Submitted by David_H on 2015/01/04 03:30
I'm using it for personal project/task management and info management related to those projects/tasks.  And I'm loving it for that purpose.
 
But for general purpose information management I'm still using Evernote.  By information management I mean all of my web clippings and notes which represent the storing of information I might want to refer to, but which do not represent projects/tasks.  The main advantage Evernote has that I don't want to give up is tags, it's just too powerful to be able to clip a piece of information and be able to assign several tags to it.
 
For those of you using IQ for all info management, do you just use a conventional single subject hierarchy to store your information?  Are you using any additional methods?
 
Thanks
 
 

Comments

[quote=David_H]
I'm using it for personal project/task management and info management related to those projects/tasks.  And I'm loving it for that purpose.
 
But for general purpose information management I'm still using Evernote.  By information management I mean all of my web clippings and notes which represent the storing of information I might want to refer to, but which do not represent projects/tasks.  The main advantage Evernote has that I don't want to give up is tags, it's just too powerful to be able to clip a piece of information and be able to assign several tags to it.
[/quote]
 
I'm using IQ for all my information needs. Fields (yes/no mostly) play the role of tags. These can be assigned when capturing (in the Add Item dialog) or later on, in your in-box grid.
When I'm on a mobile device, I tend to use the emailToIQ feature, which also supports field assignments (using the Evernote syntax).
Some users use the Wikitags field to simulate tags. True GMail-like tags (labels) is also planned.
 
HTH !
 
Pierre_Admin