



I just did another search under the help menu, and the word "feedback" and "feature" do not turn up any items. Many OS X apps include "send feedback" or "contact us" menu items somewhere. To everyone complaining about missing features in this thread: please submit feature requests. Operative Me Ars Praefectus et Subscriptor jump to post.Listing image by Andrew Cunningham Promoted Comments
Onenote 2011 android#
Still, as a tool to sync basic notebooks between your Windows PCs and phones and your iOS and Android devices, OneNote for OS X is an improvement over the Web client and points the way forward for the next versions of Office for Mac. Alternative notebook applications like Evernote do a better job of providing the same features to users regardless of their chosen platform.Īll in all, the OS X version of OneNote falls short of the Windows version-you can't run a local installation with no Microsoft account, and there are several editing tools that just aren't available. You'll also find these kinds of limitations in the online and mobile versions of the application-it's too bad that Microsoft didn't try to support all of the same features across all of its desktop clients.
Onenote 2011 for mac#
While the OneNote for Mac application is pretty good, the Windows version remains more feature-rich.
Onenote 2011 full#
Microsoft has done a good job balancing its own design language (namely, the tabs of the ribbon UI) and OS X design conventions (a search box in the upper-right, full Retina display support, and full-screen mode support). Once you've signed in, you'll be presented with an OS X-ified version of the Windows OneNote client. Unlike the free Windows version of OneNote, you've got to use a standard Microsoft account with OneNote for Mac-you can't use it as a local, standalone application, and you can't use it with a corporate Microsoft account either.

When you download OneNote for Mac, you'll first be prompted to sign in with your Microsoft account.
Onenote 2011 update#
The application's user interface is more in line with the "ribbon" UI used in the Windows versions of Office, and it may give us an idea of where Microsoft is headed with the next version of Office for Mac (the rumor mill says we'll see an update at some point this year). The new OneNote for Mac app is interesting both because the app has never been available in OS X before and because it has been a few years since the other Office for Mac applications-Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook-have been updated. The full Windows version of OneNote 2013 has also been released as a free download, and it includes all the features of the standard OneNote client that comes with Office 2013 for Windows. As predicted a week ago, Microsoft has just released a version of its OneNote client for OS X-it's currently a free download in the Mac App Store, and it's available for any Mac running OS X 10.9.
