Tiberium

A Notion alternative for Linux — no Electron tax

Most people who want Notion alternative for Linux are tired of waiting on a heavy Electron window to boot before they can write a sentence. Tiberium runs in your browser, sync is instant, and there is nothing to install.

Why Notion alternative for Linux matters

Native apps on every platform sound nice in marketing copy, but Linux users mostly want the app to open fast and not chew battery. Tiberium runs in the browser, so the platform-specific install dance disappears.

How Tiberium runs on Linux

On Linux, you open Tiberium in any modern browser. Add it to your home screen or dock and it behaves like a real app — full-screen, instant startup, offline-friendly for short connection blips.

  • Works on Linux without an install
  • Sync the moment a connection returns
  • Touch-friendly and keyboard-friendly editor
  • Notes look identical across every device you sign in on

What you give up vs. a native app

Very little for note-taking. You lose deep OS handoff features and some advanced offline workflows. In exchange you get an app that updates the moment we ship — no app store review, no version-skew bugs.

Daily capture on Linux

Open Tiberium, hit new, write the thought. Folders and tags later. On Linux this takes under two seconds.

Findability later

Live search across every note means the question is never 'where did I file it' — it is 'what word did I use'.

Publish when you are ready

Any note can become a clean public page with one click — useful for changelogs, FAQs, or sharing a draft.

Sync that just works

Switch devices mid-sentence. The note shows up where you left it, no manual refresh.

Try a Notion alternative for Linux that respects your time

Tiberium is free to start. Capture ideas, organize notes, and publish in seconds — the Notion alternative for Linux most people actually stick with.

Sign up for Tiberium

Frequently asked questions

Is Tiberium really a Notion alternative for Linux?

For the way most people actually use Notion — capturing notes, organizing them, finding them later, and sometimes sharing one publicly — yes. If you depend on Notion databases or full workspace wiki features, Tiberium will not replace those one-for-one.

Do I need to install anything on Linux?

No. Open Tiberium in any modern browser on Linux and you are in. Add it to your home screen or dock if you want it to behave like a native app.

Is Tiberium free?

Yes. There is a free tier with the whole notes app, and a simple paid tier for extras like monetization on published pages.

Can I import my Notion content?

Tiberium accepts pasted text and Markdown. Most people copy across the pages they still reread and leave the rest archived in Notion.

Does Tiberium work offline?

Tiberium runs in the browser and saves to the cloud as you type. Short connection blips are fine; long offline sessions are not the primary target yet.

Where are my notes stored?

Your notes live in our managed cloud database, scoped to your account. Only you can see them unless you publish a note as a public page.