
There are other apps that don’t do that either, some of them iPad specific.įor me it still stands what I said above: The largest deficiency of EN on the iPad is that they don’t support 2 sessions side by side. It is quite obvious they can’t simply follow the latest UI-changes Apple may do isolated for their apps.

User interface: EN has its own UI, that covers different platforms. This is a bug (or a feature gap, depending on the definition), open since quite a while. The problem is that on all mobile platforms EN opens just one note at a time.ĭrag & Drop works for text, does not work for other attachments. Opening the same app twice does currently not work with EN (as stated above by me).

Where it is not converted is when writing into a Sketch area of a note - this is intentional, because it is a drawing canvas. My pencil allows to write into a note, no problem, handwriting is recognized and converted into computer text. Fewer than for the Mac, but this is not the issue here. Long press on the cmd-key shows the available EN keyboard shortcuts for the iPad. My external keyboards connect and works (3 different ones, all Logitech) My Magic Mouse connects to my iPad, and works inside of EN. Thank you for your answer - did you try, or do you just write stuff to confirm your view of the world ? Evernote could have built-in iPad support in their "mobile framework" if they want to. But that is no excuse to handle the iPad like a big iPhone - or like mobile apps at all (the iPad Pro with Magic Keyboard is my desktop computer). And I doubt we will ever see things like multi-window (open more than one note!), real Pencil support and full support of the trackpad and keyboard. And take the Start screen: Why on earth are there no widgets available side-by-side? The stretched quick note widget in landscape on a 12.9" screen just looks absurd.ĭon't forget that the old iPad version of Evernote (pre v10) had supported drag&drop. Why are there only two columns shown on the huge screen of the iPad Pro? Ironically the web version used in Safari on the iPad displays what the app should look like. There is absolutely no reason at all to not display the exact same layout. The screen of an iPad Pro 12.9" is like a MacBook Pro 13". The adaptation of the mobile app to the iPad is pretty good, talking about the GUI.
