Using Apple Notes

Like a lot of people, I like having a place to keep piles of text notes. For years I’ve solved this problem with nvALT and a rotating group of iOS apps that work with Dropbox-based text files. About a year ago, I decided to start looking at other options. This was not out of some dissatisfaction with nvALT but instead but my insatiable nerd-curiosity. So I went on a notes spirit quest for several months including tours of duty in SimpleNote, Evernote, and several other options that ultimately led me back to nvALT. The funny thing about that experiment is that one app I never considered as a potential replacement was Apple Notes and all of its Marker Felt glory. Then WWDC rolled around and one of Apple’s big new announcements was an all new Notes app. I was in the betas. I had just finished one notes app experiment so I figured … “why not?”. I started using Notes in August and we are now sneaking up on January and I find myself still using Notes. Trust me; I’m as surprised as you are. So here’s a few notes on … well … Notes.

Things I Like About Notes

Syncing Works

Syncing in the old version of Notes always felt like a crap shoot. It used an IMAP protocol and felt (and acted) like a bit of a hack. With the new version, syncing is much improved. I’ve currently got over 300 notes and the list is growing. Some of them are a few lines of text. Others are full of pictures, files, and links. It’s also fast. Out of curiosity, while writing this I got out my iPad Air, which has spent the last week on a shelf, and fired up Notes. It was up to date in seconds. It’s sad that I need to even mention this but I’ve had no syncing errors and lost no Notes despite now running the app on four devices.

Rich Text and Attachments

If I just wanted to have plain text notes, nvALT is probably still the winner. However, one of the reasons I started looking for alternatives was because I’m finding I’d like to do a bit more and Apple Notes does that. I’m increasingly finding excuses to put pictures in notes. I’m also throwing word processing documents and other files. Everything is syncing just fine. I also really like the checklists and bullets. They’re easy to add, attractive, and useful.

Adding a little formatting is nice. That does, however, come at a price. My nvALT text notes are timeless. I’m certain my grandchildren’s grandchildren will be able to open a text file. I’m not so certain they’ll be able to get at my Apple Notes data. I’ve been conscious of this as I’ve been adding new notes to the database. Anything that I want to be really long-term, I’m addressing differently or at least exporting as a plain text when appropriate. There’s also an app linked below that can mass-export your Notes to text files.

Notes as an Everything Bucket

While comparisons to Evernote are obvious, the applications are very different. Evernote definitely has more features and better sharing as an everything bucket but it hardly feels native to the Mac and iOS. Evernote, and its desire to be everything to everyone, gets a little rough around the edges. I think the more appropriate comparison for Notes is to Yojimbo. Notes is a native Mac and iOS app that also syncs its data on the cloud. That was something that we never quite got out of Yojimbo. Apple Notes is cleaner and, in my opinion, generally a better experience overall for Mac and iOS users. Moreover, because it’s an Apple product, it’s got hooks all over the Mac and IOS operating systems making it seriously easy to put data inside it.

Sketches

Now that I’ve got an iPad pro, I also find myself adding sketches to notes. That’s something I haven’t done for a long time and it’s really useful.

Things I don’t Like About Notes

That Ridiculously Small Mac Font

It’s completely nuts to me how they shipped the Mac app with both that tiny default font and no way to change it to something larger. You can increase the font size in individual notes but nothing across the board. It’s like someone at Apple thought, “I’m 24 years old and I can read the tiny font just fine. If anyone else can’t, screw em’.” I was hoping that by now they’d have shipped an update that lets me fix this but no luck. Strangely, this is not an issue on the iPad or iPhone where the default font size is larger and entirely readable.

Duplicating Notes

There is no way to easily duplicate a note. Quite often I will use an existing note as a jumping off point for a new one. The only way to do that now is to physically copy the contents of the note, create a new note, and then paste those content. Not exactly convenient.

Note Organization

The Notes application will sort your notes any way you like, so long as you only like them sorted by modification date with the most recently modified note always at the top. This generally is the best way to sort notes and my preferred method. However, once in a while I would like to sort them in different ways, like alphabetically. That’s not possible here. Searching your Notes (Option-Command-F on the Mac) helps but still I wish we could decide for ourselves how Notes organizes its data.

