

The ScanSnap even compensates for misaligned or downright crooked scans. I just started scanning and figured it out as I went.
As long as it is not thicker than normal paper or even light card stock, you can scan it. The ScanSnap handles paper of all sizes up to 8½ inches wide. There’s almost nothing you can’t scan into Evernote. I had everything from receipts, to bills, invitations, and multi-page manuals and white papers. I had about a foot-high stack of loose papers when I started. If this doesn’t apply to you, just skim past these images to Step #3. In case you have to do this yourself, here is what my Settings look like.

However, once it is setup, it is as simple as inserting your paper and pushing a button. Fujitsu needs to make this process easier. I had to setup an Evernote profile manually. I tried it on two different computers with the same results each time. This saves you the step of scanning into a PDF and then importing into Evernote-a huge timesaver. Fujitsu, Canon, and Lexmark all make models that sync directly to Evernote. Here’s how you can do the same thing in seven steps: Instead, I scan all loose papers-receipts, invitations, business cards, bills, warranties, letters, and even entire seminar notebooks-directly into Evernote. No more stacks of paper sitting on my desk or credenza. This has been the single biggest clutter-buster for me. In this post, I want to explain how to use a scanner with Evernote.
