YangKC 6 Posted April 16, 2017 Share Posted April 16, 2017 Hello: Because my experience of using Evernote Android is that the app is too big and too slow and not practical which I also notice some reports from other Evernote users, I managed to read EV note via Android browser while integrate it with my personal GTD app(MLO, MyLifeOrgainzed in this case), it is fine for me to be able to read a note associated with a MLO task item. However, from time to time, I still need to view the note listing, but I can not figure it out how, so the question as in the thread title becomes important to me, please share some useful information to me, thanks. Link to comment
Level 5* gazumped 12,078 Posted April 16, 2017 Level 5* Share Posted April 16, 2017 Hi. The default view of the Android app is 'All Notes', which is equivalent to the snippet view in the desktop app. The size of the app on a mobile device depends on how much information is stored in the temporary cache and how many notes are retained for offline access. Link to comment
YangKC 6 Posted April 16, 2017 Author Share Posted April 16, 2017 2 hours ago, gazumped said: Hi. The default view of the Android app is 'All Notes', which is equivalent to the snippet view in the desktop app. The size of the app on a mobile device depends on how much information is stored in the temporary cache and how many notes are retained for offline access. Hello, thanks for your information, does your reply apply to Evernote free account? Link to comment
Level 5* gazumped 12,078 Posted April 16, 2017 Level 5* Share Posted April 16, 2017 If you have the Basic (free) account, you won't be able to select notebooks for offline access, so the footprint will be purely the app and any cache used. Link to comment
YangKC 6 Posted April 17, 2017 Author Share Posted April 17, 2017 17 hours ago, gazumped said: If you have the Basic (free) account, you won't be able to select notebooks for offline access, so the footprint will be purely the app and any cache used. Appreciate it, then I still need to know how things work based on my user environment. Link to comment
Level 5* gazumped 12,078 Posted April 17, 2017 Level 5* Share Posted April 17, 2017 Hmmn. I thought I posted a reply to this and it appeared on a completely different thread. Let's try that again... You might get more useful help from Evernote developers - start here - http://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/evernote Good luck.. Link to comment
briancaldwell 202 Posted April 17, 2017 Share Posted April 17, 2017 Evernote does not offer a mobile browser web view. The native Evernote app for Android is the best way to view your notes on Android mobile devices. Link to comment
YangKC 6 Posted April 18, 2017 Author Share Posted April 18, 2017 7 hours ago, briancaldwell said: Evernote does not offer a mobile browser web view. The native Evernote app for Android is the best way to view your notes on Android mobile devices. Hello @briancaldwell, thank you for your attention, then I hope "the best way" could be better. Link to comment
briancaldwell 202 Posted April 18, 2017 Share Posted April 18, 2017 @Benjamin X Yang Please consider describing exactly what problems you have with Evernote for Android. Unfortunately "the app is too big and too slow and not practical" is not very actionable for us. Be as specific as possible in your comments, so our Android team may consider your input. Link to comment
Level 5* jefito 5,598 Posted April 19, 2017 Level 5* Share Posted April 19, 2017 On 4/17/2017 at 3:41 PM, briancaldwell said: Evernote does not offer a mobile browser web view. Ah, but we know that strictly speaking, that's not true -- it's easy enough to get around this, at least on Android. However: On 4/17/2017 at 3:41 PM, briancaldwell said: The native Evernote app for Android is the best way to view your notes on Android mobile devices. This is almost always true. Using the web client on my phone is just not all that much fun. But sometimes you want independent verification of what you're seeing in the native client, and the web version does that. Grain-of-salt should be applied to this advice... Link to comment
briancaldwell 202 Posted April 19, 2017 Share Posted April 19, 2017 @jefito Perhaps I should have said "Evernote does not intentionally make a mobile web view available, where that view has been optimized to look great and function as a full featured mobile web client." or something like that. ;-) Link to comment
Level 5* jefito 5,598 Posted April 20, 2017 Level 5* Share Posted April 20, 2017 @briancaldwell No doubt, the native client is by far preferable and functional, and I like it a lot; I certainly agree that "the native Evernote app for Android is the best way to view your notes on Android mobile devices". On the other hand, the web client is a nice-to-have tool in your bag for certain situations. In my case, I can use it on my phone to look at unshared notebooks in my work account so that I don't need to log out of my personal account on the Android client. It's not pretty or convenient, and I wouldn't recommend it for everyone, but it does work. Link to comment
