AppRecs review analysis
AppRecs rating 4.3. Trustworthiness 78 out of 100. Review manipulation risk 22 out of 100. Based on a review sample analyzed.
★★★★☆
4.3
AppRecs Rating
Ratings breakdown
5 star
70%
4 star
13%
3 star
4%
2 star
9%
1 star
4%
What to know
✓
Low review manipulation risk
22% review manipulation risk
✓
Credible reviews
78% trustworthiness score from analyzed reviews
✓
High user satisfaction
83% of sampled ratings are 4+ stars (4.3★ average)
About Nuclino
Nuclino allows you to create real-time collaborative documents and connect them instantly like a wiki. The list, board, and graph views let you explore and organize your knowledge visually. It's perfect for anything, from quick notes to detailed documentation.
Use Nuclino to:
• Create, edit, and share notes and documents
• Collaborate with your team in real time to produce great content
• Browse your team's knowledge base and quickly find the information you need
• Stay up to date with your team's work and check recently edited documents
• Comment on items and interact with your team
• Upload and download images, videos, PDFs, spreadsheets, and other files
Learn more at: https://www.nuclino.com
Nuclino Screenshots
Tap to Rate:
Reviews for Nuclino
Echievera
Amazing!
I’m loving this app to make a game design document. It’s a little hard to navigate at first on a phone, iPad formatting feels better to use. I was using google docs to write everything down and share with my team and this app feels revolutionary. Especially love the @ quick links to get to specific topics details so they don’t feel buried.
Astrobiophysican
Love this app + one issue & suggestion
Nuclino is great if you have lots of complex information to organize and interlink. Currently I experience an issue when moving a page or collection; it basically decouples and becomes a float element disassociated from and unable to place in the list again. It persists until I restart the app. The suggestion I have is a toggle that allows the graph layout to include (maybe as a different color or dotted line) the in page links. This would be incredibly useful as it would show other axes of centrality and clusters of pages reflected in the hyperlinks. The links feature is what makes this better than OneNote for sorting files. personally I find OneNote’s section organization and indentation more intuitive. Nuclino requires new layers to convey taxonomy. That is cognitively expensive (more clicks through dedicated organizing elements). It would be worth considering allowing notes to be added to collections so you can give account of what a group means without forcing a subpage dedicated to that (which can push containers into the list; which is the tradeoff perhaps to Nuclino approach). Overall, I love and recommend this product.