeting, but for your eyes only (fully offline and in plain text).
If you’re an Org markup user, you’ll be delighted to know it’s powered by unicorns under the hood.
If you’re a Markdown fan, please get in touch! I’m recording interest for journelly + markdown at xenodium.com. The more requests I get, the sooner I’ll get Markdown support out the door.
Hope you like the app!