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The Evernote Google Chrome Extension Gets Chromier

Product updates | By Andrew Sinkov
 

We love streamlining the Evernote experience. Fewer clicks here, faster access there, all in an effort to make capturing the things you like easier. Today, we introduced a big update to our Google Chrome Extension (current users will auto-update). At this point the extension is almost a full-fledged version of Evernote. Here’s why.

Note browsing

The Chrome Extension now lets you browse through your notes right inside the popup. We’ve added a small green tab along the bottom of the extension window. Click the tab to expose your notes. You can browse through everything just by scrolling. When it comes to searching and filtering, we’ve taken a cue from Chrome’s Magic Bar (their name for the do-it-all address bar). You can search through your notes and also filter by notebooks, tags, and saved searches all in the search bar. As you type, the bar will display matching filters with an identifying icon. Select what you want and those notes will show up.

When you find the note you’re looking for, click to open the note in it’s own window.

Scratchpad

As always, clicking on the Extension without selecting anything pops up a Quicknote option, allowing you to create a simple text note right inside the Extension window. That Quicknote box now has a memory, which means that you can start typing into the box, leave the extenstion, and when you open it again, your thoughts will still be there. This turns the Quicknote box into an easy scratchpad for you to take down ideas as they come throughout your web browsing. When you’re ready, just click Save and the note will be sent into your account.

Please note, until you hit Save, the content in the Quicknote box will not be sent to your Evernote account.

Extension options

Right-click on the Extension icon and select “Options” to go to a Extension Options screen. This is where you control how your Chrome Extension works, including sort order of notes, whether the notes tab should stay open when you close the extension, destination notebook for clips, and more.

We’re really excited about these new capabilities. There is a lot of effort going into making the clipping experience across all of our browser extensions as great as possible. Lots more good stuff is on the way. Stay tuned.

Get the Evernote Google Chrome Extension »

  • http://danjswade.wordpress.com Dan Wade

    I’m new to Evernote, loving it so far. Just playing about with this extension in Chrome and when I highlight a section, then go to the extension, it doesn’t save what I’ve highlighted. Am I going wrong?!

  • SimonR

    Love it but why do I have to login every single time I use it, drives me batty! Lastpass doesn’t remember it either so I have to login to the site in a browser every time I want to clip something, very annoying, I just want to use the extension.

  • Brian Lang

    Holy freakin’ slow extension batman (In Google Chrome on OS X). Used to be I could bookmark a site in about 2 seconds flat with Delicious’ tools. Now that I’ve switched to Evernote, it sometimes takes minutes to save a site – with or without clipping the page content. And forget about switching tabs, or doing ANYTHING else while it’s saving – it just stops saving the clip entirely. So I hit save, and walk away to get a cup of coffee. Come back 5 minutes later, and it’s still trying to save. Wowsers. Not all that useful.

  • http://natanyellin.com Natan Yellin

    I agree with Brian.

    I seriously love EverNote – and I have tried every other notetaking & bookmarking tool out there – but the clipping speed in Chrome is unacceptable. If Chrome’s API wont let you save data to the desktop, then at least don’t keep the “Clipping page content” popup open while you sync to the internet. I can’t do anything else in Chrome while that dialog is open. Please, please, sync notes asynchronously, in the background.

  • John L

    “Holy freakin’ slow extension, Batman!” is right. (WinXP). This was ok until recently, it seems. Now, when I run it, my CPU and i/o usage just SPIKE and the thing gets unresponsive. What happened to “quick clip and move on”? (It gets nasty when autocompleting tags, mostly, but tabbing to the notebook dropdown is also painfully slow. Do y’all REALLy need to download megabytes of data just to auto-complete from a list of about 30 tags? REALLY???)

    Otherwise, yeah, great tool, and I’ll PROBABLY continue to use it, but suddenly seriously painful.

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