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Microsoft Office 2010 Professional Plus Can OneNot
Yes.,Microsoft Office Professional Plus 2010
OneNote helps me keep track of all my writing, so I can organize ideas and works in progress and find everything. When the Office Show crew asked me to talk about how I use OneNote when I write poetry, I jumped at the chance. I worked on the Help for the very-first version of OneNote, and I knew it was going to become my favorite writing tool. I use OneNote for writing poetry and drafting blog posts and planning classes--and by now,Windows 7 Product Key, I have more than six years of free writes, research, notes for blog posts, poems, and essays. I can work through multiple drafts and I can save all of them (without carrying around heavy stacks paper pages and the tree-carnage they represent). If I go to far down a path that isn't working, I click a page tab and I'm back to an earlier draft--ready to try another direction. And the Search feature in OneNote is rock-solid reliable. If I remember even one word from something I worked on years ago, I can search on that word and find that piece of writing. OneNote also helps me write anywhere. I have a Capturex pen, so if I can't bring my laptop along,Office 2007 Enterprise, I can write on paper--whether I'm on the bus or walking up the street or waking up in the middle of the night. I can get my images and ideas down. Later, I can download my writing from the pen to my computer and then use handwriting-to-text conversion. That gives me more time for exploring and revising instead of typing. I can use handwriting-to-text conversion,Microsoft Office 2010 Professional Plus, so I still have the experience of writing longhand. I used to write on a Tablet PC,Microsoft Office Professional 2007, but now I use a special pen that writes on paper and stores what I've written. Either way, I can get my handwriting onto my computer without typing it. And when I gather all those ideas, I can easily move them around on the screen, create little side windows, let the images coalesce and arc and flow. Inspiration found everywhere finds a good home in OneNote. You can see some of this--as well as how authors David Salaguinto and Jennifer Egan use Microsoft Office to create--in the Office Show. -- Joannie Stangeland <div |
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