www.office.com/setup Blogs: Evernote and OneNote are two of our favorite tools, but both have changed substantially since we last compared these two apps-in some ways, not for the best. Here's where these two stand today.
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LIFEHACKER FACEOFF: ONENOTE VS. EVERNOTE
Now that Microsoft OneNote is free for Mac and Windows, the price and cross-platform barriers to…Read more
WHAT'S NEW IN EVERNOTE
In the last year, Evernote introduced a new pricing plan, redesigned its webapp, and added new features for its Android and iOS apps.
THE FREE PLAN LOSES A FEATURE, BUT NOW THERE'S A MORE AFFORDABLE PAID PLAN
Let's talk price first with Evernote, since it's the biggest change in the last year. The free plan no longer lets you email notes to Evernote, something most users enjoyed and used often prior to that change. Although you can get around this limitation with an IFTTT recipe, you won't get the full flexibility of Evernote's email-to-notes feature, such as specifying your destination notebook in the email subject line. So that's a bummer.
On the positive side, however, Evernote introduced a new, more affordable paid plan called Evernote Plus. For $25 a year, you get offline notebooks for Evernote's mobile apps and the ability to lock the app on your phone with a PIN. Both of these used to require Evernote's Premium plan, which used to cost $45 a year.
Finally, Evernote's Premium plan now costs $50 a year. But in return for those five extra bucks, you get larger upload limits: 10GB a month, instead of the previous 4GB data cap. With Evernote Premium, you can search attachments, scan business cards, view previous note versions, annotate PDFs, and use the new note presentation mode.
EVERNOTE'S USER INTERFACE KEEPS EVOLVING
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Last year, Evernote took its redesigned, minimalist web client out of beta. Though slicker and easier on the eyes, the makeover also made the webapp less functional. You can't order
Republicans have doubled down on obstructionism with their unprecedented filibuster of secretary-of-defense nominee Chuck Hagel. Picking a member of the opposite party to serve in a cabinet is usually an olive branch, a sign of outreach. However, GOP senators have long been critical that Hagel does not reflect the values or positions of the Republican Party.
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