 Hi there, this is Kelvin Dewick, and this is how to customize OneNote for your tablet PC. I've opened up OneNote already. OneNote is a program that I use all the time on my tablet PC. So actually what I'm going to do is I'm going to go All Programs, Microsoft Office, OneNote 2007. I'm going to right-click, and I'm actually going to add that to my Quick Launch Bar. Now the Quick Launch Bar is this little arrow right down there. If I press there now, you can see OneNote has been added. Now I use this one so often that I like to have it appear as one of these three. So I'm going to do that by carefully dragging this little OneNote icon right to there. Now I've bumped Firefox off, and I don't like that because I use Firefox all the time as well. So I'm going to drag Firefox right to there. These are the three that I use the most. The Show Desktop button, OneNote, and Firefox. So let's open up OneNote. This is your basic page. There are a couple of toolbars that you really would want to turn on. So if you go to the View button, you want to turn on the Drawing toolbar, and you want to turn on the My Pens toolbar. However, I prefer to have the My Pens toolbar at the bottom, and I can do that by, I think, going to those three dots, or those four dots in the top corner. And if I hold the mouse button down, I can drag it right down to there, which is really where I prefer it. I just clicked to create a new page, or I could have gone File New Page, and now you'll see all these buttons have come to life, and they're now accessible. I can choose different pen colors, highlighters, thin pens, and thick pens. I can choose to erase. I can bring various shapes. This is a very handy one. If you want to bring in a graph, for example, a two-dimensional XY graph, I toggle it on, I pick somewhere on the screen, I hold the mouse button down, I drag down, I drag sideways, and it puts a lovely little XY coordinate plane in there. If you go to the Format option and Rule Lines, you can pick different kind of paper. Many of you will probably choose to go with medium-grid graph paper, in which case my graph didn't line up very good, but that's okay. I'll erase this graph, and I'm going to go to a bit of a thicker blue. I'll pick two dimensions full. Line up carefully, drag straight down, and if I drag straight sideways, it's really pretty easy to line it up right on the grid paper without too much trouble. I can give this a title if I click right here. I need to go to Text first, Toggle Text, click right there, Lesson 1. You'll notice as I type, or you can hand write into there, it also appears right there. One other thing with OneNote, this button right here lets you go from full screen, which is what I teach in, back to the smaller screen, back to the full screen, back to the smaller screen. A couple of other buttons I do add with OneNote, one in particular, and I need to remember where it is. I'm going to go Tools, Customize, Commands, All Commands, and it's called UsePen as Pointer. It's going to be under the letter U, I hope, too far. I'm going to drag it, I usually put it right there on my screen. What does the UsePen as Pointer do? Well, if you've ever wanted to mark up a geometry diagram or even a graph, but you didn't want the characters to stay, if you, I'll pick red, if you toggle UsePen as Pointer, whatever I draw on this graph will vanish after about 10 seconds, 3, 2, 1, you can see it's slowly vanishing, and now my original drawing is back to its pristine condition. Really handy, however, don't forget to toggle it off, otherwise you'll start to write your equation, and suddenly, as you're in the middle of your lesson, what you've just written will vanish and you can have fun with the kid. Oh, yep, and there, toggle it off, and now when I write Y equals NX plus B, sorry for the messy writing, everything works just fine. So that's how I toggle OneNote and how I customize OneNote. We'll talk about how I organize notebooks and things another time, or you can figure out your own little system. Right-click, delete this page because I was just goofing around, close.