[Air-l] Doctoral Research - Project or Document
elena at monmouth.com
elena at monmouth.com
Mon Jun 25 18:28:32 PDT 2007
I'm using EndNote 10 and I like the ability to add a pdf to each
reference. I keep research notes with each reference and import
references directly from proquest (but they almost always have to be
edited afterwards). I ordered the student version from Amazon and it was
pretty inexpensive (about $100).
> I have always made entries in Reference Manager
> (http://www.refman.com/) to document the titles for downloaded files
> and webpages. I have a titling system and everything goes into one
> folder for easy access and that system works fine for me. However, I
> have to admit that I really like the look of some the programs you've
> suggested here, particularly Papers. Are their any good PC based
> solutions? No I don't own a Mac...not yet.
>
> Lois Ann Scheidt
>
> Doctoral Student - School of Library and Information Science, Indiana
> University, Bloomington IN USA
>
> Adjunct Instructor - School of Informatics, IUPUI, Indianapolis IN USA
and
> IUPUC, Columbus IN USA
>
> Webpage: http://www.loisscheidt.com
> Blog: http://www.professional-lurker.com
>
>
> Quoting Daniel Sutko <dmsutko at ncsu.edu>:
>
> > I've just started wrestling with this problem, too. I've been
> > experimenting with Journler (http://journler.com/) and Yojimbo
> > (http://www.barebones.com/products/yojimbo/), both for Mac. Journler
> > is donationware, but you can get a student discount for Yojimbo.
> > Right now, they're looking the same to me, but maybe 30 days will
> > tell the difference. :) I'd love to hear what other people are using,
> > too.
> >
> > -Dan
> >
> >
> > Dan_Sutko at ncsu.edu
> > TA - Public Speaking Program
> > RA - Mobile Gaming Research Lab
> > Dept. of Communication
> > North Carolina State University
> >
> >
> > On Jun 19, 2007, at 9:02 PM, Ben Spigel wrote:
> >
> >> You can really use any database program to organize things. If you
are
> >> a mac user, I use something called DevonNotes
> >> (www.devon-technologies.com), it handles any kind of format, and
its a
> >> good way to take notes. Papers, like Jeremy suggested, is also a
good
> >> mac application. I've also experimented with using a personal wiki,
> >> but that's still in its early stages.
> >>
> >> The key is to think about exactly what you need, and then look
around
> >> and find a program that is close to what you're thinking of. There
are
> >> actually a lot of programs out there for this application. I'm
> >> interested in what other's use.
> >>
> >> Ben Spigel
> >> Graduate Student
> >> Department of Geography
> >> The Ohio State University
> >>
> >> On 6/19/07, Jeremy Malcolm <Jeremy at malcolm.id.au> wrote:
> >>> Samita Nandy wrote:
> >>>> I am a Ph.D. student and currently arranging research material
> >>>> for my thesis
> >>>> proposal and dissertation. In my research, I am coming across a
> >>>> vast number of online sites and offline material. Usually, I
> >>>> save them as
> >>>> documents and organize them as files and folders in my study area
or
> >>>> computer. However, I was wondering if there is any academic
> >>>> software that
> >>>> could manage, categorize, and coordinate research, conferences,
> >>>> publications, calender, appointments, etc in a strategic manner.
> >>>
> >>> For organising publications, take a look at Papers:
> >>> http://mekentosj.com/papers/. You *do* have a Mac, right? ;-)
> >>>
> >>> For some of your other requirements, look at OpenGroupware.org:
> >>> http://www.opengroupware.org/en/applications/index.html.
> >>>
> >>> --
> >>> Jeremy Malcolm LLB (Hons) B Com
> >>> Internet and Open Source lawyer, IT consultant, actor
> >>> host -t NAPTR 1.0.8.0.3.1.2.9.8.1.6.e164.org|awk -F! '{print $3}'
> >>> _______________________________________________
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> >>>
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>
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