
To get started, just choose “Sign in with Google” at sign-in and follow the prompts. Anyone with a Google account will be able to sign into, or create, an Evernote account using their Google account details.

Starting November 3, 2016, Evernote will support Google sign-in. We don’t think anything, not complex login pages nor forgotten passwords, should ever stand between you and your notes. The trouble is, with more apps come more passwords to remember. Evernote may be just one of many apps in your productivity toolbox. For tech pros, the most useful of the bunch is Replay: It’s an animated instant-replay for your sketches, letting you rewind and replay ink strokes that you made with your stylus as a visual demonstration for others.We understand-it’s hard to live in a ‘one-app-fits-all’ world.

Office-exclusive features: When you use OneNote in conjunction with your Office 365 subscription you’ll unlock a handful of bonus features, including a Researcher tool and a Math Assistant.Another option, Immersive Reader, will read a note aloud if you need to look away from your screen. Distraction-free options: OneNote has lots of pretty color-coded organizational tags, but if you just want to focus you can choose Reading View instead.Image-to-text transcription: Like Google Keep, OneNote is good at pulling text off of images that you can insert into your notes.You can collaborate with coworkers the way you do in other Office apps, too. You can insert things like Excel tables or lists from your Outlook email, and you can present your notes to others in a style similar to PowerPoint. A familiar Office layout: OneNote’s menu bar looks a lot like Microsoft Word.

You can use your HP Pen to draw, take notes (which can be converted to text later) and edit your old ones.

A stylus-friendly app: OneNote is particularly well-suited to use with smart pens.
