Even better, when an event is added to Sunrise it contains a link back to the corresponding note in Evernote so that you can access relevant data and additional materials directly from your calendar (great for meeting documents and notes).Īnother nice feature is that if I manually create a new event in Sunrise (in the Note Reminders calendar) then it will appear as a scheduled note back in Evernote. Everything is kept in sync even when you change the reminder details in Evernote or in Sunrise so you can delete events or mark them as completed or move them around without worry. Once this calendar is visible in Sunrise you will see your scheduled notes show up as calendar events. Then, when you set a reminder for a note it gets turned into a calendar event for the appropriate date and time and which is then added to a Note Reminders calendar in Sunrise. Just connect up Sunrise with your Evernote account in the usual way. In short Sunrise plugs my leaky task management workflow by integrating properly with Evernote and it’s reminders system. Then along came the latest edition of the Sunrise Calendar app, a free cross-platform calendar which, for me at least, has now replaced the native iOS and OSX Calendar apps. I’ve experimented in the past with a web service called EventNoted but while it appeared promising at first it proved to be a little too unpredictable in the end, required learning a special syntax for note/task titles, and only provided for one-way sync’ing (Evernote to Calendar only). Suffice it to say that my Evernote tasks are rarely in sync with my calendar events. The result is far too much manual calendar work to turn Evernote tasks into calendar events and vice versa as events get shifted around. The one gap in this has always been the connection (or rather lack thereof) between Evernote and my calendar app. In brief, emails that require action, or that map to tasks, get ‘swiped’ into Evernote where they are turned into scheduled tasks. I have written before about how I use Evernote with email (specifically the gesture-based Mailbox app) for the frictionless scheduling of tasks and followups from my deluge of emails.
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