![]() ![]() Anyway, when you email the content, the web notebook will get it and then it will sync with your mobile devices. EverNote still retains the ‘paper tape’ like interface, though the messages are now visually separate. OneNote is very flexible in where you can place your content, but EverNote is not. No matter what method you use, however, the formatting will not be the same. You can also CTRL-A, CTRL-C and then create a new mail message in your favorite email client and paste in the content. one attachment as it is not usable on the mobile device. There are a few ways to do this from OneNote: you can use the SEND TO menu to send the document as a PDF, you can use the EMAIL option, but remember to remove the. When you create your EverNote account, you get an email address as well. You can email your OneNote documents to EverNote. Now, I can export things to PDF and manually copy to my phone. Sometimes, though, I want the same thing on my phone. Since I am primarily a OneNote user, I tend to throw a lot into my OneNote notebooks. I had it, I used a little, I did not like it. I won’t discuss the Windows Mobile version. The iPhone/iPod Touch client is the most feature complete, but the Pre version is coming along nicely. This is particularly useful for note taking while in meetings or anywhere that happen to be without your computer. If you have syncing turned on, your notes will automagically sync to your web based notebooks and with all of the mobile clients you have. You have to copy your EverNote database to the device. And then it was still cumbersome.ĮverNote 2.2 also had a Windows Mobile client, but it was a beta and also pretty barebones. Problem was, however, that I had to connect my mobile phone to my computer and sync the notebooks. It’s pretty bare bones and lacks most of OneNote’s features, but I did have my notebooks. Having the ability to carry around my OneNote information was something that I was already used to since OneNote has a Windows Mobile client. At first, I did not realize just how useful this web-centric nature of EverNote could be. This web-centric nature is something that OneNote just does not do. Of course, you can also use pretty much any browser to access your notes on the web, if you sync them. There are EverNote clients for Windows, Mac, Windows Mobile, iPhone/iPod Touch and, recently, the Palm Pre. EverNote has transformed from a OneNote wannabe into a rather rich, web-centric, multi device note taking application. It’s odd when a developer ignores one of the core features of iOS.I’m a big fan of Microsoft OneNote, but I also use-as I have written about in the past-EverNote. The kind of round-tripping that went out with iOS 4. And the app isn’t using iOS share extensions-so one needs to go through an export up to Dropbox or Google Drive then back down to another app on the iPad. PDF exports are single page and the right margins are clipped-they’re really not usable. ![]() (I love the idea of any program named “Growly”).īut the iPad app is buggy in strange ways. The search function is rather impressive, too, although I haven’t unleashed it on any really big data sets yet… Very, very few other apps do that, even among the heavyweights. Not least because it’s one of the vanishingly small number of iOS apps that uses smart apostrophes/quotation marks by default. I haven’t delved into it as yet, but thought other Growly Notes users might be interested. Now the developer has introduced a version for iPad. ![]() Growly Notes is a OneNote-style app for Mac. ![]()
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