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bonyv2018-08-05 17:21:12
IT education
bonyv, 2018-08-05 17:21:12

Difference between Evernote, OneNote, Wunderlist to-do, ToDoIst?

Where and what kind of data do you prefer to store, what do you use it for?
I found these 4 services, but I find little difference (usually everything is written approximately the same on sites), can anyone use these services or can give a comparison, a difference?
As usual, each service has its pros and cons.

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5 answer(s)
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GavriKos, 2018-08-05
@bonyv

Well, as it were, Evernote and Vannote are notepads, you can store texts and something similar in them.
A wunderlist and a tuduist are lists in which checklists are compiled and grouped.
They have completely different purposes.
However, there are less differences between the groups. What to choose for use - I advise you to choose from preferences, primarily in terms of interface and platforms.

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Igor, 2018-08-06
@hostmaster

Disclaimer: I am a person of interest.
My setup:
Todoist is used as a task manager, personal and work. The features of the free version are enough for almost everyone if you need advanced features - ₽190/month or ₽2190/year. I personally don't use integrations with various external services, but many people find it useful.
EverNote is used as a digital archive in conjunction with their web clipper. Also, a free subscription is usually enough for everyone. As it was rightly noted above, 99.9% of everything that is uploaded there will never be read, however, from my experience, those 2-3 times when you still need something are worth it. After 5 years, finding something from the series "I remember there was such an article about setting up a garbage collector in python" in Evernote is much easier than in google. I also store copies of technical manuals, receipts, labels, etc. in Evernote. thanks to text recognition, they can also be found later. Real life example, "I bought Timberland boots 6 years ago, but I don't remember the size" found the label in evernote.
Tried OneNote, couldn't use it. The interface seemed too confusing, and heavy didn't work very well on macOS at the time. Maybe it's better now.
Wunderlist is very beautiful and simple, but for me it turned out to be too beautiful. I wanted something more ascetic. And as rightly pointed out in the comments, Microsoft is going to replace it with their "To-Do" service.
For a very simple and minimalistic task manager, I would look at Any.do. I used it before Todoist, and was very pleased.

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xmoonlight, 2018-08-05
@xmoonlight

1. OpenServer with DokuWiki (everything is local, of course)
2. CryptPad (TODO - in Kanban, in templates)

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Dimonchik, 2018-08-05
@dimonchik2013

Evernote is the best,
the rest are free

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Geek, 2018-08-06
@dixam

Asana for projects and tasks (both personal and team) You can connect a customer to a project. Asana is the most underrated project manager in my opinion, better than Trello in many ways, try it.
Notes - only OneNote , I have been leading for more than 7 years, there is nothing better - synchronization with OneDrive, many levels of nesting, tags, linking with Outlook, etc. For a personal knowledge base, better software has not been invented, moreover, it is free. Although it is a little depressing that Office 2019 will close the desktop version, leaving only the app for Win 10.
Evernote used a premium account before, but over time it has become immersed, overgrown with unnecessary features and there are fewer and fewer arguments left to sit in it, especially for money.
Todoist, Wunderlist - taste, the first is not bad, the second is even better, but soon the T-shirts will close it. Their new To-DO is scary to look at, just like the new Google calendar.

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