I always feel a little silly writing these posts, as I’m not remotely an early adopter or a tech authority by any stretch. But I have lots of conversations with folks who are curious about what I use and why or how, and every time I think I’ve answered the questions, someone else asks. So what the heck? If it’s helpful, here you go.
I’ll share a few of the apps I’m using lately and what I’m using them for, in hopes that you’ll find something new, or revisit something and find a new, helpful use for you. Oh and PC folks, fair warning: I’m a Mac, and some of these are specific to that OS. If PC folks will share their alternatives in the comments, you might find some gems.
Click on the application names to head over and check them out.
Evernote
Oh, how I love Evernote. It’s the online version of my Moleskine notebook (which I use more for journaling and working through ideas). I use Evernote to take meeting and conference call notes. I keep project lists for my team members in there so I know what to chat with them about during our updates. I draft blog posts there and keep fleeting post ideas as they come to me, because they’re easy to copy and paste right into the blog platform.
I use the desktop and the iPhone app, and sometimes the web version (because right now that’s the only way I can share a notebook with another person). They all sync seamlessly, and it’s free. Great app that knows what it’s for and doesn’t try to be anything else.
Things
This is my task management application. Sorry PC folks, but it’s a Mac-only thing (and I’ve yet to hear about a good alternative for PC folks…maybe someone can share some ideas in the comments). It costs $50 for the desktop app and another $10 for the iPhone app, but it’s worth it for me, because I have a big to-do list.
I love that I can tag items different ways from the main task or project buckets, and I can look at my tasks through different lenses: priority, due date, sequence, tag, project, etc. It’s flexible but really simple, and I love it more than any other task management application I’ve tried (and that’s several, including Remember The Milk and OmniFocus).
The only downside right now is that you have to have your phone and laptop on and on the same wifi network in order to sync right now, but they’re working on that as we speak, and I can’t wait.
Google Wave
I’ve found this really useful for collaboration with colleagues and project partners. The real benefit is that I don’t have to be on IM or the phone with someone at the same moment, yet it has the fluidity of that kind of conversation (vs. a more stilted and fractured email stream). I use it for discussion and conversation with small groups of people, project notes and updates, and brainstorming/knocking around ideas with folks. I’m also playing around with Waveboard, which is a desktop and iPhone Wave client that has push notifications and more.
Go read Chris Brogan’s post about how he’s using it. Mine is similar, though I can’t stand to use it for task management, and there are times when I want a more concrete doc for things. But I went through a similar adoption curve, and he said it better anyway.
If you don’t yet have an invite, either leave a comment or email me and I’ll get you one.
Picnik
Photo editing the easy way. It’s so straightforward and easy to use, and it makes editing a photo for a post so simple it’s silly. And because it’s web based, I don’t have to wait for a desktop app to load every time. Those photo editing ones can be cumbersome memory hogs. You can pull photos from your machine, or from your Flickr, Facebook, and more. The basic app is free, and you can get more and fancier features with premium account if you want.
Delicious.com
I capture so much stuff here. Case studies. Social media resources and reference. Statistics. Supporting research and articles on topics that interest me, like social media measurement or internal social networks. I use it to keep a vanity file of people kind enough to interview or write about me. It’s a great way to build a reference file for myself, and to be able to share it with tons of other people who might find it useful, too.
Spanning Sync
I’m a Mac, and I have an iPhone. The iPhone syncs with Address Book and iCal for Mac, but I don’t use those. I use Google Calendar and Gmail, which means lots of my contacts are housed in there. Spanning Sync lets the two pairs of apps talk to each other, syncing my contacts and calendar back and forth. It costs $25 for a year or $65 for a lifetime buy.
For the bonus round, I use MobileMe ($99) to sync my phone and laptop wirelessly over the air, instead of having to plug in and sync to my laptop.
Morning Coffee (Firefox Add-On)
This is so ridiculously simple, and not really an app, but really helpful for me. I start my day with most of the same tabs open in Firefox: Gmail, my Radian6 login, Google Calendar, Google Docs, Google Wave, Facebook. Morning Coffee remembers them and pulls them all up with a single click. Call me lazy, but it helps me remember to check all my relevant stuff at the start of the day.
