OneNote 2010 Linked Notes

I've just started playing around with the Beta of OneNote 2010. One of the new features is linked notes, If I have a word doc, explorer window, outlook contact, etc. open while working on a note, it links that to the note automatically. I don't know what it would take or if this can even work with L4, but if it could the application would be extremely valuable.
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Philip, is one of your goals with OneNote something like a master notes repository where you can store all your Bible related notes, given you have one or more Bible software packages?
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Joan Korte said:
Philip, is one of your goals with OneNote something like a master notes repository where you can store all your Bible related notes, given you have one or more Bible software packages?
I guess right now my goal is to explore how I want to manage notes. I do want to see what Logos comes up with as far as an importer, but Onenote is more feature rich and would be a great place for all my notes (board meetings, Contacts, etc.)
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yes, i would like a way to link it. Embedding it (like MindManager software does with IE browser within its "mind mapping" software would be an additional feature that would make the ability to link even more useful
I like Apples. Especially Honeycrisp.
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Linked notes in Onenote 2010 is a very cool feature. I am trying to think how it would work with resources and with notes/clippings. The problem I see is that the link in OneNote is to a location in a document so each open resource would have to be linked (OneNote linking does allow multiple linked documents) but they each have to be established. So before a paragraph could be linked to a resource the document would have to be linked. But it could possible work and might be really cool.
It may be easier to just enhance/simplify the ability to make resource links to external resources.
Drag tab to external document (OneNote, Word processor) similar to dragging to favorites or the toolbar. When they are dropped in the document a short text label and the resource hyperlink is added just like to the favorites window. Same thing could be done with the CTRL+ALT+C keyboard shortcut (or another keyboard shortcut) then CTRL+V to past the resource hyperlink with resource label text in the destination document.
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Funny there should be a post about OneNote 2010 here. I was exploring a trial version of OneNote over the weekend and got to thinking that this could be a powerful mnistry tool. Would you guys say that it is worth the price to go ahead and buy OneNote? Or would I be wasting my money? I'm thinking that there's lot's of promise with OneNote.
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I think it is well worth the $. I do all my sermon prep, journaling, and note taking in onenote (2007).
One of my favorite features - make a guide of some sort, lets say you have a study guide for bible study. Scan that guide in as a picture, then set it as a background for a onenote template. I even use this for my weekly planning:
. I tried the free version of evernote, but it will not let you write over the top of another note, which is really helpful when doing sermon prep. If you have seen Marks videos on making a sermon in L4, he writes the scripture out on paper, and put notes all over that. You can do that with onenote without the paper!
The drawback, it takes 3 programs to do all this - L4, onenote, and then wood processor.
I was thinking of staring a onenote thread and have everyone who uses it share their best ideas and practices, but I think that is against the rules now a days.
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Michael Birney said:
The drawback, it takes 3 programs to do all this - L4, onenote, and then wood processor.
That last program would be especially difficult to work with. And NOISY. Would you recommend Craftmen or Black & Decker?
sry, that was just too funny (your typo, not my retort!)
I might try your thing. Why do you have to scan? Can't you just make a table and save it as some kind of template?
I like Apples. Especially Honeycrisp.
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What makes that typo even more funny - the other forum I spend time in is called hearth.com, and is about heating your house with wood - which is how I heat my house. Maybe a Freudian slip rather than a typo. [:)]
I scan them, or turn them into pictures so they are background, and don't change as I change things on top of them. There are other ways, as you said you can just make a table, I just find that I like it as background, it works the best for me.
You don't have to scan, your can create it in paint or publisher, or whatever will save it as a .jpg. In fact I think I created that one in publisher, and saved it as a jpg.
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Michael Birney said:
I was thinking of staring a onenote thread and have everyone who uses it share their best ideas and practices, but I think that is against the rules now a days.
I would be interested to see how other guys use OneNote, notonly in L4 Bible study, but also ministry in general.
