I don’t use one. Which should I use? My requirements: Must be usable on Ubuntu, substantially less useful if it can’t be shared between that and Windows.
Wikidpad. You need a part of disk where both Windows and Linux can write.
When you create a new wiki, there is an option “only use ascii in file names”, I am not sure what it means, but it would be probably a good idea to use it, to prevent possible problems with different encoding on different systems.
If you choose an option “Sqlite compact”, all wiki pages will be in one file; the default option is one file per page. It depends on what you want. I prefer less files. But with the one file per page, you could use external tools to search in the pages; as a Linux user you will probably want this.
Evernote is pretty useful, it has no own Linux client, but there are third-party clients (e.g. Everpad) and you can use it in a browser window. Opinions differ on how much a pain this is.
I don’t use one. Which should I use? My requirements: Must be usable on Ubuntu, substantially less useful if it can’t be shared between that and Windows.
Wikidpad. You need a part of disk where both Windows and Linux can write.
When you create a new wiki, there is an option “only use ascii in file names”, I am not sure what it means, but it would be probably a good idea to use it, to prevent possible problems with different encoding on different systems.
If you choose an option “Sqlite compact”, all wiki pages will be in one file; the default option is one file per page. It depends on what you want. I prefer less files. But with the one file per page, you could use external tools to search in the pages; as a Linux user you will probably want this.
Try wikidpad.
Evernote is pretty useful, it has no own Linux client, but there are third-party clients (e.g. Everpad) and you can use it in a browser window. Opinions differ on how much a pain this is.