Blog Archives

Microsoft OneNote Comes to the iPhone [Downloads]

iOS: It’s been a long time coming, but finally Microsoft Office users can get their favorite note-taking app on the iPhone, so you can view, create, and sync notes on-the-go. More »







NoteSync Is a Lightweight Note-Taker that Syncs with Google Docs [Downloads]

Windows/Mac/Linux: NoteSync is a lightweight application that allows you to manage notes easily, and offers two-way sync with Google Docs to keep your notes updated and always accessible. More »







Use Better Tools to Be a Better Student in 2010 [Students]

Despite the proliferation of laptops and netbooks, the vast majority of students still use their computers like $500 typewriters. Stop working so hard and be a better student by leveraging some clever computer tools to your advantage.

Photo by Brad K..

Every semester I get a new wave of college freshman into my classroom, most of them armed with laptops. For the last several semesters, I have been informally tracking how they use their computers. I always assumed that my students were using their computers to their full potential to help them with school, research, and such, but almost all of them were simply using their laptops as extremely expensive typewriters and instant-messaging terminals.

What good is all the computing power of the pre-1960s world sitting on your lap if you’re not using it to make college life easier? The following is a guide for students everywhere that want to spend less time on the tedious stuff, and more time on the things like study and research that actually produce results.

Never Do Anything Yourself That Your Computer Can Do For You


Never, ever, do something the hard way without checking to see if any easy way exists. Applications come in every shape and form to automate tasks on the computer. Never undertake a tedious task on your computer without first visiting a search engine and searching for a method of automating it. Whether you're resizing photos for a class project, renaming files, or crunching numbers in a spreadsheet, check for the simple—and automatic!—way first. Photo by striatic.

File Renamers: Renaming tons of files has to be one of the most boring and grinding tasks you can undertake. Never waste time renaming files. If you’re on a PC, check out the powerful Bulk Rename Utility for a dashboard of options and the less-overwhelming but still effective Ken Rename. If you’re on a Mac, you can download specialty apps like File List, but it pays to become acquainted with Automator, which can do so much more than simple file renaming.

Text Replacement: Unless you’re writing the next great American novel, chances are you type a fair number of things with a high degree of frequency. Your email address, common phrases you use, formatting you find yourself typing over and over again when working on papers or taking notes, and so on, it might not seem like much but you can easily save hours over the course of a semester by using text replacement. How does text replacement work? Each text replacement tool handles things a little bit differently, but nearly all of them have two basic methods: instant replacement and hot keys.

With replacement, you tell your computer to replace every instance of a string with another string—like notes1 becomes your favorite bullet-list format for taking notes, or mymail becomes your full email address.

Hot keys allow you to assign a phrase to a bit of shorthand plus a hotkey. For example, I have a phrase that is XXX+TAB. Typing it takes only four key strokes but it types out a phrase that would require 53 keystrokes if I typed it manually.

If you’re on a PC, you can try out our home-grown text replacement tool Texter, or other capable tools like Phrase Express. Mac users should check out TextExpander or become more familiar with the built in text-replacement tools in Snow Leopard, and Linux users can give AutoKey a whirl.

Regardless of what you’re trying to do, you’ll almost always be able to find a tool online to automate or at least make that task easier. Get in the habit of always asking yourself, no matter what the task, “Could the computer do this faster and with less input from me?”. Over time you’ll build up a set of tools for quickly completing common tasks.

Keyboard shortcuts

Learn the keyboard shortcuts for everything: your word processor, your note-taking tools, your email client. Slinging the mouse around for tasks that can be accomplished with a keystroke or two is a really inefficient way to work, and far less comfortable. If you’re furiously taking down notes in class do you really want to break your stride to dig around in the toolbar or menus for something like a bullet point activation? You can find shortcut lists for every operating system and application under the sun; hit up Google with a search query like “myapplication shortcut list” to find more shortcuts than you knew existed. Photo by John A. Ward.

Take Better Notes

Note taking is an art form, and it is most definitely not simply writing down everything your professor says or that is in bold print in your textbook. How you take notes is a highly personal thing and heavily influenced by your learning style, but everyone can stand to improve their note taking with a tip or two. Photo by D’Arcy Norman.

Study Note-Taking Techniques: We’ve shared tips with you on how to take more effective notes and how to utilize different note-taking styles and you’ll find no shortage of resources elsewhere on the web for being a more effective note-taker. You can further hone your note-taking skills by researching subject-specific note taking techniques—how you take notes in Medieval Literature won't be the same way you take notes in Organic Chemistry.

Ditch the Pen:

People who love to take handwritten notes love to take handwritten notes, and we don’t expect to dissuade the everything-looks-better-on-a-Moleskin crowd from abandoning their pens. For the rest of you, taking paper notes is, quite literally, so last century. It’s 2010, and there is no reason for you not to have dynamic, media-rich, cross-indexed, and always available notes. At the end of the semester, do you really want to pick through a hundred pages of hand written notes looking for specific bits of information? No, you don’t. You want to be able to search through your notes quickly and efficiently the same way you use major search engines like Google.