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Jarred Edgecombe said:Michael Birney said:
I was thinking of staring a onenote thread and have everyone who uses it share their best ideas and practices, but I think that is against the rules now a days.
I would be interested to see how other guys use OneNote, notonly in L4 Bible study, but also ministry in general.
I, also, would be quite interested in this!
Philippians 4: 4 Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, Rejoice. 5 Let your reasonableness be known to everyone. The Lord is at hand..........
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Larosa Johnston di d an excelent post on this, cant find it tho [:(]
Never Deprive Anyone of Hope.. It Might Be ALL They Have
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5QGGD7rOEYs
this is using the OneNote 2010 beta... and this is what I'm still using as my system for taking notes/outlining... although I use the notes in L4 for jotting notes & questions that I need to answer/investigate while studying, much like Mark Barnes does
Urban Scholar - http://urban-scholar.com
Christ-centered Hip-Hop - http://www.sphereofhiphop.com0 -
Jarred Edgecombe said:Michael Birney said:
I was thinking of staring a onenote thread and have everyone who uses it share their best ideas and practices, but I think that is against the rules now a days.
I would be interested to see how other guys use OneNote, notonly in L4 Bible study, but also ministry in general.
I use One Note 2007 and will install One Note 2010 when it is out of Beta. In response to Jarred's question above here is how I plan to use One Note (I do not see a way to link One Note to Logos 4 at this time but it would be great if it did).
I have created a One Note Workbook That will have a Tab for each Book of he Bible. The Book Tab will have Book overview for general Bible Book notes. Within the Book Tab I create new pages that match the Book Pericope, such as Genesis 1:1-2:3. Then within these pages I wil lcreate subpages that are specific to a verse or a group of verses.
Mnay times my personal notes or commentary on a verse(s) can be lengthy. From One Note I can link to external documents such as Word documents that I have created. I also like that that when I copy a resource into One Note it automatically captures the source information. I can link specific notes to Word documents and other files within One Note.
I will use Logos 4 to have a brief note linked to verse(s) or word(s) but will keep my more extensive notes in One Note. I will also use the clippings feature in Logos 4 to capture the 3X5 index cards for resources in Logos 4. But I will copy those clippings to One Note as needed. Notes in One Note can be linked to other notes in other Bible books in One Note.
I don't see (unless someone can show me) a seamless link between One Note and Logos 4. Since I desire a commentary and book writting tool, I will use One Note as the hub that stores information that I want ti use for writting commentaries and books. Books will be produced in Word (I have special book writing interface with Word). Everything will be using Logos 4 as the main resource (I have some resoures that are not in Logos), Word will be used to produce the documents, and One Note wil be used to gather all resoure information (notes, clips, other files) in to one place for use in Word documents or PDF's.
One Note is a great place to organize thoughts, notes, and ideas along with tracking progress on a writting project. Just wanted to share how I use One Note.
Thanks
Mick
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First I use Onenote for sermon prep: This week I a preaching from Psalm 127, I have Preaching Notebook / Old Testament Section / Psalm Tab / Psalm 127 page. On that page is: 1. Basic notes on the "big idea", 2. All of Psalm 127 in 26 bold font, that is double space (have to do this manually). Then in that space are notes about words, questions, ideas, all kinds of stuff that I thought of. Mark Barnes has a video on sermon prep, he does this on paper - but it is the same idea. 3. I copy and paste all of the info from L4 to this page. This is the stuff that you'd like to put in notes and clippings in L4, but .... . I also copy and paste the link in case I want to go back to the source. (I have just started to play with onenote 10, so not sure how the new link stuff works). I can highlight this stuff, I can bold it, I can write a note next to it, I can make comments about it here. This is great sermon fodder, and where I take quotes from. (Any other info you might want to include could also go here, for example if you read a sermon on this subject on a sermon sight, you could cut and paste it here also, which automatically inserts a hyper-link) 4. A basic outline of the sermon.
