Journaling app with true infinite scrolling?

I use a journaling app (Journey) to help keep many balls up in the air (many ongoing projects), and make notes that I can review later and that will remind me of specific information I need to reference again. Incidentally, I use this journaling app in parallel with a note-taking app (right now, I am using Evernote and piloting Notesnook). My primary reason for using both is my need to be able to infinite-scroll daily entries (I can't do that with my note-taking app).

Unfortunately, the journaling app I use, Journey, does not provide true infinite scrolling. It provides infinite scrolling of daily snippets. I'd like to be able to read my journal as a continuous infinite scroll, including the full daily entries (not just the snippets) in the same manner as one can do it with a handwritten journal.

Do you know a journaling app that can do what I need it to do? These are my requirements specs:

  • Multiplatform with Android, Windows, MacOS, iOS
  • Solid syncing capabilities (Journey is supposed to sync but I run into constant problems with the Android version)
  • Markdown support and file storage
  • Infinite scrolling of the full journal entries (not only snippets)
  • Does not require significant time in software upkeep
  • Reasonable cost for a personal license is quite alright

A bonus would be an app that combines a full range of note-taking with all the above (In this case, infinite scrolling would need to provide the ability to be turned on for a specific folder). I imagine Obsidian might do all that with the right plugins, but I am leery of the software upkeep required. I am past retirement time and I figure that my tech capabilities will decrease with time.

Many thanks for your help!

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u/InspektorCluzo — 4 days ago

Who translated the 62 recipes missing from Charles Perry's translation of the Kitab al Wusla?

In Scents and Flavors, Charles Perry offers a translation of the Kitab al-Wusla (Kitab al wuslah ila l-habib fi wasf al-tayyihat, Scents and Flavors the Banqueter Favors).

In discussing the different versions of the manuscript, he mentions, in the "Notes on the text" chapter (page XLVI), that Text Family B had added 62 recipes [which he did not translate]. He writes: "These are of considerable interest, both in themselves and as part of the larger tradition of these book, and are available online."

So a food historian must have published a translation of these 62 recipes. Who was this food historian?

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u/InspektorCluzo — 25 days ago