Thanks to DEVONtechnologies’ new iOS app, DEVONthink To Go, I can wirelessly sync any or all of my DEVONthink database with my mobile devices, so I’m never without any of my crucial data.īefore the release of DEVONthink To Go, the recommended way to get at your DEVONthink library from an iOS device was to use the Web server built into DEVONthink Pro Office and connect to it using Safari. So for the most part I haven’t bothered-until now. Although I can use any of a gazillion apps to copy PDFs to my iOS devices and display them there, the process of getting documents out of my DEVONthink database and into an arbitrary iOS app is tedious at best. My iPhone and iPad display PDFs brilliantly, but there’s been a problem. Naturally, I’d like to have access to all my PDFs and other documents from DEVONthink when I’m away from my Mac, too. What I mostly use it for.) I liked it enough that I wrote a book on it-distributed primarily as a PDF, natch-“ Take Control of Getting Started with DEVONthink 2.” (DEVONthink handles dozens of file types, it just happens to excel at PDFs, and that’s My tool of choice for cataloguing, searching, annotating, and otherwise managing all those PDFs has for several years been DEVONthink Pro Office. I have even been known to write the odd occasional PDF-format ebook myself. Doxie: Two Portable Document Scanners,” 24 July 2010) others appear when I save Web receipts, capture archives of Web pages, or download manuals, data sheets, or books. Some come from documents I scan and save in searchable PDF format (see, for example, “ ScanSnap S1300 vs. I have thousands of them, and the number grows daily. My digital life seems to revolve around PDF files.
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