After all that, I use word (or wood as in my previous post) to write my sermon, with the big idea now fully developed cut and pasted to the top of the word document.
Second I use onenote for journaling - again I am able to cut and paste things from bible readings, or things that just strike me as interesting during the day into that notebook. What is nice here is that by using office live sync, I can journal in my notebook, or on my work computer or on my home computer, it all shows up everywhere.
I also use it for gathering illustrations, just cut and paste and title and tag. I have to admit, I have a lot of illustrations, I hardly ever use them.
The notebooks I keep open are: Personal, Work ( I am a part time pastor, so is this tab for the other full time job), Ministry, Preaching (includes illustrations), Contacts, IT, Receipts. I have a few more notebooks which I have started, but don't use them now, so they are not opened.
Major drawback - all this work is not searchable in L4. But I would do it on a yellow pad by hand if I had to use notes and clippings.
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Thanks for your input on how you use One Note. It is a powerful application and is pretty mush user defined on how you want to use it. The interface with most other Microsoft applications gives it lots of power.
My laptop is a tablet and so I can even taken hand-written notes in it and then convert the hand-written into typed notes.
Thanks Mick
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LaRosa,
Thanks for your post. Just what I was looking for. Like your website also, use to follow your blog especially when you first started with Logos.
J.T.
Phoenix, AZ
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Michael Birney said:
After all that, I use word (or wood as in my previous post) to write my sermon, with the big idea now fully developed cut and pasted to the top of the word document
brings new meaning to the task, "cut and paste!"
I like Apples. Especially Honeycrisp.
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MichaelFinch said:
I use One Note 2007 and will install One Note 2010 when it is out of Beta.
i gather you are just making sure all your work doesn't crash . . . but I have been using OneNote 2010 beta for a few months with absolutely no problems. And I love the ribbon on it, and other minor improvements.
I like Apples. Especially Honeycrisp.
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Dan DeVilder said:MichaelFinch said:
I use One Note 2007 and will install One Note 2010 when it is out of Beta.
i gather you are just making sure all your work doesn't crash . . . but I have been using OneNote 2010 beta for a few months with absolutely no problems. And I love the ribbon on it, and other minor improvements.
Dan,
My sister and I have special Enterprise License with Microsoft. As soon as The Microsoft Office Enterprise 2010 is out of beta we will get our copies of the software automatically. I usually wait to upgrade to newer releases when we get our copy. I could download the beta and I might since you mentioned it, but I typically wait for the full Office release.
Thanks Mick
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Mick,
I have enjoyed your comments and ideas about using OneNote for notkeeping as well as the comments of all others that have contributed to the discussion. You mention a OneNote notebokk that you have created and use regurely. Is it possible to get a copy of the notebook so I, and possibly others, will not have to completely reinvent the wheel?
Currently I have no real organization to my bible study notes in OneNote but do use it to keep exstensive notes on passages under study. I then create a link from that passage in a Logos 4 note file to the appropriate passage in Onenote. I can then click on the link in Logos 4 and jump almost instantly to the notes I have compiled for that passage in OneNote. Works great.
For those using both OneNote and Logos 4, here is an example of what I'd do. There's probrably a simpler way but this is how I do it. Say for instance I am have Logos 4 open and am studying Romans 1:1-7. In OneNote I create a page in my study notebook for Romans 1:1-7. I then create a link to this page in OneNote. Next I copy this to a Work document and then right-click on the link and edit the link if I want to change its name to make it more meaningful. I then copy the link from Word into the note file I'm using in Logos 4. From there on in, I can click the link in my Logos 4 note file and it jumps to the appropriate place in OneNote.
I love this linking capability because it works in the opposite direction as well. I can create a link to a specific location in a Logos 4 resource (bible, commentary, etc) and paste it into Word, edit it to give it a meaningful name and then past it into OneNote. From there on in I can click the link in OneNote and jump directly to the resource location in Logos 4.
