offline to online question

M

minimus

Rainald Taesler said:
minimus schrieb:
Why so aggressive?

For a moment I thought that my messages are not carefully read. But nope I
am wrong I admit.
Sorry that I indeed sounded aggressive. My mistake.
Be assured that I read all of your postings (although it's getting a bit
biring by the time) very carefully.

Thanks for reading and for your concern.
If you re-read yourself, you might see that you just had been
complaining about the fact that you could not eject the stick.
Only later you said that you were doing, what Bernd had suggested
(closing ON prior to ejecting).
So I asked back.
Before that, no word that "ofcourse" ejecting works after closing ON!!

BTW: just to the terminology: not "closing pages" (no such feature),
"closing ON" which means that ON is not running in the system anymore.

Anyway: It's a very basic thing for working with a stick to
- close applications using the stick (the same when working under Word
in a document stored in the stick);
- use "Ejcet" and/or "Remove hardware safely";
- plug off the stick only thereafter.

Ok it is clear to me now.

Thanks once again!
 
M

minimus

Ilya Koulchin said:
A more accurate description would be:
1. Your computer's memory
2. The cache
3. The usb stick


When you type, your notes are stored in your computer's memory (1). Every
few seconds your notes are saved to the cache (2). Then every once in a
while OneNote attempts to sync changes between the cache and the USB stick
(3). This will typically happen once every 30 seconds, or whenever you
manually trigger a sync (F9, or "Sync Now"). If OneNote tries to sync and
the USB stick is not there it'll keep working with the cache and try to
sync again 30 seconds later.

Ok it is clear. Thanks!
 
M

minimus

Erik Sojka said:
OK. There's a cache behind the scenes where ON does all of its storage
and
file management. All of the data in all of the the Notebooks is also
stored in the cache. Every operation done in OneNote (make a new
Notebook,
delete a Page, add a new container, write/type, etc.) is stored in the
cache. Changes to ON content are written first to the cache and then
later
to the "real" storage location. If the network location or USB key where
the "real" data is stored is unavailable, the changes are still written to
the cache until they can be synced to the network/USB.

Think of it sort of like a SQL or Oracle database. The ON cache is like
the transaction logs, and the USB key is like the raw database files.

Yep its clear now. Thanks!
 
R

Rainald Taesler

minimus said:
For a moment I thought that my messages are not carefully read. But
nope I am wrong I admit.
Sorry that I indeed sounded aggressive. My mistake.

Thnks for your reply.
No problem.

[…]
Ok it is clear to me now.

OK, fine ;-)
Thanks once again!

You're welcome
Kindest Regards
Rainald
 
M

minimus

Rainald Taesler said:
minimus schrieb:

Why so aggressive?
Be assured that I read all of your postings (although it's getting a bit
biring by the time) very carefully.

OK, I would like to stress. I am sorry for being aggressive. Nothing
personal of course.
Please do not mind.

Regards.
 
R

Rainald Taesler

minimus said:
OK, I would like to stress. I am sorry for being aggressive. Nothing
personal of course.
Please do not mind.

As said before: No problem at all. You did apologize alraady and I fully
accepted it. Obviously you were a bit under stress. And I did not at all
take it personal!
Don't worry, be happy <g>

Best regards
Rainald
 

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