5 awesome Google Keep features you aren't using, but should be

Google Keep is not preinstalled on all phones, which is a real bummer. It's one 
of the most focused and useful apps in Google's arsenal. On the surface it's a 
stylish basic note taking app, but dig deeper and it ties into several other 
Google services, making it easier to get things done. Here are five ways to 
unleash the amazing power of Google Keep.

Shopping list by voice

Add items to your shopping list without even touching the phone.

Keep is great for making lists, for example a shopping list. If you actually 
title one of your lists "shopping list," you can add new items to it without 
even opening the app. It's a simple matter of pulling up your Google voice 
search by tapping the mic in the search bar or using the "OK Google" hotword.

Just say, "Add to my shopping list," and you'll get a cool Google Now card that 
lets you list items one after another. When you're done, say "finished" or 
"that's it" to have everything you've added inserted into your shopping list 
note. You can also add single items in a single step by saying, "Add [item] to 
my shopping list." It's a remarkably well-developed feature.

Reminders

Reminders in your Keep notes show up in Google Now too.

Down at the bottom of each note in Keep is a "Remind me" button. You might 
never have paid attention to it because you already have reminders on your 
phone via Google Now. However, this feature is actually tightly integrated with 
Google Now.

When you tap the reminder button, you have the option of setting a time or 
location reminder. With the time, you just pick when you want a reminder 
notification pushed. For a location-based reminder, type in an address or the 
name of a location, and your device will remind you when you are nearby. All 
the reminders you set in Keep are accessible in Google Now—it's the same 
system. You have the added bonus of getting the note text right there in the 
reminder when you set it through Keep.

Sharing lists

Collaborate with shared Keep notes.

Most apps use the same terminology and icons for sharing content on Android, 
but Keep is a bit different. It has both sharing and sending, and they mean 
different things. Sending is what you'd normally think of as sharing in other 
apps—taking the content from your note and pushing it to another app. That's in 
the overflow menu in Keep. Sharing, on the other hand, refers to making one of 
your lists available to someone else in Google Keep.

Sharing a list allows one of your contacts to read and edit a note. It's a 
great way to keep track of chores or a shopping list (don't forget the voice 
features). To share a list, tap the contact plus button at the top of the 
screen, then enter a contact's name or email address. They'll get a message 
asking them to accept the invitation to manage the note. You can open the 
sharing menu again at any time to remove someone from the note as well.

Get text from images

Use OCR to make the text from a photo editable in Keep.

Did you know images can be inserted into Keep notes? That's pretty 
straightforward, but what about extracting the text from those images? Keep can 
do that too, and it's a really useful feature. For example, you just snap a 
photo of someone's business card or a sign, then have keep turn it into 
editable text.

The first step is getting an image in Keep. You can add a photo to a new note 
with the camera button at the bottom of the screen. Either snap a new image or 
import one you've already taken (these can be screenshots as well). For 
existing notes, the image option is in the overflow menu.

Once you've got the pic in Keep, open the overflow menu and select "Grab image 
text." Google Keep runs optical character recognition on the image (which takes 
a couple seconds) and adds the text under the image.

Send to Docs

Move an entire Keep note to a new Google Doc for more advanced editing.

With all the widgets, voice commands, image imports, and so on, your Keep notes 
might start to get a little ungainly. If you want to use that text for 
something more intricate, Keep isn't the best environment. Luckily, you can get 
all the text in a note into a Google Drive document in one step.

Open the note you want to transfer to Docs, and go into the overflow menu. At 
the bottom you'll see "Copy to Google Doc." This option grabs all your text and 
images, then transfers them to a new Google Doc. The original note is left 
untouched, and you can truly say you have mastered Google Keep.

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