Everyone looking to replace paper notebooks should consider Microsoft’s OneNote. I have used Wacom pens on tablet PC’s since 2000 (started on a MotionComputing PC tablet which was very alien at the time, it was $5k back then, but it was awesome (except for the 1.5 hour battery life)). On a windows tablet nothing can beat OneNote, and on Android and iOS the OneNote app is free and automatically syncs across all your devices. The Andoid and especially Samsung (since that is the best Note device) apps are competent, but for most users it’s better to have something seamless across your devices, even if some OneNote features don’t work on Android or iOS. So, for example you can take your electronic scribbles at a meeting or conference and later edit them at your desktop and easily turn them into proper notes. Plus everywhere you are, you have access to all your notes, even on any phone – and that’s just great. But some people, especially those in the public sector should clear legalities about freedom of information law regarding personal electronic vs paper notes. Think of EndNote as an unlimited file cabinet or library, where you create sections for each part of your life/job and divide them down ultimately to daily notes. And on a PC the scroll feature flipping through pages is blindingly fast.