Papers
Tags: arXiv, bibliography, Endnote, Google scholar, JSTOR, Mac, papers, PDF, PubMed, science, Scopus, web of science, Windows, WordPosted in Presentations quality, Technical (ms word, tex), Tips for junior scientists, Tips for senior scientists, useful software
When you are doing research, you tend to collect a lot of papers. I remember that at the end of m PhD, when I moved to another continent to do a postdoc, I dumped a huge box of photocopies in my parents’ basement. A few years ago, I had collected two cupboards full of photocopies. It was getting seriously out of hand. Then, of course, journals started putting everything online as PDFs and the same process started all over again but this time filling up hard disk folders instead. I used to have subject-based folders, which sort of worked until something fit within 2 or 3 or 4 of my subjects. Searching for some old paper you had read a few years back became more and more nightmarish. Then somebody showed me Papers.












Readers' comments
The fact that my idea was used by someone means that my scientific behavior is not original, that is normal. ...
24 Aug 2010 17:24, Vitaliy
Have you tried Mendeley? Looks like an interesting alternative to EndNote.
24 Aug 2010 15:30, Witek
I'm experimenting with a new theme for another Wordpress blog that uses #666 and came across your post. It's on ...
14 Aug 2010 23:59, Donna B.
Ah, a lot of interesting issues regarding patents I think. Maybe the most interesting question is what is ethical to ...
12 Aug 2010 19:12, Mirjam
I like the idea of an article written not in a linear style but rather like a wikipedia entry, because ...
12 Aug 2010 2:35, Wolfgang