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Notability update
Notability update













notability update

They always get back to me swiftly and usually with great news! For example, autosync only used work if you had made changes to the note you had viewed immediately before returning to the main screen. With Notability’s built-in folder setup, I can add as many “notepages” as i can fit on my iPad – including pictures & scans of handouts! And it even syncs to Dropbox using those same folders, so I don’t have to set things up in advance!ĭo you like academiPad? Check out our facebook page to show your love and to participate in our community.Ī great listener. Ginger Labs’ tech support is awesome via Twitter! I’ve asked a question or two and sent in a few requests and suggestions. Heck, even if I don’t have my iPad on me, I have access to my notes via Dropbox. You can still practice with it, but your changes won’t save.) Check out this nifty promo!Ĭlass notes are never lost. Remember those giant, multi-subject spiral-bound notebooks? Remember how the page you accidentally ripped out always contained the most important notes? Remember how you never had enough room for handouts in those flimsy folder/dividers? Well, as long as I keep up with my iPad, my notes are never disappear. That’s exactly how the Notability welcome file is set up, FTW! \o/ (There is a read-only version that gets more in-depth. I like to push buttons and poke at things until I figure out how they work. I’m not a “read the instructions” type of person. I think Notability (iTunes link) was on sale for $0.99 at the time, so I jumped right on it. I liked GoodReader well enough (and still have it), but I felt a bit restricted in what I could do.

#Notability update mac#

I first stumbled upon Notability through this Cult of Mac post, which was sent to me by At that point, I’d been using GoodReader to read & annotate PDFs.

notability update

Sure, I’ve grown up a little, but I still want the flexibility of using pretty colors & putting awesome pictures in my notes. I admit, I do still use those 4-color pens when I’m forced to deal with hardcopy items. I also drew pictures & diagrams to help drive concepts home. I would use red ink for vocabulary words & names of important concepts, blue ink for explanations, green ink for things that struck a chord with me, and black for general info. Ever since junior high, I’ve had either a stack of pens in various colors or (my fave) the Bic retractable 4-color pen.















Notability update