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OneNote and Les Miserables fan? Then watch this great parody

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OneNote Mac

Microsoft's OneNote team has been kicking ass lately. A few weeks ago they introduced a new set of APIs for developers to tie into the OneNote service. In addition there's a new app for Mac users and the desktop version of OneNote on Windows was made free. Check out this pretty amazing parody from the OneNote team of the song "One Day More" from the musical Les Miserables. Video Yes. This was a video from Microsoft promoting a product for Mac.

As if you needed any more proof that Microsoft is now a devices and services company. We loved the video and thought it was awesome. Share your thoughts below!

Source: YouTube Via: GeekWire


Microsoft releases OneNote Clipper for Chrome, Springpad migration tool

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Microsoft releases OneNote Clipper for Chrome, Springpad migration tool

Microsoft has released a Chrome extension for their note-taking app OneNote called OneNote Clipper. You can install the extension either by going to the OneNote website, or the Chrome Web Store. From there, OneNote Clipper lets you save webpages and clips to OneNote to be viewed later.

But that's not all. Microsoft is also releasing a migration tool for Springpad users, letting them move their Springpad content over to OneNote. Springpad announced its shutdown last month, with service shutting down on June 25. Users can download their data in a ZIP file. To migrate their data to OneNote, users will will upload file to Microsofts migration tool, and Microsoft will notify you when the upload is complete. Springpad users will not need to sign up for OneNote to get their first notebook.

What do you think of OneNote Clipper for Chrome, and will any of you Springpad users be making the move to OneNote? Tell us below in the comments.

Source: OneNote, SpringPad to OneNote, via TheNextWeb

Microsoft's OneNote team offers the world their Surface Pro 3-LMFAO parody video

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onenote parody

The OneNote development team at Microsoft has released a video that ... well, may be among the oddest but still entertaining things we have seen from a major corporation in a while. It shows how the note taking app can be used with the new Surface Pro 3, but with a electronic house music beat set to the tune of "I'm Sexy and I Know It" by LMFAO.

The video itself features things like a man with a purple colored afro wig singing about how everyone should use the OneNote on the new 12-inch Surface Pro 3. These scenes are combined with images like a man with a box on his head and a Star Trek: The Next Generation uniform on his body, two men juggling apples and lots more.

This is not the first time the OneNote development team have made a wacky video. They also released a clip celebrating the release of OneNote for the Mac to the tune of "One More Day" from the Broadway musical version of Les Misérables. However, this latest clip makes the former one look downright normal by comparison.

Yet, we can't help the fact that this video is kind of entertaining and may actually show off how the OneNote app works with the Surface Pro 3 better than Microsoft's other "official" videos about the tablet. What do you think of this clip?

Source: OneNote on YouTube via Neowin

OneNote app for Windows 8.1/RT updated with long awaited printing support and more

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onenote

Owners of Windows 8.1 and Windows RT devices can now download a new version of Microsoft's OneNote note taking app from the Windows Store that finally adds printing support, along with a number of other new features.

Printing notes should arguably have been added to the OneNote app long before today, but at least it's now available for Windows 8.1 and RT users. Microsoft says, "With this update, it's a breeze to print your notes, and OneNote supports all of the features you'd expect including beautiful full color page previews, portrait and landscape orientations, multiple copies, duplex printing, and more."

In addition, the OneNote update now allows for file attachment support so users can save documents in their notes. Also, the app now allows for PDF printouts, with Microsoft saying, " ... students can read slides, assignments, and more directly in OneNote and annotate them with ink or text."

Finally, there's a new highlighter tool, with Microsoft saying, "Highlighter is now included in the radial menu next to the four pen styles, and you can customize the color and thickness to your liking. This feature is especially useful when combined with PDF printouts." What do you think of these improvements that have been made to the OneNote Windows 8.1/RT app?

OneNote for Windows 8 receives an update - Office 365 support and more

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Today Microsoft’s OneNote team announced an update for their Windows Store application, adding two new features. The first addition to the app allows users to easily sign in with their Office 365 accounts to open up and edit notes from work. The second addition allows users to easily dismiss the touch screen keyboard while working.