Thus my note files in Logos 4 are very minimal, mostly containing links to OneNote, locations withing specific resources and links to web pages.
Michael
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RevMichaelLBurns said:
For those using both OneNote and Logos 4, here is an example of what I'd do
Thanks Michael. At some point, I may jump back into OneNote. LaRosa gave me the "fire" to do it, but i just drifted away from it. I have never linked anything to anything. I need to try it. It seems a bit of a pain, but probably not, once i get used to it. One of the reasons I have gone back to L4 is Clippings. I just love that, even though some functionality is limited (text manipulation, organizing, etc). I mean, I really love it. "Notes" is a bit different. I am a bit indifferent about it. They really almost need to merge Notes and Clippings in some fashion. I really like that htey are automatically (for the most part) in "My Content" now.
That said, there are a lot of advantages to One Note. I wish it could somehow be embedded. It just takes up too much room. and it can't be "tabbed behind" other applications in L4. It just takes up whatever space you give it, and that is it. Docking it is okay, but it is to stinkin' skinny.
I like your plea to send us the templates, or whatever. that is a good idea. (for us!)
Dan
I like Apples. Especially Honeycrisp.
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Not sure how to edit my original post so I will do it this way.
I failed to mention yesterday that I follow the same basic procedure to put links in Wordsearch 8 and Bibileworks 8 note files to jump to my more detailed notes in OneNote 2010. Actually, if I am studying Romans 1:1-7 in Logos 4, I creat the link as mentioned in yesterday's post so I can jump to my notes in OneNote. I then usually copy the link that I created in Logos 4 and pasteit into a Wordsearch and Bibleworks note file, thus whichever program I am using (Logos 4, Bibleworks or Wordsearch) if I am studying Romans 1:1-7 again, I can quickly jump to a common area where my notes aere kept.
Thus my actual note taking in the individual Bible study applications is kept at a minimum and my notes are kept neatly in one place accesable from eithr and/or all of my bible study applications.
Oh, I just love OneNote.
Michael
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RevMichaelLBurns said:
I have enjoyed your comments and ideas about using OneNote for notkeeping as well as the comments of all others that have contributed to the discussion. You mention a OneNote notebokk that you have created and use regurely. Is it possible to get a copy of the notebook so I, and possibly others, will not have to completely reinvent the wheel?
Michael, I am really just getting started setting up my notes in OneNote so I really don't have a sample to provide. I only have ideas that I am working with and will modify as I actually set them up. But I can share my structure ideas that iam working on so far if you would like.
First I will probably have two notebooks, one for OT and one for NT. The tabs on the top will be the Books. Then the pages down the right side wlll match the Books pericopes. Then if needed I will have sub-pages within that set of verses. An example would be a Tab for the Book of Genesis. A page on the right would have Genesis 1:1-2:3 (The Creation of the Wordl). Then if I wanted specific notes to words or other resources pertaing to Genesis 1:1 alone I would create a sub-page for those. So it is kind of a tree level approach going from a Book to a set of verses (in my case teh verses that make up that pericope) to individual verses. Another sub-page on any page could have research notes and information from other authors along with the source information for footnotes and copyrights.
I hope this will give you an idea of what I am thinking and hope you gives you some ideas as well. Since notes can be linked and tagged in OneNote and hopefully to Logos 4 "notes," then it will be a powerful combination of tools to keep track of everything I have read and its copyright source.
I am also experimenting with voice recognition so that I can read notes into OneNote if I do not have a source document to copy from.
Yours in Christ, Mick
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MichaelFinch said:
I am also experimenting with voice recognition so that I can read notes into OneNote if I do not have a source document to copy from.
I was playing around with the one in Win 7. It has its merits, but overall, pretty useless, at least with my set up. Sometimes it flowed well, other times, it would NEVER get the letter (I had resorted to spelling one word) I kept saying, no matter what I did. Arrrrgh. Are you trying Dragon?
I like Apples. Especially Honeycrisp.
