G
GTreible
I'm an Engineer who uses onenote on a laptop without digitizer capability.
Here are a few suggestions I have:
Add the Microsoft Equation Editor to the insert menu so I can enter
equations quickly and professionally.
When using the digital ink feature with the mouse, it would be nice if I had
a palet of simple drawing tools, like draw a straight line, round circle,
etc. These could be keyboard combinations shift+mouse is horizontal line,
etc.
Also when using the digital ink feature, it would be nice to have several
"pre-drawn" primitives. Things like an X-Y graph without the data, or a
binary tree, etc. Most of the "black board" things I draw are the same only
with different names or data.
Again with digital ink, it would be nice to type with the keyboard and have
"digital ink text" appear in a free form location on the drawing (for
non-tablet pc users).
Finally, I would like to see a classic "engineering notebook" template
suitable for patent applications ( AND where the ruled lines actually line up
with the rows of text).
Thank you for your time in reading my suggestions.
Gary Treible
Engineering Manager
Fincor Electronics
York, PA
Here are a few suggestions I have:
Add the Microsoft Equation Editor to the insert menu so I can enter
equations quickly and professionally.
When using the digital ink feature with the mouse, it would be nice if I had
a palet of simple drawing tools, like draw a straight line, round circle,
etc. These could be keyboard combinations shift+mouse is horizontal line,
etc.
Also when using the digital ink feature, it would be nice to have several
"pre-drawn" primitives. Things like an X-Y graph without the data, or a
binary tree, etc. Most of the "black board" things I draw are the same only
with different names or data.
Again with digital ink, it would be nice to type with the keyboard and have
"digital ink text" appear in a free form location on the drawing (for
non-tablet pc users).
Finally, I would like to see a classic "engineering notebook" template
suitable for patent applications ( AND where the ruled lines actually line up
with the rows of text).
Thank you for your time in reading my suggestions.
Gary Treible
Engineering Manager
Fincor Electronics
York, PA