To open one of your Office 365 notebooks in OneNote, start the application and select the “More Notebooks” option in the upper right corner. Next, select “Add a work or school account” at the bottom of the screen.

If you find yourself working in OneNote and want to dismiss the touch screen keyboard to view what you have written, you can now tap any of the empty space in the notebook to dismiss the keyboard. We find it odd that this feature was never included in the original release as it seems to be a no brainer – at least we have it now.

You can grab the latest update for OneNote by clicking here in the Windows Store.

Are you a OneNote user or do you still rely on a third party service like Evernote – why?

Source: OneNote Blog

Join Microsoft’s free Tuesday webinar to learn about Office Web Apps

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This week Microsoft will be teaching users how to use the free browser versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote. The webinar itself will be completely free and last 15 minutes in total.

To join in,  Windows 7 and Windows 8 users can use the free Lync Web App by clicking here. Others may call in to the webinar at 1-888-320-3585 with conference ID #84172528.

The webinar will start at 9:15 AM PST and will end with a Question and Answer session. The session will focus on getting started with Office Web Apps, five new features for the Excel web app, and how to share web apps including the ability to make documents publicly available.

For more details, please visit the Office Web Apps blog, here.

Anyone intend on attending tomorrow’s webinar?

Source: Office Web Apps Blog

10 Years of Microsoft OneNote: "One place for all of your notes."

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Happy Birthday OneNote - 10 Years

We are approaching the 10th birthday of Microsoft’s information gathering application, OneNote. The first edition of OneNote to be released was OneNote 2003 in November of the same year. If you are like me, you may not have been introduced to Microsoft’s info application until only a few years ago when the company decided to include it in all versions of Office 2010.

Today, after almost 10 years of OneNote’s existence, the app is available on a variety of platforms including Windows, iOS, Android, Windows Phone, and Symbian (surprise!). In addition, as part of Microsoft’s Office Web App suite, OneNote is available online and can be accessed from a variety of modern web browsers (although, it does work best in IE).

OneNote allows users to collection text input, tables, pictures, hand sketches, and more into a digital notebook collection. Notebooks are further divided into sections, and each section can have an unlimited number of pages to them.

There is also a free version of Microsoft OneNote available, OneNote MX, which can be downloaded from the Windows Store and used on Windows 8/RT machines. It takes the standard desktop application and optimizes it for use on tablets and other touch screen devices. In terms of Windows 8/RT, OneNote is the only Microsoft Office application to have its own optimized Windows 8 application.

For heavy Microsoft users, OneNote works flawlessly between various devices thanks to the integration of SkyDrive. Users can create a notebook on their PC and easily access and edit it from their Windows Phone thanks to the built in Microsoft Office suite.

Other popular contenders exist alongside OneNote including Evernote; a popular suite of software that can also store text and media in a notebook like form. Unlike Microsoft’s OneNote – Evernote can be obtained for no cost and then upgraded to a Premium account later for more features.

You can download OneNote MX for free on your Windows 8/RT device by clicking here.

Are you onboard the OneNote train or do you prefer the Evernote Express?

Have the pens at the ready; OneNote receives massive update for Windows 8.1

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OneNote Windows 8

Microsoft has today released an update to the OneNote app on Windows 8. The update adds new features and improvements, including note capture with the Share Charm, scanning of items with the camera and the display of recent notes with Page Previews. It's a fairly sizeable upgrade, so hop on past the break to learn what's new in the latest release.

This Share Charm integration adds OneNote to the list of apps that can be utilised when attempting to share something on-screen, saving the information in a new note that can be viewed on all devices with OneNote connected. This isn't restricted to mere Windows 8 apps, however. You can even share stuff from the browser, on the desktop and elsewhere. OneNote will display a preview of the screenshot before saving.

OneNote

Capture the world with OneNote

The next feature to join screenshot sharing is Camera Scan. This handy new functionality enables you to capture documents, magazines and whiteboards. OneNote will then automatically crop, rotate, straighten and work some magic with the image to make it look like a scanned document. Simply select Camera Scan from the radial menu from within OneNote and you're good to go.

