What you'll learn
- Log into OneNote and create your first notebook.
- Navigate the interface and customize it to your preferences.
- Add and format text content including to-do lists and bulleted lists.
- Use the Tell Me feature to quickly find commands and the Search feature to search for terms across notebooks, sections, or pages.
- Insert tables, embedded files, PDFs, pictures, links, and research results, and use the Send to OneNote app to integrate with Outlook.
- Facilitate meetings by recording audio or inserting meeting details for meetings synced from your Outlook calendar.
- Use included features like the drawing tools, the Math Assistant, the Accessibility Checker, Dictation, and the Immersive Reader.
- Share your notebook with others for real-time collaboration.
Requirements
- Access to OneNote on Windows 10
Description
The Structure You Need with the Flexibility You Want
OneNote is one of Microsoft’s unsung heroes: a digital notebook that allows you to organize your notes, meeting minutes, project documents, and more—all in one place. It’s almost like having an old-school, three-subject binder—except with unlimited sections and your notebook won’t weigh down your bag like it might have in school. Plus, no one will have to copy your notes, because you can share them digitally to collaborate with others.
Are you ready to get organized?
Note: While many of the features are the same in other versions, this course is specific to the Windows 10 version of Microsoft OneNote.
Who this course is for:
- Windows users who want to learn how to use OneNote for Windows 10
Course content
- Preview02:08
- Preview03:23
- Preview06:25
- 04:55Customizing the Interface
Instructor
Bigger Brains Founder and President Chip Reaves is a serial entrepreneur who has started five successful companies. An Atlanta native, Chip began fixing computers for small businesses in the 1980's while studying Computer Science at Georgia Tech. After 10 years building a successful IT Service Practice in Atlanta, Chip founded the Computer Troubleshooters franchise system alongside Wilson & Suzanne McOrist, which became the world's largest computer service franchise and received multiple awards from Entrepreneur Magazine, Franchise Business Review, and AllBusiness.
Chip has been interviewed on TV and other major media on topics related to small business technology and entrepreneurship, including ABC News, BusinessWeek TV, the Wall Street Journal, and the New York Times, and is a member of Jim Blasingame's "Brain Trust" on SmallBusinessAdvocate. In 2010 Chip was listed among the Top 150 most influential people in small business IT by SMB PC magazine.
Chip lives with his wife Maren and step-daughter Meg in Anderson, South Carolina where they also co-own a Computer Troubleshooters franchise location. In his spare time Chip is very active with his church and local charities, and consults with two aid organizations serving Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo in Africa.