1Password
Have waaaay too many passwords to remember? Yep, me too. And I suck at generating really strong, unique ones for different accounts because I don’t want to remember them all. Enter 1Password, and now I’m a much better little password student.
It keeps them all for me behind a master account, generates random ones for new accounts if I ask it to, remembers them, and fills them in with a single click. You can also have it remember your identity profiles and even purchase or e-commerce wallets and payment info if you want and are comfortable with that.
So, let’s collaborate here, shall we? What applications are YOU using that you can’t live without these days? If you’re a PC, share your alternatives to the above, or different ones entirely? Fun and productive welcome. Let’s find some new stuff to monkey with.
image by John-Morgan
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Hi Amber,
I use and love one of the Apps you talk about, evernote. Find it great, everyone seems to use this product very differently which shows it’s versatility. It’s syncing is the best part! I will definately try out Morning Coffee, 1password (had an issue with passwords this week), delicious and google wave – if you’ll invite me 🙂 I have been using a firefox add-on called Read it Later, useful for capturing great resources that you don’t actually have time to read at that moment and can come back to later to read. It saves on unnecessary bookmarking. Acts a little like an electronic reading pile.
Thanks for sharing.
Alycia
Hi Alycia – would be happy to send you a Wave invite. Shall I use the email you attached to your comment (only visible in my admin, don’t worry)?
I hadn’t heard of Read It Later, though Mitch Joel turned me onto Instapaper, which seems rather similar. 🙂
Yes Amber that would be great. Use email attached to Admin.
Thanks
Alycia
Hi Amber,
I use and love one of the Apps you talk about, evernote. Find it great, everyone seems to use this product very differently which shows it’s versatility. It’s syncing is the best part! I will definately try out Morning Coffee, 1password (had an issue with passwords this week), delicious and google wave – if you’ll invite me 🙂 I have been using a firefox add-on called Read it Later, useful for capturing great resources that you don’t actually have time to read at that moment and can come back to later to read. It saves on unnecessary bookmarking. Acts a little like an electronic reading pile.
Thanks for sharing.
Alycia
Hi Alycia – would be happy to send you a Wave invite. Shall I use the email you attached to your comment (only visible in my admin, don’t worry)?
I hadn’t heard of Read It Later, though Mitch Joel turned me onto Instapaper, which seems rather similar. 🙂
Yes Amber that would be great. Use email attached to Admin.
Thanks
Alycia
Great list, I use most the apps you mentioned myself specifically Evernote, Things and 1Password, however you don’t need an app to sync your Google Calendar and Google Contacts with the iPhone you can do it for free! Here’s the instructions from Google http://bit.ly/9iTTnT
.-= Kenny Tran´s last blog ..KQATran: 34 Insanely Useful #Wordpress Plugins for Admins – http://bit.ly/bXrIMk =-.
Hey Kenny! Thanks. Back when I first set up the sync, Google didn’t have the functionality you link to above, so I’ve just let it run. But it’s a great resource for others, so thanks!
Great list, I use most the apps you mentioned myself specifically Evernote, Things and 1Password, however you don’t need an app to sync your Google Calendar and Google Contacts with the iPhone you can do it for free! Here’s the instructions from Google http://bit.ly/9iTTnT
.-= Kenny Tran´s last blog ..KQATran: 34 Insanely Useful #Wordpress Plugins for Admins – http://bit.ly/bXrIMk =-.
Hey Kenny! Thanks. Back when I first set up the sync, Google didn’t have the functionality you link to above, so I’ve just let it run. But it’s a great resource for others, so thanks!
I use most of the apps you mention. With Evernote, I have so many notes but right now it is disorganised, I need to add that as a task on Things on my iPhone so that it syncs with my Mac. 🙂
I also use Delicious, Spanning Sync and 1Password. 1Password is especially useful for looking up those randomly generated passwords when I want to login to a site on my iPhone. I can register on a site, copy and paste the details into the 1Password app, and forget about it as it will soon be synced to my Mac.
