Ads_kid=0;Ads_bid=0;Ads_xl=0;Ads_yl=0;Ads_xp='';Ads_yp='';Ads_opt=0;Ads_wrd='[KeyWord]';Ads_prf='';Ads_par='';Ads_cnturl='';Ads_sec=0; ActiveWin Anonymous Create a User Reviews ... Career Portal Users Online: 196 User Controls New User Login Edit/View My Profile Active Network ActiveMac ActiveWin ActiveXbox Careers DirectX Downloads Editorials FAQs Interviews Reviews Support Center TopTechTips Windows 2000 Windows Me Windows Server 2003 Windows Vista Windows XP News Centers Windows/Microsoft Apple/Mac Xbox News Search XML/RSS Newsfeeds Pocket PC Site Windows Vista Windows 98/98 SE Windows 2000 Windows Me Windows Server 2003 Windows XP Windows CE Internet Explorer 6 Internet Explorer 5 Xbox DirectX Latest Reviews Games Halo (PC) Xbox Manhunt Mafia Applications Virtual Server 2005 Hardware AMD Athlon 64 4000+ Microsoft Fingerprint Reader Latest Interviews Steve Ballmer Jim Allchin Site News/Info About This Site Advertise Affiliates Contact Us Default Home Page Link To Us Links Member Pages MobileNetSwitch Download NEWS HEADLINES FOR: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2005 Unifying the analog and the digital with OneNote Time: 19:15 EST/00:15 GMT News Source: Microsoft Posted By: Jonathan Tigner One of the long term visions for OneNote is to bring together "your information" and make it findable and reusable, regardless of format. When we look at the types of info we try to help people organize, it is obvious that a lot of it lives outside the digital realm: Business cards, handouts, receipts. People always have a collection of paper that accompanies their PC because it is hard to include that stuff in their digital storage. Beyond paper, there are other analog forms of information such as speeches (audio) and "performances" (video). You hear and see things today, but all you have are your memories of that, or maybe a recording on tape or mini-recorder. As you know from the current release of OneNote, there's a lot of value in just being able to capture various kinds of information in one place: text, HTML, ink, photos, audio/video recordings. In OneNote "12", we're going to go even farther. | |
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