OneNote

But how does one find text within a scanned document or screenshot? This is where OCR (Optical Character Recognition) comes in. OCR even allows you copy the text out of a document and use it in future use, check out the below video to see it all in action:

Since OneNote is available on all platforms, you're able to remain on top of exactly what you've got stored in the OneNote cloud. Recent Notes displays all your notes in the order of last edit, regardless as to which device it was created or last edited on. Page Previews takes this listing slightly further with a quick look at text, images and ink content.

This helps you browse through your collection without losing time to viewing all your notes, particularly useful when in a rush.

OneNote Ink

Spice up your notes with improved Ink support

For you ink fans, Microsoft has improved Ink support to help you create some unique notes. It's now possible to take notes in colour and choose desired thickness. What's more is you can also use the ol' finger to work some magic in a more natural environment. 

Lastly, full screen mode will help you enjoy your notes, which is automatically selected on smaller devices. Should you be on a larger device, simply swipe up and select full screen. 

If that wasn't enough, the team has also addressed bugs and improved performance. You can download OneNote from the Windows Store, should you not already have the app installed.

Source: OneNote Blog


Office Lens takes text from your camera to OneNote

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Office Lens

Office Lens for Windows Phone 8 is a beta app that lets you snap pictures of text and turn them into OneNote notes. Using OCR technology, Office Lens instantly recognizes text in documents, business cards, and even whiteboards, and then converts them into searchable electronic files. It is also one of the features that was listed as part of the Windows Phone 8.1 SDK late last week.

The app has two different settings. Whiteboard mode removes glares and shadows from writing surfaces, while Document mode captures the text and color and fits trims them to size.

Here's a glimpse of Office Lens' controls

Both allow you to save directly to your camera roll or Microsoft OneNote, where you can organize and share your scans.

Office Lens is currently in internal beta testing, but you can keep an eye out for the app going public here in the Windows Phone Store.

Thanks, rdw, for the tip!

QR: Office Lens

Microsoft introduces new OneNote APIs, free desktop apps for Mac and Windows

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OneNote API

OneNote is one of the best note taking service out there right now. There’s competition from apps like Evernote and Wunderlist, but OneNote is still an exceptional product from Microsoft. It gets better and better as time goes on. Not only as an individual app, but as a service. Today Microsoft is announcing three big changes coming to OneNote.

OneNote is now out for Mac, is now free everywhere and there’s a new OneNote API for developers to tap into.

OneNote now available for Mac

Starting today we’re truly getting OneNote everywhere. We’ve had OneNote built into Windows Phone since the dawn of the OS. There’s also a killer desktop application for Windows users and a touch friendly one on Windows 8. You of course can get apps for iPhone, iPad and Android. And last but not least, your OneNote content is available anywhere online through your web browser.

Now OneNote is available for Mac and is free. Like all other OneNote experiences, the Mac version will stay in sync with your other devices.

Now free on the desktop for Windows users

It would be a little asinine for Microsoft to keep the desktop OneNote app for Windows as a paid offering now that OneNote is free on Mac. Which is why starting today, you can download OneNote for the desktop without needing to buy an Office product. It’s free and available to all.

Having free desktop apps for OneNote on Windows and Mac is big news, but it gets even better for fans.

OneNote cloud API

There’s a new OneNote cloud API that will allow Microsoft, partners, and developers to build and connect to OneNote. The new API will enable a completely new OneNote experience as it developers build new experiences and connect their apps.

Microsoft and select partners already have been working on new applications for the OneNote cloud API. Here’s what you can look forward to doing soon thanks to the new APIs. It’ll also give you an idea as a user what developers might be able to do with the new OneNote API. And if you’re a developer, you might want to start thinking of creating innovative and unique hooks for your apps with the new OneNote API.

