Evernote Or Onenote For Mac

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Over the past year, Microsoft has been consciously unbundling OneNote from their Office Suite. Now, it’s a completely standalone service backed by OneDrive and available on all major platforms – Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Windows Phone, and of course, the web. When MS did that, many eyebrows rose simultaneously across the world. Here’s a company that produces world-leading productivity software that has just made a big part of their suite free for everyone. And it’s from MS after all, so it must be good, right? Well, that’s what we’re here to find out.

  1. Evernote Or Onenote For Mac Versions
  2. Import Evernote Into Onenote
  3. Import From Evernote To Onenote
  4. Evernote Or Onenote For Mac Os
  5. Evernote Vs Onenote For Mac

We’re pitting it against Evernote, currently the most popular and versatile note taking service. It’s cross platform, has great features and has proved for more than half a decade that it’s a reliable system. Let’s get started.

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OneNote Has Lots of Stuff for Free

Evernote Or Onenote For Mac Versions

OneNote is a very small part of MS’s business. Even if it was a paid service, the revenue wouldn’t make a dent in the giant’s multi-billion dollar quarter results. OneNote storage is backed by OneDrive. So as long as you have a couple GBs of storage there (or a couple of hundred if you jumped on any promotions), you should be fine.

Evernote is the opposite (you only get 60 MB of storage for free every month). The note taking app is all they have going on (yes, they sell accessories as well). This app is their major source of revenue. But they’re smart about it. Evernote is set up in a way that most users can get by without paying anything (I’m a proud Evernote freeloader). A small part of the user base pays a couple of dollars a month and that (along with the funding) keeps them going.

The $2.99 Evernote Plus plan gives you offline access, a 1 GB monthly upload limit, a passcode lock and the ability to turn emails into Evernote notes. $4.99 a month gives you unlimited storage space and enables business related research features.

OneNote, on the other hand, has features like OCR in images and PDFs, attaching PDFs to notes, and more for free.

  • OneNote Evernote; Available on Windows, Mac, iOS, Android and web: Sync notes across your devices: Limited to 2 devices for Evernote Basic. Requires Evernote Plus or Premium to sync across your devices. Offline access to notes on mobile: Requires Evernote Plus or Premium: Unlimited monthly uploads: 60 MB/month (Free) 1 GB/month (Evernote Plus).
  • I find Evernote to be more visually compelling than OneNote on the iPad and Mac. The display is particularly attractive when you scroll through a notebook, with the list of notes in the notebook.

Evernote Has a Better UI

Evernote looks better than OneNote on every platform. The web and Mac client is gorgeous. OneNote, on the other hand, reminds me of Office apps. I hate Office apps. But that might just be my personal pet peeve.

OneNote’s Mac and Desktop apps look like any other office apps with an added tab bar that doesn’t really make sense. My pet peeve for Office apps is significantly exploited here. When I’m taking notes, the last thing I want to see is options for everything from checklists to starring to audio recording. Please, just show me the important stuff.

OneNote Has Complex Features, Lots of Them

If you’re a multi-device user and you switch between mobile and desktop frequently for note taking, OneNote’s experience can be downright alienating. On the mobile apps, you just tap and start typing like any other note taking app. But OneNote’s desktop app has this weird floating input field that takes a lot of time to get used to.

When you click anywhere and start typing, you get a text box that’s not confined to the text area. What this means is that each piece of information is its own box standing on top of a grid. You can do crazy things like drop in an image or PDF, draw over it, put some text on it, overlap media, bring objects forwards and backwards, make images into background and a lot more. And I’m not done. You can insert tables, files, and even calendars. This is mostly limited to the desktop app (some of it is available on the iPad).

This is powerful stuff, but it’s also complicated and not very intuitive to use.

A note taking app needs to be feature-rich, but it needs to be simple as well. Evernote has none of the features I described above, but in my everyday use, I don’t need them. Evernote has basic text formatting options, voice recording, and the ability to import images and PDFs (can’t do crazy annotating but that’s fine).

OneNote’s Android App Sucks, but the iPad App Is Good

OneNote lacks in equal features and UI parity between platforms. Sounds like a no-brainer right? Someone at MS didn’t get the memo.

OneNote’s iOS app has a tabbed interface. The Android app as a pane-based interface (desktop has dropdown + tabbed UI). The iOS app has a helpful toolbar to create checklists, format text, indent text (great for creating outlines). No such thing on Android. And the Android app is just not good. It’s slow and it crashed in the first 5 minutes of use.

OneNote’s iPad app is killer (irony, amirite) and very different from the iPhone app. The updated app has support for stylus input, handwriting recognition and searching through the handwritten notes. So you can use OneNote to scribble notes in lecture, draw stuff and more. You can do some of this from the desktop app, like importing PDFs and images and annotating/drawing over them. I imported a 200 page PDF book for the kicks. It didn’t go well. But for small files, it shouldn’t be a problem.

Evernote Is Much Easier to Use

This might just be me, but I don’t understand OneNote’s note taking hierarchy. There’s a notebook, then there are sections (that show up as tabs in one app and panes in another), and each section has pages.

I’m not saying Evernote is without its problems but the app has a simple tree structure. There are notebooks and there are notes within them. While you can do crazy things like add tags, add shortcuts, or create a notebook stack, the basic idea is simple to grasp. You can just pick up Evernote and start using it.

And this is the same in every platform. Yes, Android has Material Design UI that’s a bit different from the iOS app but the basic structure is the same.

