![]() It's great for someone maintaining class lectures, but I much prefer individual single notes, like Notability. My biggest gripe with GoodNotes is the entire notebook approach. For project planning, I really like using a mind mapping tool, then once I am done with it I export the data to a common file format. I don't really care what tool I use to generate a particular note, as long as they are all easy to find and are saved in a common format I can use on any device. If I have to generate dozens of notes, and I am at my desk, I just use Word. All of my backed up stuff was there, and it was only a minor hiccup thanks to the GoodNotes backup feature. I suppose, if you generate dozens of files a day in GoodNotes, it might not be so great.īy the way, the other day my iPad lost consciousness for good, and I had to get it exchanged for a new one. I've never found it terribly onerous getting things into Evernote, though. could use some improvement. and Molekine notebooks (mentioned in blog post) have been abandoned since I wrote that. Unfortunately, Evernote's handwriting support. One cool thing that Evernote has, and no one else seems to have, is the ability to recognize text from multiple languages at once. I've got a blog post about the app - my poor handwriting is clearly shown there There's no particular integration with Evernote, as far as I know (don't use it that way), but it is easy to "open" notes in Evernote, where the OCR is still readable (of course). You can also select some handwritten stuff, have that converted to text, and paste that somewhere. My English handwriting (native speaker, but poor handwriting) is a little less effective. The OCR works in the background. I easily get 90% recognition with Japanese / Chinese. GoodNotes is amazing, especially with the iPad Pro and Apple Pencil. Basically, as I understand it, the OCR text in PDF is handled by a special layer, so the result should be the same as with a typed PDF that has that OCR layer embedded. I only still have Evernote free which I am not even using, just keep it around so I could use this forum (lots of good data organization info here that is more or less universal) so no comments there - I think you need a paid membership to search through PDF files ? I can however find text in my handwritten PDFs when searching in GDrive. So if it works for me, it should work for anyone I seem to be one of the few people left who still write in cursive, plus English is not my native language and my handwriting is probably affected by this (different learned strokes). ![]() I'd say I get well over 90% accuracy with a decent stylus, and my handwriting is terrible. I don't think there's a way to correct it when exporting a PDF automatically. You can correct handwriting when exporting it manually. Can you comment on the GoodNotes > Evernote integration? No OCR, but it has good integration with Evernote via the share menu. I'm currently using Notability on my iPad. Is there an option to review and correct the errors (I have terrible handwriting) Handwriting OCR feature is a nice feature. I'm a fan of using alternate editors in Evernote
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |