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Researchers: Melo or OneNote?

Researchers managing papers, citations, and literature reviewneed tools that keep up with their workflow. Here's how Melo and OneNote compare for this specific use case.

What researchers need from a productivity tool

Researchers deal with papers, citations, and literature review daily. The ideal tool for this workflow needs to be fast (no waiting for pages to load), flexible (different projects require different layouts), and smart (AI that understands your specific context). Privacy matters too — researchers often handle sensitive information.

Dozens of browser tabs open with journal articles and no way to organize them
Literature review notes disconnected from the papers they reference
AI tools that summarize without understanding your research context
Collaborative tools that put sensitive unpublished research on someone else's server

OneNote for researchers

Microsoft's free-form digital notebook. While OneNote is a capable tool, researchers often find it limiting when they need to work with multiple content types simultaneously. OneNote's approach works for generic use cases, but the specific demands of papers, citations, and literature review require more flexibility.

Melo
OneNote
Platform
Built native for Mac — first-class macOS experience
Cross-platform but Mac version feels like an afterthought
AI
Built-in AI that sees your entire workspace
Copilot integration with limited notebook awareness
Organization
Spatial boards with tiled content — visual and flexible
Notebooks → sections → pages — rigid hierarchy
Sync
Local-first — works offline, data stays on your device
OneDrive sync required — occasional conflicts and slowness
Ecosystem
Standalone — no Microsoft account required
Best with Microsoft 365 subscription

Why researchers pick Melo

Open a journal article in one tile, your notes in another, and AI chat to help you synthesize findings. Melo's spatial layout lets you visually map relationships between papers. All data stays local — your unpublished research never touches a cloud server.

For researchersspecifically, Melo's spatial canvas means you can design a workspace that mirrors how you think about papers, citations, and literature review. Tile your key documents, tasks, web references, and AI chat on one board. Switch between project contexts by switching boards. Everything stays local, fast, and private.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Melo faster than OneNote?

Melo is local-first — your data lives on your Mac with zero server round-trips. This means sub-50ms response times for everything. OneNote relies on cloud infrastructure, which introduces latency, especially with larger workspaces.

What does Melo do that OneNote doesn't?

Melo's key differentiators are the spatial canvas (tile any content type side by side), workspace-aware AI (sees your entire board, not just one document), and local-first architecture (instant performance, true privacy). Most traditional tools focus on one paradigm — Melo combines notes, tasks, AI, web, and calendar in one spatial environment.

How do researchers use Melo differently?

Researchers typically create boards organized around their papers, citations, and literature review. They tile relevant documents, tasks, web references, and AI chat specific to their workflow. The spatial layout lets them design a workspace that matches how they naturally think about their work.

Is my data private with Melo?

Yes. Melo is local-first, meaning your data lives on your Mac by default. Nothing is uploaded to external servers unless you explicitly use AI features, which send only the necessary context and don't persist your data.

Can I use Melo offline?

Absolutely. Since Melo is local-first, your entire workspace works offline. Notes, tasks, canvas arrangement, clipboard history — everything is available without an internet connection. AI features require connectivity.