LL2525 13 Posted May 3, 2017 Share Posted May 3, 2017 On 19.4.2017 at 6:32 PM, jefito said: Ah, but we know that strictly speaking, that's not true -- it's easy enough to get around this, at least on Android. Is there really a way to view shared notes on android phones without using the Evernote app ? Can you explain how to do it ? Link to comment
Level 5* gazumped 12,078 Posted May 4, 2017 Level 5* Share Posted May 4, 2017 10 hours ago, LL2525 said: Is there really a way to view shared notes on android phones without using the Evernote app ? Can you explain how to do it ? Hi. I think that's a different question than the one asked by the OP. If you know the public URL of a note, you'll be able to see it in any web browser on any device. The important word there being 'public'. Anyone with that URL can see the note directly, so don't use this for personal or confidential information. Link to comment
LL2525 13 Posted July 7, 2017 Share Posted July 7, 2017 On 4.5.2017 at 0:59 PM, gazumped said: Hi. I think that's a different question than the one asked by the OP. If you know the public URL of a note, you'll be able to see it in any web browser on any device. The important word there being 'public'. Anyone with that URL can see the note directly, so don't use this for personal or confidential information. First sorry for my late response... I have just created a short note called "A public note #1" on my Windows 7 desktop Evernote and shared it to the public. Here is the note public link http://www.evernote.com/l/ACruNCYGiBNAXalNLu3XnR5y6g8YHvVHLVU/ Can you please check and tell me if you can view the note on an android device without using the Evernote app. I tested it on the native browser of an android phone and ONLY the title of the note is displayed. Evernote 6.5.4.4720 Win 7 x64 Link to comment
Level 5 Dave-in-Decatur 4,006 Posted July 7, 2017 Level 5 Share Posted July 7, 2017 I sent this URL to my phone as a text message, copied it from the text into my browser's address bar, and tapped Go. The browser (Opera Mobile) opened the note. It doesn't seem to have much content (the title, "A public note #1"; created date; sharing status; the public URL; and an image of the Modify Sharing dialog); is that what it's supposed to be? Link to comment
LL2525 13 Posted July 7, 2017 Share Posted July 7, 2017 29 minutes ago, Dave-in-Decatur said: I sent this URL to my phone as a text message, copied it from the text into my browser's address bar, and tapped Go. The browser (Opera Mobile) opened the note. It doesn't seem to have much content (the title, "A public note #1"; created date; sharing status; the public URL; and an image of the Modify Sharing dialog); is that what it's supposed to be? Thank you @Dave-in-Decatur. Yes, you succeeded viewing my public-shared note on your Opera Mobile browser. I still need to know if it can be viewed on a native android browser. Link to comment
Level 5 Dave-in-Decatur 4,006 Posted July 7, 2017 Level 5 Share Posted July 7, 2017 Well, Opera Mobile is "native Android," in that it was developed specifically for use on Android. But I tried it on 3 other browsers (CM, Chrome, and one just called Internet). The last-named is probably the stock browser on the phone. At any rate, it worked equally well on all of them. So this does seem to be a functional method. Hope this helps. Link to comment
YangKC 6 Posted July 8, 2017 Author Share Posted July 8, 2017 15 hours ago, LL2525 said: Thank you @Dave-in-Decatur. Yes, you succeeded viewing my public-shared note on your Opera Mobile browser. I still need to know if it can be viewed on a native android browser. Note sure about your so-called "native android browser", I clicked the link via Android/Gmail, and it opened a browser not belonging any of my installed browser app, and I can see the public note, hope this help. But to be clear, this thread is about a "Viewing a note listing" in Android browser(An issue not solved yet), not a single note. Link to comment
Level 5* gazumped 12,078 Posted July 8, 2017 Level 5* Share Posted July 8, 2017 Voting for Firefox on Android here - clicking the link automatically jumps to the browser assigned to deal with web links, which is my case is Fx. And I can see the note in the browser. (You do get a big green invitation to get Evernote too.) Link to comment
YangKC 6 Posted August 16, 2017 Author Share Posted August 16, 2017 Hello All, I just found the trick to do the titled issue, so I would like to share it here, I tried to change Google Chrome setting to "Request Desktop Site" and then logged in to Evernote web, now I can view the note listing in Android/Google Chrome browser. Following an idea coming from nowhere, I searched and found a webpage talking about this(Android — How Do I View the Desktop Version of Web Pages?) and tried the option 1 in there. Hope this help. Regards, KC aka Ben Link to comment
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