I like to bring up my personal opinion and realization of owning an open format -- plain-text - content for your life-long textual contents.
I was once an Evernote user since its early days and a premium subscriber for many years. I have used many notetaking apps and bought enough of them – iA Writer, ByWord, Bear, SimpleNote, nvAlt fork of Notational Velocity, etc.
I have moved to a simpler notetaking and writing habit for my notes. I have chosen a simple plain-text life. The idea is to approach contents as data-first with tools on the top. I have grown to like the simple methods I use and the philosophies of managing the files and the directories/folders.
I wrote about it sometime back - https://brajeshwar.com/2022/plain-text/
Have you tried Obsidian?
3 days ago one of the obsidian makers posted this: https://twitter.com/kepano/status/1675626836821409792
Key quote:
"These days I write using an app I help make called Obsidian, but it’s a delusion to think it will last forever. The app will eventually become obsolete. It’s the plain text files I create that are designed to last."
Seems to align with your philosophy
Obsidian's problem is Sync + Publish costs way too much, esp. when compared with competitors.
Notesnook provides almost everything Evernote provides, with encryption, better publishing and syncing.
Notion provides more features, incl. publishing and syncing plus the kitchen sink and its factory, yet it doesn't have offline access.
For sync + publish, I have to pay 1.5x what Dropbox wants for 2TB of storage, or what Trello wants for a year, etc.
It makes no sense, at least for me.
BTW, Evernote's .enex format is just well-defined XML. You can parse and convert it into anything you want. It's a modest superset of Markdown.
>Obsidian's problem is Sync + Publish costs way too much, esp. when compared with competitors.
You can sync for free using Syncthing or OneDrive, Google Drive, Dropbox free accounts.
On ios you can only do icloud though