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(Archived) Any chance at all for a Palm client?


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We don't have a native Palm client, but you can currently use your Palm in a lot of different ways:

The mobile web UI (http://www.evernote.com/m)

Email notes from your mail client to the "incoming email address" listed on your web Settings page

We are also almost finished with our rewrite of our POP3/IMAP gateway, which will allow you to access all of your notes (including offline!) via your mobile mail client.

You may also want to take a look at complementary solutions for your mobile use such as ShoZu:

http://blog.evernote.com/2008/05/15/shozu-and-evernote/

Or Jott:

http://blog.evernote.com/2008/03/30/eve ... arts-jott/

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We don't have a native Palm client, but you can currently use your Palm in a lot of different ways:

The mobile web UI (http://www.evernote.com/m)

Email notes from your mail client to the "incoming email address" listed on your web Settings page

We are also almost finished with our rewrite of our POP3/IMAP gateway, which will allow you to access all of your notes (including offline!) via your mobile mail client.

You may also want to take a look at complementary solutions for your mobile use such as ShoZu:

http://blog.evernote.com/2008/05/15/shozu-and-evernote/

Or Jott:

http://blog.evernote.com/2008/03/30/eve ... arts-jott/

I signed up for Jott; looks good. I look forward to the mail gateway. I realize that the Palm platform seems to be fading into the sunset but there are still a few of us out here squinting into the dwindling light every day. B)

Thanks

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  • 2 weeks later...

You may also want to take a look at complementary solutions for your mobile use such as ShoZu:

http://blog.evernote.com/2008/05/15/shozu-and-evernote/

ShoZu does NOT have a native Palm OS client so your advice is, well, frankly useless unless people want to start messing about with MMS (no thanks).

Two million Centros have now been sold, their market share is rising and there's millions of people still using the Palm OS, so why won't you offer a Palm OS client?

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Two million Centros have now been sold, their market share is rising and there's millions of people still using the Palm OS, so why won't you offer a Palm OS client?

The entire Evernote engineering team fits in a medium sized conference room. We're currently maintaining and expanding a Win32 client (including multiple portable versions), a Mac OS X client, iPhone, Windows Mobile, and a web service supporting all major web browsers, mobile browsers, SMTP, POP, IMAP, etc.

This means that, in the 6 months that we've been live, we haven't had time yet to fully support a lot of the cool things that people would like. E.g. Palm, Blackberry, Symbian, Linux, Opera, etc. In your post, "won't" is too strong a word.

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Thing is, I can remember a Palm version being promised as "coming soon" back in 2004, so you could hardly get in a huff if long-suffering Palm users get just a little frustrated with the loooong wait - especially after an iPhone version suddenly rushes to the front of the queue while we're still left twiddling our thumbs with no realistic prospect of a Palm version arriving any time soon.

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