![]() Best of all it is free, you can install it on as many devices as you want, and the chances of MSFT killing it (like Google is famous for doing to its products) are minimal. ![]() ON also has the nice browser webclipper tool for Chrome and Firefox, so it is super-easy to clip stuff from websites. You should see an option to export the notes. ![]() This should be easy, just login to your apps and right click on your note. Once you adjust your brain to working this layout it makes sense and works just as well as EN and is actually a bit better IMHO. In short, what I did is to convert Evernote file into markdown file and then import the markdown file into Notion directly. For example, I have 2 main notebooks in ON ("work" and "personal") with 10-15 tabs in each for various categories of notes (names+numbers, travel, projects, recipes, etc.), and then however many pages of notes within each tab. Evernote is a program that allows you to make notes and sync them to the web so you have access to your notes, documents, images, web clips and. The tabs in a ON notebook are much easier to select. ON is a bit different from EN in that you are better off having fewer actual notebooks with ON because it becomes tedious to click on all the different notebooks if you have a bunch of them. The import tool from MSFT worked pretty well, but I still had to spend an hour copying and pasting notes that all got dumped into individual notebooks in ON. Switched to OneNote (ON) when Evernote (EN) dropped the free account to 2 devices earlier this year and couldn't be happier. ![]() *Full disclosure - I expected them to explain the process and try to show how it wasn't intrusive, and why it was necessary to use people versus machines. They'll do much better in the future and answer questions and concerns before they arise :) Evernote now understands what happens when a privacy gaffe is made, and had an appropriate response - We're not going to do that. The best-case scenario is exactly what happened*. You can't do that in a case like this, where everything is black or white and no middle ground exists. The problem is that they didn't detail anything fo the sort, and what they did say only raised alarm horns for everyone concerned about privacy and anonymity. I'm pretty sure Evernote had a plan to make sure some random Joe who works for them isn't going to be able to take what he reads and affix it to any single account (or person) or build ay type of profile on an Evernote user. ![]()
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