![]() Personally, I keep tons of personal documents in Evernote. I guess I was more so curious about the average individual. That's interesting though, your perspective. They use OneNote some, but mostly use Word and Excel extensively. She has Office on her computer, as I'm sure you do too. Yeah I didn't think people that work for large corporations use it. The bottom line is, it’s a valid choice but you both lose features and gain features if you switch, and if you expect Onenote to be a literal 100% replacement for Evernote in form and function, you won’t be happy with it (or any other app) because it’s not Evernote. I could probably write a book on all the things it misses compared to Evernote, and all the additional functionality it has. That said, it’s really not all that hard to get used to, and is very powerful yet somewhat clunky (again, typical MS). It’s a very different approach from Evernote, and the interface is typical MS - complicated and jammed with features. If I had not used Onenote for work I’d probably be overwhelmed with it and wouldn’t use it for personal stuff. Personally I’ve used Evernote for personal stuff and Onenote for work for about seven years, then went with 100% Onenote after the first major Evernote price hike, and now am contemplating moving most of my notes to the filesystem - I switched from Windows to Mac and I am finding that MacOS’ built in file indexing and tagging fully meets my needs without having to put an external wrapper on my data. So it’s impossible to separate Onenote use from Office use. It’s really impossible to tell because Onenote is part of O365 and I suspect most of its use is in the corporate environment because of its integration with Office, especially Teams, Sharepoint, Outlook and Excel. ![]()
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