3 iOS Apps To Help You Go Paperless

Vern Seward Goes Paperless

That’s a lot of paper!

Even so, consumers have reduced the amount of paper they use. In fact, people in North America consumed 20% less paper in 2009 than they did in 2005. A lot of factors could contribute to that decrease including the increased use of plastic, a non-renewable resource. Still, it can be reasoned that going paperless can have an effect.

Personally, I would love to reduce the size of the mountain of paper I use, store, or throw away daily. Just dealing with receipts is enough to drive me batty. Then there’s business cards, snail mail, handwritten notes, napkins, paper bags (to hide my beer), contracts, agreements, and on and on.

Going completely paperless is tough to do, maybe even impossible, but every un-needed sheet of new paper is a bit of an old tree saved, and here are three iOS apps that might make saving whole trees a tad easier.

Let me say up front that I haven’t had a chance to play with these apps fully so I can’t say how good they are after long term use, so I’ll only speak to the apparent usefulness (or lack thereof) and offer what little opinion I have based on my limited playing.

myWill
You need a will! Yes, you! You may be young or in the best health of your life, but you really could use a will. Not to get morbid on you, but if you’re reading this while walking your next step could be your last. And there you’d be without that piece of paper that everyone gathers around after you’re gone to see how much you liked them while you were alive.

I’m kidding, of course, you’ll likely live a long a happy life, but, just like taxes, your eventual quietus is the only other sure thing. A will can make sure that your wishes for the disposition of the stuff you own and for what you owe gets taken care of according to…, well, your will. It’s a legal document that you’d think you’d have to visit a lawyer to create. Not so. And as many iOS users are wont to say, “there’s an app for that!”

myWill

myWill is a simple iOS app that walks you through the process of creating a basic last will and testament that, if executed correctly, is recognized by most municipalities. You fire up the app and answer some rather pointed questions, and after a bit you have a document that describes how you want things done in the even of your timely or untimely demise.

I’ve played with it a bit and it looks super easy to use. Be warned that the app can’t create more than a very basic will, and it explains that, so be sure to read everything before you start creating.

It’s ad free, easy to use and free. What’s not to like about myWill?

Steno Lite
There are many occasions when I need to push out a form email or message, one that’s contains similar information, but the variables, such as recipients, times, dates, and places are different. I keep a short list of note templates and update the variables, then mail them when I need to. That may well change with Steno Lite.

Steno LiteForm letter ready for your variables in Steno Lite

This app handles the heavy lifting when sending form messages, all you have to do is provide the details. The Lite version gives you four note templates to play with, and a bunch of variable, they call placeholders, to get you going.

Where would you use Steno Lite? If you routinely send a specific type of email, like reminders to clients, direction or instructions, queries, and such then Steno Lite could be what you’re looking for.

Be warned that the Lite version only allows you to send 20 messages. That should be adequate to see if it’s useful to you. It is also ad supported. Presumably buying the full version gets rid of the ads.

SignNow
Lets say you’ve got a PDF or other document in you inbox and it requires your signature. What you’d normally have to do is print it out to sign it, then scan it back in to send it back via email. There are others ways around this, but they tend to be just as kludgy. What you need is a simple, elegant way to sign your documents electronically. What you may need is SignNow.

SignNow

As the name implies, SignNow lets you sign virtual documents …, um,… virtually. No muss or fuss. Pop open a PDF or other doc type in SignNow, tap where you want to sign, position and size your hen scratching, hit “OK” and there ya go. The app lets you create the perfect sig then stores it for future use. You can also insert text anyplace you need to.

The result is a PDF file that you can send via email or save to a free SignNow account that looks professionally typed and manually signed. While I like the idea of being able to save my signed document to a cloud I don’t like that I have to use SignNow’s cloud. I can’t even save it locally, I have to send it to SignNow or email it to myself to save it. Not cool.

Still, It’s simple and works great and that’s one less tree that needs to be harvested.

That’s a wrap for this week. More free paper saving apps below with direct links.

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