  • A web clipper for saving web pages to your OneNote notebook
  • me@onenote.com for emailing notes to your OneNote notebook
  • Office Lens for capturing documents and whiteboards with your phone
  • Send blog and news articles to OneNote from Feedly and News360
  • Easy document scanning to OneNote with Brother, Doxie Go, Epson, Neat
  • Write notes with pen and paper and send them OneNote with Livescribe
  • Mobile document scanning to OneNote with Genius Scan and JotNot
  • Connect your world to OneNote with IFTTT

OneNote API

Obviously there are some exciting new features that we’ll be tapping into thanks to the new OneNote API. For example, Microsoft is releasing a browser extension that will allow you to save web pages to OneNote. Or you can send blog and news articles to OneNote from services like Weave, IFTTT,  Feedly (check out Phonly on Windows Phone) and News360. Check out the full list of compatible apps on OneNote's website

Home office scanners from companies like Brother, Doxie Go, Epson and Neat will easily be able to send scanned documents to your OneDrive notebook. Or you can use Livescribe’s innovative note taking products to create notes with pen and paper that automatically go to your OneNote. 

And finally, we’re super excited to see Office Lens integrate with OneNote, which has just launched on the store. At the time it was undergoing an internal beta test at Microsoft. Office Lens will allow you to snap pictures of text and turn them into notes for OneNote. It’ll leverage the power of optical character recognition (OCR) software to turn those images into recognizable text. We’re very excited to see this come to Windows Phone and presumably other platforms. Sharing notes with classmates just got a whole lot easier. Go ahead and download Office Lens for Windows Phone

The possibilities are endless with the new APIs and we’re very optimistic about the future of OneNote. Head to the OneNote website to grab the web clipper, set up your sending an email to yourself and more! Or if you're a developer, just jump directly to the development portal on OneNote's website

What are you looking forward to? Sound off below and share some creative ideas that you’d like to see with OneNote integration.  

Source: Office Blog, OneNote

Weave newsreader teams up with Microsoft, delivers OneNote sharing for all users

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Weave newsreader has been on Windows Phone since 2010 and is one of our go-to apps for keeping track of news or topics of interest (there’s also a swanky Windows 8 app for your Surface or PC). Last week, we covered a significant update that brought Pocket support for saving articles. At the time, we hinted that there was room for “one more share button” and we now have the answer as to what that’s for: OneNote.

Microsoft and Weave had teamed up to use their new OneNote API, which gives developers the ability to integrate OneNote into their apps. Weave is one of those apps, and one of the first to do so. Even better? There’s no update, just open up Weave right now, and it will be there under the Share button. Surprise!

Tapping the OneNote button will take you to a login screen, where you can enter in your Microsoft Account info (you only need to do it one time). That’s part of the new API function, and it is essentially you giving Weave permission to post to your OneNote (but crucially, not read).

Once you do so, you can then just one-tap to save to your OneNote for later viewing. Images, media and the entire article as seen in Weave is saved. While perhaps not as focused as Pocket, using OneNote in this manner (combined with Office Lens), makes Windows Phone quite a powerful media recorder.

Watch the above video to see it all in action and explained by Microsoft.

Weave comes in two versions: free (ad-supported, with no ads throughout March) or paid ($9.99). You can also grab the free Windows 8 version, so that you can read everything, everywhere.

Let us know how it’s working for you and how you plan to use it in your daily life! (Remember, there is no Store update as the OneNote API was basically 'turned on' in your Weave app).

QR: weave free     QR: weave paid

OneNote team announces future APIs, wants your feedback

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OneNote APIs

Last week the OneNote team at Microsoft was very busy. On Monday they announced a handful of new products and changes. OneNote is now available (and free) for the desktop on both Windows and Mac. Office Lens is a new OneNote application for Windows Phone. And finally, the team introduced a host of new APIs for both hardware and software products to tie into OneNote. Those APIs were just the beginning. The OneNote team is already working on additional APIs to expand functionality even more.

Head on over to the OneNote blog and you’ll see a list of upcoming APIs the team is working on. They plan to have these available to developers in 3-6 months from now. But they also want your feedback. Like the APIs? Want different ones? Let them know on their UserVoice page.

Here’s the list of upcoming APIs the OneNote team hopes to have available:

  • PDF Rendering
  • Improved error codes
  • API to create in a specific notebook and section
  • API to create a notebook
  • API to create a section
  • API to do whole page replacement
  • API to get default location
  • Checkbox and other tag support
  • API to delete a notebook, delete a section and delete a page
  • API to recall list of pages
  • API to recall page content
  • API to recall images across notebooks or within a notebook

Office Lens

The OneNote team has an idea of which APIs to prioritize over others, but they’d love to hear what you want too. Be sure to hit up that UserVoice and let your voice be heard.

