Onenote Review
This Onenote Review is focused almost completely on the advantages of Onenote for Netbooks, and Tablet.
On a Tablet, Onenote can be used for taking hand-written notes, as well as text notes. It can be used for the same things on a Netbook.
Many people compare Onenote to Evernote, but they serve very different purposes. Onenote is for organizing large groups of notes, while Evernote is for taking a series of entries, like a journal or to-do list. Onenote also has other advantages over Evernote, such as the fact that you only have to by it once, whereas with Evernote, you have to pay a monthly subscription to get more storage(you get a tiny amount for free). Some of the advantages of Onenote is that you can put Word documents, Excel documents, PDFs and pretty much any other type of file, straight into it. When I say that, I mean that you can put an Excel spreadsheet straight onto a page in Onenote. The same applies for Word documents, and PDFs, and Onenote retains the original layout of the file(most of the time).I would recommend Onenote to any one who wants to organize their notes(eg. Students, Teachers) or simply wants to organize their files into one convenient location.
ProsThe first good thing about Onenote, is its simplicity. It is as simple as a real notebook, and as organized. The next good thing about Onenote is how organized it is. In Onenote you can create notebooks(an unlimited amount), which you can split up into sections(also an unlimited amount), then each section can be split up into pages(again an unlimited amount).
ConsMy one and only problem with Onenote, is the price, but considering all of its good features, I can live with it.
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