

The OneNote 2016 desktop client wouldn't let me directly share/move the notebook to O365 as it kept falling back to consumer/Microsoft Account authentication. It was a manual process of saving the OneNote notebook in the OneNote desktop client to the local synced OD4B folder location. It was not in mass, but I was manually moving one of our user's old notebooks from their OneDrive Personal account to their OneDrive for Business account (we were on which used Microsoft Accounts and SkyDrive before the migration/upgrade of to O365 for Education). Not necessarily the answer you are looking for but maybe worth looking into. If needed I can provide "before and after" screen shots if seeing what we are experiencing would help us figure this out. I felt like I needed to rewrite my original email as it didn't explain the problem well enough. one file to move as a whole to each users new ODFB location. Please let us know if were are doing something incorrectly or a solution to get these. We can't manually create new OneNote notebooks for each of the 200 users since each user has multiple. We can't seem to find a way to just download the notebook and upload it to its new location like an excel spreadsheet. onepkg would try to open the file in the OneNote 2016 desktop application. onepkg in the user's new ODFB location, I was unable to use it in the OneNote online editor which is the whole reason that users and teachers created these OneNote files. In testing we tried to export the OneNote notebooks to a. Though we currently can't figure out a way to move them and have them show up in the user's new ODFB location as they did in the user's old ODFB, a complete One Note notebook. one notebooks if we need to move them a different way. We still have access to the original full OneNote. Please let me know if you need a better explanation. one files, each with one of those student’s name on it." There is now a folder called "8th grade classroom" and 10 separate. one notebook named "8th grade classroom" containing 10 sections each containing one students name on that section. To explain better, here is an example: "Instead of one. one notebook and places them in the folder as their own separate. one notebook title and then separates all the sections that were in the original.

one notebook from the source to the destination ODFB by creating a folder with the same name as the name of the original. The only down side is that the migration tool migrates an original. It was mainly used to migrate each user’s old ODFB location (source Office 365 tenant) to their new ODFB location (destination Office 365 tenant) for each user. We migrated over 200 users to their own O365 tenant with a third-party tools called "Share Gate".