As a user, what features would you like to see soonest? Sound off below!

Source: OneNote

Office Lens or CamScanner, which will prevail?

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While many of us are trying to live in a completely digital world, much of civilization has yet to catch up with us trendy hipsters. Whether you are a student trying to manage the stacks of papers that your professors throw at you or you are a business person trying to clear off your desk – digitizing your papers are a great way to simplify your life.

Up until recently, CamScanner has been seen as the number one application to scan your physical documents on the go, but Microsoft’s recent release of Office Lens might change the landscape. The Office Lens application has already hit the top of the Windows Phone Marketplace, but we are going to take a detailed look at the two competitors to see who really deserves the number one spot.

CamScanner

As CamScanner came first to the marketplace, we will begin with it in our comparison of the two apps. In fact, CamScanner’s own origins began before it landed on Microsoft’s Windows Phone platform; it is also currently available on Android, iPhone, and iPad. Downloading CamScanner is completely free, but premium features are available as we will mention shortly.

Upon opening the application, you will be prompted to sign in or create a new account for the CamScanner website. If you have never used the app, the setup process is quick and simple – otherwise, hit the login button to access your current account.

The menu system within the app is quite simple and easy to use. The application opens with a list of all of your currently scanned documents, but you can swipe to the side to view your documents via various tags. If you notice some of your past documents missing, you can open the settings menu at the bottom and select the “sync” ability.

One of our favorite features of CamScanner is the fact that your documents can be grouped into different collections; this ability can be extremely useful when scanning a packet of information or if you wish to keep specific scans grouped together.

To begin a scan, simply hit the “plus” button at the bottom of the app’s home screen and you will be launched into camera mode. There are two buttons at the bottom of the screen allowing you to control flash operation or import photos from your phone’s library.

Taking shots of documents is extremely quick and once you scan a single document it moves on and allows you to take the next shot. Using this method, you can easily scan through a large amount of information. Once you are done taking photos, you can select the “checkmark” symbol at the bottom of the screen.

You will then be brought through a review phase, where you can size and crop the photos you have just taken. CamScanner automatically attempts to find the edges of the document you are scanning and while it does not work all the time, we found it worked for the vast majority. You can also easily rotate photos for correct alignment if you happened to take a photo with your phone upside down.

Once you have finished cropping your photos and you select the “checkmark” symbol, this is where the magic beings. CamScanner automatically applies a high contrast filter to the documents you scan, which makes the text extremely readable. Besides the default “Magic Color” mode that the application applies by default, there are also “lighten”, “black and white”, and “greyscale” modes. If you are extremely picky, you can adjust the exact amount of brightness, contrast, and “magic” (which, appears to also be a form of contrast control). Once finished, hit the “checkmark” button and you are finished.

While viewing collections of previously scanned documents, you can sort files or share them with friends via a PDF in an email or via an image using the default Windows Phone share menu. CamScanner is designed to be a completely one stop solution for your document managing needs and provides safe backup to the CamScanner website.

While the service is free and users are given 200 MB of free cloud storage, you can also upgrade your account to premium for $4.99 a month or $49.99 a year. The premium ability adds automatic OCR conversion, allows you to share documents with up to 50 people, removes all ads and watermarking, enables text extraction, unlimited annotations, password protected document sharing links, and much more.

For more details on CamScanner you can visit their website by clicking here. Additionally, you can download the application from the Windows Phone Marketplace by clicking here or scanning the QR code above.

Office Lens

Microsoft’s addition to the document scanning space comes in the form of the recently released, Office Lens. While CamScanner can be seen as a completely independent app for scanning and document storage, the Office Lens app serves as more of a companion app to OneNote.

When you launch Office Lens, you are immediately presented with the camera. There are no menus to go through or buttons to click – opening the app gives you access to the scanning function right away. Four buttons are present on the screen: a library button to view your previously scanned content, a flash control button, a mode button, and the camera shutter button. You can also access the settings menu below to easily change settings, save snapshots, and import photos from your device’s library.

