본문 바로가기

카테고리 없음

Best Notes App For Mac And Iphone



People say that the best camera is the one you have with you, and we think the same thing goes for note apps. If you always have an iPhone or iPad with you, either is great for taking notes. But which app should you use?

Aug 07, 2016  In the Notes app on your Mac, you’ll see all of the notes from your iPhone in the sidebar on the left-hand side of the window. On a PC, look for a new folder (most likely called “Notes”) in your email program. What Makes a Great Note Taking App? To find the best note taking apps, we started with a list of about 35 contenders and whittled our way down to the 10 best based on a few criteria. Best note taking app for sketching notes on iPhone and iPad. Owned by Microsoft, OneNote is a note-taking app you'll definitely want to consider diving into if you regularly use the suite of Microsoft Office apps like Word, Excel and PowerPoint since the app is fully integrated with them.

Note-taking apps litter the App Store, and at one point it felt like we couldn’t go a day without a big new app launch. Since then many have fallen by the wayside, including some high profile apps, but what’s left is a collection of apps that range from the brilliant to the abysmal.

So which should you be using?

App for notes on iphone

When choosing an iPhone or iPad app for taking notes, there are a few prerequisites at play depending on your particular use. For some, Dropbox integration is a must-have, while others are perfectly fine so long as the app supports iCloud. Some people might need support for exporting as Markdown, or perhaps they need live previews of those Markdown notes. There are so many different requirements out there that it’s impossible to consider them all here. What we can do is share what we think are the best note-taking apps for the iPhone and iPad, for most people.

With that said, let’s jump in.

Apple Notes

The obvious place to start here is with Apple’s Notes app because it ships with every iPhone and iPad. Right out of the box those devices have one of the best note-taking apps around, but it isn’t without its flaws, and those flaws are enough to make it a second-class citizen on a lot of people’s devices.

The best thing Notes has to offer is that it syncs effortlessly between all of your Apple devices, but that also brings with it an obvious problem. Getting at your notes on an Android device or Windows PC is a case of using third-party apps that unofficially gain access or the iCloud.com website. Neither solution works well enough to be a real option as far as we’re concerned. If you’re all-in on Apple’s gear, this isn’t going to be a problem for you at all.

As for things we love about Notes, the thing that first springs to mind is the way it can accept just about anything, including URLs. When you enter URLs into a Note you’re presented with a preview of the website, and similar previews exist for things like images, too. This can be great if you’re collecting information for later use, such as when researching for a blog post or paper.

Apple Notes may not be our favorite note-taking app, but it is the first you should check out—you already have it, and it’s free!

Google Keep

Google Keep is another fully cross-platform option, and if you’re looking for a free solution that works everywhere, it might be the option for you. Google Keep has most of the features anyone would need from a note app, although it stops just short of the Evernote model of being a bucket for saving just about anything. You can’t save files to Google Keep, for example, but support for images and URLs is there, as is support for URL previews. You can even save voice memos to Google Keep for later playback.

Organization is a breeze thanks to support for tags—something that is table stakes at this point—and Google Keep is perhaps one of the nicest looking apps in this list. It’s functional, but not boring to use and despite being a Google app, it’s fair to say the iPhone, and iPad apps feel more like they have been created with iOS in mind than anything Evernote has built.

Perhaps the biggest draw for Google Keep is the fact it’s free, something that only Apple Notes can compete with on our list. If the price is a primary concern, then the decision is a toss-up between Apple Notes and Google Keep, and the beauty here is that you can try both out without spending a penny. They both work well, and we don’t think you can go wrong with either at your side.

RELATED:How to Use Google Keep for Frustration-Free Note-Taking

Iphone

Bear

The darling of the iOS community last year, Bear isn’t the must-have app that it once was, but it’s still a fine note-taking app. Like Apple’s Notes, Bear only syncs via iCloud, so it works best if you use Apple devices.

