Techcrunch: "Today (6 June 2011): Evernote hits 10 million registered users...that means Evernote attracted about 4 million users since the beginning of this year, but more importantly, the number of premium (paying) users has more than doubled in the past 5 months (from ~200,000 to ~425,000).
The startup owes a lot of that growth to its cross-platformness: it offers native apps for Mac, Windows, Web, iPhone, iPad, Android, BlackBerry, Windows Mobile, HP WebOS — with support for more apparently on the way according to today’s company blog post.
According to Evernote, 75 percent of its user base uses 2 or more platforms to access its service (some power users apparently use as many as 10)."
It swears that it will anonymize info before someone reads it.
Evernote is a place for storing notes, and not just the ones you've typed up. You're welcome to scan documents and upload them to the service.
Evernote is a place for storing notes, and not just the ones you've typed up. You're welcome to scandocuments and upload them to the service. Alternatively, you can whip out your phone, open the app, and take a picture. With the latest update
If you can't beat 'em, convert 'em. Anyone who has watched a Microsoft keynote within the past year or so knows all about the power and versatility of OneNote for Windows 10. But what if you're neck-deep in, say, Evernote? Turns out, Microsoft has an app for that, too.