I’ve not heard of Morning Coffee or Piknic, will look into those. Maybe Waveboard too but I’ve no real need for GW right now.
I really need to write a blog post on this because there are many apps I could recommend and/or review as I try and buy so many.
I use most of the apps you mention. With Evernote, I have so many notes but right now it is disorganised, I need to add that as a task on Things on my iPhone so that it syncs with my Mac. 🙂
I also use Delicious, Spanning Sync and 1Password. 1Password is especially useful for looking up those randomly generated passwords when I want to login to a site on my iPhone. I can register on a site, copy and paste the details into the 1Password app, and forget about it as it will soon be synced to my Mac.
I’ve not heard of Morning Coffee or Piknic, will look into those. Maybe Waveboard too but I’ve no real need for GW right now.
I really need to write a blog post on this because there are many apps I could recommend and/or review as I try and buy so many.
Really cool list Amber. I’m a Google nut so I’ll be checking out Google Wave immediately. With me being in South Florida and my partners being in GA, it sounds like that might be a good tool for us to use.
Have you tried Feedly? It’s a Firefox app that places all of your RSS feeds on an “Online Magazine-like” interface. It’s pretty cool. I read a whole lot of them so it’s really good for me. It also has a feature where you can ReTweet articles, mark articles to read later, categorize them into groups,… Long story short, it does a lot stuff.
Really cool list Amber. I’m a Google nut so I’ll be checking out Google Wave immediately. With me being in South Florida and my partners being in GA, it sounds like that might be a good tool for us to use.
Have you tried Feedly? It’s a Firefox app that places all of your RSS feeds on an “Online Magazine-like” interface. It’s pretty cool. I read a whole lot of them so it’s really good for me. It also has a feature where you can ReTweet articles, mark articles to read later, categorize them into groups,… Long story short, it does a lot stuff.
Great post! I have been trying to decide whether or not to try Evernote, but I think I will.
You might find Fluid for mac useful as well… I need to use Gmail, Google Reader, and other web-based apps all day so I create a browser-based app for each using Fluid. This frees up my browser, and lets me enable ‘launch at startup’ and access them from the dock. (fluidapp.com)
.-= Nicole´s last blog ..I love Maps =-.
Great post! I have been trying to decide whether or not to try Evernote, but I think I will.
You might find Fluid for mac useful as well… I need to use Gmail, Google Reader, and other web-based apps all day so I create a browser-based app for each using Fluid. This frees up my browser, and lets me enable ‘launch at startup’ and access them from the dock. (fluidapp.com)
.-= Nicole´s last blog ..I love Maps =-.
Good post – I would agree with the top 3. I recently wrote about my love for Evernote and Things in this post . The other app I would add is Dropbox. This is indispensable for me now to save files for backup and use between computers. I have tried 1Password and it seems good – do you use it to set new passwords with it and how do you remember them if you happen to be on another computer?
Thanks
Matt
Good post – I would agree with the top 3. I recently wrote about my love for Evernote and Things in this post . The other app I would add is Dropbox. This is indispensable for me now to save files for backup and use between computers. I have tried 1Password and it seems good – do you use it to set new passwords with it and how do you remember them if you happen to be on another computer?
Thanks
Matt
Things and Evernote are 2 amazing apps for personal knowledge management and productivity.
You might want to try out SimpleNote (iPhone) and Notational Velocity (Mac) combo – really good for minimalist note taking. If you are using Mac Mail – take a look at http://www.getrocketbox.com/
.-= Anol Bhattacharya´s last blog ..Video Case Study for B2B Marketing: Free Whitepaper Download =-.
Things and Evernote are 2 amazing apps for personal knowledge management and productivity.
You might want to try out SimpleNote (iPhone) and Notational Velocity (Mac) combo – really good for minimalist note taking. If you are using Mac Mail – take a look at http://www.getrocketbox.com/
.-= Anol Bhattacharya´s last blog ..Video Case Study for B2B Marketing: Free Whitepaper Download =-.
