Freeplane Mindmap Free Download


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Clicking on the images will increase their size. Clicking the hyperlink under the images will open the interactive mindmap.Because of limitations of the mind map viewer, the interactive maps may behave slightly different from the maps you download on your computer and view with Freeplane. Read [[#How to download maps to your computer|here]] how to download maps.

I am trying to find a way to import a Docear/Freeplane mindmap into Knime. I would appreciate help to deal with this issue in two ways: (a) creating a workflow based on the XML file exported from Docear/Freeplane; (b) idea about how to start a node development in order to import native .mm files.

I like using Freeplane for mindmapping ( ) but a mindmap is only really useful if you can find the mindmap with related material in your notes. You also need to update the map when you add new information to your notes.

I cannot see any basic mindmap editor for Joplin (of the style of the "free" Freemind, the archetype mindmapping app for desktops, or possibly Freeplane, it's successor). Not that I would like to edit large mindmaps within Joplin, but a "simple" import of limited, short (text only) mindmaps would be really great.

If it helps, it seems that mindmaps are possible with Mermaid 9.2.0 and above. Joplin 2.9.17 uses Mermaid 9.1.7. However you will see from the link that Mermaid 9.2.2 is currently being added to Joplin pre-releases v2.10.2 and above, but is currently not fully working. I do not use mindmaps so I do not know whether this is compatible with how Freemind works.

Thanks shikuz, your response helps, as I did find the Kityminder plugin from within Joplin, but the PlantUML plug-in I missed.

Any practical use-case (to show simple mindmaps in Joplin) does however heavily depend on the ability to create mindmaps in an outside editor and have them imported through the plug-in. In contrast both of the suggested solutions do seem to depend on manual text input, and a new version of Mermaid be limited in that way.

Thanks again !

Well, there is a snag, at least for the ultra-security minded user.

The plantUML plug-in requires access to the plantUML website "every time" you create or update a graph (or mindmap). Otherwise it creates an error, or just an empty canvass. While you have to carefully review or scan every plugin for malware, this design adds the concern that if this website does ever get infected it could ... in principle ... inject unwanted code into your Joplin database (yes, I know ... this ain't like, many hurdles, no etc.). But for me that doesn't work.

Just in case anybody was interested in the subject.

Checked what kind of control Mermaid offers over its mindmaps. I still think a simple import from an offline, graphic mindmap editor (such as freemind) would let one create mindmaps faster.

The main problem with the (experimental) mermaid implementation is that positions and colors are all set automatic, which leads to big, fancy mindmaps - not very usefull for any serious task.

copy the nodes in the mindmap and paste - Bam. They turn into tasks. The Child nodes from the mindmap even turn up as indented text in Asana - so you can recognise subtasks. Multiple-select and drag them into a task as sub-tasks.

Hi. I saw this and tried it with a different mindmap tool I use (SimpleMind) and it worked too. I exported/copied outline mode. Nice to know pasting hierarchical text stays that way for at least a few other tools we Asana users have in our bag of tricks. Hope this helps others at least check if pasting from other tools they use might work as well. Cheers!

Great post guys! @Alexis is there any plans to incorporate a native mind mapping feature into Asana at some point? Im with @George_supreeth I find using a mindmap to get ideas out to be way more efficient than how you would add them to Asana. Being able to create a mind map and create actionable tasks from it would be awesome.

From my point of view this is awesome for every mindmapper, we can outline the project and complex issues in a mindmap and once done we can simply send the tasks to an Asana project and collaborate from there.

I am really excited

One of the advantages of Freeplane is that you can export your mind map in many formats. This including different formats for online publishing, e.g., as java applet or a clickable map image version.The java applet offers a basic interface to your mindmap, including search and expanding / collapsing of the nodes.

I just added another versions, the xhtml outline version (see text). So if you follow the links given in the text, you can see in total four different ways to publish your freenode mindmap on the web.

