

Together with the iPad itself, which is helping me writing posts from the couch, Evernote enables me to dump whatever kind of data I want into a notebook and see it immediately synced on my MacBook, which sits in the other room. But again, this is not the main point.Įven with the feature set cut half due to deadlines and annoying bugs, this app is changing the way I work. So, from a development standpoint, you can be sure that Evernote for iPad will be updated and refined in the upcoming weeks.

Indeed, the developers have already submitted a bug fix update and have another one in store which should address even more bugs and introduce new features. The first iteration of Evernote for iPad has been developed in a rush to submit the app for approval, it doesn’t have all the features you might expect from Evernote and it definitely shows great room for improvement. But thing is, thanks to the iPad version Evernote makes much more sense to me now.įirst of all, let me say this straight up: it could be a lot better.

Perhaps I wasn’t just ready for it? Who knows. But like I said, I had a problem with the Mac version the first time I tried it: I found the UI quite messy and I didn’t manage to get along with the system clipper and tons of desktop features. Looking at the big picture, Evernote is so popular because the service is good, works fine and it’s cross-platform. The free service lets you store up to 50MB of data per month, while the Premium version brings the storage space up to 500MB per month, together with better file types support and enhanced security. You can organize all your stuff in notebooks and tags, search and apply filters to keep everything always under control. For those who don’t know, the purpose of Evernote is that of allowing you to build your own digital scrapbook made of notes, pictures, links, sounds, whatever.
