Daily Backup will take you to a choice from two week’s worth of automatic backups, Export Backup will give you the option to export manually in different formats and scopes (best to invoke Export from the document menu if you just want a specific document).
Not sure what you mean. For local knowledge bases, it’s up to you when you backup (not sure whether it’s safe to designate constant backups with a third-party app). For synced ones, they are constantly automatically being backed on each and every edit as long as you are online, and immediately after coming back online. In other words, the daily shapshots are stored to have milestones, the synced database is backing up continuously.
It sounds like you may have run into a bug, but otherwise just keep in mind that the rem will appear at the bottom (and scroll the view to itself) or use the mouse to drag them around until you get the hang of it.
Possibly a Safari bug. Use the in-app Report Bug feature from the lower left ?
button.
The native dark mode is currently in a pre-release state, but you can use an extension in the meantime. Do apply this fix if you go for Dark Reader (which I can recommend, set in the dynamic mode).
The official video tutorials from the in-app help are comprehensive as far as available functions go. As for actual daily usage, RemNote is, in my estimation, the most adaptable of all networked notebooks (though the extension ecosystem is currently lacking, “everything is a rem” means you can easily switch approaches on the fly using the native tools. Plus, there’s obviously no need to hack in SRS.), so you can literally search for any videos on RemNote, Roam, Obsidian, Logseq etc. in the title for inspiration. I can recommend the examples in the awesome list, especially the van Doorn article and Matuschak’s second video. Nick Milo posts some interesting Obsidian tours of different people using the app for different things (use the chapters to skip around). I think the in-app help also has some links to RemNote-only videos from some other people.
It’s not okay if you want to use different headers. The keyboard shortcuts are alt+shift+<1 or 2 or 3>
for the three available headers, each of which may be filtered for (ctrl+shift+f
) separately. ctrl+shift+`
will remove any header. If you prefer the omnibar (ctrl+/
, will act on the rem the cursor is in) or slash commands (/
and start typing inside a rem), it’s h1, h2, h3
or p
to remove.