You can then choose to email or text the digitized document, upload it to iCloud, share it via AirDrop, or save it to your Evernote account, where it becomes searchable. Business cards, on the other hand, are automatically associated with their owners' LinkedIn accounts and photos, assuming you're logged in. Finally, the app doubles as a controller for the ScanSnap Evernote Edition scanner, so you can quickly go through pages you need to process if, say, your office owns one. Evernote's Scannable is now on iTunes (some readers within and outside the US told us they can't access it -- we'll update this post once we've confirmed if it's a limited release) * though the company says it plans to develop versions for other platforms.

Update (01/08/15): An Evernote spokesperson told us there was an issue with the App Store earlier. Scannable is on iTunes now, and it's available worldwide for free.