PCMAG -You're browsing the Web, and you stumble across some interesting bit of text - perhaps an interesting passage from a book, or an awesome recipe, or some extremely horrible-yet-funny thing a friend said on Facebook. For whatever reason, you need to take that text and get it from one system to another, perhaps going from your laptop to your desktop. What do you do?
You could send an email to yourself (crude, but effective), or even copy and paste it in an open conversation you're having with an online friend (so long as you remember to check that later). Or, you could turn to all sorts of services that let you save notes in a centralized location - Evernote, Google Keep, Apple's Notes app.
According to reports, Microsoft is allegedly working on a new app of its own called OneClip that would, as its name implies, allow a person to copy elements to a clipboard that could be accessed by any other device: Android, iOS, OS X, Windows, Windows Phone. Microsoft is currently internally testing the app, but the Windows and Windows Phone versions of OneClip have already leaked out....
You could send an email to yourself (crude, but effective), or even copy and paste it in an open conversation you're having with an online friend (so long as you remember to check that later). Or, you could turn to all sorts of services that let you save notes in a centralized location - Evernote, Google Keep, Apple's Notes app.
According to reports, Microsoft is allegedly working on a new app of its own called OneClip that would, as its name implies, allow a person to copy elements to a clipboard that could be accessed by any other device: Android, iOS, OS X, Windows, Windows Phone. Microsoft is currently internally testing the app, but the Windows and Windows Phone versions of OneClip have already leaked out....