![]() ![]() ![]() You can probably succeed, but you won't necessarily like the results. Not sure what is coming for the future of Evernote, but as we move further away from Notes/Text/Pics, it seems that you're trying to make the software do something it wasn't designed to do well. Diaries, Notes, WP, Lists - those would all work really well. I can agree with a couple of your other observations, though. Add in the fact that you'd have to search pretty much one, maybe two "fields" and you're going to have poor performance. I just don't see a good way of handling that in a generic text lookup fashion. Even if you just set up a single DB Table and separate out the fields (Year, Director, Actors, Summary, Title, Plot, Rating, etc), you'll get better performance just because you won't have to differentiate between the movies made in 1984 and the movie titled "1984". No offense intended towards the Evernote team, but as Dave noted, the User Experience of using Evernote to search for small entries and such will be poor and will only grow worse as more data is added to the notebook.įrom your initial description, you really want to design something small and custom tailored to your needs. ![]() There are all sorts of platforms that are better suited for your needs than a program such as Evernote. "Yes, you could do this." However, in your case, you'd be better off building a small database to handle what you want to do. I think I'd have to agree with Dave on this one. Again, I think this would work technically, but the end user experience might not be ideal. for every note that would be a little unnecessary if you're just storing a single line of text for each note. the note display includes lot of headers, footers, etc. our UI and display isn't really tuned for someone to easily browse through 170,000 tiny entries. ![]() While I think that you could probably make a dictionary using Evernote, I don't know that this would necessarily be the best tool for this purpose. This sounds like a very interesting potential use of Evernote. by genre, etc.) to help you find just the Mysteries. Then you could find those books by searching for text, or you could tag books (e.g. You could make a "books" notebook and then put one note in there for each book. You could put the title and year into the note title, and you could give a bit more information about each entry, possibly with cover images, etc. I think Evernote could definitely be useful as a book/movie database. ![]()
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