It seems that the power to blog is becoming ubiquitous these days. As I mentioned in my last blog, blogging is possible from third party applications as well as directly through the blog host’s site. In that case it was Writely, in this case I’ve discovered that it is also possible to blog directly from OneNote (2007 Beta 2), the note taking tool developed by Microsoft.
To demonstrate, this blog is written in my ‘1032 – Computer Applications to Law’ notebook in OneNote. As you can see from the screenshot below, I’ve created a notebook (on the left edge of the image) for each of my classes. Within each notebook I then create a series of sections (tabs running along the top of the image) for different aspects of the class – in this case I’ve got Class Notes, Research and Blogs. Within each section, I then can create a new page or add to existing notes as the circumstances dictate. In this case, I’ve got a different page for each of the Blogs I’ve created (although this is the first published through OneNote.)

While I use the program at university, this program strikes me as an excellent organisational tool for legal practice as well. Setting each file up as a notebook allows easy access to each client’s file, and by creating your default folder on a server, you can also collaborate on files from any workstation running OneNote.
An hour of wasted effort later…
AARRGH!!
Guess what? MS Office 2007 (I’m using Beta 2) doesn’t support WordPress blogs hosted by WordPress. (but does support WP blogs hosted on your own domain) I’ve posted this the usual way. If you want to know more about the workings of OneNote (though I’m pissed off at MS right now I still love OneNote) check out my wiki on it.