Pin your favorite or most important notes to make them easier to find. To pin a note, swipe right over the note, then release. Or go to the note, tap the More button , then tap the Pin button . To unpin a note, swipe right over the note again.
To add a photo or video, tap in a note, then tap the Camera button . Tap Take Photo or Video to create a new photo or video, or Choose Photo or Video to add an existing one. Tap Use Photo or Use Video, or tap Add to add an existing one. You can also scan documents and add them to your notes.
The Notes app lets you lock any note that you want to keep private from anyone else that might use your device. Depending on your device, you can use Face ID, Touch ID, along with a password to lock and unlock your notes.
If you use Apple Notes on an Apple device, first ensure you have iCloud sync enabled so that new notes and changes are pushed to all of your devices. This should be enabled by default, but it's good to check.
I recently switched from iPhone to S20 F5 and am thrilled with it. But the question is, how can I import all the apple notes to Samsung notes? I don't have access to my old iPhone, so I can't use the switch app. I have access to my iCloud account and exported all the .TXT notes from there. Now how can I import them to Samsung notes? I appreciate any help you can provide.
The Notes app may be the most under-used and under-appreciated app on your phone. Some notes apps have even now far surpassed a simple text-based input, and now offer a range of cool features like lists, images, tables, sketches and more!
The problem is there's no way to transfer notes from the default iPhone Notes app directly to the default Notes app on your Android... However, there are a number of ways to get around this and access your iPhone notes on your new Android device. Let's see the best ways to do it:
Potentially the quickest way to get access to your notes on your Android is via email. This method is super easy, but it will not retain special elements like checkable list circles, images, or sketches.
Using iCloud is recommended for transfers of large amounts of data, as you can have both devices connected to a charger for the duration. However, using a USB adapter you can transfer more content types (for example you cannot transfer music from iCloud). Nevertheless, you can transfer your notes with either method.
The methods above are great if you still have access to your iPhone, and all your notes are still saved on your device. However, what if you have already got rid of your iPhone, it got lost or broken, or you accidentally deleted your notes?
If one of these unfortunate situations applies to you - there's hope yet! Using a program like iBackup Extractor, you can access content stored in a backup of your iPhone from your computer, extract the notes to your computer, then transfer them to your Android.
Once your notes have been extracted from your backup and saved to your computer, you are then free to transfer them to your Android using a USB cable, sending an email, or using a cloud service like Google Drive.
As mentioned at the top of this article, it is not currently possible to transfer notes from the default iPhone Notes app to the default Android Notes app. However, this situation becomes a whole lot easier if you use the SAME notes app on both devices.
The app offers amazing features like sharing notes with friends, real-time updates on all devices when changes are made, and smart organisation tools. But the best bit for us is that you can access your notes on any device on which you are logged into your Google account.
In Sticky Notes version 3.0 and later, you can sign in to sync your notes so that you can see the same notes across apps and your favorite devices. Usually, these devices have a settings command or link you can use. Consult your device's documentation if you're aren't sure.
Android phone Your sticky notes appear with OneNote for Android phones. Open OneNote, and then on the bottom right, tap Sticky Notes. Visit the Google Play Store to install OneNote with Sticky Notes.
You can also quickly access your sticky notes without OneNote if you are using Microsoft Launcher as a custom Home screen for your Android phone. From the Android Home screen, slide from the left edge to see your feed, then flick down and tap Customize feed to add cards. Flick down again and turn on Sticky Notes to add to your feed.
As long as your favorite devices are signed in to the same Microsoft account, your sticky notes stay synced up so that you can see the same notes, everywhere. Sign in with the same Microsoft account to see your notes across your devices.
You can also quickly access your sticky notes without OneNote if you are using Microsoft Launcher as a custom Home screen for your Android phone. From the Home screen, slide from the left edge to see your feed, then flick down and tap Customize feed to add cards. Flick down again and turn on Sticky Notes to add to your feed.
