Daylife review: Slick Mac journal software isolated from a connected world<article>
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<p>The idea of committing each day’s events to a diary—or as Greg Heffley repeatedly reminds us in Diary of a Wimpy Kid, “it’s a journal”—feels a bit out of place in our fast-paced, social networking world. But that hasn’t stopped developers from thriving with apps like
Day One ($30 on the
Mac App Store), which succeeds at modernizing this once-popular ritual in digital form.</p><p>Search the Mac App Store and you’ll find nearly 100 titles capable of collecting such memoirs. The latest is made by Chronos, a publisher best known for OS X productivity tools such as
Greeting Card Shop,
iScrapbook, and
PrintLife, who has proven they have the programming chops to create good software.</p><p class="jumpTag"><a href="/article/3100669/software-productivity/daylife-review-slick-mac-journal-software-isolated-from-a-connected-world.html#jump">To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here[/url]</p></section></article>
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Daylife review: Slick Mac journal software isolated from a connected world