Notes, notebooks, and account sync
Microsoft OneNote opens with a welcome screen and sign-in path for taking notes and getting organized. The captured flow includes Microsoft account creation and sign-in screens, showing that account access is central to syncing notes across devices.
This is useful for users who want notebooks available on phone, desktop, and web. Before adding important notes, users should understand which account is being used and whether school, work, or personal data will sync to cloud storage.
This gives the section a clearer user value by connecting the main feature to a concrete mobile use case, session goal, or replay reason.
Sign-in and onboarding flow
The app presents email entry, account creation, and sign-in screens, along with help, feedback, terms, and privacy links. The main notes workspace was not reached because credential submission was not completed.
Users should verify account ownership and avoid entering credentials on shared or unmanaged devices. If OneNote is used for work or school, organization policies may affect sync, retention, and device management.
This gives the section a clearer user value by connecting the main feature to a concrete mobile use case, session goal, or replay reason.
Permissions and note privacy
Android settings show notifications, camera, microphone, phone, supported links, appear-on-top, storage, mobile data, battery, and application data controls. Notifications were allowed and no additional runtime permissions were granted during the visible settings path.
Note apps can contain private writing, scanned pages, voice notes, contacts, and work information. Users should review media permissions, notification previews, cloud sync, storage size, mobile data, and account security before storing sensitive notebooks.
This gives the section a clearer user value by connecting the main feature to a concrete mobile use case, session goal, or replay reason.