![]() ![]() Microsoft recently made it free to use OneNote across all platforms and devices, including Windows PCs, tablets and phones Macs iOS and Android. The app’s straightforward interface is easier to learn and navigate than Evernote. In short: OneNote has improved since I reviewed it nearly two years ago. In my tests, OneNote’s OCR works just as well as Evernote’s, though the keyword-search function in OneNote sometimes delivers broader results. This feature is also available in the recently updated iPhone version, but that version doesn’t offer the same drawing tools. OneNote for iPad also now has optical character recognition (OCR) for pictures with text, including screenshots of Web pages you capture using the iPad. If you don’t tap an image in a note, you won’t even know that it’s possible to annotate. To call up annotation tools in iOS Evernote, for instance, you tap an image to select it, tap the annotation icon, and then choose the tool you want (such as a pointer, text box, and so on). On my iPad, OneNote’s drawing tools are easier to access than Evernote’s utilities. The Palm Rejection menu makes sure your palm doesn’t mess up your handwriting or digital pen input, and you can choose from among three different orientations for each hand. You can quickly choose a marker, color or thickness, and then start circling and annotating images, Web pages and more. OneNote now includes intuitive drawing tools, which are easily accessible from its Draw menu. The latest version includes a set of new features designed to help OneNote catch up with - maybe even surpass - its popular rival, Evernote. The company most recently updated its OneNote note-taking app for iPad. Microsoft has been stomping furiously through the mobile app world these days like Godzilla on guarana supplements. ![]()
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