![]() ![]() Scrivener already does this, you can grab WriteRoom notes and import them directly into a writing project. It can also be set up to automatically synch with a central server, which incidentally does have APIs for third-party integration. I use it to jot down ideas while commuting, and then use the built-in web server to access the notes later on in a browser. For a small price, WriteRoom.app is very nice. An EF “light” library reader that lets you access your notes on the go.Īnother present-tense method for loose EF integration between iDevice and Mac is the EverNote application which can be run on both. It may very well be that iPad applications will be, like iPhone/Touch applications, restricted to running in their own box, save for the pasteboard.īeyond that, and into the heavy development realm (as if the above would be “easy”), something like what Gus has done with VoodooPad could be interesting. While some of their applications definitely do provide this, it remains to be seen if these are Apple-only APIs that cannot be accessed by third-party vendors. The rest of the synch process would essentially dump the pending clippings into the “To Import” folders on the Mac, letting EF handle the rest from there.īut, that assumes Apple will allow inter-application integration. On the iPad itself, when snipping pages, text, and images, the user would be presented with a pop-up menu that lets them select the target library, perhaps with the last used library always at the top for easy access in the case of long lists. Synch could look something like this: It handshakes with a host application running on the Mac and gets an updated list of registered libraries that the user sets up on the Mac. ![]() What would definitely be useful is an EF capture application that would let you snip things from other applications. ![]()
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