Evernote Is for the Always Online

The fact that Evernote doesn’t support offline access for notes can be a turn off for many. But it’s not as simple as it looks. Evernote’s support page says:

On mobile devices, Evernote stores only note titles, tags, a small excerpt of text from the note, and some other system information related to your notes and notebooks. All of this information is stored to a temporary file so you can search and browse notes.

Upgrading to the $2.99/month Plus plan lets you selectively save notebooks for offline use.

In my experience: On Android and iOS, a dozen or two of my most recent and used notes are available Evernotefully even when I’m offline. I can edit them and the changes are saved offline until there’s an internet connection, when the changes are uploaded and synced to all my devices. On desktop, the entire Evernote library is available for offline use. All my notes are text-based, so it seems the temporary file is large enough to accommodate all the notes that are important enough for my work (around 2 dozen). It rarely happens that I’m left without the internet and I need to write something in Evernote. If nothing else, I have access to 2G, and that’s enough for syncing text.

But if you’re a heavy user of notes – in that you want to sync PDFs, images, and audio recordings – you won’t have access to all that offline.

So Who Is OneNote For?

Evernote Or Onenote For Mac

I believe OneNote is for people who have specific needs that can’t be covered (for free) by Evernote or other note taking apps. Need to create multi-page notes filled with floating text, images, PDFs, and annotations but don’t want to invest in a Pro PDF app? There’s OneNote for you. The experience won’t be great but it will do the job.

Also, if you’re used to Office apps, you get the familiar Ribbon UI. Perhaps you have a Windows Phone and you’re already using OneDrive storage, so you’ve got 100s of GBs of storage there for free. For these types of Windows power users, OneNote is for you. For the rest of us, there’s Evernote.

Become an Evernote pro: Learn how to search in Evernote like a pro, the best integrations for Evernote and how it compares to Notability.

The Winner: Evernote

I’ve written about software on the internet for a couple of years now and I like to think of myself as a pro user. And I get by with the free Evernote plan just fine – for the reasons I’ve highlighted above. But I use Evernote for text-only note taking. I’m not a student or an office user who might need to scan images and have them OCR’d or to upload and annotate PDFs (when I do need to, I use GoodReader for it).

Evernote’s basic plan is fine for most of us. And if you’re not a spec-sheet guy, you’ll understand why. Evernote is a joy to use. It is simple if you want it to be. But don’t be fooled, Evernote is also really powerful. People have written books on how to use Evernote to do all sorts of things.

If you value ease of use, thoughtful design and an overall pleasant interface, just go with Evernote. OneNote has a great spec-sheet and it’s all free. But unless MS takes the product and does a re-write, bringing UI and feature equality between all the different versions, it’s not a worthy contender. And something tells me that’s not going to happen anytime soon.

I’ve used Evernote for a couple of years now and I’m not planning to stop or switch. I’m removing the OneNote apps from all my devices as soon as I’ve turned in this article.

Import Evernote Into Onenote


The above article may contain affiliate links which help support Guiding Tech. However, it does not affect our editorial integrity. The content remains unbiased and authentic.Also See#comparison #evernote

Did You Know

You can also solve calculus equations on OneNote.

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Import From Evernote To Onenote

Editor’s note 8/24/2016:
Please see Fixes or workarounds for recent issues in OneNote for Mac to help troubleshoot any issues installing or using the OneNote Importer for Mac.

Since last March, we have helped Windows users import 71 million Evernote pages to OneNote. Following the great feedback we received, we want to help even more people make the move. Today, we are launching the OneNote Importer tool for Mac. You may feel hesitant about moving all your notes from a place you know to a new online home. Don’t worry, the Importer tool makes moving day easy.

Download the OneNote Importer tool.

OneNote lets you work the way you want. You can get your ideas down in a range of ways that include typing, inking, embedding videos, recording audio or clipping web content. If you prefer to use paper and pen, you can even scan that content with OneNote to make it digital, searchable and available from your phone to your laptop. We’ve heard that many Evernote users rely heavily on their clipper. OneNote has a great clipper for all major browsers, available for free at OneNote.com/clipper. We upgrade it all the time, and you can read the OneNote July roundup for the latest updates.

OneNote lets you sync all your notes across all your devices—for free. It is part of the Office family and works seamlessly with Outlook, Word, Excel and PowerPoint to help you stay organized, collaborate and get more done. Following Evernote’s recent price changes—their Premium offer ($69.99/year) is now the same price as Office 365 Personal ($69.99/year). Office 365 gives you OneNote, plus all the Office apps you know and love that are always up to date, and 1 TB of cloud storage.

Evernote Or Onenote For Mac Os

How to migrate your notes from Evernote

To get started migrating your Evernote notes to OneNote, you will need:

Evernote Vs Onenote For Mac

  • A Mac with OS X 10.11+ (El Capitan). Once your Evernote notes are imported, they’ll sync across all your devices, including PC, iOS and Android, as well as web browsers—for free.
  • To speed up the migration process, it is recommended you have Evernote for Mac installed from the Evernote website. Sign in to Evernote for Mac with your Evernote account and make sure your latest notes are synced before importing.

Watch this short video to see how easy it is to use the OneNote Importer tool:

Download the OneNote Importer tool and visit our Support page for more information and step-by-step instructions. And don’t forget to send us feedback and ask questions at OneNote UserVoice or tweet us at @msonenote. The OneNote team wants to do everything possible to help you feel confident about choosing to try OneNote.

—Scott Shapiro, product marketing manager for the OneNote team





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