01-05-2021



  1. Notion Boost Open-source extension for Chrome and Firefox to add features like sticky outline, small text & full width by default,scroll to top button, hide slash command menu, and more to Notion.so website.
  2. Embed 500+ other apps inside Notion pages. Create a hub for everything your team is working on. Try Notion today Get started for free, then add your whole team. Google Play Store. Using Notion at.
  3. Notion Web Clipper is an extension to Notion that allows you to save any page on the web to your Notion workspace. It is offered as a free browser extension on the desktop for Firefox, Google.
  4. Notion Boost Open-source extension for Chrome and Firefox to add features like sticky outline, small text & full width by default,scroll to top button, hide slash command menu, and more to Notion.so website.

Chrome, Firefox, Safari Next-level notes: Although Notion has been around since 2016, this year it started allowing unlimited personal notes, so you can finally take full advantage of the.

Many email servers do not accept messages with large file attachments. The file size restriction varies depending on the mail server configuration. While you might be able to send a message with a large attachment, the receiving mail server might refuse to accept a message with a large attachment. This is all beyond the control of Thunderbird.

Free

Thunderbird Filelink eliminates this problem by providing support for online storage services. It allows you to upload attachments to an online storage service and then replaces the attachment in the message with a link. The message recipient clicks the link to download the attachment. As additional benefits, sending and receiving large files is much faster and both you and the recipient will save disk space.

Note that you can use Thunderbird Filelink in addition to conventional attachments. For example, you can attach small files directly to a message and use Filelink for large attachments in the same message.

Notion Firefox

The instructions below show how to configure and use Filelink with the Box online storage provider. We have an agreement with them to integrate their services into Thunderbird as well. (We used to have an agreement with Hightail, formerly YouSendIt). However, the community has been active in adding other providers through the use of add-ons with FileRun, hubiC, Mega, ownCloud-based services, Pydio (formerly AjaXplorer), Synnefo, and ~okeanos currently having add-ons.

Table of Contents

  • 3Filelink FAQ

To use Filelink, you must first create a new account (or configure an existing account) with an online storage service provider.

  1. At the top of the Thunderbird window, click the Tools menu and select OptionsIn the menu bar, click the Thunderbird menu and select PreferencesAt the top of the Thunderbird window, click the Edit menu and select Preferences, or click the menu button and choose OptionsPreferences.
  2. Select the Attachments panel and choose the Outgoing tab.
  3. Click the button. The Set up Filelink panel will open.
  4. Select the desired service provider from the drop-down list.
    • Choose Box, click , or click the Get a Box account… link to create a new account.
      Note: In order to set up a different account, you need to install an add-on for its provider first (see below.)
  5. Click to continue.

If you are creating a new account, a browser window will open that displays the service provider's registration page. Create an account as instructed. The service provider will send you a validation email message. Click the validation link in the message to activate your account. Enter your username (your email address) in the dialog shown above and enter your password when prompted.

In the main configuration dialog, check Offer to share for files larger than and specify a file size (in megabytes) if you want Thunderbird to prompt you to use Filelink when a message attachment exceeds the specified size.

When you attach a file to a message and the file size exceeds the size you have specified above, Thunderbird will automatically offer you the use of Filelink:

To force a file to be attached using Filelink (rather than relying on Thunderbird to determine if the attached file exceeds the specified size), you can click the down arrow next to the button on the message toolbar to access the Filelink menu option.

Click the button to upload the file to the online storage service provider. (Alternatively click to attach the file as a conventional attachment.)

When you select the displayed message will update to:

When the linking is complete – that is your attachment has been uploaded to the service provider – your email will be modified and a block of text and a link will be added to the body of your email as shown below:

Note: The message will appear in plain text, if Compose messages in HTML format is turned off in Account Settings.

When the recipients receive the message, they will see the same information and clicking the link in the message will take them to a download page to download the attachment.

Attachments that you send via Filelink are not stored on Mozilla servers. Each file storage service provider has its own privacy policy and terms of service. The file storage service provider has reviewed the Filelink feature to ensure that it is consistent with their policies.

Q: Does Mozilla know which provider the user has picked?

A: No. Mozilla is unaware of which provider has been selected by a user. Provider configuration is stored on the local machine.

