

Therefore my GTD system based on custom tagging is no longer needed. A few months ago this would have been a show stopper for me but one of the reasons for moving to OSX was so I could use the amazing OmniFocus. There are a number of things that are annoying but I assume will come in time. For avid users the OSX team have copied over the keyboard shortcuts pretty comprehensively so that most things which would be Ctrl+(something) are now Cmd+(same something), interestingly some of these are not even documented I just happen to know them from years of use on the Windows version. As far as I can tell all the basic things that one would do with OneNote have been directly replicated. You can have multiple OneDrive profiles & you can embed files. You can open multiple notebooks including – now with the minor 2nd release – password protected sections. Starting with the good stuff, it’s mostly there. Below I’ll quickly list out some points and highlight some hopeful areas for urgent improvement.
Pin notebooks in onenote for mac update#
In turns out that the OSX team have got it just about right for a first (well, second as there was a small update recently) release and the version is useable, even for a hardcore OneNoter like me. One thing I was extremely nervous about was what the brand new OSX OneNote would be like, just how limited would its feature set be compared to the amazing Windows desktop version? It has gone very smoothly with me taking a Macbook Air on holiday (with no work or email loaded onto it!) so I could get used to it and when back I had a few transition days where I did productive work with both old & new machine side by side. Recently I moved to Apple’s OSX as my primary operating system.
