I’m not quite sure of what to make of this latest Evernote update. The cloud-based notetaking service has improved its offline Notebook support (the interface is cleaner and it’s much clearer about which notebooks are fully synced), but as a basic (read: cheapskate) user of the service, I was hoping for a little more detail […]
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Evernote 3.3.8 for iPhone: improved offline notebook support, added mysterious UI changes

I’m not quite sure of what to make of this latest Evernote update. The cloud-based notetaking service has improved its offline Notebook support (the interface is cleaner and it’s much clearer about which notebooks are fully synced), but as a basic (read: cheapskate) user of the service, I was hoping for a little more detail about the text note improvements.

I poked around for a few minutes and didn’t find any noticeable changes — unless they meant that you can now switch fields using the “return” key (not sure that’s a recent development, though).

Perhaps the most interesting thing to take away from this is what Evernote CEO Phil Libin stated in the Evernote Blog’s comments: rich text editing and a new kind of UI view are coming to the iPad and iPhone versions. They’ve been talking about this UI for a while now, so I’m hoping we’ll see it very soon.

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