This section is about getting files into Myne and keeping track of them. Attachments are files of any type — images, PDFs, and other documents, but also any other file you drop in — stored inside the encrypted vault; voice notes are audio you record straight into a note; the attachments library is where you see and manage them all; and the importer is a one-time way to bring an existing vault across.
What’s in this section
- Attachments: adding files to notes — images and PDFs render inline, any other file type is kept as a downloadable card — the accepted types and size limits, and how they’re stored.
- Voice notes: recording audio directly into a note, where it lives as an encrypted attachment.
- The attachments library: browsing, searching, and managing every file in the vault.
- Import from Obsidian: bringing an existing vault into Myne. Obsidian
.base files (saved views) are brought in separately — see Saved views.
Articles in this section
- Attachments & import An overview of working with files in Myne: attaching files of any type to notes, recording voice notes, managing them in the attachments library, and importing an existing vault.
- Attachments How to attach files to your notes, how renderable and generic files differ, the size limits, and how attachments are stored inside the encrypted vault.
- Voice notes Record a voice note inline from the editor with the /record command. The clip saves as an encrypted audio attachment with an inline player. Recording runs locally and stops on lock or auto-lock.
- The attachments library How the attachments library lists every file in your vault, how to search and sort it, and how to see which notes use a given attachment.
- Import from Obsidian How to import an existing Obsidian vault into Myne, how notes, links, and attachments are mapped, and the edge cases to check in the import summary.