In a large sea of collaboration tools, Notable is certainly a refreshing one. It is simple, easy to use, and above all very helpful web based application to each team member. It relies on visual feedback instead of boring textual emails and messages which most of the time get overlooked or finish in junk mail and you forget about them. It takes team collaboration straight up to the next level.
Sure, many people will say why do we need to use this application when we already have similar tools in our work flow. Yes that is true, but you have to switch back and forth between those tools in order to accomplish something that with Notable can be accomplished much easier and in fewer steps. What is also more important, your feedback on certain subject will be in correct context and that means fewer mistakes and additional questions.

Notable - Easy feedback
Notable is also supporting iPhone and it is super easy to make feedback through it. You can fire up the Notable iPhone application, sign in, and start collaborating. Upload images from your camera roll, take screen shots, or send sketches, mockups, pictures, and anything else you have on it. Mobile Safari and App Store developers are probably ones that will appreciate that option the most.
Organization is is done through sets, workspaces, and history. While all things can be organized that way, there is also an option to avoid all that and simply track activity feed on the dashboard. Other than that, history will give you precious information about the work flow in the past, and it will all be recorded online and on one place, so you won’t need to dig through endless emails and messages in your inbox or other tools you might be using. Of course, user permissions are on board so you can delegate who does what around and restrict access accordingly.

Notable - History
Unfortunately for some people, Notable comes with a price tag attached, but there is a free plan option which contains only one private workspace, unlimited sets, 3 GB of storage, iPhone App, and maximum 3 users on board. For a small team or one individual it should be more than enough while bigger teams will probably need stronger plans.

