It is possible that I am behind the curve here, and others have found better solutions. The question at hand is how to bring the wonderful world of handwritten notes in DEVONthink. Then a couple months back, I took advantage of the Black Friday deal to upgrade to Pro.I just posted this as a response under DTTG, but realize that it probably belongs here. Even got Devonthink to display the UI close to what my EN’s snippet view (Another screenshot)īefore the 30 days was up, I managed to secure a 20% discount, which I used to purchase the standard version (just a 1-time purchase which works out cheaper than a year’s subscription on EN). The more challenging parts are getting used to the appearance of Devonthink’s UI, which I found inferior to EN, and also Devonthink is so feature rich that it could appear overwhelming at first for new users, but I got used to that pretty quickly. Devonthink has one of the easiest EN export options, so it was a breeze. ![]() How I migrated: You can trial the full Devonthink for 30 days, so that’s what I did. Personally, I’m not a heavy user of OCR on EN because I tend to prefer using 3rd party OCR apps to convert images to text first before saving them as a note. Devonthink isn’t a perfect replacement of course, but it checked enough boxes for me to leave EN behind.Īs for OCR, the Devonthink Pro version has OCR capabilities. It’s a huge relief for me, having spent an entire year looking before I found the right app to move to. I’ve pretty much fully-transitioned to Devonthink for notetaking and digital filing and Craft.do for tasks/daily notes. That said, I haven’t felt the need to pull up EN for months now. Occasionally, when I’m not completely satisfied with a Devonthink clipped page, I would still pull up EN just to clip some page before importing that immediately into Devonthink. My thoughts: I do miss EN’s webclipper sometimes but that hasn’t been a deal breaker because I didn’t trash EN completely after I moved to Devonthink. There’s also a ‘clutter-free’ version but I found that lacking so I rarely use that. The Devonthink clipper often clips cookie permission pop-ups so you might have to click them away when viewing your clipped content. You’ll see it looks identical to the web browser’s version.
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