Bear does support Markdown, though, which is something the Notes app can’t boast. Bear also displays images that are attached to notes in-line, making it perfect for taking notes in order during a lecture or similar meeting environment. Unfortunately, Bear does not give you previews when you add URLs; it turns them into clickable links instead.

Aesthetically, notes don’t look quite as good inside Bear, but whether that impacts the app’s usefulness depends on your preferences. Speaking of aesthetics, Bear has plenty of themes to choose from, altering how the app looks throughout.

There are iPhone, iPad, and Mac versions of the app.

You can use the free version of Bear and get most of its features. However, you’ll need a Bear Pro subscription needed to get the best out of the app. At $14.99 per year, Bear Pro adds advanced features like note tagging and the ability to export notes to Markdown, plain text, or as images. Unfortunately, device syncing is also part of the Pro subscription, so if you need to use Bear on multiple devices, you’ll have to pay.

Drafts

Drafts works a little differently than most note apps. The idea behind it is that you can create text of any kind quickly and easily, and then decide later where that text should go. At its simplest, Drafts is a great place to jot down notes in an instant. Opening the app immediately creates a new, blank note with the keyboard up and the cursor blinking away, ready for text. While taking a note is simple, the real power behind Drafts is what comes next.

While Drafts is a note-taking app, it’s designed to let you take notes and then act upon them. You can do all sorts of things with your text, such as send it to iMessage or Twitter or a dozen other apps. And even those barely hint at where Drafts can take you because you can create your own actions or even browse an Action Directory where other users have uploaded their actions.

This post could go on and on about how Drafts can change how someone uses their iPhone, but even if you were to use it only as a place to store text, it’s great at that, too. Note tagging is in place, and Workspaces can be configured to show only ones that have specific characteristics. Think of Workspaces as saved searches and you will be in the right ballpark. Everything syncs via iCloud and while a Drafts app is not strictly available for the Mac as yet, there is a beta in the works at the time of writing.

Drafts is a free app, with a Drafts Pro subscription required to create end edit actions as well as unlocking some of the best features like Workspaces. At $19.99 per year, it is one of the more costly options, too.

Evernote

It’s impossible to talk about note-taking apps without also mentioning Evernote. A service that has had its troubles in recent years, Evernote was once the place to go if you wanted an app that could act as your “everything bucket.” Evernote is much more than a note-taking app, letting you add files, documents, and more—and making everything searchable once it’s in there.

While Evernote doesn’t lack in the features department—handwriting recognition, clipping of web pages, note tagging, and so on—the biggest gripe we have about it is the app itself. It feels crowded and not quite at home on iPhone or iPad. That said, Evernote does work across any major platform you can think of and has a web interface as well. You’ll always have your notes with you, even if they don’t feel great to work with on iOS. We’d probably put Evernote towards the bottom of our list of favorites, but it works for plenty of people just fine.

In its basic form, Evernote is free, but to be able to use some of the more advanced features like note sharing and integrations with cloud storage services, you’ll need to hand over $7.99 per month.

READ NEXT

  • › How to Use Pipes on Linux
  • › Why Does USB Have to Be So Complicated?
  • › What Should You Do If You Receive a Phishing Email?
  • › Why Do You Have to Log In to Your Home PC, Anyway?
  • › The Best New Features in Android 10, Available Now

Whether you’re headed back to school this fall or you just want a better way to keep your notes, memos, and other tidbits of information organized, you have a number of applications to choose from. Some of them just help you get your thoughts down quickly, others sync with online services that organize your notes for you. Here are, based on your nominations, the top five apps or services for the job. [jump]

We asked you earlier in the week which applications or services you used to take notes and organize your thoughts so you could get back to them quickly. You responded, and we collected the votes. Now we’re back to highlight the top five. Photo by MagneticNorth.

Advertisement

Best Note Taking Application or Service?

