I just came across this site and this is program I could of used over the last few years. This program will organize your sources for your papers you are writing. It will even do citation and create reference pages. I just got done on a paper for my master's degree and this came in handy. Plus it is free and open source.
I would recommend Zotero and the Zotero Chrome connector over cite this for me. It maintains a citation database for you and allows you to annotate and organize the collection in many different ways. You can also save copies of the actual documents and keep notes about them and highlight them. You can save local copies of your database and documents as well as saving them online. It goes way beyond just formatting your citations and bibliography.
Be aware, however, that Mendeley locks your data in and makes it unnecessarily hard to switch to another tool. They even started encrypting their database recently, so that Zotero can no longer import references from Mendeley.
I've been surprised in the past by people who were unaware that there are tools which handle the organising of your research into databases, and allow you to cite references and build bibiliographies/list of references on the fly.
Examples include Zotero and Mendeley.
Also, learn python for all your data processing needs.
Despite the obvious thing being manually keeping track, there is software originally designed for academic citation that stores hyperlinks. Baiscally you can make a folder called "Election Interference" and then just store all articles you read about that in there, includes search function and more. Given that KREAM stated he does work with an academic background, I'd imagine he has something similar. One of these programs is basically a browser plug-in that can be used with libre-office called Zotero
Physicians and Barbers were separate companies, with different rules and regulations. Not until 1745 when the Company of Barbers and the Company of Surgeons were split by the King of England do you see Surgery begin to come into its own. Basically they believed becasue the barber had knives, they could do the blood lettings/amputations/tooth pullings. However, as Anatomists and Anatomy schools became more prevalent, and surgery became an "educated" profession (to join the Royal Company of surgeons, you had to give a dissertation on a medical subject in Latin, which many only apprenticed Barber Surgeons wouldn't know.) This was the true beginning of Medical schools and the scientific process of Medicine as we know it today.
(I portray an 18th Century Surgeon for fun on the weekends and have a whole bibliography of my studies: https://www.zotero.org/doctorclift/items)
For any still suffering, there's Zotero. It's a free citation management that allows you to keep track of sources, with the added bonus of automatically formatting in-text citations and bibliographies. The browser extension is especially nice if you need to cite websites or PDFs, as it pulls metadata from pages when possible.
Or even better yet:
And now you can just go anywhere to find description of the paper, searching first in Google Scholar, Microsoft Academia - doesn't matter. When you see something of interest, just click one button of browser addon. Everything is handled automatically. Then using word processor plugin you can use effortlessly create bibliography based on styles of your choosing. It's almost like magic. Did that with my thesis I just finished.
My PhD life changer was Zotero. It was my research assistant throughout my coursework and dissertation writing process. It helped me track everything I read, take notes, grab quotes, keep links, keep a PDF of the paper/article/chapter, and cite my sources. Invaluable!
I like Zotero - it works as a plugin for Firefox or as a standalone version. You can save references directly from the website without an extra download step, tag things, add notes, save pdfs and sync across multiple computers. I now have a huge library and searching is easy. When it comes time to write a paper, it has plugins for Word and LibreOffice to help with your references.
> 1) Use Excel to document your citations. Reserve a few columns for a precis (or a link to one) and some quotes. This will let you help you reuse research easily.
My friend, do you have a minute do hear about our Lord and savior Zotero? It's got a great cataloguing system, cloud storage, can keep PDFs, has built-in notes, a word and libre office plugin, and can usually manage to automatically pull all of the citation information and the full-text pdf right off of a journal page/google scholar. The dark ages of keeping these things in an .xls file are over!
Echoing this, please do thorough research. I highly recommend cross-referencing potential programs with both the subreddit database and the BreakingCodeSilence database. These programs often engage in extremely deceptive/fraudulent marketing practices and can be hard to spot. Also, please feel free to reach out to me or other members of the subreddit with any additional questions or concerns you may have.
I use Zotero for managing my citations. At least in the past, it has been possible to self-host your own Zotero server. As it stands, you can run the client standalone, without syncing to Zotero's hosted back-end.
Here it is.
An entire 23-minute video on selecting, disinfecting, soaking, and sowing green coffee beans that were intended for home roasting. All 468 of them in 13 media types.
I know this isn't exactly a /r/druggardening staple, but this is just the beginning. C arabica has massive amounts of research behind it, so it was relatively easy for my very first video.
I hope to expand my video catalog to include as many medicinal plants as possible. Treating them to the same rigor as I gave C. arabica. I've already started collecting research on dozens of medicinal species.
