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Did You Know: How to Access Notes Without an Internet Connection

Tips and Stories | By Kasey Fleisher Hickey
 

I recently went on a trip where I knew I’d be lucky to have an Internet connection, especially away from my hotel. If you travel abroad, for work or for fun, or live in a place where data plans are astronomically high, there is a way for you to avoid some of these costs.

Did you know that you can access your notes without an Internet connection in a number of places, including your desktop? All of your notes are available to you anytime on all desktop versions of Evernote, so if you have installed Evernote for Mac or Windows on your laptop, you can access existing notes and create new ones without a connection. You’ll see new notes everywhere the next time sync with the Evernote service.

Creating offline notebooks on your mobile devices

If you use Evernote like I do, you might defer to using a mobile device when you’re on the move. You might have hundreds, if not thousands of notes, but on the road, you likely only need access to a handful. Any new note you create on your iPhone, iPad, Android, or Windows Phone 7 will automatically be available to you when you’re offline. Premium subscribers can take advantage of Offline Notebooks, a feature that allows you to make any existing notebook and its contents available to you without an Internet connection. Offline notebooks are available on the following mobile versions: iPhone, iPad, iPod, Android, and Windows Phone 7.

When offline notebooks come in handy

There are a myriad of different reasons why you may want to or need to access your notes when you don’t have an Internet connection, but here are a few ideas:

  • When you’re abroad: Planning a trip abroad often involves gathering a lot of information like flight and hotel itineraries, articles, emails, passport copies, vaccination copies, etc. Make sure you can access all of this valuable information, even if you don’t have Wi-Fi.
  • When you’re on an airplane: Want to enjoy a productive flight? Be sure to add articles, newsletters you’ve been collecting, web clips, and PDF documents in an offline Evernote notebook that you can browse on your tablet.
  • When you’re at a conference, festival, or in the outdoors: These places are notorious for having bad to non-existent network connections. Having access to information like phone numbers, conference rooms, itineraries, hiking trail maps, and schedules is invaluable.
  • When you live abroad: If you find yourself visiting Internet cafes where you might have to pay for an Internet connection, or have a data plan at home, you can reduce the costs associated with getting your work done.

How to create an offline notebook

Creating an offline notebook is simple. First, decide if you want to convert an existing notebook to an offline notebook, or create a new one. If you have created a new notebook, you can select and paste notes from other notebooks you’d like to save and drop them into this new notebook. Make sure that you save everything you’d like to have access to on your trip into this notebook.

On iPhone/iPod Touch
Select Offline Notebooks from your phone Settings. If you’re a Free user and you Favorite a note on your iPhone, you’ll be able to view that note without a connection. Premium users can select whole notebooks to be available offline.

On an Android
From the menu, tap ‘Select Offline Notebooks.’ Back in the Settings, be sure to select ‘WiFi Sync Only’ to bypass any potential roaming charges from your data plan provider. Notes that you create using Evernote for Android can still be viewed, even if they are not in a selected offline notebook.

On an iPad
Hit the satellite button in the lower right-hand corner of your iPad. Next, click on ‘Offline Notebooks.’ Move the slider from ‘Off’ to ‘On’ next to the notebook (s) you’d like to make offline. To make sure you don’t get charged for roaming, be sure to select ‘Sync on WiFi only’ in the Settings.

On a Windows Phone 7
Tap on the application bar dots and choose Settings from the menu. Next, swipe to the Offline Notebooks panel and check off the notebook(s) you want offline.

When you’re preparing for a trip or would like to avoid syncing notes for a whole, select the notebooks you want to take offline and allow them to sync over Wi-Fi. Since you’re potentially downloading a lot of content, being connected throughout the process will ensure that your notes with sync quickly.

Offline access to shared notebooks

Shared notebooks (notebooks that others have shared with you) are also stored locally on your computer. When you open a shared notebook, you’ll automatically save that notebook’s content to your computer, where it will be accessible to you even if you don’t have an Internet connection. This feature is available on desktop versions and Android.

When you open a PDF in Evernote, you’ll also be able to view it from any device you’ve opened it on, even without a connection (devices that support this feature include Android, iOS, and Windows Phone 7).

When have offline notebooks come in handy for you? Has an offline notebook saved you in a pinch? Let us know in the comments.

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  • Scott E

    I reading a lot of comments to the effect, “You should not be critical of something free” and, “If you think $45 is too much, then you have no business even using an iPhone/iPad/etc…”

    Well, $45 IS a lot, especially if you really don’t need or will use the storage. I too really like Evernote, and would probably pay aropund $20 for the app, which is a mid-high price for an app. But I would be paying for the FEATURES, not the storage service. If I just want to store a few notes, I don’t need 1G per month storage.

