Ben Smith is a writer based in Los Angeles, California who has been covering consumer tech for at least five years. He's written thousands of articles for various sites about laptops, tablets, and ...
Have you ever felt like your notes are just a chaotic collection of thoughts, scattered across notebooks, apps, or sticky notes, never quite coming together into something useful, like a second brain?
Laptops are ideal for taking course notes. They’re portable enough to carry with you to every class, they have built-in keyboards and touchpads for fast typing and navigation, you can doodle and ...
Imagine this: it’s 2025, and your notes aren’t just static lists or scribbled reminders, they’re living, breathing ecosystems. With a single tap, your app connects ideas across projects, suggests ...
We list the best note-taking apps, to make it simple and easy to manage your notes on the go. Note-taking apps have become increasingly popular, not least with the wide availability of mobile devices, ...
If there is one essential skill that students should master in schools and universities, it is the art of taking good notes. Notes that are not copied and pasted from professors' slides, not even the ...
Ian Campbell is a reporter based in San Diego who writes features, interviews, guides and reviews for Pocket-lint. Before he spent his days covering great products for Pocket-lint readers, Ian was an ...
Computers and phones have become the go-to note-taking method for many. But your brain benefits from an old-fashioned pen and paper. This article originally appeared on The Conversation, and is ...
Even though the keyboard serves as a useful text input tool, students and business professionals know there are instances in which a handwritten note or a simple drawing best captures an idea or ...
Computers and phones have become the go-to note-taking method for many. But your brain benefits from an old-fashioned pen and paper. Do you pick up any old notebook and pen when you need them, or do ...