Unlike CamScanner, which simply takes a photo of your document and begins conversion, you can set a specific mode within Office Lens to allow the app to know what you are scanning. Three modes are bundled including photo mode, whiteboard mode, and document mode. Photo mode seems to boost contrast and saturation, while the latter two modes seem to boost mainly contrast. The whiteboard mode is supposed to remove glare that could be caused by plastic whiteboards, and while it seems to work most of the time, your mileage may vary.

After taking a photo in document mode, you are given the ability to crop the document out, but the method is not as precise as within CamScanner. Office Lens also includes the ability to automatically detect your scanned document and we found it to work just as well as CamScanner.

As far as the changes made to the photo we took – we were not impressed. While the application did increase the contrast a bit, shadows and paper cringes were still evident. In many ways, while CamScanner actually seemed to create a digital version of the document, Office Lens simply looks like a picture taken with any phone (app or no app).

When it comes to sharing your content and managing it, as we stated above, you are going to be plugged completely into OneNote. Office Lens does not feel like a complete application, but instead compliments Microsoft’s OneNote software. You can share your photographed document via the standard Windows Phone share menu, but if you wish to save your content – OneNote is the direct one click option.

If you are interested in checking out the Microsoft Office Lens application, click here to download it for free from the Windows Phone Marketplace or scan the QR code above.

Conclusion

While Microsoft’s Office Lens app has been openly received by the Windows Phone community, we cannot help to feel that the features it offers are a bit lacking and under whelming.

Office Lens might make a nice companion for heavy OneNote users, but we believe that CamScanner is a much better alternative. Not only does CamScanner deliver a better end result, but it allows you to sort and tag documents in an efficient manner. In the end, if you really want pair the app with OneNote, you can always share the image via the Windows Phone share option.

As always, we recommend downloading both application and trying them for yourselves, while the author of this article feels that CamScanner is the winner by a large margin, I’m sure some of you will find more comfort within Office Lens’ simplicity.

Do you use one of the two applications we just compared – which do you prefer, CamScanner or Office Lens? Or is there a third option out there you'd recommend?

OneNote and Les Miserables fan? Then watch this great parody

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OneNote Mac

Microsoft's OneNote team has been kicking ass lately. A few weeks ago they introduced a new set of APIs for developers to tie into the OneNote service. In addition there's a new app for Mac users and the desktop version of OneNote on Windows was made free. Check out this pretty amazing parody from the OneNote team of the song "One Day More" from the musical Les Miserables. Video Yes. This was a video from Microsoft promoting a product for Mac.

As if you needed any more proof that Microsoft is now a devices and services company. We loved the video and thought it was awesome. Share your thoughts below!

Source: YouTube Via: GeekWire

Microsoft releases OneNote Clipper for Chrome, Springpad migration tool

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Microsoft releases OneNote Clipper for Chrome, Springpad migration tool

Microsoft has released a Chrome extension for their note-taking app OneNote called OneNote Clipper. You can install the extension either by going to the OneNote website, or the Chrome Web Store. From there, OneNote Clipper lets you save webpages and clips to OneNote to be viewed later.

But that's not all. Microsoft is also releasing a migration tool for Springpad users, letting them move their Springpad content over to OneNote. Springpad announced its shutdown last month, with service shutting down on June 25. Users can download their data in a ZIP file. To migrate their data to OneNote, users will will upload file to Microsofts migration tool, and Microsoft will notify you when the upload is complete. Springpad users will not need to sign up for OneNote to get their first notebook.

What do you think of OneNote Clipper for Chrome, and will any of you Springpad users be making the move to OneNote? Tell us below in the comments.

Source: OneNote, SpringPad to OneNote, via TheNextWeb


Microsoft's OneNote team offers the world their Surface Pro 3-LMFAO parody video

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onenote parody

The OneNote development team at Microsoft has released a video that ... well, may be among the oddest but still entertaining things we have seen from a major corporation in a while. It shows how the note taking app can be used with the new Surface Pro 3, but with a electronic house music beat set to the tune of "I'm Sexy and I Know It" by LMFAO.

