top button
Flag Notify
    Connect to us
      Site Registration

Site Registration

Alternative of oneNote on Linux

+3 votes
723 views

Have been looking for an alternative to OneNote which will run on CentOS.

I've looked at Evernote, but it's support for Linux is emerging (supports Android, but not other flavors yet).

I've looked at nixnote, but it looks as though I might have to make from source. I can do that, but would prefer to find something in the standard CentOS repositories.

None of the other recommendations I've found out on the net show up in any 'yum list recommended-tool' runs.

Most seem to recommend getting an MS Live account and accessing OneNote in the MS cloud with a browser. I suppose I could do that, but would prefer my data stay on my CentOS box.

Any recommendations?

posted Nov 24, 2013 by Abhay Kulkarni

Share this question
Facebook Share Button Twitter Share Button LinkedIn Share Button

2 Answers

+2 votes

You can try these alternatives :

1. Evernote
2. Tiddlywiki
3. CintaNotes
4. Tomboy
5. Nevernote

These are the closest and good application as an alternative of onenote.

answer Nov 25, 2013 by Shekhar P
Evernote is best.
+1 vote

It is very simple:

  1. Register yourself on skydrive and use One Note at any OS (Linux, Mac, Windows, etc).

  2. All you need is only Internet connection and Web Browser.

  3. Make your own One Note and use it for your pleasure. (I did try to upload One Note from my desktop, but it doesn't work)

PS. Do not forget, you can paste in One Note only using Ctrl+V keys, mouse doesn't work.
and you'll get 7GB free space on skydrive.com

answer Dec 4, 2013 by anonymous
Similar Questions
0 votes

My CentOS-7 home server has a static IP address.

Is there a simple way of organizing the hpptd server so that it is accessible through this address at a remote host, but is accessed at its 192.168 address by a laptop on the WiFi LAN?

+1 vote

I am new to MongoDB and try to install MongoDB 3.2.9 on Ubuntu 14.01 LTS. I found there are different ways to install it as below:
1. The MongoDB official guidance use the apt-get install.
2. Download the package and create folders like bin, data, log, conf etc. and then manually and copy the corresponding modules to the bin when needed.

I am wondering which method should I use. Seems the second one is more flexible as its hard to make sense what the first one has done to the OS.

Could you advise any other impact and differences about the two methods for installation? Thanks in advance!

+3 votes

Does anyone have an inside scoop on books that look at the detailed design and architecture of a recent version of the Linux kernel? Some that I have seen are rather dated - from early to mid 90's.

Some links to such "recent" books would be appreciated. Google is returning way too many links and very hard
to sift through.

+2 votes

Why, when installing a new app do we need to also install the -libs and the -devel if the app is needed to make another app work.

Why cannot -libs be part of the installation if they are that important to the operation. Why are -devel, which I'm guessing are development files for the app needed, does this mean the app is bar minimum and cannot be used when required by another app.

...