![]() This app in free mode seems to do everything I need to manage a single blog. I don’t spend enough time blogging mainly because the apps I’ve used until know have been too kludgy. I can definitely get used to the weird parts. Even the advertising panels are done really well, they look as good as those in Wunderlist. The text has a nice looking markup, is colour coded, and has good style previews for most of the structure format tags. The Markdown mode is excellent, even how it deals with images, better than the DayOne app, for example. It finally does when focus changes to somewhere else in app. If I have some tags/categories assigned to an article and I delete them, their selection does not disappear. Overall this feature is nice, like how it’s collapsible, scrolling and the multiple selection in the right panel works well. There are a few kinds, they are all really nice. After I hit the Update button, it does not become greyed out. Why do I have to decide between Save and Update, they seem similar. So I added some new text and the Save button is still greyed out. It’s quite annoying, especially as it follows you around when you’re selecting text. The main text area seems to be a web view, but with some custom context menu options you don’t find in Safari. I quite like the Headings customiser control, this is a good idea I haven’t seen anywhere else. You can hover over existing images in your post, very slick, and there are nice edit options, although nothing for resizing.Ī parallax effect is applied to the post’s images while scrolling down the page. The options for customising images in your blog post are very slick, but I can’t understand why they don’t let you drag/drop the image on the image well to upload – that feels broken. Is this company owned by Evernote? System Notifications for Save I personally hate Evernote, it epitomises badly designed software: always begging for money, feature bloat, crowded UI. Saving a post prompts you to Link/Register with Evernote. the button at the bottom left is very strange, it opens a File Open dialog, big WTF moment, how will local files be related with my blog post?.controls to switch between h1/h2/h3 … cool.Ok this app is growing on me, the UI overall is quite slick and – aside from a few gotchas – it looks like a lot of care has gone into crafting it. ![]() don’t ask for money at such a high level, it doesn’t set a good tone.this navigation layout suggests the user will be able to swap through different views, not for the main window to change shape expectations have been set by the Twitter app and the TONS of apps that copied this UI.The first thing I tried was the app’s main navigation buttons – on the third one I got a bunch of popup dialogs! I expected to navigate to a part of the app, not be warned that I might be doing something wrong.Īnd why is it possible to preview (and be required to have something published live on the web) when I clearly have a blank page and haven’t entered any content? Why do I have to worry (or even panic) that some wrong content will go live on my website? Confusing Navigation UIĪ few faux pas, in my opinion, with the navigation: This review is written from the point of view of someone who is an experienced blogger, who just bought the app, and started clicking around trying to discover all the features.īlogo’s launch experience was good.
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