A search for the best stylus-friendly iPad note-taker hits the wall
BACK TO THE DRAWING BOARD
I have this touch-capacitive Pogo stylus,
and it never made a lot of sense to me as an
iPhone tool unless I was wearing gloves (not
likely) or had severely sunburned the tips of
all my fingers (even less likely). I know some
people like them for typing or drawing, but
I never used mine on the small screen. Now,
though, I have an iPad, and I want to take
notes on it, so I need a notebook-type app
I can use to jot down ideas with the stylus
or—in a pinch (heh)—my fingers.
My search, by the way, started one month
after the original iPad launch, so I naively
hope the apps I find won’t feel like beta
software. Not so for the first three. Finger
Notes ($2.99, dragancats.com) is almost
unusable. Double-tapping the screen erases...
the entire screen. And that happened a lot,
especially when I tried to use the stylus.
And you can’t erase just a part of the screen
LegalPad HD is practically devoid of any truly
useful features.
My search started one month after the
iPad launch, so I naively hope the apps I
I find won’t feel like beta software.
or email your notes, only save them to the
photo roll.
Write Now XL for iPad ($2.99, jetware.
com) is a laggy, obviously rushed-out port
of the iPhone app Write Now, evidenced in
the grossly oversized control panels and
Scribble Notes ($5.99, seashellgames.com)
is better, but needs undo—you can’t erase,
except to draw over it with white, and that
erases the lines on the paper too. Sob.
Hand Writing Mail Pro ($8.99, ultie.com)
is designed around the gimmicky task of
sending a letter in your own “handwriting,”
so as you write each line on the bottom
of the interface, it’s added to the sheet of
stationery along the top. It’s tricky to make
your missives look good, though, and they’re
emailed as PNG attachments with no saving
in the app itself.
At this point my old pen and paper are
looking pretty good. Luckily, I found two
apps that work a little better. PaperDesk for
iPad ($1.99, mypaperdesk.com) lets you type,
write, draw, and even record audio—great
for classes or meetings. But you can’t export
the audio, only play it back from within the
app. Emailing your notes attaches them as
PDFs, but strangely, the audio toolbar along
the bottom was included too. Still, it works
in portrait or landscape and has the best set
of tools so far, even letting you bookmark
notes so you can find them later after you’ve
created dozens.
And Penultimate ($2.99, cocoabox.com)
is the best as a real writer, delivering stylus
writing that feels smooth and natural. It also
makes my handwriting look the most like,
well, my real handwriting, and I dug its gel-pen look. You can’t change the pen thickness
or color, but you can email individual pages
or a whole notebook as PDFs.
Still, call me picky, but after test-driving
these nine not-so-ready-for-prime-App-Store-time apps, I wish I would have blown that
$28 on the nicest Moleskine and fancy pen I
could find.—Susie Ochs
Writing in cursive is the best way to avoid
Finger Notes’ cruel false erasings.
text labels. And then there’s LegalPad HD
($0.99, atomicharvest.com), which feels
alpha, but according to i Tunes is version 1. 5.
Turns out, the first version didn’t even have
an eraser tool. It’s there now, but you can’t
change the way-too-thick pen size—the
developers say that’s coming in version
1. 7. Meanwhile, no sending, no saved-note
gallery, no color—no joking.
NoteSketch ($0.99, thejukeboxnation.
com/notesketch) has a thoughtful design—
customizable for lefties or righties with an
optional, movable, nonlive “green zone”
for stylus users to rest their hand on while
writing. But writing didn’t feel natural. My
capital C, for example, wound up with four
points instead of a curve. To get graceful-looking letters, I had to write way too slowly.
And there’s no emailing here either—it
saves PDFs, and you sync those back to
your Mac via i Tunes for printing or sharing,
another heart–slash–deal breaker.
PadNotes ($0.99, www.nicoladefranceschi
.com) takes four taps before you can write,
a UI nightmare. It can email PDFs, but it
prefers to crash. And this is version 1. 2.
NoteSketch is designed well, but it makes our
letters look pointy and strange.