Diego Mesa you hit the nail right on the head. 

After using TW for last couple of months, I have realized what makes it 
unique and powerful is the ability to customize almost each and every 
aspect of it. This is something missing from established products like 
EverNote and OneNote. New products like Notable have planned feature for 
plugin support but I doubt it will be as permissive as TW.

Problem is for a beginner TW has a bland UI and very little features. To 
customize you need to use plugins and scripts. A central repository for 
searching and installing plugins would be nice.

I like how Browser Addons Stylus and GreaseMonkey do it. The browser addons 
let user install customized soles and JS scripts for different sites. 

   1. They let you search from the addon UI, without having to visit some 
   external site. 
   2. They also let you update the scripts and style if an update is 
   released. 
   3. Most of the styles and scripts are hosted on Github. So you can 
   Github to view the code and suggest updates if necessary. 
   4. Finally if you have the addons installed and visit a user css or user 
   script they detect it and offer to install it for you. Try installing 
   Stylus and visit this 
   https://stylishthemes.github.io/GitHub-Dark/github-dark.user.css to see 
   what I mean. 

A similar mechanism for TW would be very useful.
​

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