Your Sticky Notes on your Android phone appear along with OneNote notebooks. Open OneNote, and then on the bottom right, tap Sticky Notes. Sign in with the same Microsoft account to see your notes across your devices.
it blows my mind this isn't a feature already, or if there's already a thread please link me to it. i have googled this a million times and cannot find a way to sync notes from my iPhone Notes app to evernote. even if it's a one time import, i have so many notes that i don't wanna copy and paste them all. why is this not a feature yet?
additionally i've looked around for ways to sync certain gmail labeled messages to evernote (since you can sync iphone notes to gmail) but no dice. am i missing something? seems like this would be the perfect feature for evernote to finally take over the native notes app on iOS.
I tried vJournal and found it too restrictive (can't change notebook destination/structure and couldn't insert audio notes) and didn't preserve timestamps if u created notes offline (fail!). iLifeLogger is a bit better - i like how you can even define contexts for different activities, blog within each activity (or you can just use a single category and be done with it) - it's all good at "rolling up" at the end of the week if you're into stats.
perhaps there is a separate thread for this topic - my goal is to import past notes in Note.app since 2007 and use an app du jour (thanks for iNote ptr!) to keep Note.app and Evernote in sync from here on out.
Maybe the info here could be added to some kind of pinned help thread (or help page)? This is a really common question around the internet. What's more, the method (for most people) requires a Premium Evernote account. This is the reason I purchased a premium account, and I suspect a lot of other people would purchase one for this reason as well. They should advertise this to sell more accounts. As far as I know, a premium Evernote account is the only possible way to mass-transfer a large number of Gmail-synced iPhone notes to a new phone.
You can apply existing Evernote tags to the notes by adding the tag to the subject preceded by the # mark. Please note, the tag must already exist in your Evernote collection. Adding #FoodFight to the subject of an email to your Evernote account won't create the tag.
Oh. No, I don't have suggestions. In fact, I am adamantly opposed to Apple Notes and strongly recommend that no one use it for notes they want to keep. The reason is because Apple provides no options for import or export of notes. It is a closed app that locks users into it. One thing I like about Evernote (and many other apps that I recommend to people) is the value they place on portability. They provide one or more methods of getting data in / out of the app. In some cases (like Evernote), they are also set up in a way that will enable notes to be synced with other apps. In my opinion, Notes is antithetical to the interests of consumers / users. It has great potential, of course, but utterly fails in practice.
In its place, any number of wonderful notetaking programs exist: notesy, voodoopad, plain text, etc. all do pretty much the same thing as Notes, except they do it better, and by syncing through Dropbox using the .txt format (all except for VoodooPad, which has an export as .txt on the desktop version) notes are easily moved in and out of Evernote. I have not used Cloud HQ myself, but you can sync data between Dropbox and Evernote using it
Hey guys, why do you want to get your iOs notes into Evernote so badly? I'm just wondering. I tend to use my iPhone notes for small things on the go, but do those notes really need to be in Evernote? What benefit are you trying to achieve? Curious if I'm missing something
to answer your question @emmaici - I made Apple Notes from 2007 until 2013 my only input/capture tool - esp while in the field. I've been burned too many times having data all over the place (I still do, but it's not as bad) - yes i have a lot of scribbles here and there but I'm finding I have journal entries, meeting notes, ongoing lists, agendas - things that are better referenced (and leveraged ) in Evernote IMHO.
I enter my notes into the native apple notes application throughout the day (unless something is really important, in which case I write it in my Franklin Planner) and at the end of my day I sit at my desk and go through my notes and just email them right into my evernote. My evernote email in my contacts is labeled .Evernote so it is on the very top so I do not have to search for it. With the ability to set the note title, notebook, and tags it's pretty fast and effective. Most notes can be sent in about 20 seconds or less.
I also only use iPhone notes for occasional small things that are (probably) temporary. But I'm still syncing my iOS notes with Evernote because I'm a pack rat. Everything has to go into Evernote. Everything! NOTE ALL THE THINGS!!!
Am I really not able to sync my Mac Mail notes to evernote? This is crazy - what is the point if we cannot retro fit things into new apps. We should have learned from our Palm days...Any ideas? If not...then note to the EVERNOTE team - this surely must be a priority?
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