For that, go to Samsung Notes Settings and tap on Sync to Microsoft OneNote text. But if that doesn’t happen, you can manually press the Sync Now button or change sync settings. Typically, your notes should start syncing to the OneNote feed. You can also select any other custom folder. Tap on Folders since it has all the notes generally. Once logged in, you will be asked to select the folders that you want to sync to OneNote. Tap on the Get Started button and log in to your Microsoft account.ĥ. Tap on the three-bar icon at the top and press the Settings icon.Ĥ. Open the Samsung Notes app on your phone.Ģ. Connect Samsung Notes to OneNoteįollow these steps to link Samsung Notes to your Microsoft account:ġ. To do so, first, you need to connect your Samsung Notes to OneNote using your Microsoft account and then view the notes in the OneNote feed. But don’t worry, you can still access your Samsung Notes using OneNote web or Outlook web versions. Sadly, the OneNote Mac app doesn’t have the feed option, which means you cannot view Samsung Notes in the OneNote Mac app. You can find both of them in the OneNote’s feed which is accessible from the OneNote Windows apps and the web version. OneNote not only offers amazing note-taking features but also lets you access Windows Sticky Notes and Samsung Notes from all devices.
View Samsung Notes on Mac Using Using OneNote Let’s know the steps in detail to view Samsung Notes on Mac. But what if you own a MacBook? How do you access Samsung Notes on Mac? Thankfully, you can do it using OneNote. Samsung only provides support for Galaxy Books. However, it has a major drawback, and that is you cannot access it on other platforms easily. I’m looking for: * Proper sticky notes on the desktop * Works on Linux, MacOS and Windows (and bonus if mobile too) * Open source but worst case freeware.Samsung Notes is considered among the coolest note-taking apps. GloboNotes includes the kitchen sync for features but is a database and is Freeware and not open source, whilst Pin ‘Em Up is open source and XML format, but is very bare bones with no text formatting, and has had no updates for 7 years.
So I have found two Java apps that are Windows, MacOS and Linux but no mobile clients, and neither do they actually handle concurrent multi-client syncing. Notezilla is halfway there for Windows and iOS and Android, but no Linux or MacOS. There was a great solution like this called Cloud Sticky Notes that synced to Amazon Cloud but the site is now unavailable. I ma using QOwnNotes already for masses of text based notes which sync via my NextCloud. Some like Microsoft’s Sticky notes don’t ‘stick’ on Linux. It got me thinking though about proper cross-platform syncing sticky notes (not note managers like Evernote, Google Keep, QOwnNotes). I just had a fallout with KNotes ‘losing’ my few notes after an upgrade, and it was a major sweat to finally track down the notes saved in two Akonadi folders elsewhere.