Evernote is waiting for approval from the Chinese government before it introduces a dedicated data center in the country, as it seeks to grow its user base and unlock the potential of ”the hardest” market on the planet.
If you’ve been searching for a new productivity system or want to make better use of Evernote, give The Secret Weapon a try. Be sure to come back and let us know what you think.
Evernote is a service “in the cloud” that you can dump notes, documents, photos, and tweets into for future access from any computer with Internet access. (Jennifer Van Grove also talks about it in her article.) Here are fourteen uses of Evernote that can help you organize, archive, and share information.
Add any file you’re working on to your Evernote account. We’ll back it up and make it available on any computer or device you use, wherever you are.
- Mac: (shown above) drag a file into a note or onto the Evernote dock icon or use the File->Attach File menu option.
- Windows: Drag a file in a note or right click in a note and choose the File option.
- Evernote Web: Edit a note, then drag file onto the note header or click the paperclip icon.
Get version control over your notes with the note history feature. If you or someone you’re sharing a notebook with makes a change to a note you don’t, like you can easilly roll back to a previously synced note using the note history feature. This feature is only available to Premium users. Check out our complete list premium features here.
Several times each day Evernote will check to see if any notes have changed. If they have, it’ll make a new snapshot of those notes and add them to your Note History stored on our servers.



