Skip to main content

Microsoft gives OneNote Windows 10 a promotion, kills off OneNote 2016

Microsoft OneNote is one of the oldest and most popular note-taking apps on the market. It is also one of the most feature-complete, it works on every important platform, and it integrates well with Microsoft’s Office productivity suite. There are two versions of OneNote, though, and Microsoft has announced that it’s making the Windows 10 version of OneNote the official option going forward.

This decision might disappoint some OneNote users who have been using the desktop application that Microsoft included in the Office suite and that currently stands at Office 2016. That’s the version of OneNote that has been around the longest, going all the way back to 2002 when OneNote 2003 was released. As of Office 2019, though, OneNote 2016 will no longer be automatically installed (although the existing installations won’t be deleted).

This move shouldn’t come as an actual shock, though, as Microsoft has been focusing on updating the Universal Windows Platform (UWP) version of OneNote for several months, adding new features to it and leaving out the OneNote 2016 application. In fact, OneNote 2016 will receive no new functionality at all, and will instead migrate to maintenance mode and receive support, bug fixes, and security updates through October 2020.

Already, some features are only available in the OneNote UWP app, such as being able to share notes easily using the Windows 10 sharing functionality, view notes sorted by update order, see Notification Center updates, use the Researcher to find quotes and citable sources, and enjoy the Immersive Reading view. OneNote UWP will also be receiving faster and more reliable syncing across all platforms and the ability to see live previews of embedded Office files.

At the same time, a few features are OneNote 2016-only, such as the ability to create Outlook Tasks in notes, pin commands to the toolbar, record video, and utilize third-party add-ins. Perhaps most important, OneNote 2016 also allows saving notes locally, while OneNote UWP can only save notes in the OneDrive cloud. Notably, two OneNote 2016 features, tags and tag search, will be making their way to OneNote UWP “soon.”

In many ways, OneNote UWP is already a better app, with superior ink effects, better ink-to-text capabilities, and improved battery life and performance as some examples. Windows 10 already ships with the app pre-installed and it’s the version that is most similar to OneNote for iOS, OneNote for Android, and OneNote’s web version. All of that should make the transition to OneNote UWP a bit less painful, even for people who have been using the desktop application for well over a decade.

Mark Coppock
Mark has been a geek since MS-DOS gave way to Windows and the PalmPilot was a thing. He’s translated his love for…
Microsoft scraps its next-gen Windows 10X OS to focus on Windows 10 in 2021
windows 10 x not at ces 2020 thinkpad x1 fold 10x

Microsoft's next-generation Windows 10X operating system, which was meant to take on Chrome OS, is seeing yet another delay. The company has reportedly put Windows 10X on the shelf for now, so it can refocus on the regular version of Windows 10, according to a report from Petri.com's Brad Sams.

Microsoft reports that there are a total of 1.3 billion active Windows 10 devices in the world, and now Windows could finally see some glory after having taken a back seat in more recent years with smaller updates. Some elements and other technologies from Windows 10X, such as user interface updates and app containers, could still arrive in regular Windows 10, according to Sams. However, the lightweight Windows 10X  "isn’t coming to market anytime soon" and "10X is on the back burner for now."

Read more
Microsoft just made your Windows 10 Taskbar a lot more useful
microsoft 10

Your Windows 10 taskbar is about to get a new look and feature that will help benefit your productivity. Coming over the next several weeks to Windows 10 is News and Interests, a feature that is designed to help you stay up to date by taking a glance at all the information that matters most to you.

Just like when it was in beta testing with Windows Insiders over the past few months, News and Interests lives in a new hover-over hub in the Taskbar that contains the weather. Hovering over the hub will reveal a curated mini collection of tiles with things that matter most to you, including the full weather forecast, top news stories, stocks, traffic, and even sports scores.

Read more
How to turn off notifications in Windows 10
Windows 10 Notifications

Today, it seems like you get notifications for almost everything. Whether it's a new text message or an email about your friends’ latest social media posts, the notifications never stop. But if you need to get work done on Windows 10, you need to know how to turn those distracting notifications off.

Keep reading to learn how to turn off notifications so that you can buckle down and focus. You can always reply to those messages and notifications during your next break.
Turn off notifications
Step 1: Open the Windows Settings menu by pressing the Windows Key + I, or search for "settings" in the Windows Search Bar and click the corresponding result. Make sure you choose System in the Settings menu.

Read more