I just came across this site and this is program I could of used over the last few years. This program will organize your sources for your papers you are writing. It will even do citation and create reference pages. I just got done on a paper for my master's degree and this came in handy. Plus it is free and open source.
>Mendeley
No! Not Mendeley! It belongs go a publisher. Instead, use Zotero, which is free (unlike Endnote) and open-source (unlike Mendeley). I am a college physics instructor. I recommend Zotero to all my students (including the non-physics majors).
This is great! Zotero is also great - extension for Firefox and Chrome and a standalone desktop version, all neatly synced. You're able to store PDFs that you have downloaded and you can cite straight onto MS word with just a few clicks. I mainly use it for taking and organising notes. I've just installed the Scholar extension now. You can never have too many places to have citations saved!
Zotero is open source and professional quality. Long history, very well implemented. Citation plugins for Libreoffice (also word and google docs).
You can export your library from endnote and import into Zotero.
How do I import a Mendeley library into Zotero? from the Zotero website.
It might be the online service of Zotero, which is totally optional, and the free tier has a limit IIRC. You can sync PDFs and config with something like Dropbox too tho, for no added cost. The online tool has some extra features around collaboration if I'm not mistaken but I never used it.
To the already excellent list I would like to add Zotero: https://www.zotero.org/
It's a free reference manager. I have been using it for a while and it is quite useful to manage references.
I use Zotero and it is so much better than Endnote or Papers. Besides, it’s provided for free from as an open source research tool. It even easily switches your source format between any journals required format easily!
I didn't type them. You can copy/paste references from Google Scholar. I also use Zotero to store references to papers, website etc., that too is just a copy/paste job.
I was in a similar boat; I loved (and professionally recommended) Mendeley until they started having problems. Parallel to those problems was a decision to encrypt data in a way that makes it inaccessible to its users. It made me concerned that the software may transition away from a fee-free model. Now I'm adopting Zotero.
For school, I highly recommend Scrivener as the writting program. Word s no longer checks for two spaces after a period. Plus, I also find Scrivener to be much easier to organize my thoughts and ideas. It's on sale now for $35
https://www.literatureandlatte.com/scrivener/overview
I also recommend a program like Zotero to keep track of references, and to export then as APA/MLA/ and a bunch of others. You can also embed the full papers/books/ movies as well, for offline reading. It can also automatically download the author,s name, paper title, date, etc.
You might still have to use Unix or Windows from time to time because of some special software. Windows should be free from your school, and they will direct you to the version of Unix to use. To install them, I recommend VMware Fusion. You can have the programs run just like a MacOS program, bypassing the terrible interface s of Windows and Linux.
Overleaf as online LaTeX editor that you can use together with collaborators, automatically fetches packages and comes with version based backups so you don't lose progress. Compatible with all citation management softwares via BibTeX etc. as well.
Zotero for citation management. Free, regular updates, matches my work cycle and the fact that I always want to use external PDF annotators and viewers.
It's a free software that helps with citation. It has a plugin for Microsoft word, it's integrated with Firefox, and for chrome or Internet Explorer, there's an easy download. When browsing sites you need to cite, you click on a button, and it saves the citation information for that site.
You get to choose between hundreds of citation formats, and there's a tab in word that lets you add in text citations easily, as well as a bibliography at the end, using only your cited material. Plus, it stores the site you've saved, so you can access them easily again. Just make sure to double check the citation, and it'll save you much time.
Might not be helpful, but have you heard of Zotero? It's a organizational tool for keeping track of research papers and help you cite them. I know when I was writing biochemistry research proposal - this thing kept me sane. https://www.zotero.org/
No relacionado con tu pregunta: Si vas a citar te recomeindo enormemente que uses un gestor de bibliografías como Zotero. Te va a ayudar en toda la carrera, y en tu tesis te hará la vida mucho más fácil. Entre antes lo uses mejor.
personally i used harvard bc our school does, which has in-text citations but ib doesn't care. also: there's a program called zotero out there which makes referencing so much easier - it was a godsend for anything that needed referencing. it can handle all the different referencing formats, and all you have to do is dump the info about the source in and it'll spit out a reference/footnote and a bibliography at the end. it's a stand-alone program, but has extensions for chrome + word as well!! gl :)
Zotero or Mendeley are absolutely excellent and free! Easy reference management, multi-platform and very compatible with word processors.
It's great being able to change referencing system partway through when your Professor decided that in fact they want Cell style rather than Harvard or Chicago, and the fact that adding a numbered reference updates all numbers around it just saves a world of heartache.
My biggest recommendation to anyone studying at University is to get a good citation manager.
You probably won't get in serious trouble for it. Your video could get Content ID'd, but that would probably mean ad impressions going to Hasbro and not you - better than a takedown.
If it became super-popular and/or if you charge money for it, you could get a Cease & Desist, but the vast majority of fanworks don't get C&D's.
It may or may not be technically be illegal (Fair Use has an extremely vague and murky definition, and it gets more complicated when factoring Trademarks in), but I wouldn't worry about it that much.
I was looking for some resources, and I found some academic essays, courtesy of the Organization for Transformative Works.
Here's the AGLC3 Style in CSL format (what Juris-M, Zotero, and lots and lots of things use)
Pure Link to CSL file, save in your style folder/directory
It can also be found in the Zotero Repository (along with a huge array of pure Aussie styles
Went through my citations and found the following on visual culture & animals:
Pachirat, Timothy. 2011. Every Twelve Seconds: Industrialized Slaughter and the Politics of Sight. Yale University Press.
Kalof, Linda. 2007. Looking at Animals in Human History. Reaktion Books.
Rothfels, Nigel. 2002. Representing Animals. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Berger, John. 2009. Why Look at Animals?. Penguin London.
Croney, Candace C. 2010. “Words Matter: Implications of Semantics and Imagery in Framing Animal-Welfare Issues.” Journal of veterinary medical education 37(1): 101–6.
Aaltola, Elisa. 2014. “Animal Suffering: Representations and the Act of Looking.” European Journal of Marketing 27(1): 19–31.
Also take a look at the speakers here and at the recent entries to this journal.
Zotero, of course.
Automatic metadata retrieval from just a PDF, one-click download of full text and citation from thousands of websites, big reference style directory, you can make timelines and generate reports, and you can attach notes to items. The advanced search is great too, and the organisation of items (they liken it to nested iTunes playlists) works really well.
So first, as a helping tool to collect your source I always used Zotero.
It is pretty intuitive to use. Or at least I got along with it good. I always uses the "ris" file formats when downloading the citations.
In case that you dont know what this is: Every scientific source you find online has usually something like "citations" on the page. There you can usually download a .ris - file. Zotero then automaticly adds the source to your list.
And then you can export your list from Zotero in e.g a Word-file and even choose the layout ofthe citations. I always went with "nature" citation scheme.
​
Second, my sources were 95% paper and scientifiy publications. 4% online sources. And my own bachelor#s thesis.
Reddit certainly has a plethora of data. A few months ago I ran a python script to gather all the citations on this and a couple related subs. It grabbed 3400+ citations just from the latest 1000 posts of three subs (a reddit api limit). I would love to do more, but I haven't had the time.
Heya, I can't help you with this instance of clicky wrongy thingy, but I highly recommend Zotero for keeping your references organised. It saved my bacon and my sanity during my MA studies, especially since it can sync with Word to create a bibliography and citations in the style of your choosing.
Much luck on your writing!
(edit: deleted stuff about LO footnotes since the OP probably doesn't mean "footnotes" but "bibliography and citation software" )
For academic work using citations and footnotes, check out "Zotero" (GPL license):
There is a slight learning curve but it will pay off extremely quickly by the huge amount of tedious typing it will save.
Also check out zotero.
I guess I don't quite understand the question. Are you trying to pull out the all the references in journal articles for later use?
I use Zotero for my academic library. It doesn't have a handsome bookshelf layout, but apart from that it's got all of the features you're asking for. It also has plugins for Word and Open/Libre Office and let's extract references to the clipboard or as a BibTex file. I can't image doing research without it anymore.
Mendeley is another popular option. (Not sure if you can set it to open PDF's in an app of choice though.)
I use Zotero for organizing PDFs and don't really print anything. Zotero has the capability to sync across computers using a small amount of free cloud storage they provide. I also have a "Current Readings" folder in DropBox that I use as my primary way of moving articles to and from my tablet/other computers.
Someone also posted a quick guide to using Amazon's S3 as way of syncing Zotero across multiple devices. I haven't done it, but I've been thinking about doing it over winter break.
It might be worthwhile to talk to your advisor and colleagues about the system they use: there are many websites and software packages that provide very similar functionality, so if everyone in your department uses one thing, it might be best to just go with the flow. Because many things are so similar, once you find a system that is functional, I'd just go full throttle on using it rather than trying to make it the single best system. You can always tweak your workflow later.
