blog / Sync images, PDFs, and anything else alongside your notes
We’re excited to launch support for non-markdown file sync and exit early access into general availability.
Let’s lead with the feature news: you can now sync images, PDFs, videos—really any file type you’d like—in screen.garden, making it a full-featured sync option for Obsidian that, for no extra cost, gets you collaborative multiplayer with live cursors and web access to your vault. You can start your one-week free trial today!
We’re launching with fairly generous storage limits in our $4/mo base plan: 10 GB total storage with a 20 MB limit on individual files. And we’re in the process of designing ways to expand those limits as needed.
If you’re keeping track, we exited our closed beta period into what we called early access just under two months ago. In doing so we promised to ship two features we considered to be a baseline requirement for any sync and collab service: private collections and file sync. We shipped private collections two weeks ago, and with the launch of file sync today we’ve hit our first set of goals for screen.garden. We also, incidentally, shipped a bevy of smaller features in the same period: external editor sync in the Obsidian plugin, better auth session refreshing and invalidation, and oh yeah we lowered our prices, too.
We’ve been turning out new features for you at a rapid clip, and with file sync launched we can now turn to the stuff we think is really going to change the way you think about running a company, family, or other collaborative endeavor within Obsidian. Even if you use Obsidian solo we still think screen.garden is a great fit, too—fast, cheap sync with a web editor is hard to beat.
While I can’t share details on those exciting features just yet, the best way to see where we’re headed is to sign up, follow this blog, and join our Discord.