Its things like this that make me thrilled, but I am easily amused.
Edit: Lifehacker has also reviewed this: http://lifehacker.com/5367091/evernote-35-beta-brings-tons-of-tiny-fixes-to-windows
Writing history, knitting, and still trying to save the world!
Its things like this that make me thrilled, but I am easily amused.
Posted by LLM at 12:33 PM 0 comments
Labels: Evernote, software. link
I love the art of "double sentido" in Spanish. This is a mildly amusing conversation that I just had with my Guatemalan novio:
Ultimamente, tuve que dar una presentación que se trató de la lucha libre. Le dije a mi novio que iba a dar la presentación y le pregunté si había luchadores en Guatemala.
"Bien," me dijo, "15 milliones de luchadores."
¡Bien dicho!
Posted by LLM at 12:28 PM 0 comments
I'm playing with a ton of beta software these days, much of it great:
Windows 7 RC1, Build 7100. Its great, really, and has been rock solid and run without a glich, in a refreshing contrast to my older Vista installation. I'm definitely buying it when it comes out.
I'm eligible for a $30 version of Home Premium, due to my graduate school poverty level existence, but am still not sure what to do about the netbook, which I also threw Windows 7 on in a fit of total geekiness. The RC1 expires in March. It may be time to buy a real laptop with a Windows 7 upgrade. Or try Ubuntu.
This is no longer available, but the RTM version of Windows 7 is out on October 22!
Thunderbird 3 Beta 4: The search function is awesome. Since Postbox came out of beta and then wanted $40 for their product, I've gone back to Thunderbird. I'm glad I did, as its open source, free, extensible (well, the 2.x versions, anyways), and supported by a community.
http://www.mozillamessaging.com/en-US/thunderbird/early_releases/downloads/
Zotero 2.07b.2: I love this. See the previous post. I'm recommending this to everyone who has to wrestle with citations, bibliographies, and research management. Zotero.org
Evernote 3.5 alpha: I'm out on a limb here with alpha software testing, but I like it so far. No crashes and Evernote puts out frequent updates and bug fixes. In general, Evernote still has a ways to go to catch Microsoft Onenote's text editing abilities, but its search capabilities and multi-device input are pretty great. A comparison of Evernote and OneNote is definitely on my agenda. Evernote.com
Beta (and alpha) testing is pretty fun and you get to try some neat stuff. One word of caution: back up early and often. Its not a question of if something will go wrong, its when.
Full disclosure: I'm not a professional software reviewer. I'm not a professional blogger. I'm not associated with the Zotero project.
So, why am I qualified to review a citation manager on a decidedly non-professional blog?
Because it works in real life. As a grad student in a demanding program, I've put Zotero through its paces and it has performed brilliantly.
Zotero, for those not in the know, is a free reference manager created by the Center for New Media and History. Its a Mozilla Firefox extension that lives in your browser and captures bibliographic information from around the web.
Bibliographic management is not generally something that people get really excited about. I, for one, am thrilled about it. Here's why its great:
Posted by LLM at 2:33 PM 0 comments
Labels: bibliography, software, zotero