Before 2010, I wrote everything in Word files that were lying around. The thought “aaaa, it will get lost anyway…” destroyed hundreds of my more memorable colleagues. Then I got Evernote. It was a huge breakthrough in the field of fast saving and systematization of notes. In principle, it would have remained so if Evernote UX engineers had paid due attention to the mobile version. A few more years passed and a lot of startups flooded the text editor niche, and Google Docs did the impossible - it released a mobile application with pretty good editing functions. Most importantly, it has an offline file editing mode. I already wrote about how to make posts in Google Docs in my blog .
In general, if you are interested in benin whatsapp number database learning how to write-write-write and then cope with heaps of your own texts, this article is for you.
Search for an application
All this time I was actively dreaming about an app that would combine:
1. note taking
2. mind breaking
3. longreads writing.
The second is a pot of ideas. It happens like this: you want to write, but what about - who knows. You climb into the "garage of verbal trash", pine and pine over scraps of "how-to wisdom" and ... look ... something will catch your eye.