My local library has an "ask a librarian" chat option, yours might as well. Most public librarians are capable of helping you with these kinds of research questions, and most public libraries also have access to a (usually more limited) set of journal databases. If you live near a college, their librarians will usually have access to a broader set of resources and somewhat more expertise in searching academic subjects.
World Cat is searchable without log-in credentials- it is a good place to build a list of resources you'd like to get a hold of. Your public library should allow you to log in and search journals through databases like EBSCO. If you don't have a public library card, you're going to need one to do the necessary research for this paper.
Edit: You can also start with the article linked to in this post. Read the bibliography and see if you can obtain the works it references that seem relevant to your topic.
Edit the second: Since you're probably (I hope) going to need a bibliography for this thing, I highly recommend using Zotero or some other reference manager as it makes life significantly simpler.
You should be able to use the Zotero plugin for MS Word. There are some instructions for manually installing the plugin here if it is not installed already.
Deus me livre ter que usar ABNT. Mas o Zotero tem um repositório de estilos que contém a ABNT. Também tem o abntex que automatiza todo o resto do texto.
https://www.zotero.org/styles?q=abnt
Obs: não use o Mendeley. É software codigo fechado da predadora Elsevier. Use software livre como o Zotero, que funciona tão bem, se não melhor.
Install the Zotero Connector https://www.zotero.org/download/connectors
Easiest way would be to then find some journal article through CLIO, and go to access it. The Zotero Connector should then ask you if you want to turn it on and will automatically configure it.
This is what mine looks like Imgur though you shouldn't have to mess with that. As you access new websites, there'll be prompts which will save them for future access without having to go back through the library website.
A lot of people report using Zotero with Zotfile, which is compatible with most GNU/Linux distros. Once a document is imported, you can right-click > Export Annotations, and it will generate a summary of page numbers + highlighted text.
With the latest development version of RCU (d2021.003(b)), highlights should appear in Okular. There will be more changes to RCU's highlights before the next release version (text won't be extracted into the annotation's "comment" property, but RCU will gain a menu option of exporting a .txt of highlights including page numbers, and it should work the same or better in other PDF readers).
Try Zotero with Zotfile plugin.
Extract Annotations from PDF Files
After highlighting and annotating pdfs on your tablet (or with the PDF reader application on your computer), ZotFile can automatically extract the highlighted text and note annotations from the pdf. The extracted text is saved in a Zotero note.
For a general reading list, you can check out our emotions bibliography: https://www.zotero.org/groups/300219/che_bibliography_history_of_emotions
Some scholars who work on this for the classical period include Han Baltussen (grief), but perhaps the most prolific is David Konstan who has written a lot on this. A good introductory text might also be the Ancient history volume of the Bloomsbury Cultural History of Emotions.
Check out my Zotero link for a ton of research (and a few other articles) about IF, diet, and other things that often come up here. Otherwise I'd say read The Circadian Code (not the Obesity Code) by Satchin Panda and The Hungry Brain by Stephen Guyenet. Neither are directly about IF but I highly recommend them if you want a broad picture of how to improve your diet and health. Panda is a TRF researcher but his book covers more than that.
I use Zotero, which is available on Firefox. It's an open-source Mendeley-like that doesn't support in-place notes (it's a more pure save-for-later system), but it works pretty well.
I tend to follow the rabbit-hole of "recommended articles" with every new article I find. Every major journal or host has a section devoted to it. Then I set up alerts on the most recent review articles for when they are cited.
Mendeley has a great suggested article feature, but you need a decently sized library of saved bibliographic info to start.
Pubchase is a standalone recommender system for the life sciences. Its still being heavily developed, however.
You can also browse or search the zotero library I created recently using this and similar subreddits.
You can do (1) in Zotero but only with a bit of a crux, as far as I know. You can enter advanced search and instead of entering "men" you enter " men ". Note the spaces around the word indicating you want those letters to be surrounded by spaces, e.g. it will not trigger for thinks like "women" or "mending". For a quick overview of Zotero searching, see https://www.zotero.org/support/searching
It can also do (2) if I'm understanding correctly. Its "search everything" or at the very least advanced search mode should be able to do that.
Use the reference manager Zotero. It has browser plugins to download PDFs of articles, along with all the appropriate metadata for creating entries for bibliographies. It will manage the local copies, too, so that 8 months from now you can actually find an article's PDF.
> Zotero has a limit as to the number of papers I believe for the free version. Mendeley does not.