Amber, I use Toodledo for tasks across work PC, home PC and iPhone. Perfect no-hassle sync and you can sort task lists in endless ways, including by context for GTD fans. Free online app with various premium upgrades. Works perfectly…but the GUI is not as nice as it should be. If they fixed that I would probably crawl inside and live there, because the functionality is awesome.
Amber, I use Toodledo for tasks across work PC, home PC and iPhone. Perfect no-hassle sync and you can sort task lists in endless ways, including by context for GTD fans. Free online app with various premium upgrades. Works perfectly…but the GUI is not as nice as it should be. If they fixed that I would probably crawl inside and live there, because the functionality is awesome.
Amber,
Great Post. I love these topics, as it reminds my favorite blog aside from yours of course, Lifehacker.com. Whats great is they will have polls for apps, e.g The best free cd/dvd burning app, and let the community decide. You can either feel good about your current app, or discover a new gem that will make you feel like Christmas morning. Well at least it does for me at times. Onto your list. I am a PC guy, but like to ride the fence at times with a Mac.
Evernote
As with everyone else, Evernote is King! I before Google decided to do away with notes, I would use that all the time, and found it very comforting the day I found I could import all my google notes into Evernote. I also love the ability to import into Evernote from a designated folder on my PC. I can copy PDF docs, images, etc to a folder and it will automatically import it into my Evernote.
Picnik
This is a great app, and have recommended it to a lot of friends that do not have Photoshop, nor have the time to learn Gimp or Paint.net. Although these are great FREE apps
IPassword
Again as a PC user, my alternative is to use Keypass. This is a great password management tool as you can load it onto a thumbdrive and take it with you. If I add new passwords during the day, I can sync it to my secure ftp site incase I don’t have my thumbdrive handy. It has a great password generator and can even expire the passwords if you have that policy at work or just as good practice to change your passwords. I like all you us, have so many to remember, there is no way I could do it and have a good password policy without a tool like this. This is one to definitely check out.
Feedly is great as T. Brian Brown mentioned. I haven’t left it from Google Reader yet, but it definetley has legs.
Greasemonkey and Stylish addon scripts for Firefox are a must to add customization and functionality to your browsing experience.
These are just a couple of my favs. If there is more interest from the pc users, I would be happy to continue.
.-= Jeremy Bryant´s last blog ..TED Talks Pranav Mistry: The thrilling potential of SixthSense technology =-.
Jeremy, are you still with Google Reader for a particular reason or just b/c? What is the benefit (if any) to using Feedly?
Yes, please…I’m a PC and I would also be happy if you continue:)
.-= Beth Coetzee´s last blog ..Date Night =-.
I am still using Google Reader as my default rss reader. I like what lifehacker says about feedly,
With that said, I have enjoyed some of the bells and whistles feedly offers, but always seem to go back to google reader with some added greasemonkey scripts
.-= Jeremy Bryant´s last blog ..TED Talks Pranav Mistry: The thrilling potential of SixthSense technology =-.
Thanks, Jeremy! I finally had time to go app shopping today…Feedly is very pretty:)
.-= Beth Coetzee´s last blog ..Spiritual Preparation =-.
Amber,
Great Post. I love these topics, as it reminds my favorite blog aside from yours of course, Lifehacker.com. Whats great is they will have polls for apps, e.g The best free cd/dvd burning app, and let the community decide. You can either feel good about your current app, or discover a new gem that will make you feel like Christmas morning. Well at least it does for me at times. Onto your list. I am a PC guy, but like to ride the fence at times with a Mac.
Evernote
As with everyone else, Evernote is King! I before Google decided to do away with notes, I would use that all the time, and found it very comforting the day I found I could import all my google notes into Evernote. I also love the ability to import into Evernote from a designated folder on my PC. I can copy PDF docs, images, etc to a folder and it will automatically import it into my Evernote.
