Take Microsoft’s One- Note note-taking program, put it on the Web, add lots of cool collaborative tools, and make it free-and you’d have something resembling AdventNet’s Zoho Notebook service.
Like OneNote, Zoho Notebook allows you to organize multiple-page on-screen binders that include information such as text, graphics, audio, video, and embedded Web content. I especially like how an entire notebook page can behave as a text document or a spreadsheet, complete with Office-like editing tools from Advent-Net’s other services.
Zoho Notebook’s features outshine those in OneNote (and in Google Notebook, a Web-based rival). You can share a whole notebook, individual pages, or specific objects (such as images), and you can grant colleagues either editing or read-only privileges. It even gives you a built-in chat window.
This beta doesn’t have a few common features, such as a search capability. Also, the program lacks documentation (such as, how to use a handy Firefox extension for clipping content from other sites). The company says that search and help may be up by the time you read this. But even as is, Zoho Notebook is worth checking out.
This review is courtesy of PCWorld.ca. For the latest reviews and comparisons on laptops, notebooks, desktops, printers, software, consumer electronics and more, visitPCWorld.ca.