Two extremely popular note-taking tools are Microsoft OneNote and Evernote—so popular, in fact, we faced them off in a reader poll last year. The awesome features of the two applications are beyond the scope of a paragraph, but suffice to say they both have excellent systems for searching (with handwriting recognition!), organizing, and accessing your notes—I use OneNote for everything from graduate school to teaching to writing for Lifehacker. You can check out our overview of OneNote here and Evernote here.

Use the Computer to Network

We’re not talking about Facebook-ing everyone in your class. We’re talking about actively using online study and collaboration tools to interact with your classmates. Sharing notes, discussing assignments and class topics, and collaborating on group projects are but a few of the ways you can take advantage of the hyper-connectivity the information age has brought about. Photo by krossbow.

Share Your Notes:The first objection I usually hear to the idea of sharing notes is that people don’t want to share their hard work and they don’t think that other people should benefit from it. Fair enough, how you deal with who participates in your class-centered groups and note sharing sessions is your business but as an instructor I can tell you this: the kind of person who doesn’t bother to take their own notes isn’t exactly the kind of person you’re going to have to fight for the top grade in the class.

You can share notes and collaborate in quite a few ways but it would help your cause to stick with methods that have a low barrier to entry—most people don't want to sign up for a bunch of services just for a class. Google Notebook and Documents are great tools since having a Gmail account is nearly universal. You could also set up your own wiki with free tools like Luminotes or customize MediaWiki into your own personal collaboration server.

Build a Contact Web: Whether it's a group on Facebook, an email list, or a list of phone numbers for text messaging, it's wise to create a way you can quickly communicate with other students. Many times you have a question about an assignment, something that happened in class, or what you missed when you were absent and sending out an email to your fellow students will result in a faster response than waiting to hear back from the professor. It also helps you build a contact list of your peers—not as important in a freshman Psychology 110 course, but by the time you're in at the end of your schooling you'll be taking more focused classes and meeting people in your career path you'll want to stay in contact with.

Backup, Backup, Backup

You have no excuse for not backing up your data—none. The number and methods for backing up data, especially the small volume that constitutes text-based research and class notes, are so numerous that there simply is no excuse for doing something foolish like keeping all your hard work on a single hard disk or flash drive. Photo by Jeff Wilcox.

Dropbox: It's free, the basic account can more than hold a semester's worth of work—short of a film school project—and it syncs to all your computers and to the web. "I accidentally deleted my homework" wasn't a very good excuse ten years ago and it's an unforgivable one now. You can sync your passwords, your OneNote notebooks, and access your favorite portable apps from anywhere.

Online Backup: While Dropbox is great for syncing files, if you want to go all out you’ll definitely want to check out some full-fledged computer backup tools like Mozy and Carbonite. Check out our Hive Five on best Windows backup tools to get more information.


Have a tool you use to enhance your note-taking, studying, or school experience? Can’t believe we overlooked your favorite technique? Let’s hear about it in the comments below.




Scribbly Takes Notes and Emails Them to You [Downloads]

Windows/Mac/Linux (with Adobe AIR): Note-taking application Scribbly lives in your system tray and lets you quickly write notes or reminders to yourself, and then will email them to you with a single click.

Once you've installed the application, you can simply click the system tray icon to bring up the single note-taking window, type in whatever note you'd like to send to yourself, and then send it off with the click of a button—you'll need to set your email address in the settings, of course. The notes persist even after you minimize the application to the tray, so you can use it to take little notes throughout the day, and then email them to yourself before you go home.

The application is very simple, but where it could be really useful is when you combine it with Gmail’s plus-addressing feature—just add something like username+notes@gmail.com to your email address in the settings, and then setup a Gmail filter to automatically put those notes into a separate label for storage. It's a useful feature that makes it worth a look, at least. Scribbly is a free download for all platforms with Adobe AIR.

Scribbly [Adobe AIR Marketplace via Digital Inspiration]






Record and Transcribe Notes for Yourself with Google Voice [Notes]

In our first Lifehacker Wishlist, we came up with five wanted features in Google Voice, including an easy way to record and transcribe notes for yourself. Mark Stout suggests a Voice settings tweak to fulfill that wish.

Stout’s method involves setting up a special group in Voice’s caller settings for yourself (dubbed “Special Transcription” in his case), adding your cell phone number as the only member, setting up a very short greeting for that group, then setting the “Direct access to voicemail” question to No. He calls his own Voice number, records a memo, and it’s transcribed and sent to him via email. If you rely on listening to your voicemail over your phone, this makes pressing the “#” key during your uber-short greeting somewhat tricky. Then again, if you’re cool with Voice’s mostly-okay transcription, you likely don’t listen to your voicemail all that often.

