(This post is a continuation of a previous post http://www.techgeekandmore.com/2011/07/15/notebook-software-evernote-part-1-of/)
The reason to store something is that you might have a use for it later, and the reason to organize anything is so that we can use it later. Storage and organization are the two important features notebook software should focus on. To put it another way; What information am I looking to store and use later on? And, how can I best structure that information for quick and effective retrieval?
And while I don’t think you can think about one without the other I want to focus on the tools Evernote (Evernote.com (http://www NULL.evernote NULL.com)) gives you to organizing your information.
Evernote employs two methods of organization, the first being Notebooks. Notebooks are where your going to be storing your notes. I like to create my Notebooks around subject matter. This may mean different things to different people, and no two people are going to organize their notes in the same manner. For an example, a sales person might create a notebook for each of their clients, or they might organize by document type, or by project. A student my choose to organize his/her notes by subject, or by day entered in.
You might want to organize each of those Notebooks with a sub-Notebook, or a notebook within a notebook. In that case you can create what is called a Stacked Notebook. For an example: The student that has a notebook for each subject, might open up a Notebook in side their Science notebook for an upcoming project. Or for the sales person while each of their clients might get a different notebook, he might have a products stacked notebook with an individual notebook for all the products that he sells.
The choice is yours. Once the Notebook is created you can then add and create your notes to the appropriate notebook.
I use a few different notebook programs (OneNote, NoteCase, and Evernote), and to be honest I think that Evernote falls short on the stacked notebook feature. For one reason you can’t turn an existing notebook into a stacked notebook, you have to create a stacked notebook and add your existing notebooks to it. Second you aren’t allowed to create stacked notebook inside a stacked notebook. OneNote and NoteCase do a much better job with this feature, but that is for another post.
The second is with Tags and that is for next week.
