
Evernote for Windows users can upgrade to start sharing their notes on Facebook and Twitter. Users can also better manage and share notebooks, as well as view notebooks shared with them from inside the application.
Users will find a share button inside each note with four options: send by email, post to Facebook, post to Twitter and copy note URL to clipboard. The Windows app user can then select an option to share the individual note, making its contents public to outside viewers. The process is similar to that already introduced in Evernote for Web.

In addition, notebook sharing via Evernote, a once complex process, is now simpler in the Windows version. A "shared" tab has been added above the notebook list and gives the user a place to go to not only share notebooks and manage settings, but to also view the notebooks other Evernote users have shared with him or her.
Frequent Evernote users will understand immediately the significant implications of these layers of sharing. Evernote, once merely a repository of personal memories, can become a vehicle to create shared memories. Somewhat problematic, however, is that each version of Evernote -- spanning web, mobile and desktop -- now has a slightly different sharing experience.