Programowanie

Microsoft OneNote

Microsoft OneNote

Microsoft OneNote

Microsoft OneNote 2007 running in Windows Vista.
Developed by Microsoft
Latest release 12.0.6211.1000 / December 11, 2007
OS Microsoft Windows
Genre Notetaking
License Proprietary EULA
Website www.microsoft.com

Microsoft Office OneNote, usually referred to as Microsoft OneNote, is a tool for notetaking, information gathering, and multi-user collaboration by Microsoft. While many earlier systems relied on linear text flow (simple lists), OneNote visualizes notes as a two-dimensional page. OneNote also adds modern features such as drawings, pictures, multimedia audio, video, and ink as well as multi-user sharing of notes.

Contents

[edit] Key features

The following features are shared with both OneNote 2003 SP2 and OneNote 2007:

[edit] OneNote 2007

OneNote 2007 also included a number of new features:

[edit] Key shortcomings


In August 2004, Microsoft released Service Pack 1 for OneNote 2003 which fixed several shortcomings and added a number of significant new features such as date/time stamping, import of notes from Pocket PC and video recording, as well as shared sessions and a button to transfer a "page" of notes to Word 2003. The current release of OneNote 2003 is Service Pack 3 (which includes all the changes made in Service Packs 1&2).

In January 2007 Microsoft released OneNote 2007. OneNote 2007 is included in Microsoft Office 2007 Home & Student Edition, Enterprise Edition, and Ultimate Edition.

[edit] Platform support

Microsoft OneNote 2003 requires Windows 2000 with Service Pack 4 or later, Windows XP or Vista. A feature with similar (but comparatively limited) functionality to OneNote's is available in Word 2004 for Mac OS X, called "Word Notebook."

OneNote 2003 will run on any hardware that supports the required operating systems.

OneNote 2007 will run only on Windows XP SP2 or later versions of Windows. OneNote 2007 printer driver cannot be installed on 64-bit operating systems.

Many Office apps support importing/exporting MIME HTML (.mht), including OneNote, Word, and Internet Explorer. Therefore, any modern browser that recognizes this file format is a suitable platform for viewing OneNote's exported MHT files. OneNote 2007 will also support exporting notes as PDF which is likely to be a better option than MHT if editability is not required.

OneNote Mobile for Smartphones (Windows Mobile 2003, 2003 SE, and 5) as well as Pocket PCs (Windows Mobile 5 only) is included with OneNote 2007.

[edit] Version History

First public announcement November 17, 2002
OneNote 2003 released October 21, 2003
OneNote 2003 SP1 released July 27, 2004
OneNote 2003 SP2 released Sept 27 2005
OneNote 2003 SP3 released Sept 17 2007
OneNote 2007 released January 30, 2007

Note that all release dates are "retail availability". "Release to Manufacturing" ("RTM" or code final) is usually 2-3 months prior.

[edit] Competitors

Since the introduction of OneNote, Ergo,[1] EverNote and GoBinder have emerged as competitors on the Windows platform. There are many basic notebook applications available for the Apple Macintosh but nothing equally comparable. The open-source application BasKet is the most noteworthy competitor in the Linux/Unix field. It also competes with Google Notebook, a web-based note taking and web clipping system.

Two free-form databases on the Windows platform are askSam, from askSam Systems,[2] and Info Select, by Micro Logic. Both have been available since the mid-90's.[3] Info Select for the Palm Organizer provides bi-directional synchronization between Info Select databases on a Windows computer system and Info Select databases on Palm PDA's.[4]

The Home-Sec software from Lware [1] tackles the problem from the perspective of Events, arguing that much of your important data is related to things that you do or things that happen to you. Any Event can contain text notes and details of contacts or organisations that might be involved in the Event. It then becomes easy to view complete histories of interactions with any individual or organisation.

[edit] References

[edit] External links