

What OneNote adds is that one additional level of slicing which is great. This is very different than only seeing what I want from the start. For example, I first have to see everything and then filter on what I want. True, most apps allow tagging and additional methods of sorting and searching, but all require an extra level of effort and difficulty around managing the content.

Everything in the folder is more or less the same. I can't file meeting notes together, or specs, or anything else. All the items inside of that folder are at the same level. This allows you to create two categorizations, a bunch of folders filled with a bunch of stuff.įor example, if I create a folder for each project I manage. Every single one I've seen allows two basic methods of categorization. I've tried numerous tools from Evernote to YoJimbo, through just about every list of suggested apps. OneNote has just a wonderful amount of tabs, well only three to be precise, but it is exactly the extra level of slicing that I need. I imagine the developers of OneNote went to Steve Ballmer and asked him his thoughts in a rant that only Ballmer can do, he danced around screaming Tabs. The latest Office update I got came with OneNote so I gave it a shot, turns out it is a fantastic tool! Lately, I've been using VMware Workstation on my Mac so I can run Outlook and properly schedule a meeting. I recently tried out Microsoft OneNote, I've heard great things about the tool previously but being a Mac user for so long I didn't have the opportunity to use it. Misc Why Microsoft OneNote kicks so much note taking ass! Why Microsoft OneNote kicks so much note taking ass! - mkaz.blog mkaz.blog Site
