Synopses & Reviews
Learn to:
- Take advantage of note saving and sharing tools
- Create notes from scratch and add electronic files
- Index your notes for easy searching
- Use OneNote on your Windows® 8 tablet
Take note! OneNote lets you organize, access, and share notes on multiple devices
OneNote is much more than a note-taking app for students. The 2013 incarnation is a feature-rich application with online and tablet versions that enable sharing and collaboration. And this book shows you how to take full advantage of everything it offers text recognition, the ability to include data from other Office apps, and more!
- Meet OneNote navigate the interface, create a Microsoft account, and set up a notebook
- Note how it's done make your first notes, organize them, and choose whether to sync your notes manually
- Tag it tag notes for followup, mark ideas, identify items to be e-mailed, and establish priority
- See what you mean add images, video, and audio to notes
- Write on hand-write a note on your tablet's screen and let OneNote convert it to text
- Notes in the sky store notes securely on SkyDrive® and access them from any web- enabled device
- A team effort share notes and collaborate via OneNote Web App
Open the book and find:
- Easy ways to format notes
- Tips on keeping your notes secure
- Why you need a Microsoft account
- All about OneNote for Windows 8
- How to edit notes on Android and iOS devices
- Ways to use OneNote every day
- What you need to know about permissions
- Ten terrific OneNote tips
Synopsis
A quick guide to using Microsoft OneNote on tablets, online, or on your desktopOneNote is the note-taking-and-sharing application that's part of Microsoft Office. It lets you create notes by hand, as audio, or by clipping items from other electronic formats to create a file that can be indexed and searched. With the release of Office 2013, OneNote has been integrated with Windows 8-powered tablet platforms and offers advanced mobile-enhanced features. This guide includes all the basic information, guidance, and insight you need to take full advantage of everything OneNote can do for you.
- OneNote is the Microsoft Office note-taking application that lets you make notes and clip items from electronic media to create a searchable file
- This friendly, plain-English guide shows you how to use OneNote online, on your desktop PC, or on your Windows-powered tablet
- Helps you take advantage of this highly useful and often-overlooked application
OneNote 2013 For Dummies gets you up and running with OneNote quickly and easily.
About the Author
James H. Russell is a technology writer and journalist who specializes in PC hardware and software, tablet computing, and social media. He writes for numerous online periodicals, and in 2012 Mashable.com named him one of 101 experts to follow on Google+.
Table of Contents
Introduction 1
Part I: Getting Started with OneNote 2013 5
Chapter 1: OneNote Basics 7
Chapter 2: Managing Notes and Configuring OneNote 23
Chapter 3: Formatting Notes 41
Chapter 4: Inserting External Data and Taking Quick Notes 59
Chapter 5: Securing and Managing Notes with SkyDrive 77
Part II: Taking Notes via Other OneNote Versions 89
Chapter 6: Taking Notes with OneNote for Windows 8 91
Chapter 7: Taking Notes on Android Devices 107
Chapter 8: Taking Notes on iOS Devices 121
Chapter 9: Managing and Taking Notes with OneNote Web App 131
Part III: Putting OneNote Through Its Paces 141
Chapter 10: Sharing and Collaborating with OneNote 143
Chapter 11: Taking Notes in the Real World 155
Part IV: The Part of Tens 171
Chapter 12: Ten (or So) Resources and Add-Ins for OneNote 173
Chapter 13: Ten Killer Tips for OneNote 179
Index 185