![]() ![]() I'm sure there are but I can't think of them at the moment. I'm sure there are many more features I have yet to use. If I'm researching heavily, I can use Endnote daily, sometimes weekly. I love the Endnote Online and Endnote intregration, and use the Capture Reference quite often. This helps keep my workspace tidy in Endnote and reminds me what I need. I can label folders and put sources in them so I know what to do with them later. I love the idea of the ratings feature because I know there are many sources I may read but which may not be neccessary, and the ability to rate them is very important to know what to look for later. Once the reference imports, I know that the PDF will be functional in any assistive tech I may use. Because of the way Endnote is made, I create the screen readable PDF and attach it to the reference. This is an absolutely necessary feature for me as I need an accessible way to organize and keep track of sources, as well as ensuring that they are screen readable PDF before loading them into any other program. I love the fact that references can be created, edited later, and I love that PDFs can be attached to the reference and imported into other programs as needed. I love the fact that Endnote has the potential to gather sources for me, though I haven't yet figured out how this works, possibly because I don't have access to some of the pay-walled search engines that attach to it. Without Endnote as part of my assistive tech, I couldn't research and write the way I do. It saves me hours of time and makes it possible to take notes and eventually piece together sources into a report without having to have someone assist me with writing and cutting up source quotes all over the floor. I love the Cite Whilte You Write in Word - it updates, it saves me massive amounts of time, it creates footnotes, which are the bane of my assistive tech, it works brilliantly. But I can copy and paste author and title info within Endnote and it will assemble these for me. It remains among the most difficult of tasks for me. ![]() I could not make a bibliography with Endnote. If you make any changes on the mobile app, just sync again so the changes are reflected on another version of Mendeley.Comments: Absolutely necessary. For example, you can add citations from the lab computers to your Mendeley library using the Chrome extension or the web importer, and then you can sync your mobile app to keep reading after you leave. You cannot sync in the web-based Mendeley library, but the library will pull the information synced from the desktop or mobile app. Sync your citations to Mendeley by clicking the "Sync" icon in the desktop application or the mobile app. The image below shows the Mendeley web importer in Internet Explorer. The image below shows the Mendeley Chrome extension. Mobile App - Access your Mendeley library and read, annotate or highlight your citations on the go.It can be used in any browser, not just Chrome. Web Importer - This simple tool can save citations to Mendeley (it has no other features).The Chrome extension most of the features of the desktop application of Mendeley, and is a great substitute if you cannot use the desktop application. Chrome Extension - Save citations to Mendeley using the Web extension whenever you are viewing an article (including PDF files) or a list of references in the browser.You can also set up watched folders where Mendeley will automatically add all PDFs that appear in that folder. It will then try to create the citation from the PDF itself. Mendeley Desktop Application - Add PDFs and citations to Mendeley by dropping PDFs into the desktop application.For more information and download links, visit the Mendeley website. If you are using the PSU computer labs, you will need to use the Chrome extension or the web importer. ![]() There are several tools you can use to install Mendeley. ![]()
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