Q: What storage services are currently supported?

A: We have reached an agreement with Box to integrate their services directly into Thunderbird. The agreement with Hightail is no longer valid. You can install support for more providers with add-ons, like:

  • DL for Thunderbird may be the best if you prefer using your own server instead of relying on third-party providers.
  • Last but not least, you can use Filelink with a WebDAV server with the WebDAV for Filelink add-on.

Q: Can the storage service view my attachments?

A: Unless you encrypt the file before uploading, the storage services will be able to view the file, as will anyone who obtains the link to the attachment. Users must decide on their own which service provider they trust with that responsibility. (Service providers generally explain your privacy rights in their terms of service.) Note that standard attachment functionality is also not encrypted. When you send an attachment the 'normal' way, the file can be accessed by anyone that can access the message between your system and the recipients system (such as your email service provider). Filelink adds some security as file uploads to the storage service provider are sent via HTTPS, a secure protocol.

Q: How long will my file be available on the storage service provider's site?

A: The file will remain available on the storage service provider's site until you specifically delete it. Log in to the provider's website to view and delete the files in your storage space.

Q: Can you support service provider X or protocol Y?

A: We plan to support SpiderOak. We also have an 'Up-for-grabs' project available if anybody would like to add support for more services or protocols. Also have a look at the Developer documentation for the Filelink feature.

Q: I don't like the idea of storing my files with third-parties like this. Do regular attachments still work?

A: Regular email attachments still work the same as they always have. We've just given you the ability to choose to upload large attachments somewhere else, if you wish. Thunderbird's notion of a large file defaults to 1 MB, but can be customized in Thunderbird's Preferences:

  1. At the top of the Thunderbird window, click the Tools menu and select OptionsIn the menu bar, click the Thunderbird menu and select PreferencesAt the top of the Thunderbird window, click the Edit menu and select Preferences, or click the menu button and choose OptionsPreferences.
  2. Select the Attachment panel and choose the Outgoing tab.
  3. Set the file size for the Filelink warning.

The offer to upload can also be disabled entirely by removing the selection from the Offer to share for files larger than option.

Most of us quickly outgrow taking notes in our main word processing tool. Whether you use Word or Docs, Pages or something else, they’re seldom ideal for creating the interlinking bodies of smaller text pieces that we need for notes.

And whether you’re working on your first degree or your first book, putting lectures together yourself or working on complex engineering problems, you’re going to need your notes a lot.

We think that for making, organizing, sharing, and using your notes, there’s no better tool around today than Notion. I’m going to explain why, but first, I need to introduce you to Notion if you haven’t encountered it before.

What is Notion Notes?

Notion is a note-taking and web-clipping app—among other things, which we’ll get into later. It’s highly structured, intuitive to use once you get familiar with the basic way it’s organized, and it’s rapidly growing in popularity.

Notion Firefox

How Notion Notes works

Notion lets you rapidly create structured, flexible content which you can then change, restructure, share, duplicate, and basically do nearly anything you can think of with.

It’s this ability to create structured notes that sets Notion apart from other note-taking apps immediately. Hastily-made, unstructured notes are a poor aid to memory, understanding and creation.

Here’s a quick view of the basic features.

Web Clipping

Notion lets you simply pick up a whole web page and drop it inside your Notion workspace. Once it’s in there, you can do anything with it that you can do with your own notes: you can move it around inside your workstation, copy parts, re-order it, reformat it, tag it, and more.

The web clipping function is accessed from the extensions bar in Chrome and Firefox.

Blocks

Notion is built around blocks—sections or chunks of content. Think of them as containers in a website, if that helps—or paragraphs in a page if you’ve written more text than HTML.

Either way, the two most distinguishing features of Notion are its basis in these blocks, and their adaptability.

There are over fifty types of block, and more are constantly being added. Web pages can be clipped directly from the web, as can videos, images and sections of text. New text can be written and formatted on the fly, and structured lists can be created.

You can use blocks to format as you write a simple page of text, choosing heading and paragraph styles as you create the block; or you can reformat blocks after creation.

Blocks also allow you to create completely new functionality inside Notion. You can create tools that might otherwise be standalone apps inside Notion using blocks like Checkbox, or integrate Kanban and calendar functionality into a page.

