Well, there is finally a version of
Evernote for the Mac, albeit a Beta
version. If you haven't signed up for the beta,
now's a good time.
While not perfect, the developers have done a good job
of Mac-ifying one of my favorite Windows apps. The new
version of Evernote is ambitious - Evernote is
attempting to go multi-platform, and I'm not just
talking about Windows and Mac. There is a web version,
as well as mobile flavors. This one of the first total
solutions that I've seen for a consumer-level
unitasker. When I refer to Evernote as a unitasker, I
don't mean it in the pejorative sense either. It does
its one task very well.
A welcome piece of functionality to the Evernote puzzle
is tagging. While I would only say that the tagging
feature is in its infancy, it is definitely a major
step ahead of the hierarchical categorization of its
predecessor.
On the Mac, there is no shortage of competition for
Evernote:
VoodooPad Pro (which I own and use,
but not nearly in the same way that I use Evernote
on Windows),
Yojimbo (I'll leave it to the Mac
zealots to wet their pants over BareBones' apps —
I am not a fan) and
DevonThink (I think I have a
license from a previous MacHeist, but I was
already using VoodooPad) are no slouches in the
note-taking realm. While some may arguably be
better than Evernote as
Macintosh
applications, none of them are cross-platform,
syncing applications. A key distinction for any
Mac user who lives in the
real world.
A lot of Mac users among us are multi-platform computer
users, with most of us being Windows users during the
day, and Mac users the rest of the time. Plenty of us
have non-iPhone smartphones also. Evernote makes a
serious effort at bridging our multi-platform needs,
and I commend them for that.
I've been using the Evernote Beta for the Mac, and I'm
ready to say goodbye to VoodooPad. I've been waxing
evangelical on Evernote for over a year on Windows —
the free version is an indispensable tool for business.
Now that Evernote is going to be a syncable,
multi-platform application, there is good reason to pay
for that premium feature.
Tags: evernote, voodoopad, yojimbo, devonthink