OP
designbetter
New Member
let's say you have 100 or even 1000 words explaining something about cat
how you gonna find that?
how you gonna find that?
This is just too easy, unless you're just here to argue. So write your 1000 word article and guess what there are going to be quite a few key words/points all mixed in that article. And that is how you search the article.let's say you have 100 or even 1000 words explaining something about cat
how you gonna find that?
let's say you have 100 or even 1000 words explaining something about cat
how you gonna find that?
"exactly"
im looking for something far more detail about 'cats' but dont know where it is
"typically remember about 90%"
psychological studies have proven that not a single person
and that a person has a high amount of bias in their self-perception
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if everything was remembered, we would never even need any notes at all
"better search criteria"
well onenote is a 13y old software and doesn't, and there's nothing better in 2017
is there a better solution?
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so you're able to find exactly what you need instantly??
how do you have your notes setup that you're able to find exactly what you need instantly??
* what's the most detail example you can think of to see how fine-grain onenote can be? (remember there are multiple occurrences of any given word)
"3 notebooks each with around 12 sections, and about 40-80 pages in each section"
any most helpful links on the Web in 2017 by now on structuring?
"for sleep, snacks, toys, furniture"
huh... do you even use onenote?
i already said there are many occurrences elsewhere of the aforementioned words
so how you gonna find what you're looking for??
Thanks @jnjroach! This thread has given me the opportunity to learn how good OneNote search really is. Your examples are really helpful. I just saw you can pin the search results so you can hop around from document to document to find what you want. And it matched searched words that were typed, inked and even in pictures (slides copied in from pdfs). Awesome.90% of inked notes isn't off - there are studies that people retain much more what that write, much less from typing. 90% is current notes (within the past 30 days) but again I can search across all open notebooks.
I haven't decided if you just have an axe to grind, are setting us up for your preferred solution or haven't really used OneNote.
OneNote 2016 gives good search results -
View attachment 8584
UWP or Mobile Version -
View attachment 8585
Just like any Index, the more info you give it the better the result - as above but with more context and information and far less but more focused results -
View attachment 8586
Organize based on your needs - if you are a student typically by subject or course, same for teachers or profs
I do it by Projects or Workstreams, I know lawyers who do it by case or client.
If you have used a moleskin notebook or even the spiral bound notebooks it the same. If OneNote doesn't cut it for you, go try Evernote or even S Note if you like Samsung.
Happy to evangelizeThanks @jnjroach! This thread has given me the opportunity to learn how good OneNote search really is. Your examples are really helpful. I just saw you can pin the search results so you can hop around from document to document to find what you want. And it matched searched words that were typed, inked and even in pictures (slides copied in from pdfs). Awesome.
Happy to evangelize
But it is the Microsoft Edition:>))) evangelize or not...but that S8+...:>))))
But it is the Microsoft Edition