If this seems like it might be a bit overpowered for a simple note-taking app, it is. Notion started life as a codeless app builder, and while you can get great value out of it as a note-taking app, one of its biggest advantages is that it can also be whatever you want it to be, including an all-in-one productivity solution that’s tough to beat.

Nested Toggle Lists

Toggle lists create lists of headings that give you a drop-down when you click on them. For taking notes on complex subjects like university lectures or complex, interlocking technological tools, these are invaluable. They turn a page into a high-level overview of your subject, but give you instant access to more detail when you need it. It’s one of the ways Notion lets you actually turn your own notes into a usable resource.

This feature doesn’t exist in other note-taking apps, like OneNote or Evernote, and it’s fantastically useful for taking notes on a subject where your understanding is still evolving. You can add, alter, and remove list items with ease, so you can insert relevant material into a list that already exists with a couple of clicks without having to restructure anything.

Drag blocks, pages, and sub-pages around

You can move around paragraphs, images, embedded sub-pages, videos, and anything else in your page by just clicking and dragging. That’s great if you’re writing something and still figuring out the structure, but it’s also great if you’re making notes on a complex subject and realize halfway through that the structure should be different. You can move any block this way.

You can also move pages around between workspaces this way. Simply click, hold, and drag to reorder pages within a workspace or drag a page to a new workspace.

Pages and sub-pages

Pages hold notes, the same way a web page holds content or a page in a notebook holds your written notes. Unlike a paper notebook, though, Notion lets you create pages in specific workspaces, share them across workspaces, users, and projects, and insert other pages inside them—like embedding one Google Doc inside another, but it’s effortless and adaptable.

Sub-pages live inside pages. But the same sub-page can be shared across multiple pages, you can embed a sub-page inside another sub-page, and they too can be shared, copied, duplicated, and imported, tagged and managed.

Note that pages, sub-pages, and blocks interact in a ton of ways. For instance, you can turn a block into a new page:

So if you’re halfway through taking notes and realize that you really need to change the structure—you realize, for instance, that what you thought was a key structural part of the lecture is actually not as crucial as you thought—you can create a new block, turn it into a new page, and drag-and-drop all the notes you already took into that page. That way you can retain them, without having them inline in your main notes page for that lecture.

New pages can be organized in several ways. You can drag them around inside the menus on the left of your Notion screen, but you can also apply properties, categories, and even visually flag them with icons and covers, as well as assigning them to users and integrating them with other features like Kanban boards.

Here you can see I’ve tagged this page as “marketing.” I’ve also created a list of togglable properties for all these pages:

I created these by typing them into the “select or create” field. Now I can search among my pages for “marketing,” and for “research,” and I’ll get this page as a result.

If I want to glance at my Notion screen and pick this page out visually I can apply a cover or icon. There’s a gigantic selection of emojis as well as the option to link to images or upload them and use them as icons:

Choose an icon for a Notion page and it becomes the favicon for that page in your browser window too!

You can also add covers, which work a little like header images in websites or the background image for your Facebook page:

Again, there’s a huge collection of images, colors and patterns to choose from as well as the options to link out to an image’s URL or to upload an image.

Templates

Notion lets you build simple pages from the ground up, block by block. You can build workspaces the same way, page by page. But if you want different functionality built in, you can use templates.

Notion offers you templates in your workspace depending on what kind of user you are: I told Notion I was a marketer, so these are the templates I found waiting in my workspace:

I can easily get new templates inside Notion:

This Class Notes template was under Education:

You can use the dropdowns on the right to browse by category, or browse the full template library.

If that’s not enough you can make your own templates, share and publish them. If you’d rather let someone else do that there’s a whole website full of them here.

Kanban, to-do, and calendar

Standard time, project, and productivity management tools like Kanban boards, to-do lists, and calendars are available inside Notion as blocks:

Choose one and drop it into the page, then use it as normal. This Kanban board lets you change the categories, click on cards to see the back of them, and all the rest of the standard Kanban functionality.

Check-box to-do lists are also available inline direct from the standard block menu:

Calendars can be dropped into the page too:

All these blocks can also be created as pages, direct from the block menu or after you’ve created them inline. They can be duplicated and shared.

