![]() ![]() ![]() For instance, if the search turns up an Apple Mail message and choose Open, you get a larger image rather than the email itself. You're not necessarily sharing what you actually looked for, though. You can find things you read and then from within Atlas Recall either open them or share them on to other iOS apps. There's also a little bug with logging in which means you have to remember to use all lowercase for your username even if you typed mixed upper- and lowercase when you signed up.Īll the iPhone app can do is show you your results from your Mac, too, but that turns out to be remarkably useful. Right now you can use the iPhone one on either phone or iPad but it's scaled up for the larger screens and looks terrible. We'll be happier too when there's an iPad version of the iOS companion app. It's possible that the service will even stay free for a period after it comes out of beta but we can't know that - and we can't get even approximate pricing now. Right now it has spent months in an open, free beta and the makers say it will continue to do so for some time. It's hard to see what will happen as more people use the service and that's another point here: Atlas Recall is a service. Mind you, since it takes screen-grabs all the time, the Atlas Recall database is growing and could presumably become unmanageably large on your Mac. Yet, for all its security, AWS is still a cloud and by definition is likely not as secure as keeping it all on your local disk. As clouds go, that's got to be among the most secure as myriad high-profile companies use it. You don't as yet get a choice of what cloud either: Atlas Recall uses Amazon's AWS. The first is security: this record of everything you're doing and looking at is stored within the app - and then on the cloud. There are a couple of issues that you have to think about but actually none that have stopped us using it. There are reasons to not want it to do that, though. ![]() ![]() When you remember a word or even just that it was a web page you read about a week ago, Atlas Recall nails it instantly. It's especially handy for half-remembered things. Nevertheless, Atlas Recall does work and it does make you faster. They must've asked workers with very secure jobs and highly patient bosses. You can exaggerate the benefits and the makers do: they claim that we each spend the equivalent of an entire day a week searching for things on our computers. What makes this app really worth having is that it makes you fast too. The fact that Atlas Recall remembers so much of what you're doing and the fact that its results are so visually clear is excellent. So for instance, Atlas Recall can find messages in Slack that Spotlight can't - while Apple's offering will conduct a new search on Wikipedia for you While you use them both for searching, what they each look for and what each they find is different. Each form of search does different things. Over time, though, Atlas Recall's main results should become indistinguishable from Spotlight yet this isn't about feature comparisons or waiting. We won't be able to test the Last Year option for many months yet. It would do because it's indexed your entire hard disk where Atlas Recall records things as you do them.Ĭonsequently, you can't have a lot of luck searching for something you did before you installed Atlas Recall. Spotlight is also likely to give you more results. While Spotlight doesn't show you images of every search result at once, as you click through its list of results it does display one individual image. All of which makes Atlas Recall sound perfect - and perfectly the same as Spotlight. This combination of simple searching, simple narrowing down those searches and the visual representation of results is excellent. ![]()
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