- Dec 17, 2013
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You might have wondered why OneNote has sparkly rainbow inking options. The answer is more interesting than you may think.
OneNote is a great, arguably industry-leading note taking tool. The free application is bundled with Windows 10, and is available on virtually every device you may own. The app synchronizes your content across devices, allowing you to share and collaborate on notes with friends and family, and if you have the educational licenses, your entire classroom.
Indeed, OneNote like many of Microsoft's products have enterprise and education-level versions, which often some with some sort of fee. For Office 365 users, OneNote comes with some intriguing extra features, such as rainbow inking, which you might think is a bit of a useless feature.
Is it wrong to take all my #CDASummit notes in rainbow ink?#AzOps #AzureAvengers #Surface #OneNote pic.twitter.com/NYTu65Pee6
— Sonia Cuff (@SoniaCuff) August 1, 2018
Ian Mikutel from the Microsoft Whiteboard team recently shared some interesting insights into why OneNote has rainbow inking, reminding us in the tech bubble that just because some of us might think a feature is useless, other people certainly won't.— Sonia Cuff (@SoniaCuff) August 1, 2018
Full story from the WindowsCentral blog...