Zotero does not offer free unlimited cloud storage for PDFs (and Mendeley doesn't either), but there's no limit on metadata storage:
> Data syncing is free, has no storage limit, and can be used without file syncing.
I highly recommend Zotero: https://www.zotero.org/
Benefits:
Make friends with your favorite profs. You want a good recommendation, not a bad one! If they're relatively high up in the department, even better. And keep a list of achievements and stuff you've done for them. Tell them what in-major classes you've taken, with grades if you can. Let them know if you've been President of Grass Examining Club or Director of Campus Cat Feeding. Any positions in organizations you've held, any research opportunities you've had, any opportunities you've had to present in front of an audience (ESPECIALLY if you want to go into academia!), awards you've won, etc.
Dr. Zarnow is a ton of work, but her classes are so jam-packed with information and experience that you'll be glad you've taken her classes. I took her capstone and she's offering it again this spring -- take it!
Get Zotero for research. It's free. /u/herropreese27 can attest to its amazingness. It has plugins for Chrome and Firefox and can import directly into Word.
Change majors if you hate your current major.
Most importantly, TAKE CARE OF YOUR MENTAL HEALTH. Do so off-campus if you can afford it and your insurance covers it, because the on-campus mental health services are kinda overloaded, but your mental health is the absolute most important thing to take care of. If your mental health is bad you won't be doing your best in school. You are more important than getting your diploma in four years. You can't finish your degree if you're dead.
Zotero has been my best friend since undergrad. Love showing it to people just for the look of amazement on their faces. Would highly recommend to anyone writing papers and managing citations. Can save yourself some time with it next time around!
The Vancouver system and the Harvard (author-date) systems are most commonly used citation systems in medicine. If you use a citation manager (and if you don't already, you should start, see here or here or here for free options), you can pick any style from the many slight variations on those themes used by individual journals. JAMA, NEJM, BMJ, Lancet are probably the most widely read and would be totally appropriate for use in this setting.
You could try Zotero. If you install the browser plugin, it will add a button into the address bar that when clicked, will save the current page into a reference list. It is fairly clever and will automatically extract a bunch of information about the page (where it is from, who is the author, what is the title, when did you add it etc) which you could then use to sort your links. It is intended as a bibliography/reference manager, but it would likely do the job for you.
I use Zotero for reference management. Making sure you're a proficient user of Word, and using it correctly, will get you much farther than adding lots of different types of software.
No costume nor I did anything except going to sleep later and later. I've been messing around with code, in fact. Wrote a bookmarklet to render a reddit comment you click on in markdown (mostly to save /r/WritingPrompts stories) (bloody hell why isn't there a copy function that doesn't require me to pull in kilobytes of js & flash?!) and a Pelican theme.
Oh. And we were almost flooded today. Stupid rain.
And - if any of you works with scientific papers or just wants a bookmark manager on steroids, install Zotero.
You're probably using the style that only specifies authors and dates.
Just hover over all the ACS styles to see a preview and pick the one you want. I use the JACS style, which makes it easier because there's only one option.
Zotero is available as a standalone app for Mac with a plugin for Safari, Chrome and Firefox but I don't know if you'd prefer that way. IMHO, I prefer to use Mendeley Desktop (a standalone app) rather than Zotero.
I use the Zotero firefox extension. It gives you an HTML snapshot of the page and provides tagging, notes, full-text search, and the ability to attach other files.
It's intended as a tool for researchers to organize their sources, but it's fine for recipes too. :-P
For all of you University students who need to do tons of internet research and write, write, write, then cite, cite, cite, you have go to use Zotero.
You might want to look into Zotero; a mentor recommended it to me and I love it. Not sure how their storage pricing compares if you've got a LOT though, I've stayed within the free tier pretty easily so far.
I use Zotero. It saves a copy in the cloud. And is free. And supported by a university so I don't think it'll stop being supported any time soon. It's great! I have so many things saved that I ended up getting one of their (cheap) paid accounts.
Watch the video and see how easy it is to use: https://www.zotero.org/support/quick_start_guide
Journal of the Geological Society of London, this is APA
Ramseyer, J. M., & Rasmusen, E. B. (2001). Why Is the Japanese Conviction Rate so High? The Journal of Legal Studies, 30(1), 53. doi:10.1086/468111
I use Zotero, it's cool
I keep all my information in Zotero. You can create categories (so for example, I have a New France category, France in the Caribbean, etc) for different fields. In each category you can either drag a pdf (say, of an article or ebook) or enter an ISBN number and the book and all of its info stays there. You get to keep and save notes for every item you have cataloged. I recommend it to anyone interested in history (or those in other academic disciplines who need to organize their research). https://www.zotero.org/
Zotero is ideal for this.
