Edinburgh
A private journal for the long Edinburgh winter.
Dark afternoons, warm interiors, and a passphrase only you know.
Edinburgh is a city that respects long sentences. The Eternal Journal is built for them.
Useful for novelists during the festival, students in their digs, and anyone who finds the dark months a good time to think.
There is no streak meter telling you you've missed a day. The journal does not nag. It opens when you open it, and waits when you don't.
The Typewriter Experience
The cursor stays. The text moves.
In Write mode, your cursor remains exactly at the centre of the screen. The page rises up to meet it. Past words fade into soft shadow at the edges, leaving the present sentence in clear focus. Switch to Read mode and the entry flattens into an evenly lit document — the fade is for writing; the flat light is for returning.
Radical Privacy & Encryption
AES-256-GCM, in your browser, with a key only you derive.
- ·PBKDF2 key derivation at 600,000 iterations — the OWASP 2024 recommendation. Existing journals upgrade transparently on first unlock.
- ·No accounts, no telemetry, no analytics, no cookies, no third-party scripts.
- ·IndexedDB storage with a localStorage fallback. Encrypted before it touches the disk.
- ·The file is not minified. You can read the source. We'd rather you trust it than us.
What It Does Not Do
- ✕No word counts chasing you across the screen.
- ✕No formatting toolbar wrestling your thoughts into neatness.
- ✕No cloud sync. No distant servers. Your words stay yours.
- ✕No social sharing. Your vulnerability is not content.
- ✕No AI assistant finishing your sentences.
- ✕No streak counters. No guilt. No gamification.
- ✕No subscriptions. No mood trackers. No noise.
Licensing & Gift Copy
One purchase covers up to three of your personal devices. It also includes a second untouched copy of the file — meant to be given to one person you trust. Lifetime updates. 30-day, no-questions refund. If you run a clinic, school, or workplace and want a copy for everyone, ask us about a site licence.
Questions
Will it work during a festival‑week power cut?
If your laptop has battery, the journal works. There is no server to be unreachable and no sync to fail.
Can I use it for my PhD field notes?
You can — many users keep one journal for personal writing and a second for thesis material. Each file is independent, with its own passphrase.
Does it support Scots or Gaelic input?
Yes. Anything your keyboard can produce, the journal stores as plain Unicode. There's no autocorrect making English of your Gàidhlig.
More in By Location
See all →A private journal designed for British writers and readers.
No data leaves your machine. No cross-border transfer questions. No subject access requests to file — there's nothing to access.
A private journal for the West End and everywhere east of it.
Quiet writing software for a city that doesn't owe anyone an explanation.
A private journal for the city that never quite goes quiet.
London is louder than most places. Your inner life shouldn't have to be.
A private journal for Manchester's working writers.
From the Northern Quarter to Chorlton, an offline notebook that doesn't ask for an account.
A journal that is GDPR-friendly by architecture, not paperwork.
We don't collect personal data. We can't transfer what we don't have. There is no DPA to sign because there is no processing.
A private journal made by a small studio in Amsterdam.
European by design, local-first by principle, sold once and kept forever.
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A private, offline journal that asks nothing of you.
One file. One password. Yours forever. No accounts, no cloud, no algorithms reading your three-in-the-morning thoughts.
Core
An encrypted journal where the passphrase never leaves your device.
AES-256-GCM with PBKDF2 key derivation at 600,000 iterations — the OWASP 2024 recommendation. Done in your browser, not on a server.
Core
A journal that doesn't track you. At all. Ever.
No analytics. No cookies. No third-party scripts. No "anonymous usage data." If you view the file source, you'll see for yourself.
Comparisons
The Eternal Journal vs Day One.
Both are journals. They're built on opposite assumptions about where your writing should live.
The cursor will be there when you return.
Centered. Blinking. Patient.
Start Writing