
- #Airmail for mac sucks, i need a new app pdf#
- #Airmail for mac sucks, i need a new app full#
- #Airmail for mac sucks, i need a new app pro#
I would rather have Evernote make the process of file transfers between applications more efficient at least without losing the file name when exporting outside of evernote.
#Airmail for mac sucks, i need a new app pro#
On iOS, it's a little more complicated but with the new possibilities of iOS 11, drag n drop, it works well on ipad Pro but not perfectly.
#Airmail for mac sucks, i need a new app pdf#
On the other hand, as DTLow mentions, the third-party PDF editors work very well to edit files stored in Evernote and this solution satisfies me completely in macOS. I have long hoped for a better PDF editor in the evernote app. Its not only outdated but simply not competitively useful. Whats more concerning to me is how long its been like this. Someone said it! About dang time and so eloquently. Maybe I'm missing something in Evernote's approach, but I'm a longtime user that's completely frustrated with Evernote's inferior support for annotation and handwritten notes. I've pretty much switched all note taking/PDF annotation to OneNote, with Evernote still used for project management and other organizational needs, which leaves me with my own fragmentation. The ability to "print" PDFs to a OneNote page and then markup the document itself and take notes/add text/etc. That's cumbersome, and annotation seems like pretty basic functionality that Evernote should offer.Įvernote certainly has some broader advantages over OneNote, but really needs to explore something like the "canvas" style approach used by OneNote. Why, at this stage, would Evernote have three separate, incompatible and incongruous approaches to annotation/note taking, none of which begin to match the functionality of some of the other apps named?Īttached PDFs can certainly be opened in other apps, such as PDF Expert, but there is no way to get the annotated PDFs back into an Evernote note without deleting the original attachment and reattaching the PDF. Again, no support for importing PDFs/annotation, yet another approach to handwriting, and, though the Penultimate notes live in Evernote, nothing can be done with them in the main app. This tool seems to have the most potential for future development.įinally, there is Penultimate - a separate app I want to love but is just too buggy, too limited, and too walled off from the rest of Evernote to be truly useful. I will say that that, though the tool is very limited, with very few options, the Pencil support works well and writing is fluid.
#Airmail for mac sucks, i need a new app full#
I've also found it to the buggy, with full pages of notes lost if you switch away from Evernote to another app before saving the image and returning to the normal notes view.

There's no way to use this tool to take notes over multiple pages, or to use it for annotation as far as I can tell. It really can't be used for anything more than simple highlighting - certainly not detailed annotation or note taking.ĭrawings and notes can be added to an Evernote Note directly through the handwriting tool, but this simply inserts an image into the note. It's fine for adding arrows and icons, but terrible (unusable) for handwritten notes on PDFs. PDFs can by opened using the "Annotate" tool in Evernote, which I think is built around the remnants of Skitch.

There are some great Pencil-compatible apps for iOS, including Notability, PDF Expert, and OneNote.Įvernote, on the other hand, is stuck with a strange and fragmented approach: I use my iPad Pro with Apple Pencil extensively. The main issue, and it is a big one for me, is the fragmented and inferior support for note taking and PDF editing in Evernote. However, I've found myself turning to other tools, most recently OneNote, with greater frequency.

(I even have Evernote desk accessories sitting next to the scanner.) I'm pretty well immersed in the world of Evernote. We use shared notebooks in my office and I have a ScanSnap Evernote Edition sitting on my desk. I use Evernote extensively on my Mac, iPad Pro, and iPhone.