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RevMichaelLBurns said:
For those using both OneNote and Logos 4, here is an example of what I'd do. There's probrably a simpler way but this is how I do it. Say for instance I am have Logos 4 open and am studying Romans 1:1-7. In OneNote I create a page in my study notebook for Romans 1:1-7. I then create a link to this page in OneNote. Next I copy this to a Work document and then right-click on the link and edit the link if I want to change its name to make it more meaningful. I then copy the link from Word into the note file I'm using in Logos 4. From there on in, I can click the link in my Logos 4 note file and it jumps to the appropriate place in OneNote.
Follow-up with Michael,
I would appreciate very much if you could provide "detailed" steps on how you link Logos 4 to a note in OneNote. I don't seem to be able to grasp what you are doing in the above steps. If you could find the time to help everyone interested in this approcah it would be a great help.
Thanks, Mick
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Dan DeVilder said:
It has its merits, but overall, pretty useless, at least with my set up.
I was testing one out that did fairly well in English ... except that it always gave a Chinese character for "gin". [D][:O]
Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."
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MJ. Smith said:Dan DeVilder said:
It has its merits, but overall, pretty useless, at least with my set up.
I was testing one out that did fairly well in English ... except that it always gave a Chinese character for "gin".
the devil is in the details . . .
I am using a built in mic on my laptop--that COULD be part of the problem, but it was more than that. However, I no longer remember that mind numbing day. . . .[8o|]
I like Apples. Especially Honeycrisp.
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Dan DeVilder said:
I am using a built in mic on my laptop--that COULD be part of the problem, but it was more than that.
I have a headset with a mic. It works very well and going through the testing phase it has not made a mistake. I am uning with Windows 7 speech recognition.
My wife and I live a two hour drive apart right now. I can set-up my laptop in the passenger side of the car and dictate to it and then edit the document or notes when I arrive at my destination. No looking at the computer screen while driving.[:O]
Thanks, Mick
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I'm still playing with the whole OneNote, Logos question myself... I was starting to create a notebook in OneNote that would be Lectionary based--- ie. a different section for each of the years of the 3 year lectionary, with the pericope running on the tabs down the side... and then I was going to created sub notes under these that I gathered from Logos, the web, etc. Not sure if it's something I want to do. I'm considering making a clippings file that has each of the pericope reading sections as a clipping title, and then store info there... seems like a possible solution for Logos as my note taking tool. I'm following most of the discussion about notes, Logos, and OneNote, trying to decide upon a final way before putting too much time with all my efforts having to be redone. I did want to let everyone know that someone put together a OneNote Notebook with the ESV and also the NKJV which you can download and import into One Note. You'll find the link here....
Blessings, Rob
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Robert C. Kuefner Jr. said:
I'm still playing with the whole OneNote, Logos question myself
Rob,
I would use Logos 4 for all notes and will use it for notes I want to show up in my Logos 4 resources. It is that sometimes my notes on a subject can be extrensive and that is where I will use OneNote to link to Logos 4. What I really like about OneNote is the way it can assist in organize thoughts and allows me to incorporate research. Then I have everything in one place and when I am writing in Word I have links to Logos 4 notes and OneNote notes complete with research and copyright information.
Thanks. Mick
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Robert C. Kuefner Jr. said:
I'm considering making a clippings file that has each of the pericope reading sections as a clipping title, and then store info there.
Rob, you may want to decide if this proposal meets your needs, but: I noticed my clippings were showing up in "My Content" in the Passage Guide in the Beta version (which will probably be in regular version soon). What I don't know is how that is generated. I know that my clippings started out as commentary clips, so it may have registered them that way. But I had other books clipped into them, too. The point being, they were topically titled: Olivet Discourse, keys to kingdom, etc. But all showed up under the pericope of study. For Matthew 24, I had several clipping files. That way I woulnd't have to search through one giant file. But they all fell under the Matthew 24 pericopes' umbrella.
I would like to h ave clarified how clippings get tied to the PG . . .
