Linux turns 29: The biggest events in its history so far
A year by year summary of the most significant events in Linux's history to date.
Microsoft's OneNote is a completely cross-platform app now, which means it can go with you anywhere. In this gallery, I present six of my favorite OneNote productivity secrets to help you get your personal and work projects organized.
In addition to To Do Tags, which I mentioned earlier, the desktop versions of OneNote (Windows PC and Mac) allow you to choose from dozens of ready-made tags and even create your own. So you can tag a photo as Important, mark a hyperlink as a website to visit later, and even (in a nod to journalists) select a name and apply the Source For Article tag.
How do you pull all those tags together? From the Windows desktop version of OneNote, click the Find Tags button (in the Tags section of the Home ribbon, identified with a bright red arrow here). That opens a Tags Summary pane on the right side of the program window, where every tagged item is listed. You can filter the result to show only selected notebooks, to remove to-do items that are checked as complete, and to refresh the pane if you've made some changes since the last time you searched.
One of the coolest options at all is a tiny button at the bottom of that pane: Create Summary Page. Click it to turn the pane's contents into a new page that neatly pulls together everything you've tagged into a single location.
This is 6/6. Return to first page.
Caption by: Ed Bott
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