![]() ![]() Once you are done, Siri will confirm that she got it and it will be in Evernote seconds later. ![]() With a simple recipe via IFTTT (found here: ), the user can hold the home button, tell Siri “note” and then you can speak whatever you want to send to Siri. Thanks to the website If This Then That (IFTTT), this feature is a reality for Evernote on iOS devices. GTD only survives if you are flawlessly able to “write down” that thought or idea as it comes to you. In order for a GTD app to work and be able to sustain itself as your go-to app, speed is a prerequisite. That’s the heart of GTD quickly and efficiently getting information out of your brain and into your “inbox”. With this blog posting, I hope to give you a better understanding of the ways in which I use Evernote for my GTD needs.Īt its core, a GTD app needs to be complex, yet simple enough to use and quickly dump information into. Evernote allows its users to jot down notes, create reminders, take pictures, record things, make lists, and store whatever you’d like. ![]() There are many GTD apps that have great features and that do a few things really well, but Evernote does it all, and it does it extraordinarily well. I’m not going to lie, both of those apps are very good productivity apps, but there is no app in the App Store nearly as powerful as Evernote. A lot of people challenged my claim, citing other apps such as Omnifocus and Things as being better suited for GTD. This past week, I tweeted that Evernote is the best GTD app in the app store. Evernote allows you to easily and quickly store notes, pictures, files, ideas, emails, receipts, and even recordings. David Allen, the founder of productivity system GTD (Getting Things Done) once said that your brain is for creating ideas, not for storing them. Every smartphone user should use and have Evernote on their device because it can make your brain work more efficiently. As I look at people’s phones, there is one app that I always look for to see if people have. Nevertheless, I love seeing different people’s workflows, homescreen set-ups, and the apps they use. (Most people I encounter don’t even use them for “smart” means). ![]() I take a deep interest in smartphones and the ways in which people use them. I just love their app and their products.) (A quick note: I do not work for Evernote and do not get paid by them. ![]()
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