PDAs and smartphones are terrific organizersalmost too good for their own good. If youre like me, the mental overhead of jotting down someones contact information, while trying to sort it into the right fields in a Contact entry can be a slow and self-conscious process, especially in front of the person whose information youre trying to input. Or maybe the information should be a Memo instead, or a Note attachment to a new Task. Thats a lot to think about before or during jotting down a note. As Palms default PIM suite migrated from PDAs to Treos, they lost their dedicated buttons for Tasks and Memos, compounding the problem of fluid data entry. For years, Ive avoided the problem of deciding where the information should ultimately reside in the Treo by taking down notes on paper first, then inputting these notes into the Treo at my leisure.
Snap is the digital equivalent of my analog workaround. It provides a dedicated Memo-like field as a scratchpad, with dedicated PIM buttons at the margins, separating the processes of collecting information and organizing it. Using Snap is a simple, three-step operation:
- Write in memo field
- Highlight selection
- Tap application button to import selection
Setup and Configuration
Snap refers to the icons for Calendar, Contacts, Tasks, etc., as buttons, which can be confusing, since the program includes an option in its Preferences to Associate Snap with Memo button. The latter option refers to the hardware Memo button found on Palm PDAs. SplashData acquired Snap from Hands High software, which called the application Slap. Some of the more buried Help screens still make reference to the older name. Snap has more than its share of residue from older POS iterations. Calendar is DateBook, Tasks is To Do List, Contacts is Address Book, and so on. In general, the app still feels like its more focused for Graffiti and stylus navigation than QWERTY keyboard and 5-way navigation. It would be nice, for instance, to have some way to highlight text within the memo field without the stylus, but thats a problem with Palm OS text selection in general.
The Memo button association is a bigger problem, since theres no other button to map the application to in the Prefs utility that retains Snaps 2nd Snap Button option. This allows a second press of the Memo button to activate another app. Since Treos lack Tasks and Memos buttons, it would have been great to be able to active two different apps with a first and second press of a user-defined button, and the third app on the same button used with the Option key.
In addition to a Preferences menu, theres a more useful Button Preferences menu, which allows you to change the apps associated with Snaps virtual buttons, as long as they use the same databases. You can map the Email button to Chatter or Agendus, but not Blazer.
On Treos, SplashData recommends using the side button or the Option Calendar combination. Since I use the Calendar button for Tasks, and Option Calendar to bring up the Calendar, I initially chose the side button for Snap, but I ultimately reassigned it to the Calendar button. Aside from finding the press-and-hold operation irritating, I had to hit the Power/End button first, then press and hold the side button, since it doesnt work when the screen is off. The Option key is also ignored when the screen is off, so Option Calendar is equally ineffective as an instant-on selection. My next option, the Email button, worked fine until I HotSynced. Palms Prefs apparently requires the button to be an Email app, so my button profile restored Versamail every time I synced. I wound up having to put Tasks on the side button, Snap as the primary mapping on the Calendar button, and associated Calendar to the Option Calendar keybinding. As a potential front end for data entry, its too bad that most buttons available for activating it on the Treo must be preceded by the Power/End button. It would be nice to start entering information immediately after the press of a single button.
Entering and Organizing Information
Snap is organized into three basic fields: a text entry memo area, a column of the PIM apps into which the text gets imported, and a bottom row, consisting of a Clear button, date stamp picker, a time stamp picker, and an application shortcut tool for launching frequently used apps.
If whatever is in the text field is a single item, theres no need to highlight it. Just tap the application into which the item is being imported. If you have one or more items in the field, highlight the item to be imported, then tap. The Clear button clears the entire field. If you inadvertently clear the whole fieldan easy mistake to makeyou can Undo from the Edit menu.
Snap is pretty good at figuring out how to parse a sentence into the proper data fields in Calendar. Writing Dinner with Megan at 8pm on Fri will import Dinner with Megan into a Calendar entry for the upcoming Friday at 8 p.m., dropping out extraneous propositions and conjunctions. Snap will figure out 8 p.m. written as 8 p.m., 8pm, or 8p. Numeral-only hours default to a.m. entries. Snap recognizes the following formats:
Entering Contacts needs a little more manual formatting from the user. Addresses need to be written in the text field the way they would appear on an envelope: with line breaks. When you select the Contacts icon for importing contact information from the text field, a preview screen shows you how the entry will look before committing it with the Add button. You can swap the First/Last Name, Company Name and Title fields by dragging the lower heading of the fields being swapped into the upper positiona pretty slick feature. Phone numbers default to the Work category, so numbers in other categories must be changed by hand; or you can append one of Snaps letter codes to the number when you first enter it in the text field. 800.555.1234h gets entered in the Home category. The letters F, P, M, and O designate a number to the Fax, Pager, Mobile and Other categories, respectively.
Oh, by the way: you can dial or text message a highlighted number in the text field from the Options menu
I was surprised by how much I liked using Snaps text field to compose the body of an email before sending it to the mail app. I have no idea why, but writing an email without initially looking for the recipients email address, or navigating to a file attachment, feels more informal and fluid that composing directly inside of a mail client. Actually, thats true for all apps that take input from Snap, which is really the reason for its existence. I wish it did the same for Messaging, since I text message far more than I email from the Treo.
When sending a selection to the Tasks app, Snap logically interprets each line break (a line separated by a Return) as a separate task, so you can write a To Do list directly into the text field, but they will import into a single category. If you have multiple categories of task lists, youll have to import each task separately to assign an individual category to it.
Not surprisingly, sending the contents of the text field into Memo requires the least amount to manipulationselect your category, and youre done. You can also export to the old Doc format (available under the Options menu), which might be useful if youre pasting an article beyond Memos 4k limit.
SplashNotes
Beyond the vanilla PIM app buttons, theres a button to send selections to a trial version of one of Snaps grown-up cousins, SplashNotes. SplashNotes (formerly ThoughtManager under Hands High) is a robust outliner that I found quite addictive for brainstorming and organizing. As a regular user of Progect Manager, an open source equivalent, I appreciated SplashNotes Zen-of-Palm simplicity, though Progect wins on the sheer number of features (closer to Shadow Plan, but free). Im registering SplashNotes for its integration with Snap, and its superior desktop client. For a more in-depth look, be sure to read Jays TC review.
Conclusion
Its a relief to be able to enter data without being concerned with how to format it at the same time. This is an app Ill continue to use beyond the review. I completely love the idea, and almost completely love the execution. Snap could do with an update to optimize its interface for Treos, but the QWERTY and D-Pad functionality work well enough to do the job for now. For the price, its an excellent value.
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Pros |
Very easy to learn and use
Inexpensive
Smart formatting of notes into PIM databases
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Cons |
Optimized for stylus/Graffiti more than QWERTY/D-Pad
Maps to Memo button, nonexistent on Treos
No import to Messaging |
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