![]() I don't at all mind paying for services or apps. I even went ahead and purchased the premium upgrade.right before the company completely overhauled their pricing. It's the-much simpler-iOS version that finally got me hooked. ![]() In fact, although I'd had an account since 2011, it's only in the past year that I began actively using it: I'd tried off and on a couple of times but never warmed to the interface on the Mac which I found overly cluttered. Here's the thing: I was never an Evernote addict. But as of a few weeks ago, I've moved into El Capitan's Notes. Everything from sketches, to texts, to ideas, to was all centralized in that application, allowing me to work across devices and keep track of everything on an ongoing basis. In the Technicalities chapter of TKTS I mention that "my brain lived in Evernote" during the project and so it did. Besides: it's Friday and I'm just moving everything around these days (!). Truth is, photography for me is often just as much about writing and organizing my thoughts/ideas than it is about shooting actual pictures-so in light of this, I wanted to share a recent change in this part of my workflow. ![]() But we don't work in a vacuum: we need tools beyond DAMs, post-processing apps and lenses. It's been awhile since I've strayed from photography-related posts.
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