For
so
many
years,
the
Evernote
elephant
was
a
truly
iconic
logo.
Evernote
was
one
of
the
first
productivity
apps
to
embrace
smartphones,
to
enable
cross-platform
sync,
and
to
make
it
really
easy
to
store
and
create
almost
anything.
And
so
Evernote
was
huge.
But
Peak
Evernote
was
roughly
a
decade
ago.
Since
then,
the
product
has
often
felt
stagnant
(or
worse),
the
company
churned
through
executives
and
business
plans,
and
it
seemed
like
Evernote
was
slowly
turning
into
a
zombie
app.
Not
gone,
not
even
forgotten,
just
sort
of...
there.
In
2022,
when
Bending
Spoons
acquired
the
company
and
soon
after
laid
off
nearly
all
its
staff,
millions
of
Evernote
users
were
confused
about
what
the
future
held
for
the
tool
they
had
relied
on
for
so
long.
Things
got
even
worse
when
the
company
went
essentially
silent
for
months.
But
since
then,
the
narrative
and
pace
around
Evernote
has
shifted
pretty
dramatically.
In
2024
in
particular,
Evernote
has
shipped
a
laundry
list
of
new
features,
retooled
its
design,
added
some
core
new
functionality,
and
made
the
app
begin
to
feel
modern
again.
With
all
that
change
has
come
a
shift
in
price,
too
—
and
not
everyone’s
thrilled.
On
this
episode
of
The
Vergecast,
the
third
and
final
installment
in
our
series
about
productivity
and
digital
life,
we
sit
down
with
Federico
Simionato,
the
Evernote
product
lead
at
Bending
Spoons.
We
talk
about
the
acquisition
process,
how
he
perceives
Evernote
in
today’s
landscape,
what
it
took
to
start
shipping
new
stuff
again,
why
Bending
Spoons
changed
the
subscription
price,
and
much
more.
We
also
talk
about
the
future
of
Evernote,
and
productivity
tools
in
general.
Evernote
is
more
than
two
decades
old,
and
is
as
such
filled
with
old
ideas
about
what
people
want
and
how
they
want
to
use
it.
Simionato
and
his
team
are
tasked
with
figuring
out
how
AI
fits
into
Evernote,
how
the
product
should
integrate
with
all
the
other
tools
that
now
exist,
and
turning
Evernote
into
something
that
works
for
the
old
users
and
appeals
to
new
ones.
If
you
want
to
know
more
about
the
things
we
discuss
in
this
episode,
here
are
some
links
to
get
you
started:
Original author: David Pierce
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