The video itself features things like a man with a purple colored afro wig singing about how everyone should use the OneNote on the new 12-inch Surface Pro 3. These scenes are combined with images like a man with a box on his head and a Star Trek: The Next Generation uniform on his body, two men juggling apples and lots more.

This is not the first time the OneNote development team have made a wacky video. They also released a clip celebrating the release of OneNote for the Mac to the tune of "One More Day" from the Broadway musical version of Les Misérables. However, this latest clip makes the former one look downright normal by comparison.

Yet, we can't help the fact that this video is kind of entertaining and may actually show off how the OneNote app works with the Surface Pro 3 better than Microsoft's other "official" videos about the tablet. What do you think of this clip?

Source: OneNote on YouTube via Neowin

OneNote app for Windows 8.1/RT updated with long awaited printing support and more

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onenote

Owners of Windows 8.1 and Windows RT devices can now download a new version of Microsoft's OneNote note taking app from the Windows Store that finally adds printing support, along with a number of other new features.

Printing notes should arguably have been added to the OneNote app long before today, but at least it's now available for Windows 8.1 and RT users. Microsoft says, "With this update, it's a breeze to print your notes, and OneNote supports all of the features you'd expect including beautiful full color page previews, portrait and landscape orientations, multiple copies, duplex printing, and more."

In addition, the OneNote update now allows for file attachment support so users can save documents in their notes. Also, the app now allows for PDF printouts, with Microsoft saying, " ... students can read slides, assignments, and more directly in OneNote and annotate them with ink or text."

Finally, there's a new highlighter tool, with Microsoft saying, "Highlighter is now included in the radial menu next to the four pen styles, and you can customize the color and thickness to your liking. This feature is especially useful when combined with PDF printouts." What do you think of these improvements that have been made to the OneNote Windows 8.1/RT app?

OneNote

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OneNote is Microsoft's note-taking software available on all major platforms. Notes are synced through the cloud and changes are instantly seen across device. OneNote is available on Windows, Windows Store, Windows Phone, Mac, iPad, iPhone, Android, Amazon devices and the web. OneNote can truly be used anywhere.

On Windows Phone, OneNote is currently an included application and available out-of-the-box. This may change in the future, but for now updates to OneNote on Windows Phone come when the operating system is updated.

OneNote started out as a desktop application on Windows in 2003. Over the years it has matured to include many, if not all, major platforms.

OneNote files can now only include notes, handwritten or typed, from users but also drawings, screen clippings, audio commentaries and more.

OneNote Class Notebook Creator enhances learning in the classroom

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OneNote Class Notebook Creator helps teachers teach and students learn better

Microsoft has released an interactive teaching and learning tool called OneNote Class Notebook Creator, which works in a similar way to OneNote allowing students and teachers to type, ink, and save clippings to their notebooks. Where OneNote Class Notebook Creator shines is that it creates a collaborative teaching and learning environment where the teacher could set up a notebook for each student in the class and monitor learning and engagement of each student through their notebooks, distribute digital handouts to all students, and setup a space for students to collaborate.

The notebook consists of three different areas:

  1. A student notebook that is shared privately between the student and the teacher
  2. A content library where teachers can distribute digital handouts and course materials
  3. A collaboration space for anyone in the class to share and collaborate

What do you think of the OneNote Class Notebook Creator? Do you want your school to adopt this technology?

Source: Office blog

OneNote Windows 8.1 app updated with new access to password protected sections

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OneNote

Microsoft has released a new update to the Windows 8.1 version of its OneNote app, which finally includes a way to unlock current password protected sections.

While this feature has been available for the desktop version of OneNote, it's never been available for Windows 8.1 app users until today. Microsoft says:

"Using this feature is easy. First, make sure you're running the latest version of OneNote for Windows Store app released today. Once you've updated the app, simply navigate to a password protected section and type your password to unlock it. After unlocking a password protected section, you can view and edit its contents just like any other section—but to protect your privacy, page thumbnails are not shown. Plus, the section automatically locks if you don't use OneNote for a few minutes."

Source: Microsoft

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