Drag the pdf in to the window and it populates the metadata from and doi or isbn number in the text. You have a place to make notes. If you open the pdf from the interface and annotate it in your pdf program and save it, it is saved with the annotations.
It has a full text search so you can search for words or terms in your whole collection of pdfs. Tagging as well to organize them.
It's FOSS and very well maintained. Good connectors for your browser to download and save into the Zotero interface/database. Plus citation plug ins for word and libreoffice.
Have you tried Zotero? It is free and IMO even better than some of the paid ones. It is a standalone program with MS word integration and web browser extensions.
Downloading the standard zotero from https://www.zotero.org/download/ and running this one instead of the one installed through snap did the trick. For some reason the zotero installed through snap fails as explained on this post.
You can find plenty of Reiki papers, systemic reviews and case studies on Google solar. I've indexed some of them
https://www.zotero.org/vdboor/library
And there is http://www.centerforreikiresearch.org/
Zotero -https://www.zotero.org/ free and Open Source - can donate/pay for extra cloud storage - download both the chrome/firefox extension and for mac os here. for best use, use both the web connector and the downloadable app.
They have all been archived and you can find archive links here. Best viewed on a computer browser (not phone). https://www.zotero.org/groups/4288739/breaking_code_silence/collections/3HUIXKKZ
The original blog can be accessed here https://musingsofawanderingman.blogspot.com/2011/01/letter.html
So Zotero 5.0.97-beta* is the dev version of Zotero. It's the version that hasn't been released yet, but will be in the future.
Future versions of Zotero can change your database so that it isn't compatible with past versions.
To be blunt it sounds to me like you somehow accidentally upgraded to beta, then downgraded, so your database now can't be read by the current Zotero. No clue how it could have happened without you knowing though.
[IH] My first MSLT was 10, although they had to make do with 3 naps since they let me sleep for 12 hours. ("We honestly thought you would wake up on your own.") There is a second way to classify IH and narcolepsy, last I saw in the DSM
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5558858/
"However, data have shown that it is common for patients with clinical diagnoses of IH to demonstrate mean sleep latencies longer than this 8 minute threshold, including 71% of those with long sleep times. Therefore, current ICSD criteria for IH also include an objectively measured sleep time of at least 660 minutes (by 24 hour polysomnography or averaged across at least one week of actigraphy), which can be used to confirm an IH diagnosis in patients with a mean sleep latency greater than 8 minutes."
And I thought having 2 short onset REMs put you in the NT2 category pretty easily? There are plenty of research papers mentioning short-falls of the MSLT (I have a small list I need to update one day: https://www.zotero.org/groups/2311151/hypersomnolence_disorder/collections/37PEWMI4 ) Doctors can use research to guide their practice, but the DSM-V and ICSD are keystone sources.
Purdue is great as someone has already mentioned. really want to recommend Zotero!! it’s a completely free in-text citation and references list generator. get the chrome extension and you can save articles straight to your library using it, and 70% of the time they will input all the details for you but sometimes the formatting is off or they can’t auto-save from certain websites so personally i still always double check, occasionally i manually input the details. you can attach PDFs into your library too. get the extension for your MS Word/Google docs and as you write your essay you can input your citations and references, the reference list is automatically arranged in alphabetical order with second line indent. and after i’ve finished everything i double check once again, and i use Purdue guides to know if there’s a mistake in the format.
A shortcut: Go to https://www.worldcat.org/ search your book’s ISBN number, then export the citation in the format you need, ready made.
Better: Use Zotero to manage your bibliographic data, notes and citations. https://www.zotero.org/
Hey, thanks for this response. Zotfile works pretty well, and I also signed up to be a beta tester for the Zotero iOS app which is working even better so far. If you want to try it, you can sign up here: https://www.zotero.org/iosbeta
Instead, why not teach them how to use a reference manager? Zotero is free, cross-platform, and integrates in a number of web browsers and word processors (including google docs).
If they really learn how to use the software, then they can easily switch between APA, MLA, Chicago, and many other citation/reference styles. That plus a few minutes learning how to do a quick check on references seems like a more useful & transferable skill than just learning one citation style (which will invariably have various changes in a few years anyway).
