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OneNote 2007 vs Wiki
The other day I came across the fact that I was offered to use OneNote 2007 and a book from a public folder to maintain various project documentation. Reference information, diagrams, diagrams, application logic and everything that can only be attributed to a specific project. Those. in view of some technical problems, the wiki was refused to be put on the server.
In general, the arguments at first glance are convincing that it is possible to create many pages and related books both in the wiki and in OneNote, and to enter links to materials and documents, and to see the history of changes. But something haunts me. A little search on the Internet did not turn up such comparisons and posing questions, so I want to turn to habrareason in discussing the pros and cons of using OneNote as a wiki resource.
Please do not raise questions about the availability of software from users, i.e. "wiki only needs a browser" arguments don't count.
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It seems to me the question is banal.
Wiki:
+ Platform
independent - Slow content handling
- Requires learning syntax, ie. unintuitive (I know about editors, they are installed, they are crooked and miserable)
OneNote:
+ Intuitiveness
+ Fast work with content
- Platform dependence. Although there is a web implementation, but it eats up the convenience of work, not all functions are available
PS Personally, I use OneNote 2010
1. You can work with onenote through a browser while saving the document in live.net
2. My wife (a small sewing studio) maintains documentation (patterns, models, etc.) in onenote. This is more convenient than a wiki because of the free layout of the pages: we poke the mouse into an empty space on the page and enter a couple of paragraphs. I have not yet seen wiki engines with such functionality.
If the whole team has Windows, OneNote is definitely the best choice. This is the only program I miss so much on my Mac :(
How was Evernote not considered?
Everything you listed is there.
+ Free
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