Skip to main content

Google Keep now automatically categorizes your notes by topic, location, and more

google keep automatic categorization drawing feature on galaxy s6
Digital Trends / Robert Nazarian
Google Keep, for the uninitiated, is a handy little app for Android, iOS, and the web that lets you jot down to-do lists, reminders, and anything else you want to remember later in a digital scrapbook. The free note-taking service has grown in scope since it debuted way back in March of 2013, and now it is gaining a major new feature: automatic note sorting.

Starting today, Google will analyze the content of Keep notes and organize them topically. Have a few future grocery lists and ideas for weeknight dinners out? You will find those collated under a single “food” tab. Create a few reminders while on vacation in Tahiti? You might see those organized by location. And if you regularly use key phrases like “pack for trip,” “note to self,” or “quote of the day,” you will see those digital post-its coalesce under more specific categories like “travel” and “quotes.”

combine_images
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The addition of automatic categorization may just make Keep one the most robust note-taking apps out there. Already, notes in Keep can be patterned differently and labeled in unique colors, and they support the attachment of pics, sound clips, and even doodles. Keep has reminders, too — you can set notes to recur on certain days of the week, too, or even appear when you reach specific physical places and geographic locations. And notes within Keep can be shared with friends and family.

And Keep continues to get better. In April, Google launched a Chrome extension for Keep that allows you to add websites and notes on mobile without having to open the Keep app. It introduced hashtags, too — tag a post-it with “#recipes,” for example, and a future search for that tag in the app’s omnipresent search bar will surface the tagged post.

 

Google Keep’s gains may be a competitor’s losses. Evernote, a rival productivity suite, this week announced that non-paying users of its services would be restricted to two devices, and hiked the price of its premium tiers. Considering that Keep has no such restrictions, and that a 2013 MIT Technology Review comparison of Keep and Evernote found the two platforms fairly comparable, that is nothing but good news for Google.

Google Keep’s new automatic categorization is live on the webAndroid, and iOS.

Editors' Recommendations

Kyle Wiggers
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kyle Wiggers is a writer, Web designer, and podcaster with an acute interest in all things tech. When not reviewing gadgets…
Google Play Store helps find the apps invading your privacy
Instagram app on the Google Play Store on an Android smartphone.

Google has implemented a feature that requires app makers to disclose what data their apps are taking from users. Starting today, Android users will be able to see specific information about their apps' data collection through the Google Play Store. The data is accessible in the Play Store via the "Data Safety" tab listed in the information section for all apps.

With Google's announcement that the feature's rollout is live, the company notes that not all apps will be showing what privacy data they collect immediately. App makers have until July 20, 2022, to provide the Play Store with privacy information, making the feature something of a gradual rollout. It's likely that apps that take more types of data (like social media apps) will take longer to post the required info due to the sheer number of data points they collect when compared to something simpler such as an offline game.

Read more
The best note-taking apps for iOS and Android
best note-taking apps 2

Taking notes with your phone or tablet is a convenient way of staying organized. You can use your device to create to-do lists, keep track of important appointments, or even take notes during classes and meetings.

Apps like Bear, SimpleNote, Quip, and others allow you to write, draw, share your notes, and add files to your notes. Choosing the right app to take notes on the go will ensure you never fail to record anything important. We've picked some of the best note-taking apps available.
Evernote

Read more
Google Fi: Phones, plans, pricing, perks, and more explained
project fi

In 2015, Google launched Project Fi, a mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) compatible with Nexus and Pixel smartphones (and the Motorola Moto X4). Three years later, the company announced the project had been brought directly under Google's branding with a name change to "Google Fi." Since then, Google's MVNO has gone from strength to strength, and today, it is compatible with the majority of Android devices, and it even works with iPhones.

Here's everything you need to know about Google Fi, including plan pricing, phones that are compatible with Google Fi, and more.
Google Fi at a glance

Read more