Philip, I am just getting going with my two "for pay" programs. And I have never heard of "freeplane." There were a few other free ones I played around with that were decent (Freemind, Mindmeister, and . . . Cayacera? or something--it had a funky cool dynamic presentation/constructino).

I can't see it happening, but I would be thrilled to have some Logos and mindmapping (say with Mindjet) software. I think your look at the atonement is a prime example. Just think how you could export some verses to different nodes, and build ideas/study/questions, etc off of each one. You could arrange them by theme (domain?) and show relationships between them.

Right now I am looking at the three "suffering/prediction" passages in Mark. I just thought how I would like to easily put them in a mindmap and build off of them (context of each one, differences, etc)

I see the education focus. It looks like they have tried to add a variety of graphics. For me, a full arsenal of graphics is essential for mindmapping. If it is done well, some maps would not need many words.

There are several ways, I am noticing, to mindmap: many words, links to documents and applications, visual representations, etc. MindManager is not so much about graphics, as it is a business application. But it does so many things so well. It would be nice for them to come out with a robust graphics package and team up with a bible software company, say . . . . Logos.

A small terminal based menu will appear asking you, to which program you wish to associate the __ extension. If none in the list are freeplane, then simply select option 1_. Then type the executable for freeplane, which I will assume it is freeplane. This will make freeplane open the file used. Now close and open any Nautilus window (You may need to actually logout and login again) you have opened and you are done. Next time you right click a 2__ file, freeplane will appear in 3_________.

Just to make sure, do a sudo apt-get install --reinstall freeplane. Just tested in 12.10 and 13.04. If it still does not work, can you provide any additional information that can help me narrow down the cause?

made it super easy to use the mindmap as a fullscreen presentation tool. As a speaker, it helped stay focused on topic under discussion and not get lost with lots of context switching and scope creep. I think I will try it more

I was not convinced about mindmapping representation before I discover XMind. Now, 99% of my work of Microsoft Visio has been migrated to XMind and my headhaches have disappeared. Thank you for your product that have upgraded the quality of my work (creation of training supports and videos)

Beside the obvious missfortune of having to pay another tool just for making a few mindmaps, the real problem is that i can't change that mindmap once i've converted it into a PDF form0(in order to clip onto Evernote).

It's not so much that I want to keep the mindmap in Evernote (although I certainly do) rather, it's more that I would like to be able to have each node be associated with a note so I can store ideas, thoughts, progress, etc. with it.

Hi. That's the sort of thing I mean when I talked about mindmaps and note links. Here's a very basic example in Freeplane, with all but the project names being links to open associated notes in Evernote. The exact process depends on which mapping software you're using, but most changes can go into Evernote - either directly or by accessing notes through the map links - with the map acting simply as a visual link between notes. Relations between sub projects can be shown on the map with additional shading / lines / layout etc

I also want the evernote can change the concept of a notebook. Let each note can be a container to contain other notes like the notebook currectly but also allow it has its own note cotent. The whole structure should be like a tree and we can just use a mindmap kind of view to explore the whole note content.

Sure, a tree-like data structure would require a significant amount of engineering work, but it's not impossible. Many software programs are designed with this structure from the beginning. It's quite peculiar to me that Evernote can only support a two-tier notebook structure at most. If this limitation were to be lifted, the entire notebook structure could potentially be navigated in a mindmap style, which I believe would be a tremendous leap forward.

But I think I understand your other points. If most people don't need this feature, then it naturally may not be implemented. And I'm just suggesting what I personally think is a better way. Not only for mindmaping, having a multi-level tree structure is what I consider to be a more flexible way of organization.

I have enjoyed using NovaMind because it seems to have the best ability to attach graphics, floating text, and jump (link) lines. You can get really wild. MindManager has a more constrained, businesslike and sedate feel, and it has become the de facto standard for mindmaps. But NovaMind will import and export MindManager documents. 5376163bf9

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