![]() Evernote has its own presentation platform–that is, you can present directly from a note. I pay for a premium account, which allows me offline access to my notes. Evernote is flexible for notebooks, tags, and searching. You can record (in a note, click on the paperclip to add an attachment, and that’s where the microphone icon is) but I haven’t tried it, so can’t speak to the quality of the recording. Not helpful.) Now that Evernote includes PDF annotating, I use it for reading for class. (I’d end up with an item on my Sunrise calendar with a title of…the date. ![]() I use Evernote reminders, synced with Sunrise calendar, to visualize deadlines.* For a while I was using Evernote for my daily to-do lists that worked really well until I decided I wanted to be able to visualize on a calendar, and that didn’t work so well. I use the Web Clipper to save my readings for class, useful links I happen across, conference information… I use Evernote with IFTTT to save my twitter favorites, which are generally things to follow up on later. Let’s start with Evernote, because it’s free, well known, easy to use, and basically just shy of perfect.
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