We've heard that many Evernote users rely heavily on their clipper. If you prefer to use paper and pen, you can even scan that content with OneNote to make it digital, searchable and available from your phone to your laptop. You can get your ideas down in a range of ways that include typing, inking, embedding videos, recording audio, or clipping web content. OneNote also offers many of the same features that are available in Evernote and it can serve as an alternative to Apple's own Notes app. OneNote requires notes to be stored using Microsoft's OneDrive cloud storage service (which comes with 5GB free storage) but there are no restrictions on accessing notes across multiple devices. Accessing Evernote content on more than two devices now requires an Evernote subscription, priced at $3.99 per month or $34.99 per year. As of late June, customers who use a free Evernote basic account are only able to access their notes on a total of two devices. Microsoft's OneNote Import Tool is timely because Evernote recently made a policy change that has pushed users into seeking other note taking services. From there, all of your Evernote content is available in OneNote. Transitioning from Evernote to OneNote is as simple as downloading the import tool, letting the app locate Evernote notebooks, signing into your Microsoft account, and hitting the import button. Microsoft today announced the launch of its OneNote Import Tool for Mac, which is designed to allow Mac users to quickly and easily transfer all of their notes from note-taking app Evernote to Microsoft's own note-taking app, OneNote.