Should you use Goodnotes in iPadOS 26?
We’ve talked about the basics of Goodnotes 6… the AI features, and even items you can add to your handwritten notes. But here’s the big question: is it right for you?
We’ve talked about the basics of Goodnotes 6… the AI features, and even items you can add to your handwritten notes. But here’s the big question: is it right for you?
Today, we’re diving into UPDF’s form tools and AI features. If you work with a lot of PDFs (or if you’re creating forms for interviews, applications, or surveys), UPDF might just be the most efficient tool out there.
If you’ve updated to the developer beta for iPadOS 26, you’re probably excited about Liquid Glass—but like me, you’ve also experienced some very annoying bugs.
Apple Journal has finally made its way to the iPad and Mac—and I have to say, it feels like we’ve been waiting forever.
It’s been three years since we made our Apple Notes wish list for the iPad… and honestly, maybe it’s time we let it go.
Alex is a second year university student, juggling lectures, tutorials, assignments — and a part-time job.
We recently reviewed TickTick, and the to-do app stood out as a potential Apple Reminders replacement. So we had to compare the two apps, to see which app is better, and for who.
We all know Goodnotes 6 is brilliant for handwriting—that’s probably why most of us downloaded it in the first place. But there’s so much more packed into the app.
Before it’s an editor, every PDF editor is first a reader. So, how does UPDF 2.0 handle reading and annotating your PDFs in 2025? Let’s find out!
Unlike macOS Tahoe, iPadOS 26 still feels a bit buggy—especially the search bar, which just refuses to behave. I’ll probably regret installing this beta because I don’t have a backup.