![]() ![]() It's marvelous and is built for writers and functions effortlessly with all the features working on windows. I reviewed several online and tested a couple landing on the Inspire Writer. Unfortunately, it took me some time to discover how lacking the other apps were for windows. Initially, I found AI Writer with a windows version based on reviews and testing out the download. I'd become interested in using a dedicated minimalist markdown app recently when recommended for my blog and content writing. Inspire Writer App for Windows The Inspire Writer app is a smooth joy to write with and I'm a more productive windows platform writer than ever before. But once I'm into a tool, I become a lifer, or something close to it. It takes me a long time to make a decision like this. I'm not sure which I'll end up using, but I'm guessing it'll be Inspire Writer based on my experience thus far. I'm trying it out side by side with Typora, CherryTree, and a few other such tools. It doesn't try to do too much, and in the process does what it's trying to do quite well. Inspire Writer, in contrast, has the "clean" interface that has become the expected norm for writing tools these days. Scrivener does, but it's still stuck at version 2.0 (versus 3.0 for the Mac), which means the software interface is archaic, the menus overly complicated, and the font management lacking. It's odd that so few Windows writing tools do this. The main thing I was looking for was the ability to see just a section of a document at a time. I've been working within the Inspire Writer tool for several weeks, and so far it does what I'd been hoping for, which is to provide a transition from Ulysses for someone, like me, who is moving from a Mac to a Windows machine. The ease of doing markdown tables and writing quickly when drafting made me take the purchase option for Inspire Writer. Inside of Inspire the same note.md file only shows the Obsidian URL for this internal image, and does not show the image. Obsidian holds images inside the Obsidian folders for copy/pasted/dragged images. Inspire only deals with external images (hosted on the web, so only URLs). The only downside to Inspire is its image view and insert functionality. Inspire publishes to Medium and Wordpress also, a huge bonus for blog posts. Inspire lets me tag files (called sheets) with inhouse tags also (not affecting my metadata tags inside of Obsidian) which I use for other purposes. Much easier than even Obsidian's Advanced Tables plugin. Inspire Writer adds some additional benefits - tables and footnotes are really easy with a popup box to input into. Write a new note in Inspire Writer, and it appears immediately in Obsidian. After trialling Inspire Writer for 7 days free trial I was overjoyed to find that I could simply map to my Obsidian notes folder on my PC, and writing in both has real time saves. I can write in Obsidian but there are still many issues - tables in particularly are difficult in Obsidian's markdown format. I wanted a simple but speedy writing app to take over the complexity of Scrivener. ![]() I have recently taken up the Obsidian notetaking app, and enjoyed learning Markdown with that. I was looking for a very simple Markdown writer app as a fiction writer. Writing between Windows and Obsidian with Inspire Writer ![]()
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