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OneMore is a Microsoft OneNote add-in. It is not positioned as a replacement for OneNote, but rather as a way to “make OneNote a better OneNote.” Based on the available content, it is mainly aimed at desktop OneNote users, filling in editing, navigation, and content-reuse features that are common in modern note-taking apps but relatively limited in native OneNote.
The feature set is fairly broad: users can quickly invoke commands via the Command Palette; the Navigator window can track visited pages, maintain a reading list, and navigate by the current page title; the add-in also integrates with the Ribbon, extends the right-click menu, and supports custom keyboard shortcuts. On the editing side, it supports custom font styles, table styles, syntax highlighting for code snippets, Excel-like formulas inside table cells, and direct image cropping, rotation, or resizing within OneNote pages. For content reuse, users can save and reuse custom snippets, as well as manage favorite pages and sections for quick access.
The website clearly states that OneMore is free. The author maintains it as a side project and accepts donations to support ongoing development. The text does not mention paid plans, an enterprise edition, SLAs, or commercial support pricing. In terms of deployment, it is a desktop add-in installed on OneNote; its telemetry backend uses services such as AWS API Gateway, Lambda, S3, Glue, and Athena.
OneMore includes anonymous telemetry and states that it does not collect personal or identifiable information, nor does it track specific users across sessions. Events include command names, timestamps, versions, session IDs, and OneNote and Windows environment information, and are also written to local logs for inspection. The codebase is public on GitHub, and the website provides development and technical documentation for the command framework, COM, styles, text editing, telemetry, and more, making it relatively developer-friendly. However, the text does not provide information about compliance certifications such as SOC 2, ISO 27001, or GDPR, nor does it show enterprise permissioning or team management capabilities.
Its strengths are that it is free, practical, well aligned with the native OneNote workflow, and relatively transparent. Its limitations are that it depends heavily on OneNote and cannot be used as a standalone app; as a personal/open-source-style project, it also lacks sufficient information on support, permissions, auditing, and compliance capabilities typically required for enterprise procurement. It is best suited to heavy individual OneNote users, knowledge management users, students, developers, and note-taking scenarios that need enhanced code, table, or image features.
The text does not state whether the site or add-in is accessible from China. Its telemetry uses AWS, which may be unstable in some network environments, but this is not enough to conclude that it is blocked. Payment methods are also not disclosed. If a local or team-collaboration alternative is needed, tools such as native OneNote, Notion, Obsidian, Joplin, and Evernote may be worth evaluating.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on onemoreaddin.com official site.
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