Sorry, I'm having difficulties in seeing your point :-(
Why "integrate" a third-party programs?
> I'm just
> beginning to use Onenote for research note taking, and realise that
> without linking these ideas, summaries, quotes etc to the original
> source, the power of Onenote is considerably compromised.
What do you mean by "linking to the original source"?
References to websites where you gathered information?
That's built-in in ON.
Whenever you copy stuff from a website, a link to the source us
automatically inserted in ON.
In IE (Internet Explorer) there is button for copying whole pages and/or
marked parts of page. And there is an add-in for FireFox.
Apart from that it's really easy to create hyperlinks in ON.
And one can links to files and even embed them.
> I use Endnote extensively, and it's doing the referencing job nicely.
ON is really great in so far.
It seems that you just have not detected the way it works and its great
power.
I'm sure that we we might guide you if you let us know what you are
after and what you are missing.
Pls ask with a bit more details.
> It would be ideal if there is a way Onenote can be integrated with
> Endnote. This seems to be an old question. I wonder if there is any
> new development?
I do not see what "integrate" might mean, nor which kind of feature
offered by Evernote would be missing in ON.
I worked for a couple of months with Evernote but made the move to ON in
early 2006 as I found ON to be ways more powerful. ON is the most used
application on my systems.
I assume that additional functionality might have been added to Evernote
in the meantime. Still I do not see what you want to integrate and what
for.
Rainald
I was talking about Endnote, not Evernote. I have never used Evernote, so
can't comment on it. But Endnote is a citation and bibliography management
program and is probably the most widely use by academics for this purpose. I
use Endnote to generate references in a style that a particular publisher
needs, like APA. I also use Endnote to manage my huge collection of pdf files
of journal articles. The problem is, Endnote doesn't have a good note-taking
capability, so I'll have to use MS Word (there is an Endnote Add-in) for
note-taking. But I suppose Word is not designed for note-taking.
Onenote seems to be a powerful note-taking tool, but my little experience
with it so far gives me the impression that it can be improved to better
cater to the academic researchers' note-taking needs. It's excellent in terms
of everyday note-taking, meeting minutes, student note-taking in class, etc.,
but for the last couple of weeks after I installed ON 2007 I haven't figured
out a convenient way to do the following:
When I'm reading a journal article or a book, I need to take down
1/ multiple quotations
2/ multiple summaries of the orginal author's ideas, research results, etc.
3/ multiple inspirations I get from reading this article
Each of these above will need to be referenced to the original article. I
don't want to type the author, year, publication, page etc again and again.
If there is a Endnote Add-in, like in MS Word, one click with do the job. Is
there a convenient way I can do the above in Onenote?
There seem to be a few note-taking programs out there for Master's students,
PhD students, and academics in general. I did a search online, and found the
following to be most relevant to what I need. But ON seems to be a more
powerful general note-taking tool and now that I've bought it, I would like
to make full use of it. Perhaps other academics out there have figured out a
way for themselves? Or as you said, I haven't found the ON function yet?
These programs I mention include, for example, Citation
http://www.citationonline.net/9-home.asp, or ndxCards http://www.ndxcards.com/
Any help will be greatly appreciated.
Oh my God, how could I be so silly to make such a bug mistake {siiiiigh}
I'm so sorry. Pls accept my apologies.
For sure I know Endnote! Ad I have it. It's on the ToDo list for being
re-installed (as I recently have re-installed the OS).
I fully agree with your ideas. And IMO it would be really great if it
could be combined with ON.
AFAICS there are no add-ins and/or tools.
Being in the run for an excursion of my faculty, for the moment only
these few remarks.
Rainald
I unfortunately do not have access to EndnoteWeb, I would guess this would
make integration easier.
I will have to experiment a little more, and am a bit wary of keeping my
libraries only in a web app., but it seems rather convenient.
Zotero seems to be it, built by researchers for researchers, and free of
charge. I've installed it, and am working on the glitches. As a bibliography
management tool, it is doing most of what EN is doing, and in some respects
better. As a note-taking tool, it's not as powerful as ON in terms of its
convenience of use, multimedia compatibility, and integration with PDA, but
it's doing what I want to do with research note-taking.
Perhaps oneday, when the OneNote team realises that the research community's
needs for note-taking should be taken very seriously and built into a future
version, many researchers like me may come back to embrace OneNote.