A Few Hacks I’ve Picked Up Along the Way

Text Formatting Shortcuts

There is a series of keyboard shortcuts for text formatting. Once you get them under your fingers, they speed up text formatting on the Mac nicely:

Shift-Command-T – Title

Shift-Command-H – Heading

Shift-Command-B – Body

Shift-Command-L – Checklist

Tags

Notes supports folders, which is a convenient one-dimensional form of organization. It has no support, however, for tags. With the inclusion of tags in iOS last year, I was hoping that would become a “thing”. However, my hopes appear to be dashed. We saw very little support for tags in iOS 9. Notes was a golden opportunity for Apple to jump on their own tagging bandwagon but, alas, they did not. If you’re going to tag notes, you’ll have to make homegrown tags. I suggest using the hashtag (e.g., #grocery) and putting them in at the bottom of your notes. The searching feature will sniff them out for you.

Moving in from Evernote

If you’ve got a lot of notes in Evernote that you’d like to put in Notes, use Larry Salibra’s script. I’ve moved great big piles of text out of Evernote into Notes this way with no trouble at all.

Yanking Text out of Notes

You can always block and copy individual notes into a text file but if you’d like to copy all of your Notes out into individual text files, there’s a Mac app for that called Notes Exporter.

Am I Sticking With It?

So throughout this test drive I’ve been putting off deciding whether or not I’ll stick with Notes or not. However, after six months I’ve come to realize that the decision has already been made. The fact that I haven’t abandoned Notes after this long answers the question. I’m sticking with Notes.

Sponsor: Tinderbox and WinterFest Sale

Tinderbox is back as this week’s sponsor. Tinderbox lets you collect and organize your notes and then helps you intelligently analyze and work with that data. You can link different notes together and display them back in different formats. There are outline, map, and chart views that you can easily jump between, letting both the right and left sides of your brain have a look. There is also a built-in timeline tool that can create an interactive timeline among dated notes. Tinderbox can also collect and report on data it accumulates from i ts own file. It works with other applications like DEVONthink Office Pro, Delicious Library, and even your calendar.


Right now you can get Tinderbox for 25% off as part of the 2015 Winter Festival of Artisanal Software. There are a lot of great apps in there for sale, many of which have been covered here and on the Mac Power Users. Tinderbox is a serious tool and getting a 25% discount may be exactly the kick in the pants you need to get started with it as we head into the new year.

So head over the WinterFest sale page to pick up your copy of Tinderbox and then take a look at the Tinderbox website to learn more about this powerful tool.


Initial Thoughts on the Apple iPad Pro Keyboard

I’ve been using Apple’s iPad Pro keyboard now a few weeks and thought I’d report in:

  • They are still difficult to acquire. I ordered mine at launch and it took several weeks to ship. I was in an Apple Store a few days ago and told they are still difficult to stock.
  • The keyboard-in-cover design has been done by third party hardware companies (and Microsoft) for some time but this the first time I’ve seen the keys molded into the cover. It’s nicer than I expected.
  • The feel is alright. There’s more travel than the new MacBook keyboard. I don’t hate typing on it but also I’ve been a minimal keyboard guy for some time now.
  • The keyboard size seems about right. It doesn’t feel cramped like some of the cover-keyboards I tried on the iPad Air. Of course, they have more room to work with on this jumbo iPad.
  • The sound is weird. It’s louder than you’d think and doesn’t sound like a typical mechanical keyboard.
  • The whole monkey-works is just a bit thicker than a normal Smart Cover and it includes a functional, working keyboard. It really feels like no extra weight or thickness bringing it along.
  • I sure would like some dedicated iPad keys but not at the expense of making the existing keys smaller. I suspect that’s why we don’t have them

When the iPad Pro was first announced I knew there would be a lot of third party keyboard cases and I figured the winner for me would end up being something from Logitech. However, the Apple keyboard has the right amount of balance between minimal profile and working keyboard that I think it is the keeper for me.

Doctor Who Christmas

If you’ve been wondering about Doctor Who too intimidated to jump in, I get that. However, the next few days you’ve got an opportunity to dip your toe with the holiday coming up. For years they’ve been making Christmas specials with mixed results. There are two, however, that are, in my opinion brilliant.

Episode 213 “A Christmas Carol”

It’s a familiar story with a Doctor Who twist and a great performance by Michael Gambon.

Episode 225 “The Doctor, the Widow, and the Wardrobe”

The Doctor returns a favor and takes care of a family in need in his own special way.

These episodes stand alone and I’d like to think you can enjoy them even if you’ve never watched a lick of Doctor Who in your life. They’re both currently available on Netflix. I didn’t link these show descriptions on purpose. You just need to watch them. Every year I wrap presents while watching these two episodes and it fixes me right up.

