

“To fulfill our original promise to become your external brain, we’re moving forward in ways that help you make valuable connections between information, so you see what you want, when you want it, and what you need to do with it.

“While today is another significant step forward in delivering on our mission, together, these new features and plans represent a bigger shift: an expanded definition of Evernote’s fundamental value,” said Ian Small, CEO of Evernote. Today’s official release of Tasks, Google Calendar integration, and expanded Home capabilities as part of the company’s repackaged plans makes it easy for anyone to create the right Evernote for them-no matter what they need to get done. Since rebuilding the platform in September 2020, Evernote has delivered a steady succession of new features and product improvements, from the launch of Home in January to Tasks in Early Access in June.

Notes become more actionable, deadlines and to-dos become easier to track, and important information is surfaced in a neat, organized view. The introduction of Tasks, Google Calendar in Evernote, and new Home widgets to the app’s core note-taking capabilities acts as a force-multiplier, creating context for whatever needs to get done. Redwood City, Calif., J– Evernote, the productivity app that helps you remember everything and accomplish anything, today unveiled a lineup of new features and repackaged subscription plans that make it easier than ever for users to effectively manage their workflows and organize their lives. Now it's a multi-platform, Internet-savvy, synchronized place for your ideas.New subscription plans, Tasks, calendar, and additional Home capabilities supercharge Evernote’s apps and empower users to accomplish more When I first reviewed the product, back in 2005, Evernote was a Windows-only, purely local information organizer. You can locate, group and peruse them quickly, without having to dig through a computer's file system. These notes can range from text to photos to many kinds of attached files. It allows you to create "notebooks" containing items called notes. The idea behind Evernote is to be a sort of digital file cabinet. Evernote is an excellent example of hybrid computing-using the "cloud" online to store data and perform tasks, while still taking advantage of the power and offline ability of local devices. I've been testing it for about a week on a multiplicity of computers and phones, and found that it works very well. Walt Mossberg reviews Evernote, a newly revamped service that provides a bottomless, free, instantly accessible repository for your thoughts.
