I'm interested in hearing the explanation for this. When you take smaller bites, more regularly, you digest things easier. Call it the 'eat little and often' approach to learning and reflection.
It's a tedious and terrible workflow, and I can hardly believe in 2022 Notes is still too dumb an app to offer simple export features. Evernote is a cloud service, but the apps work fine in temporary offline mode except for one small point - an internet connection is required to login to your account. Reflect helps you memorise and reflect on your notes, by scheduling regular flashcards reviews of what youve saved in Evernote or Yinxiang.
Plus because of Notes' formatting, they paste with extra space between each line which can't be easily corrected with paragraph formatting, so I have to go in and manually delete extra spaces and all. Evernote is an excellent, access-from-anywhere note-taking system, which includes apps for iOS, Android, Windows Phone, PC and Mac. This device limit applies to the following Evernote apps: Other Evernote productssuch as Web Clipper, Skitch, Scannable, and Penultimateand third-party apps that use the Evernote API integration do not count toward the device limit. I literally open a new word doc and then cut and paste each one manually. With Evernote Free, you can use the Evernote app on up to two devices. You can take notes, write lists, store content, and organize everything in one place. To back these up from Notes to word is a pain in the ass. Evernote is a note-taking app that offers everything you need to keep your life organized. So I have ~1000 notes in ~7 subfolders at any given time. The free tier is fine for very light users, but there are some glaring omissions from the feature list that Evernote used to throw in for free. Not what I need.ġ- Convert notes to word docs so I can save them elsewhere easily.Ģ- Export entire folders/subfolders with a click - either as a single word doc, or a zip folder of separate docs or etcīasically, I use Notes for song lyrics, poems, writing, as well as to do lists and etc. There are different tiers of access available to Evernote users: Free, Personal, and Professional.
So I've been using Notes (standard iPhone app) for years, since it's already on the phone, but there is no way to back up those notes or convert them to a word doc (short of cutting and pasting.)ĭoes Evernote allow any of the following features, and/or any recommendations of apps that might? I did Google it, but most suggestions seem to be for handwriting conversion apps.