Sponsor: Tinderbox

I’m pleased to welcome back Tinderbox as this week’s sponsor. While software to calculate numbers or layout a page of text have been around a long time, we are in the early days of applications that help you think. I’m fascinated by applications that can help you unravel your thoughts and put them back together in new and interesting ways.

One of the finest in this category is Tinderbox. I’ve never really used anything like Tinderbox before. It starts out as a place to collect and organize your notes. While there are plenty of apps that let you write stuff down, Tinderbox stands out in the ways it shows you your data. You can link different notes together and display them back in different formats. There are outline, map, and chart views that you can easily jump between, letting both the right and left sides of your brain have a look. There is also a built in timeline tool that can create an interactive timeline among dated notes. Tinderbox can even collect and report on data it accumulates from its own file.

Version 6.4 is now out and it ads footnotes, word clouds, gorgeous outline export, and all sorts of fresh support for DEVONthink Office Pro, Delicious Library, and your calendar.


I’ve been using Tinderbox in the legal practice to track facts and issues arising out of litigation matters. I’ve also used it to plan and negotiate complex contracts. Tinderbox is flexible and you can sculpt it to your own needs. 

Tinderbox can make a difference for you too. Head over to the Tinderbox website to check out further details and screenshots.

Home Screens: Eugene Gordin


I love meeting fellow nerds on the Internet but I also like meeting them in real life. Recently I went to see a screening of the Steve Jobs movie with some friends and was introduced to Eugene Gordin (website). Eugene is a structural engineer and passionate about his Apple gear. I love to see how smart people use their technology and Eugene is no different. So Eugene, show us your home screen.


What are some of your favorite apps?

Hands down (see what I did there), I’d have to say Reeder and Tweetbot. When on my iPhone, I pretty much live in those. I use Tweetbot mainly for information consumption – I rarely actually tweet unless its to a specific person. With Reeder, I’ve been a big fan and loyal beta tester since before 1.0. I’ve tried every RSS reader out there, and always come back to Reeder.

I’m not a big social networker, but I do like sharing photos of my son with our extended family. We use a service called Lifecake, which despite its weird name is geared toward this very use. It has some very creative features, and although development seems to have slowed since they were acquired by Canon, its still one of my favorites on my phone.

Which app is your guilty pleasure?

Thanks to your recommendation, I’m now playing Alto’s Adventure. I’m not at all a gamer, but that game is highly addictive. In addition to beautiful graphics, its got a very gradual learning curve. I’d say I’m hooked because I’m also a snowboarder, but the game has little in common with actual snowboarding. It’d be nice if backflips were that easy.

What app makes you most productive? 

1Password – without a doubt. It seems like all day long I’m logging into things, and 1Password on the iPhone is so incredibly useful, beautifully designed, and with Touch ID, its blazingly fast to use.

Other than that, I’d have to say Mail. When on the go, responding quickly, or triaging incoming email is so easy. The iPhone Mail experience feels desktop class, so much so that I’m always surprised that I see people with signatures that say “Sent from my iPhone. Please excuse any typos.” In my experience, unless you’re not proofreading, there’s little reason why an email from an iPhone would have more typos. 

We use Daylite in my company so that’s definitely nice to have on the iPhone as well, particularly when I need more information about a certain project, client, or company. I’m an Omnifocus user for tasks, although I’ve really tried to simplify my to-do list as much as possible in order to stick with it.

How many times a day do you use your iPhone?

I’m so glad there’s no way to check. If you ask my wife, she’d say too many. I’m on it all day, and with the battery life that iPhone 6S Plus gets, I can do that without worrying much about running out of juice.

What is your favorite feature of the iPhone/iPad?

It’d be a toss up between Touch ID and 3D Touch, both of which significantly improved the iOS experience. While the lock screen is where I use Touch ID the most, it is also a great timesaver for apps like 1Password and Amazon. Touch ID feels like the future, each time I use it.

3D Touch has changed how I use my phone – I use the “peak” and “pop” gestures all day. It will be even better once more developers add 3D Touch integration. The latest update to Reeder (3.0) added support for 3D Touch, and it is much appreciated. 

What’s your wallpaper and why?

My lock screen wallpaper is a cropped version of Brock Davis’ Broccoli House. Why? Broccoli always reminded me of little trees, and this photograph was just so perfect. Also broccoli is delicious. 

Anything else you’d like to share?

One app that I haven’t seen recommended anywhere is Kinohunt, which monitors the iTunes and Amazon video stores for sales. I’m rarely in a rush to buy a movie, but I do have ones I’d like to buy. Kinohunt lets you make a list of movies you want to buy or rent, and it will notify you when they’re on sale.