Class is back in session (or if it's not, it will be soon,) and when you sit down in your next …

Read more Read

Advertisement

Evernote

Evernote helps you remember everything-and by everything, we really do mean everything. The service’s webapp, desktop apps for Windows and Mac OS, mobile apps for iPhone and iPad, Android, BlackBerry, Windows Phone 7, and even WebOS mean that Evernote can help you take notes, save them, tag them with a location, create and organize notebooks, and share them anywhere you are and on any device you happen to have on you. Evernote is great for taking notes and organizing them, but it’s just as good at letting you capture, scan, and save objects in real life, clip web pages you browse, and share them with friends, colleagues, and classmates.

AdvertisementAdvertisement

Springpad

Springpad takes the hassle out of organizing your notes and thoughts for you, and organizes everything without your help. You have to set up a few basic categories, but of all of the note taking services, Springpad is probably the best at automatically guessing what it is you’ve just clipped from the web, snapped a photo of, or uploaded to your notebooks and organizing it without your help. Products you’ve saved automatically go into a wishlist and you’re alerted on price drops, notes go into notebooks organized by topic, and more. Plus, Springpad’s webapp and mobile app for iPhone, iPad, and Android mean you’re never without your notes and the ability to access them. Plus, the service just updated to incorporate your Facebook friends’ likes and interests to your account.

AdvertisementAdvertisement

MS OneNote

OneNote grew from a side-component of Microsoft Office (for Windows) into a full-fledged and robust note taking and organization tool in its own right. The tool functions like a basic word proessor, but it saves automatically, lets you enter any kind of information anywhere, create and save notebooks for specific subjects and projects, and then share those notes and notebooks with others. OneNote is easy to get started with and use, and makes note taking and organization incredibly simple. While OneNote is part of Microsoft Office, you can download versions of the suite for the iPhone and for Windows Phone 7, and use the OneNote webapp to take and save notes on the go from any web-enabled device.

App For Notes On Iphone

AdvertisementAdvertisement

Simplenote

Simplenote is easy to use, free, and has a robust user and developer community behind it creating apps and utilities that plug into the service to make it even easier to use. Simplenote lets you easily jot down your thoughts and organize them by tag, search note contents and tags later to find what you need again later, search through revision history for your notes, share them with others, and access them on any web-enabled device. Simplenote does have premium accounts, but all of the service’s basic functions are free. There are Simplenote apps for the web and iOS, but developers have built dozens of notetaking apps that work in conjunction with Simplenote for Windows and Mac OS.

Advertisement

Apple Notes App Iphone

Advertisement

Pen(cil) and Paper

Many of you said you don’t need a special app to take notes: you don’t even need a computer or a tablet to stay organized. Sometimes the oldest methods are the best, and you said that when you head to class or into a meeting, you bring pen and paper instead of laptop or tablet. What happens to those notes after the meeting vary; some of you type them up and store them, others just organize your paper notes, but for many of you paper and pen (or pencil) is the way to go. Photo by Ramunas Geciauskas.

Advertisement

Now that you’ve seen the top five contenders, it’s time to vote for an all-out winner.

Best Notes App For Ipencil

Advertisement

<a href=”

Advertisement

”>What’s the Best Note Taking App or Service?</a>

Honorable mentions this week go out to Notational Velocity and Catch, both of which have a large and dedicated following. Notational Velocity is Mac only, but boasts the ability to sync with Simplenote, the ability to search note content, title, and tags quickly, and make it incredibly easy to encrypt, save, and retrieve your important data. Catch on the other hand sports a robust webapp and mobile apps for the iPhone. iPad, and Android devices. It also keeps your notes secure, lets you share them on Twitter, and allows you to clip and save almost anything you want to keep and remember later.

Advertisement

Also worth mentioning is the venerable text editor-many of you said you use whatever text editor you have on hand instead of a specific app or service, and that suits you just fine. Have anything to say about the contenders? Did your favorite not make the list? Share your thoughts in the comments below.

My Notes App For Mac

You can reach Alan Henry, the author of this post, at alan@lifehacker.com, or better yet, follow him on Twitter or Google+.

Best Notes App For Ipad Pro

Advertisement