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Google Launches 'Keep' To Rival Evernote 205

Today Google launched 'Google Keep', a mobile note-taking service to rival software like Evernote. It works on devices running Android 4.0 or later, and there's also a web interface (which is struggling under launch load as of this writing). Google describes the service thus: "With Keep you can quickly jot ideas down when you think of them and even include checklists and photos to keep track of what’s important to you. Your notes are safely stored in Google Drive and synced to all your devices so you can always have them at hand. If it’s more convenient to speak than to type that’s fine—Keep transcribes voice memos for you automatically. There’s super-fast search to find what you’re looking for and when you’re finished with a note you can archive or delete it." Fans of Google Reader will probably be a bit hesitant to pick this up.
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Google Launches 'Keep' To Rival Evernote

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 20, 2013 @05:21PM (#43227879)

    Remember when Google used to innovate?

  • screw google! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 20, 2013 @05:22PM (#43227901)

    I will try very hard to never use new Google products. As they are a company that cannot be relied on to to support a product despite the number of people who become dependent on it. I have been already burnt by Google Notebook, and now Google Reader. They just decided to yank the product. Now they greedily crawl back in with Google Keep. You should not be keeping anything with Google if you really want to keep it for a long time. They are an untrustworthy company.

  • Hard to trust (Score:4, Insightful)

    by boshvark ( 2599623 ) on Wednesday March 20, 2013 @05:27PM (#43227969) Homepage
    I'm pretty sure Evernote will not suddenly "retire" its service and leave users out to dry. Sorry, Google Keep. Even if you're everything I ever dreamed of, you've arrived at the wrong place and the wrong time.
  • Re:screw google! (Score:4, Insightful)

    by h4rr4r ( 612664 ) on Wednesday March 20, 2013 @05:27PM (#43227973)

    Make sure you ask for a refund.

  • Re:screw google! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 20, 2013 @05:36PM (#43228065)

    If a refund means Google has to delete everything they know about me and can no longer resell my data to anyone, then sign me up, now.

  • Re:screw google! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by TC Wilcox ( 954812 ) on Wednesday March 20, 2013 @05:38PM (#43228083)

    Make sure you ask for a refund.

    Asking for a refund would be totally relevant if he was their customer. He isn't... He is the product and when your users are your product getting your users mad really can have consequences.

  • No (Score:5, Insightful)

    by oGMo ( 379 ) on Wednesday March 20, 2013 @05:38PM (#43228087)

    You mean when they made a search engine? Or a webmail client? Or online maps? Or office apps? Or an RSS reader? Or a calendar? Or a finance site? Or a chat program? Or a photo site? Or an online store? Or a social site? Or a phone OS?

    None of these things are "innovations", none of them were particularly innovative, and they weren't doing any of them first (or even early), but in many cases they were better/easier/free-as-in-beer-er than the alternative. Which is fine. And they made money on it. Which is great. And when they stop working (like Reader), we'll find something else, or write something else. Since they make getting your data out pretty easy, that's not even hard.

    And if you've become complacent where if Google doesn't offer it, you can't find it, that's not innovation... that's you being lazy. And it's not their fault, it's yours.

  • Can't trust Google (Score:0, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 20, 2013 @05:38PM (#43228097)

    After they killed Reader, it's not pragmatic to use any of their services, given how they're prone to senselessly killing them off.

  • Re:Cloud This! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 20, 2013 @05:39PM (#43228113)

    are you intentionally being obtuse or is this really how short sighted you are? Did you even read the summary at all?

    One of the main points of cloud based note applications like Evernote and Google Keep is to keep notes automatically in sync between many devices. This along with local and remote copies ensure your notes do not get lost.

    Sorry to break your rant.

  • I plan on using it (Score:4, Insightful)

    by linuxguy ( 98493 ) on Wednesday March 20, 2013 @05:44PM (#43228155) Homepage

    Many people here are pooh-poohing the new service for various reasons. I just wanted to provide a counter point.

    I tried evernote. I did not like it. I generally like the services Google provides and in the manner they do. I understand that nothing is guaranteed. And that one day this service may too disappear and I am OK with that. This is a price I am willing to pay.

  • Re:Cloud This! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Proteus ( 1926 ) on Wednesday March 20, 2013 @05:47PM (#43228197) Homepage Journal
    Well, Google's interest is certainly in getting data; but they wouldn't be able if there weren't a market for it. Why? I don't just use one device, so I want easy, transparent access to my data no matter what I'm using. And some of my devices are quite tiny; I don't want to lose my data when I lose my device, so I'd at least want some kind of automatic remote backup...

