

You can also easily insert web page links into OneNote content with the OneNote Insert Link dialog (from OneNote’s Insert tab or by pressing Ctrl-K), when you want to capture dynamic links rather than embedding a copy of web page content. Sending web page content to OneNote is useful because you can then annotate, tag, link, and share the content using OneNote, and you don’t need to worry about link rot (web pages becoming inaccessible for any reason, breaking page links). The first and probably most widely-used option for integrating web content with OneNote is to send web content into OneNote pages. In this article, we’ll review options for sending web content to OneNote, linking OneNote and web pages, and web-centric content authoring in OneNote. In general, the same options apply for content accessed through web browser clients, especially Microsoft Internet Explorer (IE). The previous article in this series, Microsoft OneNote: Complementing Other Office Applications, included a review of several options for integrating OneNote with other Office applications.
