![]() I’ve decided to highlight the donut entry, as you can see: The default is a light blue pen that you can click and drag around to draw, circle and scribble directly on the Web page. Click on it and you’re in Web Note (Annotation) mode and a new toolbar appears: Look closely on the upper right and you’ll see a pencil with a squiggly line icon. Nice enough, a simple browser design with minimal buttons and geegaws to distract you in your Windows 10 world. ![]() To start, I’ll go to the default home page in Microsoft Edge: Also, your designer will need OneNote, which is a free download from the Mac App Store, believe it or not. The only downside of this solution is that in testing I’ve found OneNote has some hiccups with the pop-up notes (sometimes they can’t be opened) so I’d test things before you invest too much time annotating pages. Since I am a fan of easy, I’ll show you how you can use Microsoft OneNote – available for both MacOS X and Windows – tied with Microsoft Edge to let you do on-screen annotations and comments on Web pages and share them your designer. ![]() Actually there are a number of ways to solve this particular dilemma, ranging from the easy to the ridiculously complicated.
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