Jump to content

Luispabreu

Level 1
  • Posts

    6
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Luispabreu

  1. More than three years later and the newest version still sucks. Evernote forgot what its core promise was: "remember everything." Now it has all sorts of shinny, useless, IA-powered, predictive capabilities that impede (rather than help) remembering. I would continue paying the (high) subscription price had Evernote continued to deliver on its promise. It is sad, because it was an amazing product that competitors have not been able to replicate. This month, Evernote officially shut down their legacy app. There is currently no app on Earth that can do what Evernote was able to do--not even Evernote. Way to destroy a fantastic product.
  2. After 2 years, the search within a notebook is still clunky: Yes, you can go to the notebook, search (mind you--in the legacy version, the notes matching your search term would automatically refresh as you typed), click enter (to actually perform the search; which you didn't need to do in the legacy version), and if you want to go back to the notebook you started from, click the "x" to cancel the search... and boom! You are no longer in the notebook you started. You are now looking at ALL your notes. Now you have to remember... "What notebook was I looking at?" Select it, and start the search all over again. The search behavior in Evernote 10 still sucks. Does anybody know how to close a search and go back to the notebook you were looking at previously?
  3. Deliver on your core promise to "help capture ideas and find them fast." Bring back the basic search functionality that automatically refreshed the list of notes that contained a search term as it was being typed. In Evernote Legacy, you could select a notebook (or a stack), then right above the list of notes there was a search box. The search box would only search within the selected notebook or stack. When one started typing the list of matching notes containing the search term in their full text would automatically start to change as one typed. As one typed, one could see if the note in mind would appear, and if not, one could quickly modify the search term to find the note. Each letter typed or erased would instantaneously refresh the list of matching notes within the selected notebook or stack. This was a very effective way for Evernote to deliver on its promise to "help capture ideas and find them fast." Yes, the new search functionality has predictive capabilities (suggested search-terms based on my behavior that frankly clutter both the screen and my thoughts as I'm trying to find something), it automatically changes & updates the list of exact matches with note titles, matching tags, and available filters. But one has to hit enter in order to start seeing a list of matching notes with the term somewhere in the full text. If the focal note is not in the results, one needs to go back and try other terms. This is very inefficient. Yes, I know you can select a notebook or stack, click on search, then click on "add filter" and search within the selected notebook (notice how it takes more clicks to accomplish this). But still, the list of notes in the notebook is not automatically updated as one types. If you think about it, people are not looking for tags, filters, or words that are only in the note titles (which is what the current "improved" search function prioritizes). People are looking for notes! Worst of all. In the new, "improved" search function, it is possible to type a search term that does not appear in the search-term suggestions, but that is indeed in the text of the notes! Psychologically, typing something and not seeing it in the list of possible 'matching' terms signals that it most not be a term in the notes! But, in fact, Evernote's current search function only includes suggestions for recent searches, titles of notes, tags, and other available filters: It does not include words contained in the full-text of notes. So one might type a search-term that would match with the full-text in a note, but the current search function will not put it as a suggestion. One needs to click "enter" and, only then, will one find out if the search has a matching note or not. Again, very inefficient. The current, "improved" search function might make it easy to filter & search based on tags, but it does not deliver on Evernote's main promise to "help capture and find ideas fast". Note that this basic functionality--automatically refreshing the possible list of matches in the full text--is standard practice in many search environments: it was present in the legacy version of Evernote, it is a simple function in MS Word, it is present in a simple search (i.e., ctr + f) in Acrobat Reader, etc. Despite my strong negative reaction to recent Evernote releases, I'm willing to speak to a PM about this via video-conference if you need further clarification.
  4. In Evernote Legacy, you could select a notebook (or a stack), then right above the list of notes there was a search box. The search box would only search within the selected notebook or stack. Further, when one started typing the list of matching notes containing the search term in their full text would automatically start to change as one typed. As one typed, one could see if the note in mind would appear, and if not, one could quickly modify the search term to find the note. Each letter typed or erased would instantaneously refresh the list of matching notes within the selected notebook or stack. This was a very effective way for Evernote to deliver on its promise to "help capture ideas and find them fast." Yes, the new search functionality has predictive capabilities (suggested search-terms based on my behavior that frankly clutter both the screen and my thoughts as I'm trying to find something), it automatically changes & updates the list of exact matches with note titles, matching tags, and available filters. But one has to hit enter in order to start seeing a list of matching notes with the term somewhere in the full text. If the focal note is not in the results, one needs to go back and try other terms. This is very inefficient. Yes, I know you can select a notebook or stack, click on search, then click on "add filter" and search within the selected notebook (notice how it takes more clicks to accomplish this). But still, the list of notes in the notebook is not automatically updated as one types. If you think about it, people are not looking for tags, filters, or words that are only in the note titles (which is what the current "improved" search function prioritizes), people are looking for notes! Worst of all. In the new, "improved" search function, it is possible to type a search term that does not appear in the search-term suggestions, but that is indeed in the text of the notes! Psychologically, typing something and not seeing it in the list of possible 'matching' terms signals that it most not be a term in the notes! But, in fact, Evernote's current search function only includes suggestions for recent searches, titles of notes, tags, and other available filters. It does not include words contained in the full-text of notes. So one might type a search-term that would match with the full-text in notes, but Evernote is not going to put it as a suggestion. One needs to click "enter" and only then will one find out if the search has a matching note or not. Again, very inefficient. The current, "improved" search function might make it easy to filter & search based on tags, but it does not deliver on Evernote's main promise to "help capture and find ideas fast". Despite my strong negative reaction to recent Evernote releases, I'm willing to speak to a product manager or product developer about this via video-conference.
  5. The new Evernote sucks. A simple request: bring back the old one. I don't see one single advantage of the new Evernote over the old one. Not one. This is a very simple request: bring back the old version.
×
×
  • Create New...