发布于: 2026-1-6最后更新: 2026-1-6字数 00 分钟

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I was browsing a productivity forum the other day when I stumbled on a tool called QuickNote. The pitch was simple: a browser-based journal that sends your entries straight to a Notion database. You know how sometimes you just need to jot down a thought before it vanishes? This seemed built for that.
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The setup is straightforward. You sign in with Google and connect it to your Notion—just two steps. Once that’s done, you get a clean writing space that lives in your browser. You can even add it to your home screen, so it launches like a tiny, dedicated app. I tried it on the subway, and the offline draft feature worked perfectly. The text just sat there, waiting patiently until I had a signal again. One tap, and it was sent off to my Notion page. It’s a specific kind of relief, knowing a fleeting idea won’t get lost between stations.
Here’s what stood out to me. It’s designed to be fast. No frills, just a text box, some preset tags (#Work, #Personal, #Ideas), and mood emojis (🙂 😐 🙁). The tags and moods are a nice touch—they make it easier to scan your Notion database later and remember the context of a day. The developer is clear about privacy, too. Your entries live only in your Notion; their servers don’t keep the content. That matters.
Right now, all the core features are free. You get one connected Notion database, offline drafts, and the PWA functionality. The developer has a roadmap that includes switching between multiple databases, Markdown support, and a search function for past entries—those will likely be part of a future premium tier.
I have a soft spot for these focused, single-purpose tools. They often solve one tiny friction point really well. QuickNote feels like that. It doesn’t try to be a full-fledged note-taking app. It just captures a moment and quietly files it away in the digital cabinet you already use.
So, if you’re a Notion user who’s ever wished for a dead-simple way to log quick thoughts or moods on the go, this might be worth a look. The link to try it is here. Let me know if it sticks for you, or if it’s just another tab you eventually close. I’m curious to see how these minimal tools hold up over time.
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KNotion API

KNotion API

An unofficial Notion.so API wrapper, written in Kotlin.

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