![]() There are tons of these sorts of recipes for Evernote, which you can use to augment your learning, preaching, teaching, and pastoring. For example, “If I meet someone new and add them to my phone contacts, add the date, time, and location I met them to an Evernote note”. With IFTT, you connect all of your services and devices and you make “recipes”, following an “If this, then that” formula. My favorite feature here, though, is its integration with the service IFTT. ![]() You can integrate it into a huge number of other services you probably use. Whenever I’m surfing the web or on my phone, if I run across something that will make a good illustration, I will screen capture it or “clip” that particular part of the web page for later.įor the techies out there, Evernote has an API, which means that it can talk to other programs, services, and apps. I have a whole folder dedicated to Sermon Illustrations. One of my favorite features is the ability to “clip” things off of the web when you come across them. This crowd-sourcing of notes can be incredibly helpful, especially in a ministry context, where community is so necessary. With these, you can collaborate with your classmates on Notes or whole Notebooks dedicated to courses you share. And so, I’d end up having one note with the lecture audio up top and the notes below.Īlso, more recent updates to Evernote have introduced “Shared” Notes and Notebooks. When I first started using the app in college, I’d run the built-in audio recorder to record the lecture as I would type along with it. ![]() ![]() It’s a great digital version of taking the notes we all used to do with handwriting. This may seem obvious, but the best thing to use this app for is taking notes. Today, I want to show some of the slightly deeper highlights to using this app in a seminary or ministry context. I’ve written before of my love of the note-taking app Evernote. Facebook Twitter Reddit Pinterest Email LinkedIn
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