Picnik
This is a great app, and have recommended it to a lot of friends that do not have Photoshop, nor have the time to learn Gimp or Paint.net. Although these are great FREE apps
IPassword
Again as a PC user, my alternative is to use Keypass. This is a great password management tool as you can load it onto a thumbdrive and take it with you. If I add new passwords during the day, I can sync it to my secure ftp site incase I don’t have my thumbdrive handy. It has a great password generator and can even expire the passwords if you have that policy at work or just as good practice to change your passwords. I like all you us, have so many to remember, there is no way I could do it and have a good password policy without a tool like this. This is one to definitely check out.
Feedly is great as T. Brian Brown mentioned. I haven’t left it from Google Reader yet, but it definetley has legs.
Greasemonkey and Stylish addon scripts for Firefox are a must to add customization and functionality to your browsing experience.
These are just a couple of my favs. If there is more interest from the pc users, I would be happy to continue.
.-= Jeremy Bryant´s last blog ..TED Talks Pranav Mistry: The thrilling potential of SixthSense technology =-.
Jeremy, are you still with Google Reader for a particular reason or just b/c? What is the benefit (if any) to using Feedly?
Yes, please…I’m a PC and I would also be happy if you continue:)
.-= Beth Coetzee´s last blog ..Date Night =-.
I am still using Google Reader as my default rss reader. I like what lifehacker says about feedly,
With that said, I have enjoyed some of the bells and whistles feedly offers, but always seem to go back to google reader with some added greasemonkey scripts
.-= Jeremy Bryant´s last blog ..TED Talks Pranav Mistry: The thrilling potential of SixthSense technology =-.
Thanks, Jeremy! I finally had time to go app shopping today…Feedly is very pretty:)
.-= Beth Coetzee´s last blog ..Spiritual Preparation =-.
Thanks for sharing these apps. I will be checking out Evernote and 1Password.
I’ve just done a similar post, but more specifically about web design and development apps: http://robert-chambers.com/blog/articles/my-top-5-apps/
.-= Robert Chambers´s last blog ..My top 5 apps =-.
Thanks for sharing these apps. I will be checking out Evernote and 1Password.
I’ve just done a similar post, but more specifically about web design and development apps: http://robert-chambers.com/blog/articles/my-top-5-apps/
.-= Robert Chambers´s last blog ..My top 5 apps =-.
I would be lost without Things. I haven’t managed to use Google Wave effectively though. Thanks for sharing, and pointing to that link of how you and Chris use Google Wave.
I would be lost without Things. I haven’t managed to use Google Wave effectively though. Thanks for sharing, and pointing to that link of how you and Chris use Google Wave.
This is why I love your blog. Very useful. I get a lot of use out of Busy Cal which syncs all of my calendars. Depending on where I am and what I’m doing, I enter items in different calendars. Busy Cal takes care of all of it. Mobile Me and Evernote are also very important to me. I want to learn how to use Google Wave effectively, it is a bit confusing to me.
.-= Clint Stonebraker´s last blog ..Your Responsibility in Relationships =-.
This is why I love your blog. Very useful. I get a lot of use out of Busy Cal which syncs all of my calendars. Depending on where I am and what I’m doing, I enter items in different calendars. Busy Cal takes care of all of it. Mobile Me and Evernote are also very important to me. I want to learn how to use Google Wave effectively, it is a bit confusing to me.
.-= Clint Stonebraker´s last blog ..Your Responsibility in Relationships =-.
great apps , thanks !
great apps , thanks !
I use about 1/2 of the apps you mentioned, and will definitely check out the rest. I’m a Mac, but can’t use iPhone yet because AT&T doesn’t do so well in my neck of the woods. An app I can’t live without right now is Dropbox. I’m in Tucson and one of the people I work with is in Chicago and/or LaJolla, depending on the season. We have to send rather large files back and forth and Dropbox has worked seamlessly (and for free).
I use about 1/2 of the apps you mentioned, and will definitely check out the rest. I’m a Mac, but can’t use iPhone yet because AT&T doesn’t do so well in my neck of the woods. An app I can’t live without right now is Dropbox. I’m in Tucson and one of the people I work with is in Chicago and/or LaJolla, depending on the season. We have to send rather large files back and forth and Dropbox has worked seamlessly (and for free).