Share and import

You can share anything you’ve imported, clipped, or created in Notion with any other Notion user. You can call users out in pages, or in specific blocks; share blocks, pages, and workspaces with other users; set reminders inside blocks, pages, and workspaces for users and for yourself; and work collaboratively inside a page with other users.

If you have classmates or colleagues, you can both use Notion to build test pages for each other, checking your knowledge against the notes you’ve taken to improve recall and understanding.

Notes from other apps can be quickly imported into Notion. You can import from Asana, Trello, Word, Docs, and more with just a couple of clicks, though Notion will only actually pay you to import notes from one app: Evernote.

Getting started with Notion Notes

How do you start using Notion? It’s pretty intuitive once you get the hang of it, but because it’s so versatile it can also be confusing at first. Here’s how to get the tool and start using it.

Notion Firefox

Getting the application

You can get the Notion app for mobile or desktop, or use the browser extension.

Desktop apps:

Notion has desktop apps for Mac and Windows:

iOS and Android

The iOS and Android apps can be downloaded here.

You don’t need the app to take notes though. There’s a browser extension for Chrome and Firefox that gives you access to all the functionality discussed in this post.

Browser extensions

Download browser extensions for Chrome and Firefox here.

The extension advertises itself as the web clipper, but actually gives you access to much more Notion functionality than that.

Pricing

Notion sounds pretty great. Does that mean it’s pretty expensive?

There’s a free-forever version that gives you access to nearly everything Notion can do, but with quite low limits on blocks and uploads.

Then there’s a Personal version that’s $4 a month when you pay annually or $5 month-to-month (by sheer coincidence, the amount Notion will reward you for transferring from Evernote…), which comes with limits on user numbers.

To really unlock Notion, you need the Team plan: $8 a month paid annually or $10 month-to-month, with unlimited access to everything except version history storage, which is capped at 30 days. (See our full-sized breakdown of Notion pricing, complete with comparisons, here.)

Workspace

Once you install the extension and open it (you’ll see it in the extension bar; clip whatever web page you’re in to open Notion), you’ll be guided through the setup process.

Notion firefox android

Then you’ll be in your Notion workspace. You can create multiple workspaces, pages, and everything else in Notion right from here. Next to the Workspace heading in the menu on the left, you’ll find the option to create a page.

Create a note

Click on “Add a page” and open either a templated page or a blank, untitled one. You can simply start typing; standard keyboard commands work fine in Notion, so Return creates a new paragraph and a new block.

Practice moving blocks around and setting up your workspace in a way that makes sense for your note-taking style and the projects you’re working on.

Why Notion Notes is the best note-taking app

Notion is the most versatile note-taking app there is. Its very versatility makes it slightly intimidating until you get used to being able to do anything you want with anything on your screen. Then, it’s very freeing.

There’s no structure imposed on your notes, meaning you can select, build, or modify one until it has everything you need and nothing you don’t.

Is it better than Evernote? Yes…

…and here’s why.

Notion wins out over Evernote in our in-depth comparison piece in virtually every category. Where Evernote has advantages—easier search, for instance—they’re either negated by other, more important disadvantages, or they’re a function of the app’s standalone nature: it’s easier to search because it’s structured more simply, rigidly, and predictably.

Evernote is built to keep all your files in one place, while Notion is built to keep all your work in one place. Evernote is much more rigid and prescriptive in how it lets you manage your files. While Evernote offers many APIs and integrations, Notion has almost none—but then, it doesn’t really need them.

Notion Web Clipper Firefox

As a note-taking tool Notion is more open-ended and flexible than Evernote, but it’s as a holistic productivity solution that it really shines.

Wait, there’s more…

…Notion Notes isn’t a standalone app. We’ve alluded to it throughout this guide to Notion Notes, but there’s a comprehensive productivity suite in Notion.

Think of any of the elements of Notion as doors: whether you access Notion via the browser extension Web Clipper, the mobile app or the desktop app, once you’re in, you have a tool that can replicate all your other productivity tools all in one place.

Notion Firefox Settings

Yes, you can sync Evernote with Docs, Docs with Trello, and Trello with Google Calendar. That’s a solid setup. But why wouldn’t you just sync Notion with… Notion? You can build workflows, to-do lists, reminders, calendars, Kanbans, new documents, and even whole apps—right inside Notion.