On Thursday, 12 Oct 2017 at 16:28, John Goerzen wrote: > Hi folks, > > All along, I anticipated using this with Android (and, ideally, also > iOS). The MobileOrg feature set looked great, and the syncing mechanism > looked a lot better than sharing Dropbox. > > I use git to share my ~/org between two computers (laptop and desktop), > using git-remote-gcrypt to store on a server. This makes syncing and > resolving conflicts easy (I move between the two throughout the day, so > Dropbox is really not a great option here.) Sync integrity -- or at > least robust detection of conflicts -- is a must. Encryption is a "very > nice to have." > > Suggestions? I am not sure what you are asking for. What is missing in MobileOrg? You say it is suffering from bitrot but it works just fine for me on a daily basis, with no issues having multiple Android devices using the same location. Okay, it no longer works with Dropbox but it does work with a number of other media. Maybe I missed it but what is not clear is what features you actually require that you don't have other than the encryption aspect mentioned above. For instance, I have recently started playing with org-dropbox [1] for capturing notes from an Android device. But I will keep using MobileOrg as I need Google calendar synchronisation. The only way to truly work with org on your phone would be to have Emacs on your phone. That *is* possible but the currently available solutions are less than useful (IMO). The second best is to ssh to a system running Emacs (as has already been suggested). My own full solution is to have a palm sized computer running Emacs: the Pandora [2] which is (hopefully) soon to be replaced by the Pyra [3]. eric Footnotes: [1] https://github.com/heikkil/org-dropbox [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pandora_(console) [3] https://pyra-handheld.com/boards/pages/pyra/ -- : Eric S Fraga via Emacs 27.0.50, Org release_9.1.2-98-g0b8316