Thanks for the list. I use Friend or Follow to clear out my twitter every month or so. It is a handy one to add to your list.
.-= Robert L´s last blog ..The World’s Most Expensive Hotels by City =-.
Thanks for the list. I use Friend or Follow to clear out my twitter every month or so. It is a handy one to add to your list.
.-= Robert L´s last blog ..The World’s Most Expensive Hotels by City =-.
Amber, I also think this is a great list even though I am not a Mac user. I was surprised that only Jan brought up Dropbox a great web application for managing projects with large files. And a great alternative to 1Password is LastPass this is web based and the most secure out there that I have found. But most of all I could not keep up with your blog if I did not have Delicious.com I tag a lot of your blogs for future reading and research. Again great post love your stuff.
Kevin
I love LastPass!
.-= Beth Coetzee´s last blog ..Date Night =-.
Amber, I also think this is a great list even though I am not a Mac user. I was surprised that only Jan brought up Dropbox a great web application for managing projects with large files. And a great alternative to 1Password is LastPass this is web based and the most secure out there that I have found. But most of all I could not keep up with your blog if I did not have Delicious.com I tag a lot of your blogs for future reading and research. Again great post love your stuff.
Kevin
I love LastPass!
.-= Beth Coetzee´s last blog ..Date Night =-.
Great list. I really like Evernote and Google Wave. I’ve been using them for multiple projects. I would also suggest Yourversion.com instead of Delicious. You can import all of your Delicious bookmarks into it. Yourverison.com is a bookmarking site but it brings you content based on your tags to help find new stuff and you can tweet, email and send stuff to facebook. I just found it last week and love it.
If you’re into measuring everything you might also want to check out Sharein.com. They have analytics to show your influence from bookmarks. It’s pretty neat.
Great list. I really like Evernote and Google Wave. I’ve been using them for multiple projects. I would also suggest Yourversion.com instead of Delicious. You can import all of your Delicious bookmarks into it. Yourverison.com is a bookmarking site but it brings you content based on your tags to help find new stuff and you can tweet, email and send stuff to facebook. I just found it last week and love it.
If you’re into measuring everything you might also want to check out Sharein.com. They have analytics to show your influence from bookmarks. It’s pretty neat.
Google Buzz got released today – how will that compare to Google Wave?
.-= Robert L ´s last blog ..Back later with 2 new country updates =-.
Google Buzz got released today – how will that compare to Google Wave?
.-= Robert L ´s last blog ..Back later with 2 new country updates =-.
Stefan,
Thanks for mentioning YourVersion (http://www.yourversion.com).
As you pointed out, YourVersion offers most of the bookmarking functionality of Delicious but also continuously delivers new, relevant content tailored to your interests. YourVersion also makes it easy to share interesting pages via email, Facebook, and Twitter (with automatic URL-shortening). We have a free Firefox toolbar so you can bookmark and share any page as you browse the web.
We also have a free iPhone app so you can stay on top of your interests when you’re on the go http://bit.ly/yv-app.
Please let us know if you have any feedback or suggestions for how we can improve the YourVersion product.
Thanks and happy discovering!
Dan Olsen
CEO & Founder, YourVersion
Stefan,
Thanks for mentioning YourVersion (http://www.yourversion.com).
As you pointed out, YourVersion offers most of the bookmarking functionality of Delicious but also continuously delivers new, relevant content tailored to your interests. YourVersion also makes it easy to share interesting pages via email, Facebook, and Twitter (with automatic URL-shortening). We have a free Firefox toolbar so you can bookmark and share any page as you browse the web.
We also have a free iPhone app so you can stay on top of your interests when you’re on the go http://bit.ly/yv-app.
Please let us know if you have any feedback or suggestions for how we can improve the YourVersion product.
Thanks and happy discovering!
Dan Olsen
CEO & Founder, YourVersion
There are so many applications I using day after day. I am using OpenOffice.org, AVG Anti-Virus, Skype and many more applications.