

This is very useful for tasks like planning a meeting, building an event plan, or brainstorming a document outline. You can employ these note-taking apps as sort of light-weight collaboration interfaces - to add text, comments, pictures, and even emojis and collaborate with your colleagues. In fact, they serve very different use cases. Now there are certainly some commonalities but these note-taking apps are quite different from document creation services like Google Docs. I’ve heard several people say Dropbox Paper (and Box Notes) is taking on Google Docs and Office 365. Some also provide advanced capabilities like ability to use workflows and tasks, version management, search and so forth.ĭropbox Paper: Snazzy, but how useful? Notes != Documents

All of these provide varying capabilities for co-authoring documents, light-weight collaboration, and mobile access. There’s Zoho Writer, Quip (which Salesforce has acquired), Evernote, Google Docs, O365, and many more. Box has offered Box Notes for quite some time and recently released an update. There are several tools that provide authoring capabilities. Paper is interesting, but is Dropbox a bit late to the party? Who Else is There?
#DROPBOX PAPER BETA OFFLINE#
Paper is localized in 21 languages and will soon support mobile devices and offline sync. You and your colleagues can use Dropbox Paper to co-author content in realtime. Dropbox announced its note taking application called Paper has emerged from beta.
