Note-taking on the iPad with the new-and-improved Outline+ app

Note-taking on the iPad with the new-and-improved Outline+ app
To grab a OneNote notebook from SkyDrive to edit in Outline+, tap the download button at the bottom of Outline+'s home screen and you'll see four "Open from" options: Dropbox, Box, SkyDrive, and iTunes. After signing in to your Microsoft account,you'll see a list of OneNote notebooks listed. Tap one to open it in Outline+. Screenshot by Matt Elliott/CNETTo perform the reverse and upload a notebook created in Outline+ to SkyDrive, tap-and-hold on a notebook until four tabs spring out from the right side of the notebook: Appearance, Sharing, Export, and Delete. On the Sharing tab, you'll be able to upload to Dropbox, Box, and SkyDrive. (The Export tab is for exporting to iTunes.)In addition to the headlining new feature that is syncing via SkyDrive, Outline+ now lets you use an external keyboard. I tried it with a wireless Bluetooth keyboard and found typing and navigating via the arrow keys to be a snap. You can't, however, use keyboard shortcuts to copy and paste. You'll need to highlight text via a tap on the screen to copy and paste, which is never my preferred method. As for the onscreen keyboard, it feature two new keys in its top-left corner to tab forward and back.Screenshot by Matt Elliott/CNETYou can enter text with the onscreen keyboard or an external keyboard, and you can also scribble, draw, and otherwise ink with the updated Outline+. Tap the pen icon along the right edge when you have a notebook open to call up the inking options. You have four colors of ballpoint pen for jotting down handwritten notes, and there are also five highlighters for scribbling bright notes or highlighting text. Screenshot by Matt Elliott/CNETLastly, there is a new sharing option that is sure to appeal to anyone who wants to share the genius contained within a OneNote notebook with non-OneNote users. Above the inking button is a share button that lets you quickly and easily email a notebook as a PDF attachment. You can also export it as a PDF to open in another app on your iPad, another useful option if you haven't completely turned over your life to OneNote.Screenshot by Matt Elliott/CNETThat's it for this update. For the next update coming down the line, the developer tells me that it will include encryption of sections and synchronization with SharePoint.