![]() ![]() Thank you much kindly big time in advance. So I'm only undergrad (philosophy) but I use Obsidian for almost all of my workflow.Įach class gets a note. Readings are linked from the class note, and then each reading gets a note in outliner format. Outlines will link to key concepts (check out evergreen notes for the whole method), so there is a ladder of ideas being escalated from class to reading to concept level. If something interests me, I move it up the chain. If classes have paper writing, then project notes are created for each project for me to draft and outline. ![]() I think Obsidian is super useful for gathering ideas and posing them together in various ways. The process of making notes clarifies thinking substantially. ![]() However, I don't try to produce finished work in Obsidian. You wouldn't have your prototype be your final product, and in the same way I do my formal writing outside of Obsidian. Obsidian helps me get the ideas in order, but formal writing is like a performance. I'm on my phone so I'm sorry I can't link to the plugins rn but I'll try to do it later Let me know if you have any questions, I haven't gone too in-depth re: methodĮdit: To answer your specific questions: there is a plugin for importing citations from Zotero, a plugin for importing highlights from PDF, and yes all of my notes for everything are in the same vault. I've created many vaults to start with a structure, but I keep returning to my old or none system at all. Mixing handwritten notes (GoodNotes, Notability, etc.) and (annoated) PDFs in general with Obsidian only seems possible by linking different apps with URLs, which is fragile. ![]() This only works if an app that manages the PDFs assigns unique identifiers and you store all of your notes/annotated papers in it.-If it is offered at all. GoodNotes for example doesn't and I'm not aware that any software does it cross-platform.Īpps like MarginNote 3 and LiquidText look nice, but fall short since they silo in your documents. Then there are apps like Bookends (expensive and feels outdated), Papers 3 (the old version, not that new "Readcube" bollocks), Zotero (feels dated, but has a new iOS app in beta), which can serve as a manager of your PDFs to read. Our suite of annotation tools let you mark up your PDF the way you want, quickly run a search of your notes, and even share your comments and highlights with colleagues.However the annotation options are not that powerful in those apps. With the ReadCube Papers web reader your sync-able articles and annotations go where you go. Or, even worse, you may be traveling and not have the article on your device at all. You may forget what article you were reading and wasting time searching through your extensive library. With the standard PDF, your limited note and annotation type set live only within that document. From top to bottom, left to right, the ReadCube Papers Web Reader is full of interactive features, which means you spend more time reading and less time searching. With our Enhanced PDF, all of your annotations and article information are located within a central place. These friction points inspired the ReadCube Papers team to develop our interactive PDF viewer known as the Enhanced PDF.
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