![]() ![]() Liquid Text - has a cool trick where it can temporarily compress and hide the non-lighted portions of your notes.I found the handwriting recognition not as good for me. Is a one off cost instead of subscription. ![]() Goodnotes - pretty similar to Notability.It is freemium model but I believe the basic version is pretty good (I was grandfathered in so have a semi-premium version) Has great iPad app for handwritten notes (and can OCR my terrible handwriting). Notability - has the advantage of recording as you make notes.OneNote - part of Microsoft Office but I think you can get it free from the Mac App Store.I tended to use an iPad for notetaking (my course required lots of drawing as well and the Apple Pencil was a boon) so I have factored that into my mini-review below. This type of app helped me best when I was studying. This is more versatile and you can create notebooks/folders for your different subjects etc. Then there are apps that are more like notebook apps that allow you to add PDFs (and many other types of docs/media) and further annotate them. PDF Expert (by Readdle) and PDF PenPro (Smile software)- gives you more editing tools - I think you could get trial versions from their respective websites before you buy.Probably too bare bones if you need to do heavy annotating but worth a try before you spend money. Preview- comes free on your Mac and does basic things (text boxes, highlighting).There are many options to annotate PDFs on Mac. ![]()
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