Evernote + Awesome Note

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The hits just keep on coming from Evernote. Now they have hooked up with Awesome Note to further enrich an already awesome application in its own right. Does that make Evernote even awesomer? Me thinks it might. Here’s what Evernote has to say about the hookup:

Awesome Note is an innovative note taking application and to-do manager that allows you to combine notes with to-do lists. Notes and folders created in Awesome Note can be synchronized with your Evernote account, and if you edit those notes in Evernote, your changes are synchronized back into Awesome Note so that your notes stay up-to-date no matter where you’re reading them. Awesome Note also allows you to export individual notes into your Evernote account and import individual notes from Evernote into Awesome Note.

Compatible with iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad. Requires iPhone OS 3.0 or later. Also syncs with Google Docs.

Get it in Evernote TRUNK or learn more from the Awesome Note Site

Evernote Update….with Webcam Notes

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Have I mentioned how much I love Evernote? Not only is it functional and completely spot-on at syncing across devices, it is useful in many imaginative ways. AND NOW the Windows Version has been updated with a Webcam button for storing webcam notes!

If you use a webcam with your Windows computer, you will see a new note type in your Evernote toolbar: WebCam note. Clicking the WebCam note button turns on your camera and pops open a snapshot window. Once you take the snapshot, a new note is created in Evernote containing the image.

Turn your creative thinking loose on this. You might want a shot of a business card, the greeting card that just arrived, a wine label from the great bottle of wine you had never heard of but just finished and plan on buying again, shots of yourself for the Avatar you need to make.

Point is, once captured in Evernote, those images will be synchronized and processed so that you’ll be able to find your notes from anywhere.

Open up your Windows version of Evernote and check for an update or get the new version for yourself HERE.

Cool Your Jets, People

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Here is an idea whose time has come. There are several decent cooling pads out there to reduce the heat from your laptops exhaust. My favorite is NOTEPAL by Cooler Master; it’s quiet, excellent at its job, but it only  has one usb port and it ain’t portable. Enter fanBASE from Scosche.

  • - Cooling stand with USB hub for Netbooks
  • Integrated 3-port USB hub
  • Ultra quiet USB powered fan cools Netbook
  • Adjustable arms fold in and USB cable stows away for added portability
  • Folding design is ideal for travel

It is designed for netbooks (and I haven’t tried it), but I bet it would handle a laptop, as well. $24.95 doesn’t seem to be a big risk, so if it doesn’t suit your needs, you could always gift it to a fellow netbook owner.

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If you try it and like it, or not, remember to tell JAMM your thoughts

Review: Use GogTasks To Sync Your Google Tasks With Your Windows Mobile Device

I admit I was skeptical about using Google services different from GMail. I could not understand using GCalendar when I already have a smartphone with a calendar app, and a dedicated sync app on the PC. Things changed when I abandoned my Palm OS device and I started a different job, obliging me to use different PCs.

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With the new usage scenario I couldn’t install my sync software on every PC I use, and having a 27/7 connection both on PCs and on my smartphone, a cloud based way to manage my personal information was making sense.

Luckily enough the email, contact and calendar applications on my Windows Mobile 6.5 device are well integrated with Google services, thanks to the Microsoft Direct Push feature of WM 6.5 and Google support for Microsoft Exchange.

However, the task application is not supported by Google and I was starting to abandon my task-centric way of organizing things, until I recently found GogTasks.

Introduction

The app started as a commercial software, but due to restrictions from Microsoft on allowing Marketplace apps to use unsupported third-party APIs, i.e. Goggle’s ones, the developer decided to release it for free.

While the newest version is “GogTasks for Windows Mobile 2.2″, I will consider here a previous version, i.e. “GogTasks for Windows Mobile 1.1″, as the higher version seems to suffer of a redirection problem preventing it to work in some cases. In any case, you can download both versions from here.

As always, before going through the steps detailed below, remember to make a backup of your data before proceeding, just in case.