Aquí puedes encontrar todos los papers disponibles de Sinovac (también compila otras vacunas) https://www.zotero.org/groups/2528572/covid-19\_vaccine\_results/tags/CoronaVac%20(PicoVacc)%20Sinovac/library
Hate to break it to you but if you want to be a chemist you absolutely have to be able to write research papers. I'm a biologist, not a chemist, but I can comfortably say that I spend more time reading and writing than I do actual biology. That's pretty much across the board in all sciences.
I'm a PhD student and a TA and this is usually the advice I give to my students for research writing:
Start by picking out some relevant keywords to search in Google. You can use non-scholarly sources to help you get a basic understanding of some of the concepts. IT'S OK TO USE WIKIPEDIA!!! But only as a point of reference to help you get your bearings (do not cite Wikipedia though).
To find scholarly sources...once you have a better basic understanding of the topic at hand do a search in Google scholar. Also, if your school has a library you can find their website and they should have databases available for you to search.
Download a reference manager. I use Zotero. It has a chrome add in and can be uploaded into Word or Google Docs. You can use it for your in text citations and bibliography. There are tons of how to videos on YouTube for how to use it.
Here's a good how to for Zotero: https://youtu.be/BQL_7C-YqBk
Become familiar with the Purdue OWL website.
Make sure that before you start writing that you read any prompt/guidelines the professor gives you. I usually only take significant points off on assignments that students turn in that are missing important things from the prompt or instructions.
Thanks for the quick response and articles!
I am liking Zotero to store and organize papers/references of interest, maybe you will like it too, or maybe you already know about it /shrug.
anyway, thanks again!
I think Zotero does much of what you describe. https://www.zotero.org
Probably several others as well. It is unfortunately not one of the features Wikipedia mentions. Maybe we should crowd-source such a table. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_reference_management_software
I don't think they would be that concerned over minor formatting problems, so as long as you're citing and citing correctly (though im not a ta or prof, so I cant say for sure).
My recommendation is to never cite by hand -- always use some form of reference manager. I use zotero because it lets me export .bib files to use in latex, but there are a ton out there, so just pick your favourite. That way, you're not really worrying about citing, since you just need to make sure to input the correct information once.
You might be able to build it from source https://www.zotero.org/support/dev/client_coding/building_the_standalone_client
So in my book on 'the History of Emotions', I use basic semiotics to explore how words come to have emotional resonance (so 'child' for example raises ideas of innocence and love etc, which mean it can do certain types of emotional work in society). Frevert et al's book Emotional Lexicons is a history of the development of certain emotions words, and I think has something on childhood education, but is definitely history, rather than ed dev literature. There are also linguists who work on the development of emotional words like Wierzbecka. However having said all that I can't think of anybody who does exactly what you're asking for, but I am not really in the education space per se. You could have a look at our bibliography and see if anything jumps out: https://www.zotero.org/groups/300219/che_bibliography_history_of_emotions/library
Bookmark features haven't evolved much in the past decade. I think once it became easy to call up a bookmark with a few characters in the address bar (in Firefox 3?), and with the addition of the one-click star and Unsorted bookmarks folder (now called "Other Bookmarks") in Firefox 4, the concern about and interest in folder-related features went way down. Sort of like the philosophy of Gmail. I'm not saying this is how it "should" be in a hypothetical perfect world, but I can totally understand why the priority is low based on how my own use of bookmarks has evolved.
Hopefully you make regular backups.
If you collect all those bookmarks for research / bibliographic purposes, check out Zotero. https://www.zotero.org/ They can import Firefox bookmarks, and they have an extension to integrate saving of new bookmarks into your Zotero database. (You still can use a local database, you don't need to use the cloud part.)
Well, yeah. I have just asked the question not long ago, it's here: https://www.reddit.com/r/learnprogramming/comments/bmh0zo/need_theory_to_read_about_text_editors_and_ide/
And this is what I have managed to find based on the answers: https://www.zotero.org/naens/items/collectionKey/KRB3J7IZ
Not everything is very useful, but the best seem to be
Software Tools in Pascal — it's the most basic, it's like K&R, where the main focus are strings and the final project is to make an ed clone.
Turbo Pascal Toolbox — algorithms and data structures for making a TUI text editor
The Craft of Text Editing — How Emacs works.
Formal specification of a display-oriented text editor — a kind of mathematical model of a text editor
Data Structures for Text Sequences — different data structures to represent text
I don't know if there is some theory for smart indenting though, but I think it's not the most difficult problem: you remember where the first argument of the last function on the previous line is and insert the appropriate number of spaces for the next line.
