![]() A week ago, word leaked that Microsoft was preparing to release free versions of OneNote for Mac and for the Windows desktop. On March 17, Microsoft delivered both versions of its electronic note. ![]() I dug down into the folder you're talking about bmike. The most interesting folder appeared to be OneNoteOfflineCache_Files, but when I tapped on each of the.onebin files, they appear to be just graphics files representing menus and such that you see when you're in OneNote. The only other folder with something in it was ServerListings and that has a single.onesrvcache file that doesn't look like it has data in it either. Then I took a look at OneNoteOfflineCache.onecache using TextWrangler. It's full of unreadable glop but then I found a section in actual English talking about taxonomy of polar bears! Emboldened I did a search for a term I'd used in a notebook and sure enough my data was in there. Oddly not everything I wrote in my note was searchable, just some terms. Fun stuff - not terribly useful if you're thinking you can get to that data without OneNote, but still fun in a geeky kind of way. I did find a $20 (Normally $40) application called Outline that says it will open OneNote files though. Attention note-takers: Your on-screen scribbling options just got a whole lot more diversified and a whole lot cheaper, thanks to the release of free OneNote programs for Macs and PCs alike—releases buoyed by new features that bursts OneNote's note-taking functionality out of the service's walled garden and into the arms of third-party sources. Though a OneNote app has been available on iOS devices for a while, the new release of an app for home and school use only marks the Evernote competitor's virgin foray into the world of Apple-powered PCs. Macworld spent some hands-on time with the software and already has. OneNote's Windows desktop program is now free. (Click to enlarge.) Likewise, while OneNote has long been freely available as standalone Windows 8 and Windows Phone apps, PC users used to have to pony up for Office to gain access to the note-taking software. The desktop OneNote program is now freely available to all, though it lacks the Outlook integration, Sharepoint support, and version history capabilities of the paid software. (Buying Office 2013 or Office 365 adds those capabilities.) All the core features are there and fully functional, however. Even better, it's ad-free. OneNote, many sources Microsoft also baked in some new, Evernote-esque abilities to allow you to save notes from outside sources. The Office Lens WP app automatically crops, cleans, and rejiggers photos to make the pictures readable, as shown in this Microsoft-supplied example. The new lets Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer, and Safari users seamlessly save snapshots of webpages to their Quick Notes. Forwarding messages and web links on your phone to a new address does the same, assuming you're using the email address associated with your OneNote account. Meanwhile, the new for Windows Phones basically functions as a scanner for OneNote, complete with optical character recognition technology good for capturing text in hand notes, paper documents, and whiteboards. The new functionality doesn't end in Microsoft's arms, however. The company also announced a OneNote API that allows third-party developers to connect to the note-taking service, and the fruits of that labor are already visible in. The freebie OneNote programs and all the new apps and features are already available on.
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March 2019
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