There's also dry pens and people whose handwriting is illegible. Sure, take a picture of the board, or override the DNE order. Whiteboards are much better, but what do you do when you run out of board space? Then there's the boards where someone writes "Do Not Erase!" on half of the whiteboard. You can indent to show parent-child hierarchy but how do you show a child item that derives from more than one parent in a simple list of text. A text editor is constrained to a linear list of items. You can do similar activities with a text editor, spreadsheet, whiteboard, or paper and pencil but each of these has constraints (claptrap) that will at some point get in your way and break your train of thought or stall the collaborating group. ![]() What I find particularly useful about mind mapping tools like MindNode is the ability to simply throw items (nodes) on the map without worrying too much about the organization of the document (map) itself because it's easy to move things around and create more space. ![]() I've used mind mapping extensively for brainstorming, information gathering, and planning around subject matter, topics, projects, etc., both for self organization to collect my thoughts and when collaborating with a group of people to collect the thoughts of the entire group in one document. What sort of work would you be doing where you would need such an app? Apple revives its App Store Christmas sales like they used to do and MindNode 5 is on the list. Since MindNode 4 is still very desirable I'll wait to see how XMind does on iOS before jumping on MindNode 5. but I think it is getting closer because I had a TestFlight invitation for it this past summer. What's been missing from XMind is native iOS support but it has been in the "coming soon" state for a while. Interestingly I had no JVM issues at all with the lightweight Ubuntu MATE which means it should run on RPi3. Some Linux distros require some JVM reconfiguration for XMind to run. Less desirable has been XMind's Java/JVM dependency, but on modern hardware and Windows and macOS it's not an issue. I do use the export to PDF and MS Office formats with XMind. I love XMind's drill-down navigation and presentation mode which makes it very easy to create hierarchical maps of maps. MindJet's product is good and very popular in corporate settings but it's too closed when it comes to import/export. Of the mind mapping programs that I've used including MindJet MindManager, IThoughtsHD, MindNode, and XMind I like MindNode the best on iOS but I find that I still like XMind the best overall because it's available on Windows, macOS, and Linux. Mac Studio (2022 and later), iMac (2019 and later), Mac Pro (2019 and later), Mac mini (2018 and later), MacBook Air (2018 and later), MacBook Pro (2018 and later), and iMac Pro (2017)Īpple Watch Series 3, Series 4, Series 5, Series 6, Series 7, and SEVery nice tool. IPhone 6s (all models), iPhone 7 (all models), iPhone SE (1st generation), iPad Air 2, iPad mini (4th generation), and iPod touch (7th generation)Īpple Watch Series 9 and Apple Watch Ultra 2 IPhone 8 and later, iPad Pro (all models), iPad Air 3rd generation and later, iPad 5th generation and later, and iPad mini 5th generation and later MacBook Pro (2021 and later) and iMac (2023) IPhone XS and later, iPad Pro 12.9-inch 2nd generation and later, iPad Pro 10.5-inch, iPad Pro 11-inch 1st generation and later, iPad Air 3rd generation and later, iPad 6th generation and later, and iPad mini 5th generation and later ![]() IPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus, iPhone X, iPad 5th generation, iPad Pro 9.7-inch, and iPad Pro 12.9-inch 1st generation This update has no published CVE entries.
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