Once accepted the license agreement you will have a new icon in your program list with the classical checked task graphics.

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Configuring GogTasks

At the first launch of GogTasks you will have to configure it to access your Google account selecting the “Authenticate” button.

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GogTasks Settings

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Configure your Google account 

Checking the “Autosync on startup” option you will have the tasks synced between GTasks and your Windows Mobile device when you launch the app. Regrettably there is no option to sync tasks automatically and you have to make this manually. The “Wipe tasks on device” button will delete all tasks on your smartphone, to allow you to import your existing Google tasks on a clean device, so be careful.

The “Check boxes to the…” option will allow you to choose where to put the tasks check boxes. Actually GogTasks also provides a user interface for administrating the tasks with a UI is designed to allow finger control instead of the use of a stylus.

Touch friendly tasks management

Thus, once finished the configuration, you will be able to use the clean and touch friendly interface provided by GogTasks to view and manage your tasks.

In the upper part you will find a pop up menu with the list of the tasks categories (the same you would find on your GTasks, of course), while the tasks will be shown in the center of the window.

At the bottom you will find, from left to right:

  • a pencil or asterisk icon to edit an existing or to insert a new task, respectively;
  • a set of arrows to indent and move your tasks;
  • a button to show the menu.

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The main window shows the tasks (left) and has a pop up menu with categories (right)

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GogTasks menu

The menu will allow you to:

  • exit the program;
  • sync the tasks and exit the app;
  • sync tasks without closing GogTasks;
  • open the settings window (the one where you configure your Google account);
  • add a new task;
  • delete an existing task.

To edit an existing task is enough to highlight it and select the pencil button at the bottom left.

The fields you can enter are the task object, its due date (if any) and some notes. These are quite basic settings for a task, but together with the option to indent and order them, are the only things allowed in GTasks.

One month experience

In the last month I have been using GogTasks regularly with PCs and HTC Touch Pro2, and things have worked smoothly, with no problems due to duplicate or disappeared tasks.

I am regularly using Pocket Informant and I use tasks alarms, something which is not allowed by GTasks and GogTasks, but I have had no conflicts or problems between the two programs. For your information the tasks managed by GogTasks have never been more than 50.

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You can set or edit the task object, its due date and some notes

Conclusion

Apart for some sync failures on startup, which oblige me to sync manually twice, and some ghosts tasks appearing in the list (this is due by the way GTasks allows you to enter new tasks, though) I have no real complain with GogTasks.

We are talking about a free app, which allows you to bless your Windows Mobile device with Google tasks syncing and a simple, touch friendly tasks management interface. Sure, autosync would be very welcome, but this is not a deal breaker, in my opinion. I prefer to have to push the “Sync” menu item twice a day rather than to copy and paste all new or modified tasks.

You can follow the official GogTasks thread at XDA, and visit the developer site. Remember we reviewed version 1.1, but a newer version is already available and could fit you better.

Pros

  • Free
  • Does what it says
  • Simple
  • Touch friendly interface to manage tasks is really handy if you don’t have a dedicated app

Cons

  • Sometime you have to sync twice
  • No autosync feature
  • Google could change things and render this software useless

 

Link: GogTasks

XDA Thread: GogTasks at XDA

More Mobile Capacity—Less Bulk

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SanDisk® Cruzer® Blade™ USB flash drive

My ever increasing list of email newsletters just informed me today that SanDisk has yet another addition to their ever decreasing size of USB sticks. Now you can put one of these puppies on your keychain and it won’t take up any more room than a nail clipper. Your choice of 2GB, 4GB, 8GB, or 16GB variations. Right now, presumably because they are new, prices start at $14.99 and go up from there, but we all know that deals will appear eventually to fall in line with the other dwindling and current storage drive tariffs. In the meantime, need and convenience may prevail. so now you know.

Check out the Cruzer Blade HERE.