    Not to mention that things like Evernote do a lot of processing on the data you send them that would be onerous on a portable device. For example, if I snap a pic of a business card, the text on that card is OCR'd and made searchable. That would suck hard on a phone; it's much easier to offload that capability (and corpus!) to the cloud. This saves me precious battery and improves the quality of my results.

    The issue isn't network-based computing, it's that we don't have the controls in place to assert control of our data on a provider's equipment; we are forced to trust that they won't do Bad Things. And that's a problem.

  • by Proteus ( 1926 ) on Wednesday March 20, 2013 @05:48PM (#43228215) Homepage Journal
    I mean, a slightly different interface, but substantially the same. And Google killed that product; why do we think this time around will be better?
  • by Aguazul2 ( 2591049 ) on Wednesday March 20, 2013 @05:50PM (#43228231)

    I wonder if they realize that people who are now Readerless are going to avoid relying Google products/services in future. Certainly there is no way I would build life habits around any Google service now. You don't want to get too used to using anything of theirs, don't get too comfortable. Then they will wonder why their new products aren't taking off any more.

  • This is a rival? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Dave Emami ( 237460 ) on Wednesday March 20, 2013 @06:01PM (#43228385) Homepage
    I've used both Evernote and Springpad, and stuck with the latter, but after fiddling around with the web interface on Google Keep for a while, my question is: this is supposed to be a rival service? It looks more like something from the example page of a web app library. All you seem to able to do is enter text notes, and lists. Perhaps Keep for Android has more functionality, but just comparing between the web versions of all three, Keep doesn't have 1/10th of the capability of either of the others. It's like comparing Word with Notepad.
  • Re:Hard to trust (Score:5, Insightful)

    by JanneM ( 7445 ) on Wednesday March 20, 2013 @06:06PM (#43228441) Homepage

    I don't trust Evernote either. It is their main line of business so it's unlikely to be "spring cleaned". But they can certainly go bankupt or bought by a rival and lose the cervice altogether. Or they can move in a direction that makes future versions bad or unusable for me. When it's the cloud you can never stay with a previous version.

    Anything critical, you use an offline app. Use the net only for syncing, preferably through file sharing or other system-agnostic manner.

  • by joh ( 27088 ) on Wednesday March 20, 2013 @07:16PM (#43229383)

    Yeah, but let me tell you that users who used Google Reader are those who read and write a lot. Each of them is easily worth 10 plain users. I was burned by that and right now I'm busy moving quite a few users and one business away from Google. Google kicking out ActiveSync and in six months CalDAV isn't exactly helping them here. Google is starting to feel somewhat uncomfortable all of a sudden. There has been a widely felt uncomfortable feeling about Google's potential to abuse their power for quite a while but all of this is the first time Google makes this potential into something you have to deal with. And this is not a good feeling.

    Google is changing right now. Even those working there notice that. Google is dropping right now all the attributes that made nerds comfortable with it. It is turning into something else.

  • Re:Cloud This! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by shutdown -p now ( 807394 ) on Wednesday March 20, 2013 @09:01PM (#43230379) Journal

    I was commenting on the fact that keeping things in sync between many devices could be done with a floppy disk as early as 1982,

    You're clearly either being intentionally obtuse, as GP noted, or else you have such poor reading skills that you didn't notice or understand the word "automatically" that was there in his comment.

    My privacy is worth rather more than the convenience of "keeping notes automatically in sync between many devices."

    So don't use it. A lot of people, myself and GP included, don't care about the privacy of simple notes while preferring the convenience of auto-sync. This service is for us. With your priorities, it's clearly not for you. Yet you were the one coming out to question other people's choices. Insulting, indeed.

  • Re:No (Score:5, Insightful)

    by __aaltlg1547 ( 2541114 ) on Wednesday March 20, 2013 @10:20PM (#43230759)

    There's a difference between writing scifi and making technology that works. The former is imagination. The latter is innovation.

    If you want an example of Google being innovative, though, look at their self-driving cars. A lot of people have tried to crack that problem. Google actually did it.

  • Misguided fanboism (Score:5, Insightful)

    by tanveer1979 ( 530624 ) on Thursday March 21, 2013 @03:09AM (#43231937) Homepage Journal

    Whenever google is criticized for yanking a "free" service, such comments come up. but is anything from google free? Sure its may not ask for money, but in google your eyeball is the product, and they make money from ads.
    Lets take gmail.
    Now its free. If google yanks it, many people will troll "it was free" "ask for a refund".
    But when I open gmail, I see ads. So in a way google is making money.
    No company is in it for charity.;
    And no company is above criticism. There is nothing wrong to feel bad or criticize the company if it cans a product you were dependent upon. "Ask for a refund" what kind of response is that. And just because its pro google, it gets modded to "insightful"!

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