Standard Notes is your private place for all your ideas, thoughts, and the work of your day. Standard Notes is also the simplest mobile notes app that you will ever use. That means a better, more reliable, longer-lasting experience. Standard Notes uses end to end encryption so: no one can read your notes from an unknown phone. The code also prevents the sending of sensitive information from one phone to another. This ensures that if your confidential information is intercepted, it can't be passed along to someone else.
Standard Notes comes with a simple, easy to use desktop widget that allows you to view your notes in landscape or portrait mode, tap to select a note and send it instantly, sort your saved notes and even export them as text documents. This widget is especially useful if you are on the go and don't want to use your phone's screen. For example, if you are at the gym and want to jot down a quick note about how your day is going, you can type the note into this tile. If you are on your way home from work, you can simply tap the tile and it will send a short email instead of a long note. If you don't like the widget or don't think you will be able to make good use of it on a regular basis, you can remove it by accessing the settings in the Android Market and enabling the "screen pinning" feature.
Standard Notes has some great features: free collaboration, advanced search functions, a free E-mail service, a built-in PDF viewer, the ability to organize all your notes into a single place, the ability to export everything as a Word document, and even a "stored state" that lets you remember what you were working on and make notes about the same thing later. However, its biggest shortcoming is that it's not as advanced as some of the other apps out there. It's hard to say whether this would be an improvement over Tagged, because in reality, none of these apps offers as many features as Standard Notes, but they do each have their strengths. If you use a lot of software to collaborate on projects, check it out; it's certainly worth looking at.