Quick summary: In most cases if you’re traveling to another country with a university-owned laptop with typical office productivity software, you will probably not need an export license as long as the equipment is always under your immediate control and returns to the US. If the travel involves an embargoed country, or you have non-retail-grade encryption software installed, or the laptop includes EAR- or ITAR-controlled technical data, or the hardware is unusually sophisticated, you should check with the Export Control Official (336-256-1173) for further advice.
If you will be temporarily traveling (less than one year) outside of the United States, you may take with you for activities related to your travel laptop computers, other portable computing devices, data storage devices and other equipment that people in your discipline would generally recognize as tools of trade as long as you maintain effective control of those items while you are outside of this country AND you are not traveling to an embargoed country (for current list, check: http://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/sanctions/Programs/Pages/Programs.aspx). You maintain effective control over an item when you either retain physical possession of the item or you secure the item in such an environment as a hotel safe, a bonded warehouse, or a locked or guarded meeting or conference facility.
Maintaining effective control of the items and the limit of one year do not apply if ALL of the following apply:
There are many other devices and equipment for which there are minimal constraints under the export rules. If you have an issue with regard to maintaining effective control over an item, you might check with the people identified in the first paragraph above.
You should not take with you ANY of the following without first obtaining specific advice from the Export Control Official at 336-256-1173 or exportcontrol@uncg.edu.
Traveling outside the US with laptops, PDAs, cell phones or storage devices involves special considerations and may require an export license. US export laws may involve:
If the computer or other equipment is owned by UNCG, the equipment as well as any installed encryption software may be eligible for License Exception TMP (Temporary Exports). To qualify for this exception, the equipment:
If you personally own the equipment, it may qualify for License Exception BAG (Baggage). To qualify for this exception, the equipment and retail-level encryption software must be for your personal use in private or professional activities. “Strong” encryption software may also qualify for this exception, unless the travel (or traveler) involves embargoed countries*.
Beyond export laws, you should also be aware that traveling with electronic devices may result in unexpected disclosure of personal information. Certain countries are noted for accessing files upon entry, so you should be extremely careful about any proprietary, patentable, or sensitive information that may be stored on your device. (For certain countries, this includes material that might be perceived as pornographic, or culturally inappropriate.) Homeland Security personnel may also decide to inspect your laptop upon return to the US, in which case everything on the device is subject to inspection. You should be wary about including on a laptop that you take overseas any financial or other personal information that you would not want viewed without your permission.
If your university-owned laptop contains controlled software or sensitive data—particularly data that may be controlled under ITAR or EAR regulations—you might consider alternatives. For example, if the laptop is to be used only for making presentations, can you use a memory stick instead? If you are using the laptop for other purposes (such as email), can you instead take a “clean” computer that does not include the restricted software, data, or other sensitive information?
You should keep in mind and be prepared for the potential that customs inspectors in countries that you may visit, and in the United States when you return, may require that you allow them access to inspect the devices and equipment you have with you and all of the contents of the computers and storage devices. In the United States, the inspectors may take possession of those items for various periods of time, and even permanently depending upon the circumstances. The inspectors in other countries might do so as well.
The following are some examples:
If you have questions, please check with the Export Control Official at 336-256-1173 or exportcontrol@uncg.edu.
UNCG’s laptop loaner program is sponsored by the IT Tech Support. For laptop request send an email to techsc@uncg.edu.
UNCG appreciates the use of information regarding international travel with laptops from the Office of Regulatory Compliance at UC Denver, Anschutz Medical Campus; and from the University of Colorado Boulder, Office of Research Administration & Support
Note: Exporting and importing notebooks through OneNote for the web is only available for notebooks stored on personal OneDrive accounts, not for notebooks stored on OneDrive for Business or SharePoint. For information about exporting notebooks to PDF files from OneNote 2016 for Windows, see Export notes from OneNote as a PDF .
No matter what version of OneNote you use, you can download a copy of any of your OneNote notebooks to your PC or Mac — either as a backup or to upload its contents to another account.
To download a notebook from OneNote to your computer, do the following:
In any modern Web browser, go to OneNote for the web.
Tip: Exporting notebooks is not currently supported in Windows Internet Explorer. We recommend using Microsoft Edge on Windows 10, or any other modern browser in older versions of Windows.
Enter your credentials for the Microsoft account containing the notebook you want to download. (Skip this step if you’re already signed in.)
Under My Notebooks, right-click (PC) or Control-click (Mac) the name of the notebook that you want to export, and then click Export notebook.
On the screen that opens, click Export.
Follow your browser’s prompts to save the file in the location you choose.
Tip: If the notebook you’re exporting is very large or contains a large number of image or file attachments, it could take a long time to download your content. Make sure you have enough space on your hard drive to complete the download.
Each downloaded notebook is saved to your hard drive in Zip file format. If you want to later import a downloaded notebook, you’ll need to first unzip its notebook folder from the Zip file, and then import the folder to OneNote for the web.