![]() ![]() That's probably still the plan but recently the universal app has started to exceed the desktop app with some unique functions (like shape recognition). I assumed that Microsoft would keep doing that until the universal version was caught up enough to finally merge the two platforms. The simpler 'universal' version is still quite a bit behind the old desktop version and up until recently it's been strange to watch new features added to the universal app that the desktop app has had for years and presented like they are new and revolutionary. Pretty much all their real changing has been on the 'universal version' which they've been fairly rapidly adding functionality to. ![]() ![]() They consider 'desktop' OneNote legacy software and for a while now the only 'development' on it has been to keep the appearance changes the same as the rest of the desktop Office offerings. This isn't an official statement, I've just been a OneNote user since 2007 watching Microsofts odd progression to right now. There's a few fringe functions that may have been added, removed, or changed but the underlying notebook format hasn't changed since 2010. Desktop Onenote (the version with the year by it to match the Office version year) hasn't changed much at all since 2013 which wasn't much of a change from 2010. ![]()
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