some apps demonstrate popular due to quite a few choices and features. penultimate’s success is due to its simplicity. the app presents simple notebooks, similar to moleskines in appearance,
Microsoft Office 2010 Professional Key, that can contain just one or many pages. you change pages simply by pressing either the lower left or lower right page corner. sliding the corner grip icon displays all the notebook’s pages as thumbnail images, allowing for easy review and repagination.
a simple toolbar displays just three icons. pressing the pen icon enables the selection of six line colors and three line thicknesses. an eraser,
Office 2010 Home And Student Product Key, for selective edits, and a clear page icon are the only other toolbar selections.
page types are limited to three. users can opt for plain pages,
Microsoft Office 2007 Standard Key, lined paper or a grid layout. i’ve found the grid layout particularly helpful when diagramming networks, server closets and server racks. when drawing anything requiring accurate lines,
office 2007 standard, however, i have found penultimate works best when paired with a basic ipad stylus, such as pogo’s sketch.
other than a wrist protection feature, which helps prevent unintentional screen contact from generating stray marks on a page, there really aren’t any other capabilities. the sole exceptions are printing and export functionality,
Microsoft Office Standard, critical to any note-taking, drawing or diagramming app. with penultimate, you can print (when using ios 4.2 and later) directly from a notebook and export notebooks or pages as pdf or penultimate files. single pages can also be sent or saved as images.