Merlin’s weekly podcast with Dan Benjamin. We talk about creativity, independence, and making things you love.
Merlin’s weekly podcast with Dan Benjamin. We talk about creativity, independence, and making things you love.
”What’s 43 Folders?”
43Folders.com is Merlin Mann’s website about finding the time and attention to do your best creative work.
Zotero anyone?
mdl | Jun 21 2007
I've been looking at Zotero as a means of information management recently. It seems to have a much more intuitive and seamless integration with the Web than DevonThink. And it has tag-support built in! Anyone have any experience with this Firefox plugin? It looks pretty powerful. Easy to gather clippings, citations, and notes -- organize them into smart folders -- mark up and annotate -- etc. The only think it's missing is DevonThink's AI search tool. But I tell you what... Yes, I know that Zotero is available on all platforms. But as a matter of principle, this may be the final straw in tipping me over to the Linux, open source world. Last year, I invested in all the fancy Mac apps (OmniOutliner, DevonThink, etc.) only to discover that several open source tools fit my workflow much better. I'm constantly amazed by the sheer volume and variety of free tools out there. (I mean: I had to rig up the most god-awfully awkward solution to get tags in DevonThink.) And while most of these are available to Mac OS X users, it is making me wonder why I would pay $2000+ for a new MacBook when I can get rig up a Linux laptop for well under half the price. (And Firefox for the Mac is still so slow and clunky.) Quicksilver is great and all - but now I do so much from the command line that I rarely use Quicksilver. I have enough other beautiful things in my life - so having an ugly computer isn't the biggest loss. Anyway, that's my rant of the day. But about Zotero... Anyone? 3 Comments
POSTED IN:
this looks a lot like...Submitted by Momo on June 22, 2007 - 8:51am.
this looks a lot like IdeaMason. The obvious difference is that IdeaMason isn't freeware (but has a very reasonable price tag) and that IdeaMason's integration with Word seems more advanced (ie you can compose drafts in Word from within IdeaMason). The other obvious difference is that IdeaMason is Windows only. Should've mentioned that. I was/am dead set on test-driving IdeaMason as soon as teaching finishes; now I might have to test-drive Zotero too and see which one works out better. thanks for posting about Zotero! Momo » POSTED IN:
|
|
EXPLORE 43Folders | THE GOOD STUFF |