
I guess the question is, will buying a 1-month subscription to Office 365 affect my access to my OneNote files after it ends? i.e. Take an existing notebook file set and import it to a cloud-only file set unless you have the ability to open local notebooks on the target system, or access to OneDrive on the source system. It's the limitation on the version of OneNote I'm using that disallows opening local files, and not being able to connect the old computer to OneDrive. I know where the files are stored locally, that isn't the problem. The source computer does not have access to OneDrive. The issue is that since I've only got the free home & student edition, I can't open local notebooks. The other option I'm beginning to seriously consider is using the OneNote API () and just manually constructing them using Notepad++ and Postman. If I purchase a 1 month subscription to Office 365 will I be able to import, move to OneDrive, then end the subscription and still have the notebooks available after, and without disrupting access to my existing, working notebooks? one files, not the "internet shortcut" files the functioning one files are there, but unlike my functioning notebooks, they are full.

onepkg file), something opens, but it's an empty notebook with a sync error and when I look on OneDrive, I see the. If I select OneDrive as the save location (only possible with That's fine, I just want to import it into OneDrive. The problem is, when I attempt to open the exported files, I get a message that I need an Office 365 subscription to open local notebooks.

That computer does not have the ability to access I have some old notebooks that were created on another computer in OneNote 2013. the desktop edition, not the Windows App Store version that comes with Windows 10). I am using OneNote 2016 Home edition (i.e.