As for OneNote, I have kept most of my research notes in Notes and Clippings, and not OneNote. That is still an open ended question: should I dock it to my window and use my Logos, Pradis and other research applications next to it, funneling all notes into it? I really like Clippings. And making links seems like a big pain, unless you have to do it. So I would prefer to keep most in house (Logos 4). What I don't like is the clunky way to print Notes (L4) etc. That is my biggest stumbling block.
That said, if i DON'T move all to One Note, this is still something I will do: use it as Michael said, to organize my thoughts. I have it open alongside L4 and I sift through Clippings and L4 Notes and put what I want into OneNote. But I can rearrange info easily within that, PLUS I can make sub pages that pull together illustrations or images I might find for sermon day.
I like Apples. Especially Honeycrisp.
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MichaelFinch said:Dan DeVilder said:
I am using a built in mic on my laptop--that COULD be part of the problem, but it was more than that.
I have a headset with a mic. It works very well and going through the testing phase it has not made a mistake. I am uning with Windows 7 speech recognition.
My wife and I live a two hour drive apart right now. I can set-up my laptop in the passenger side of the car and dictate to it and then edit the document or notes when I arrive at my destination. No looking at the computer screen while driving.
Thanks, Mick
wow. I may have to try that again. the "testing" went fine for me, but the actually DOING did not. Like i said, at times it was pretty good. But one day it was just awful.
I like Apples. Especially Honeycrisp.
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RevMichaelLBurns said:
Not sure how to edit my original post so I will do it this way.
Michael, [if you have not discovered this as of yet] we have about 10 hours to edit our posts.
In the upper right hand corner of your post are the two buttons "Reply" & "More"
Click on "More" and you will see a menu wilth "edit" as one of the choices.
Scroll down to where you have typed your message and make any corrections desired.
Hope this helps.
Regards, SteveF
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MichaelFinch:
What type of interface do you use with Word for writing?
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JamesSheets said:
MichaelFinch:
What type of interface do you use with Word for writing?
James,
Here is the link to the software I use.
Thanks, Mick
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Mick,
For simplicity's sake, lets assume that I am going to be doing a series of expository studies on the Book of Romans. I could create a new notebook called Romans and in that book I would creat a section called "Notes". I would then add a tab down the right side in the follow manner, "Chapter 01, Chapter 02, etc, one tab for each chapter in the book. The numbers following the word Chapter are merely to force sort or.
Now suppose I am doing a study on Romans 1:1-7. I would creat a new page titled Romans 01:1-7. It would appear at the bottom of the list of tabs on the right. I would then drag it up the list and drop it just after the Rpmans tab. I would then right click on the tab for Romans 01:1-7 and make it a subpage. Now I have a universal place foir all my notes on Romans 01:1-7.
Next I right click on the subpage tab for Romans 01:1-7 and select "Copy link to page". This creates a link to this location. I then open MS Word and past this link to a blank page. Then I right-click the link and select edit link and rename the link if so desired to make it more descriptive (Has to be done here. Can't be done in Logos 4).. Then I close the edit link dialog and highlite and copy the link again. At this time I switch over to Logos 4 where I am doing my actual studies in Romans, in this case, Romans 1:1-7. You then paste this OneNote link into whatever note file your using at whatever point you choose.
In my case, since I do extensive note taking in OnenOte, in Logos I have a note file called "Reference Notes" which I keep open and it contains a line for each book of the Bible. Since in this case I am doing a study in Romans I would add the link following the line for the book of Romans.
From this point forward, anytime I hold down the control key and click on the link, it opens OneNote to the specific passage under study, in this case, Romans 01:1-7, and I can start recording my notes. I just repeat this process to create a note page in OneNote and a link to it from Logos 4. A major drawback in using this method is that the notes are not searchable from within Logos 4. For me, this is a minor irritation when I consider the tradeoffs.
