During work meetings, I typically created the notes as the meeting progressed and projected them on a screen in the meeting room, letting everyone make sure that what they said was understood and that they could see what they had agreed to (tasks, dates, etc.)
When I left that job, I would have bought one of those tablets if I could have afforded it. Since then, OneNote has morphed into something unusable for me, and I haven't gone back.
* I was a very early adopter of [Evernote](https://evernote.com/) and had a premium membership for a long time. I really missed the ability to do handwriting recognition, but being able to search within images was almost as useful. We would put meeting minutes up on the whiteboard, photograph them at the end and stuff them into Evernote so they could be searched. I sadly stopped using it after Evernote also morphed into some unusable mess (Pay more! Get less!) that I couldn't remember how to use on different platforms.
* I used [TiddlyWiki](https://tiddlywiki.com/) for a while. It was quite powerful and easy to use, but it just bogged down unacceptably with a lot of notes. It exports to Markdown files that can be included directly in my blog.
It has almost all of the features I want, and it is relatively easy for me to add new things as needed.
* I always keep an inexpensive [sketchbook](https://www.strathmoreartist.com/visual-journals/visual-jour...) with me for drawing, painting (watercolor, tempera, and acrylics only) as well as note-taking. Scanning or transcribing notes into my wiki was a PITA, but...
* I have recently started using a [Rocketbook](https://getrocketbook.com/). I use it for detailed drawings at my desk. But for things that are in my sketchbook, I can place the smaller pages from the sketchbook onto a page in the Rocketbook and scan them. They are then sent off to my email account. There are settings to cause the handwritten notes to be transcribed and placed in the email, allowing easy transfer into the wiki. That's usually all I need.
* For web clipping, I use the browser extensions from [Joplin](https://joplin.cozic.net/) or [DEVONthink](https://www.devontechnologies.com/products/devonthink/overvi...).