Google Keep is a free, web-based note-taking service that you can access on your phone and desktop. The app has a variety of tools for capturing ideas like text, lists, images, and audio. It can sync across devices and is integrated with Google Workspace so you can bring your notes into Google Slides, Docs, Sheets and more.
Google Keep is a useful tool for pooling phone code finland all your ideas at speed. If you’re not already familiar with it, it works as both a notepad and a canvas, allowing you to jot down, paste in, or draw whatever’s on your mind and return to it later. You can label your notes, archive them, add collaborators, and even attach photographs and links. Just be aware that images must be smaller than 10MB and 25 megapixels, putting a stopper on most high-res photographs.
Regardless, there’s no denying Google Keep is a handy feature of Google Workspace. And did you know that it also seamlessly integrates with your other Workspace apps? Take Google Slides for example, if you open up a new deck, you’ll find the Google Keep logo (a lightbulb in a yellow box) already in the quick-access toolbar on the right-hand side of your screen. If you click on it, it’ll open a tab with a chronological list of all the notes you’ve been making in Google Keep.
Screenshot of Google Slides with the Google Keep notes open
Once you’ve opened it, you can simply drag and drop your notes directly into your slides – images and all.
Here’s one way Google Keep could make your life a little easier. Let’s say you’re in an online meeting and everyone on the call is discussing the same slide deck. Perhaps you’ve been scribbling some diagrams using the ‘draw’ button in Google Keep to try and test some ideas – then, hey presto! – you’ve got it! Time to stop everyone in their tracks and show them how this could look on the page. All you’d need to do is tap the lightbulb button in your toolbar, drag your drawing into the slide, and let the ooh’s and aah’s commence.