Through the years, due to various books purchased and strengths and weaknesses of various programs, I have come to do my sermon and bible study preperation using a combination of four main programs, Logos 3, Logos 4, Wordsearch and BibleWorks. Until I started using OneNote I kept notes in the various programs and oftenn forgot which program had a particular nottation. I found myself creating the note in the application with the best note taking capabilites and then copying and pasting into each of the other applicatrions note files. This was time consumming a poor use of resources.
But now, once I creat the link as recorded above, I can paste it into a note file in all four application and click on it in either and go directly to the applicable notes in OneNote. Thus, all my notes are in one location and reachable from each bible program and I don't have to remember where I recorded them.
As I mentioned in my earlier post, by following a similar procedure you can creat a link in Logos 4 to a particul place within a particular resource location and then use that link by reversing the process above and paste the link into OneNote at the appropriate place and from then on, if you clicked on that link in OneNote it would take you to that resource and location in Logos 4.
Hope this gives you sokme idea how to use links with Onenote and Logos 4.
Michael
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Michael, I do basically what you do, a few variations. I have an OT and NT section, then section groups of books of bible, then within the section group I can have a who section of each book of bible, then I can have a tab for each section of scripture I preach on. I am preaching through the Psalms lately so this weeks looks like this: Preaching (notebook) / Old Testament (section) / OT(2) Kings - Proverbs (section group) / (19)Psalms (section) / Psalm 46 (tab)
But what I want to thank you for is the linking - I was not linking at all to L4, hand't figured that out, but I tried it out this morning and it works great - I'll be working on updating my referent notes with my onenote links later today! Thanks!
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Yes, I too want to thank you for this info. This is not as good (for me) as having great note taking ability from within L4. However, it is better than what I have been attempting. Also, for someone like you, who uses many Bible study programs, this is ingenious.
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RevMichaelLBurns said:
As I mentioned in my earlier post, by following a similar procedure you can creat a link in Logos 4 to a particul place within a particular resource location and then use that link by reversing the process above and paste the link into OneNote at the appropriate place and from then on, if you clicked on that link in OneNote it would take you to that resource and location in Logos 4.
Hope this gives you sokme idea how to use links with Onenote and Logos 4.
Michael,
This helped and it works great. Thanks for taking the time to provide this detail.
Thanks, Mick
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You can try this: http://IStudyBibleTools.com
The special program for independent Bible study via OneNote.
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I've added the program usage example: http://IStudyBibleTools.com/Screencast.htm
So you can see the program for Bible study in action!
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Alexander do you offer an option for 32-bit machines? I see only downloads for x64 and x86 on your website.
Specifically, Windows XP on a 32-bit machine.
Also, when your "analyse" function parses references, it would be useful if the software would recognize references to the deuterocanonical books (for Christians using Bible translations with those books).
bob
Catholic Daily Bible Reading Plan | Daily Catholic Lectionary Meditations
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>Alexander do you offer an option for 32-bit machines?
Yes. x86 - this version is for 32-bit machines.
What about deuterocanonical books:
I can generate module with deuterocanonical books. Can you provide them in any txt format?
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Thanks Alexander....
The seven deuterocanonical books are Tobit, Judith, Wisdom, Sirach (Ecclesiasticus), Baruch, and 1 and 2 Maccabees.
There are also additional passages found in the books of Daniel and Esther, but that's an issue for another time (and Orthodox folk have some other writings as well, I believe).
The TOC (Table of Contents) of any version of the Bible that uses these books will have the list of names (such as NRSV, NJB, NAB, NABRE, RSV-CE, Douay-Rhiems (the names here differ) and should be helpful to you).
You've done a good job with this so far, and I thank you for your efforts.
bob
Catholic Daily Bible Reading Plan | Daily Catholic Lectionary Meditations
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The new release of program with support of parallel Bible translation is available at http://istudybibletools.com/download.htm.
The new modules are available at http://istudybibletools.com/modules.htm
Also the King James Version with Apokryphen module is available.
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