Daily use
When it first launched, its name was NIMBUS NOTE. At that time, I was in need of a note-taking application and had purchased several similar ones. However, since buying NIMBUS NOTE, I have used it almost every day. Initially, it was primarily a note-taking tool, but it has now evolved into a comprehensive platform for knowledge management and enterprise project management.
I like its web clipping feature, which requires its "Nimbus Clipper" browser extension. Its browser plugins for screen recording and screenshots are also excellent.
In 2023, more features were added such as AI functions and the "Portal" micro-website. The note-taking interface has now been set as the "old version," and the new interface is more suited for enterprise document management. There are many other functions to be explored. Now, in 2025, I have purchased a new code to keep up with the times and use the new features.
Suggestions for Improvement:
1.It would be great to have a manual sorting function for notes and pages, as well as for workspaces. A grouping function for workspaces would also be helpful.
2.Provide a dedicated panel to display the usage of all resources. The information currently provided on the "statistics page" is not comprehensive enough. For newly added features like AUTORUNS, AI CREDITS, and PORTALS, finding the relevant information is inconvenient, as some require navigating to other pages, and others are simply not found.
3.browser extension for FIREFOX browser.
4.new app for mobile.
Pavel_FUSEBASE
Sep 20, 2025Thanks for the feedback. We’ll continue working on the Notion use case for database functionality—this is one of our main priorities. I’ll pass your input along to the product team.
The main challenge we face is with Firefox extensions. Their review process is notoriously difficult for developers, which is why there aren’t many high-quality, up-to-date extensions available. Unlike Chrome and Edge, where developer support is much more user-friendly, Mozilla relies heavily on community reviewers rather than dedicated employees. Unfortunately, this often results in inconsistent and unhelpful interactions that slow down innovation.
Firefox was actually one of the first browsers where we built one of our most popular extensions, but due to these ongoing issues we’ve had to scale back support there. Hopefully Mozilla will improve this process, because right now it makes things unnecessarily complicated for developers like us.