Hit the link for Mark’s full run-through, and leave your own methods for recording an audio note to self, with Google Voice or without, in the comments.






Zoho Notebook Gets Search, Moving, and Export [Notes]

Not one to stop tweaking and improving, Zoho‘s integrated notebook tool recently added universal search, HTML import and export, and tools to move your notes around between notebooks and pages.

Search is the big new thing here, because without a reliable search tool, notebooks lose their ability to help you quickly recall things you once had a dash of inspiration to write. Zoho’s right-hand search bar grabs notes from particular notebooks or all of them, and clicking on any results opens that note in a new tab, so you can try a few different spots to find what you’re looking for.

The import/export tools make it easy to pull in notes from other web sources that support HTML formatting. Are you a Zoho fan, or a Notebook user in particular? Tell us how you use it, and what still needs adding, in the comments.






Evernote 3.0 Makes Syncing Instantaneous, Improves Capture Speed [Downloads]

iPhone/iPod touch: Evernote, the brain-expanding memory and note tool, is making full use of the iPhone 3.0 features with a new version that makes reading, synchronizing, mapping, recording, photo-capturing, and landscape-viewing your notes easier, and promises app interactivity to come.

All of the Evernote 3.0 app’s features are available to all iPhone and iPod touch owners, as the majority involve code optimizations and fixes for convenience. There’s no more concern about “pending” notes, or having to hit the “Load 25 More” placeholder when scrolling through, for instance. Evernote 3.0 instantly synchronizes info and thumbnails about your notes, leaving the full load for when you pull them up.

The app also removes a few of the button taps necessary to capture and tag an image or record an audio memo. Turn any device sideways, and you get a landscape timeline view for browsing through everything you’ve recorded lately to your web brain. If you’ve got notes spread over an entire city, or maybe a state or country, Evernote offers a built-in mashup showing your captures across the land.

There’s a lot more explained at the Evernote blog linked below, and in this brief video explainer:

Evernote 3.0 is a free download for iPhones and iPod touch models running the 3.0 software. If you’re an Evernote fan who’s digging on the new features, tell us how you use them to your memory-expanding advantage in the comments.

Evernote 3.0 [iTunes App Store (direct link)]
Big Update: Evernote for iPhone 3.0 is Here [Evernote Blog]





3Banana Keep Notes Tidy with Hash Tags [Notes]

If you’re looking for a simple way to take, store, and share notes in the cloud, 3Banana makes organizing your notes easy with notes based on in-text hashtags.

You can sign up for an account at 3Banana or use your existing Google credentials to jump right in and try it out. You can create basic notes simply by typing in the dialogue box, or enhance the note taking process by including HTML tags and images. 3Banana automatically recognizes pasted links and common formatting like phone numbers. You can categorize your notes by using hash tags like #tasks to tag your notes.

You can also easily share your notes by publishing them to your Facebook and Twitter account, or more traditionally by emailing or pasting the URL. There are currently apps available for both the iPhone and Android phones. For more great note-taking tools, check out the Hive Five on the topic.





WebNotes Highlights, Sticky-Notes, and Organizes Web Research [Research]

WebNotes, a research tool developed by, and for, serious researchers, allows anyone to highlight and add sticky notes to web pages and have those notes instantly added to a web-based research file. For anyone flying through HTML pages like so much paper, it could be really handy.

At first glance, long-time Firefox users might recognize certain similarities to Scrapbook, an award-winning Firefox extension previously featured here. The main competitive advantages WebNotes has against its predecessor is that it syncs everything to an online account rather than a local database, offers an easily exportable “report” of all your highlights and notes, and, in the paid “Pro” and “Group” solutions, offers annotation of PDFs that are uploaded and converted through WebNotes’ site. The main difference, which is really a user preference, is that WebNotes operates through a (hide-able, optional) toolbar or a bookmarklet that works on all browsers, while Scrapbook, a dedicated Firefox project, pops out from a sidebar.

Signing up at WebNotes nets any new user a 14-day Pro account trial, which includes the PDF annotation powers, so college students working on a big project (or, more likely, working on one when they return this fall) should keep that little freebie offering in mind. WebNotes is free to use with a sign-up.





QuotePad is a Tiny, Portable Note Manager [Downloads]

Windows only: Portable note-taking application QuotePad creates searchable notes from any text on your screen, and even saves the original link if it’s from a web page.

QuotePad works like most other note-taking applications—you simply select some text and use the Shift+Ctrl+Q shortcut key combination to create a new note, which automatically adds a link referencing the source page. You can pin the application to the side of the screen, or easily filter through the notes with the included search feature—there's even a feature to export the notes as a plain text file, making this an interesting alternative if you want to quickly save bits of information but aren't in the market for a full-featured solution like previously mentioned Evernote.

QuotePad is a free download for Windows only. For more alternatives, see our five best note-taking solutions, or learn how to expand your brain with Evernote.





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