Also I'd like to make my editor multi-threaded, so the Little Book of Semaphores could also be useful.
Check out Zotero. https://www.zotero.org/
It’s built for academic research, and can pull website snapshots or PDFs, store them locally and/or sync to their website, and supports search and tags. It has browser integrations that make most of this a one click process.
It’s not for note taking, or anything like Evernote or Onenote, but for PDFs and website snapshots and managing a research bibliography, it’s the best option I’ve found.
(I’ve tried Calibre, and Mendeley a few years ago, and Endnote ($) a LONG time ago, but Zotero worked the best for my purposes.)
The one thing it doesn’t do is report updates, though it does capture the time you accessed and snapshotted a site.
I have a lot of diverse interests, but 10-20 was an exaggeration. My (current) Zotero Library has about 1900 articles that I've added since August 2016. I read a lot more that I don't add or that I add to different accounts on Mendeley or just download the pdf. Every few years I have to get a new account because of space limitations. My main pdf backup has accumulated about 20k papers over the last 8 years or so.
5-10 papers per day 5 days a week with holiday breaks is more accurate. Some are skimmed just so I can grab a particular synthesis or procedure. Either way, emailing is quite tedious and slow compared to using my local university as a proxy to grab a paper in a few seconds.
What you should do is WebDAV backup, it's perfect. You can get a free account through Box.com with 10 GB of space, or if you have a personal website, you might be able to run a WebDAV service like I do.
Instructions:
http://academic.bancey.com/syncing-zotero-files-with-webdav-from-box/
https://shazino.freshdesk.com/support/solutions/articles/180096-how-to-use-webdav-storage-zotero-
> Zotero
Mind I add that it is open source, meaning if you don't like something about it and know how to program, then you can make active steps to fix the software :))
I'm rather late, but the reference describing which file to modify is under "Managing Lookup engines" on https://www.zotero.org/support/locate
Or read the other post. Yeah. Do that. Whoops
Zotero (Windows, Mac, and Linux) might fit your request: https://www.zotero.org
Or, Lightshot (Windows and Mac) might also help: https://app.prntscr.com/en/index.html
Let me know if neither of these work, and I'll try my best to help out!
Scrapbook X is a lot more than a collection of static web pages. It is effectively a tool for organizing static documents, bookmarks, local files, and all of it searchable from a single location. I then push the data out to a local webserver to make it available online. This allows me to access project data from anywhere. Another tool that I spend a lot of time with is Zotero.
For conference papers I write the methods and data sections first - that way I can send that section around and get some feedback on my methods before I run my experiments. It easier to change methods earlier rather than later.
For proposals, I start with an outline and sort of work randomly on sections as I feel like it. I usually start with what's easy for me to write and then work up the harder/necessary parts (like the lit review which I always hate writing). I usually end up writing the lit review and Intro last, and start with results and discussion. From watching my lab mates, most people don't write papers sequentially. They often sort of work on portions of each section as it makes sense. A lot of the time, I end up re-writing some sections a few times or cutting some parts that don't make sense anymore - which is ok! Its not wasted time if you end up throwing out some parts - its just practice writing :)
One thing I recommend for managing lit review stuff is finding an app to store your citations in. I use mendeley but my lab mates also like zotero. I add anything and everything I think is relevant, and then pare down later (and by pare down I throw all by citations into a bib-tex document and only the ones I explicitly cite show up in the pdf).
Advice for writing when you feel overwhelmed: Put the document with the half finished paper away (don't even open it) and write the drafts for the sections elsewhere. I get stressed out when I have to think about all the things that aren't done which usually turns into a shame spiral about how I'm not productive enough. I write some sections by hand or in an empty google doc (for citations in those if necessary I write something like [CITE AUTHOR X HERE]) and then after its not terrible , I copy paste it into the original document.
> Zotero
I don't think this is e10s compatible -- which may be contributing to the slowness you are seeing.
Since you are a user, it may be worth asking about a port of their Chrome plugin to Firefox on their forums.
You can focus on cybercrime w/o an IT background, but understanding some basics will help you so very much (as well as providing a little more credibility).
21 is not too "old" to learn IT, or anything else, for that matter. You should focus on your masters first, and if your concentration level allows, take a couple of community college courses on IT basics.
But it's not critical.
You should also research fake ID's, anonymity processes, money laundering, the Darknet (and it's markets), and the connection between organized crime and terrorism.
Here is my reference database with "cybercrime" tagged; I hope that helps