I have spent the last month trying to remove Microsoft from my digital life. I traded Outlook for Gmail, OneDrive for Google Drive, and Word for Docs, and for a while, the transition was smooth.
But as I reached the final stage of migration, I hit a wall: OneNote. While Google’s ecosystem is sleek and integrated, it has a giant hole in its lineup that Keep and Docs simply can’t fill.
I want to go all-in on Google, but on Android, OneNote isn’t just a choice; it’s a necessity that Google seems to ignore.
Google’s ecosystem is tempting


For months, I have been watching from the sidelines as Google transformed a collection of separate apps into a unified, AI-driven powerhouse.
I loved how Gemini can create tasks, get relevant information from any Google Docs document, and even bring up a file right from Google Drive. On Android, it’s not just a chatbot, it’s a context-aware partner.
I can be halfway through an email in Gmail, ask Gemini to summarize the project plan in my Drive, and have a bulleted list ready to paste before I have even finished my tea.
It’s a proactive approach where the apps talk to each other, so I don’t have to. I wanted that personal intelligence briefing every morning.
I was ready to leave the rigid, often clunky world of Microsoft 365 behind for this fluid, AI-first future and started migrating my files and media. But then, I tried to move my notebooks. And that’s where the dream died.
Google Keep and Google Docs aren’t just good enough


Google Keep is great for quick notes, and Google Docs for everything else. On paper, that sounds like a complete solution. The problem is that Google’s ecosystem has a massive ‘missing middle.’
Google Keep is great for what it is: a digital junk drawer. It’s perfect for grocery lists, a quick photo of a parking spot, or a quick thought I need to remember for 10 minutes.
But the project grows beyond a single note; it falls apart. There is no hierarchy, no real formatting, and no way to organize 50 related research notes. After a while, it’s impossible to navigate.
On the flip side, we have Google Docs. Docs is an excellent word processor, but it forces you into a linear world of 8.5 x 11 paper. It’s where I go when a project is finished and needs to be formatted for someone else to read. It’s too formal and restrictive.
OneNote is the only app that understands that a notebook should be a freeform canvas. It gives me the structure of a real filing system (Notebooks > Sections > Pages) but the freedom of a whiteboard.
I can type a note, drag a PDF next to it, and draw an arrow connecting them. Google is essentially asking me to choose between a sticky note and a manuscript.
OneNote remains the only tool that actually fits the way my brain works.
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OneNote is unbeatable on Android


It’s embarrassing how much better Microsoft understands Android’s potential than Google does.
While Google Keep feels like a legacy app stuck in 2015, OneNote treats my phone like a productivity powerhouse.
First, let’s talk about the Floating badge. This is the single biggest quality-of-life feature I can’t live without.
I can be deep in a research session on Chrome or watching a lecture on YouTube, and with one tap on that purple bubble, I’m taking notes.
I don’t have to switch apps, and it doesn’t break my flow.
Google’s solution is to split the screen or switch apps entirely. Microsoft solved this with a floating shortcut that makes multitasking feel alive.
Then there is Sticky Notes integration. I love that my quick thoughts live in the same ecosystem as my deep-dive research.
My OneNote home feed on Android pulls in those quick reminders perfectly, and they sync instantly with my Windows desktop.
But the real mic drop moments come when I’m actually working.
As someone who still has to deal with formulas, the fact that I can scribble a complex equation and have OneNote recognize it, solve it, and at least format it properly is mind-blowing.
I can even password-protect relevant sections in OneNote and keep prying eyes away.
When I use a stylus on an Android tablet, OneNote feels like paper.
The list of features continues with robust organization, a formatting bar, native apps on all the platforms, a highlighter, and more.
OneNote is my final hurdle
My failed migration shows just how unique OneNote really is.
It’s not that Google Keep or Google Docs (or even NotebookLM) are bad. It’s that they are technically different tools trying to solve a problem that OneNote solved a decade ago.
Until Google decides to take the digital notebook seriously, I’m staying with Microsoft’s ecosystem. I will keep my Gmail and my Google Pixel, but my brain is staying in a Microsoft notebook.
