
Box also isn’t storing the email but just the file attachments.

You do this by navigating to the folder you want, then click on the More dropdown, then go to Folder Properties > Email Options. In Box you have to enable a folder to allow uploads via email.

Auto-filing will look for similar notes inside your account and apply the same notebook and tags. what’s really cool about EverNote is it’s auto-filing feature for email. Then use the tag as the type of document: RFIs, Submittals, Photos, Specifications, Revisions, Sets, etc. The syntax for emailing to EverNote using the Email Subject is: ! If you have a few projects going, you’re probably have separate notebooks for each project. If you need help finding your email to EverNote address you can get complete instructions from in their knowledge base. You can obtain your EverNote email address from your account information then control where the note is stored by specifying it in the email subject line. Obviously, you’ll want to clear this with your IT department as company policy may limit where documents can reside. Then I’ll show you how to make a script and pin it to the tool bar of your choice. First, let’s look at the details of how to send PDF’s directly to your favorite mobile file storage app. Obviously Bluebeam has an iPad app but nothing on Android or on the iPhone for that matter. So what makes this a Bluebeam Tip? I’ve created a script for each app ( available in Bluebeam Revu Extreme only) and pinned it to my tool bar. It’s likely you are sharing these PDFs so you can use hyperlinked documents on all your mobile devices. Going mobile and paperless is part of the Bluebeam experience so how do you send your PDFs to mobile devices? You can use the email options of EverNote, DropBox and Box.
