![]() ![]() The Unfiled button shows you a list of notes you created but didn't save to a specific section or notebook. It shows the Personal (Web) notebook and any others you created using the OneNote PC or Web app. ![]() The Notebooks button shows you all of your notebooks. ![]() From the list of notes on the left, simply swipe sideways on a note and a red delete button appears.Īt the bottom of this column are four buttons: Notebooks, Unfiled, Recents, and Search. While organizing notes is limited because you can't move notes around or create new notebooks, the app makes it easy to delete a note. You also need the PC or Web app to tag notes, another useful and basic feature that is not included with the app. If you want to move a note to a new section or notebook or create a new section or notebook, you'll need to use the PC or Web app. You can only create notes (using the create button in the upper-right corner), which you can save as unfiled or in the section you are currently viewing. OneNote for iPad's biggest limitation is the inability to create new notebooks or sections. The app starts you off with one default notebook, strangely named Personal (Web). In OneNote's scheme, a notebook is filled with sections, and sections are filled with notes. No matter the orientation, three buttons-to delete, e-mail, and create notes-reside in the upper-right corner of the screen. In portrait mode, a page of a spiral notebook fills the screen, with your list of notebooks and notes available by tapping the button in the upper-left corner. In landscape mode, your notebooks and notes are listed in the left column, with the current note you're viewing on the right. Launch the app, log in to your Windows Live account (or create a new one), and you'll see an attractive layout, complete with a spiral-notebook theme. The note limit isn't the only obstacle you'll encounter with OneNote for iPad you'll also find restrictions placed on creating new notebooks, organizing notes, and assigning tags. After you hit the 500 mark, you'll be required to make a $14.99 in-app purchase to continue taking notes. The free app lets you create up to 500 notes. With OneNote for iPad, Microsoft brought its note-taking app to Apple, but seemingly against its will. ![]()
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