    I wish Evernote would separate the FEATURES from the SERVICE, and charge accordingly.

    • Frank M

      I agree. I have been using Evernote for about 2 years after moving to Windows 7 and losing a flat-file database program that would no longer work. I am retired and have about 420 notes that I would like to have available on both my mobile as well as on my home computer (as my memory for numbers is getting bad). I have absolutely no need for storage — my usage is a total 1.2K according to the USAGE tab. I would be more than willing to pay a one-time fee (like a normal program) if they would make that option available. With most mobile programs in the 0.99 to $4.99 range, I would be willing to pay 3X that for just this single option…

      • diana

        Hi – you should look at awesome note. It syncs with evernote and works offline. I use it for the more “mundane” lists eg. things to buy at ikea, usernames etc. For work (I travel a lot) I have all the agendas, itinerary’s etc in evernote (free version), but I also back them up to “Documents to go” which is a one-time purchase and I’ve used it for a few years. You can put word, excel, pdf etc into it and access them all offline on the iphone. I have organised my docs to go folder with names that match my evernote notebooks. Hope that helps.

  • Emmanuel ha’Levi

    can Evernote open note files from Windows Mobile? your program descriprion says yes but it not working on Android… or i’m not doing somthing correct?
    thank YOU!

  • Geocacher

    Even though I love Evernote, I intentionally don’t use the offline functionality for a simple reason: one of my notes holds passwords (not for any critical system, but nevertheless…). If someone steals my Smartphone, I simply quickly delete the content from the note with the desktop version of Evernote and the thief will not be able to see them. If I had synced them to be offline, it would be a different story…

    • Kasey Fleisher Hickey

      Offline notebooks are different from local notebooks. If you delete a note that’s in an offline notebook, when the account syncs, the note will be deleted. Local notebooks are not available on mobile devices.

    • Eric Robertson

      I hold passwords in Evernote but use the encryption feature when I set the file up in my desktop. They don’t show up in my iPhone/iPad until I’ve supplied the encryption key.

  • http://www.sostrenehagelin.no Anton Engen

    Thank You Evernote!
    Evernote changed my iPad from a fun gadget into a worthy tool. I now have it on my PC, my iPad and my Samsung phone. Amazing!
    With this offline tool, I am allways ready to pop up with a presentation whenever I’m asked.

  • Babu

    Evernote offline feature is not stable when I attempted to activate. It works well if the notebook size is less than 50mb. iPhone application becomes sluggish. Not revived any update from ‘premium’ support.

  • http://personal.jeffporter.co Jeff Porter

    I’ve been using the free service for a few months now and I agree with all those comments saying Evernote is a brilliant app.
    Recently while on holiday, though, I encountered a problem. I’m not really sure what went wrong. I created a new note and started building a travel journal of sorts. When I created the note, Evernote came up with an ‘Append’ warning. I can’t remember the full wording.
    Anyway, the upshot, at the end of week one I went to an internet cafe. During the syncing process the contents of the note disappeared. I retyped it all from memory, but if anyone knows what I might have done wrong, I’d be interested for future reference.
    When I read this thread, I got the feeling it may have been something to do with the offline notes feature, which I hadn’t come across before.

  • William Anderson

    Neither Evernote nor “offline notebooks” appear in my settings. So I can’t use offline feature.

  • saut

    I stopped using Evernote as soon as I discovered that any notes I made on my laptop are not available on my iPad without an internet connection. When I saw “Access your notes offline” in their newsletter, I immediately clicked on the link to “find out how”. Apparently it’s the same old story: first buy a premium account. Nebulous automatically syncs my notes via dropbox when I’m connected so that I have identical updated notes on both devices all the time. It’s missing all the do-dads of Evernote such as PDFs and pictures, but what good are the do-dads if I can’t get my info without a connection?

    • JPo

      But it’s inconsistent. Some of my notes are perfectly viewable offline. I’ve never changes a setting. That’s what’s frustrating. I always assumed notes you typed were viewable offline. This explains why some of my notes won’t but doesn’t explain why some are. And that will keep me from buying it. How do I know what’s a bug and what isn’t? Consistency.

      • Pao

        Yeah i agree, JPo. When it syncs, the notes you typed on the ipad are gone when you go offline again. So counter-intuitive.
        I won’t go premium because I really don’t need that much storage.

  • sbikes

    My iPad version doesn’t have the satellite icon at the bottom right. I have the Settings “Cog” and the Trunk. I looked in the Settings options and didn’t see anything for Offline as described above.

    • Kasey Fleisher Hickey

      Hi there, in order to see Offline Notebook options, you need to be a Premium subscriber.

  • r9s

    When it will be possibly on webOS?

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