![]() ![]() LiquidText is good for small projects ( a sort of a joke! Lol) but very bad for big projects and serious work. will oftenly crash, search in multiple documents will always fail, the digital handwriting and erasing in workspace will be horrible. In LiquidText, after the import of few big pdf textbooks and writing digital handwriting notes for 20 plus pages (A4 or letter size) in the workspace, the app will come to almost a halt i.e. So marginnote actually suffers from the same type of problems as LiquidText. For me the point 1 and point 2 both are deal-breaker points but more so the point 2 which relates to the lag noticed in the mind map. Big mind maps created in MarginNote are better off left in MarginNote. You will end up exporting multiple segments of your mind map. MarginNote is not the type of app you can export your huge mind maps out of. In MarginNote, you manually have back up your notes to a folder you choose. This is why it’s best to have auto backup for your documents to backup automatically at regular intervals. Not many of us remember to back up our documents. ![]() Otherwise, you risk not having your notes when you need them. When you need your notes on a different device, manually sync the notes and check they are appearing on your other device. ICloud syncing in MarginNote is dysfunctional. It just doesn’t make for a smooth user experience. The lag might be minor, but those seconds add up in the long run. Lagging mostly occurs when you incorporate different things in your notes: text, handwriting, pictures and scanned notes. MarginNote lags, the more nodes you add to your mind map. If you intend to use this application, as your primary PDF reader, you will need to spend some time learning to use the app even if you are using tutorials. MarginNote is a very complicated PDF reader. But, what could you possibly dislike about MarginNote? Here are five reasons: 1. Notion is an excellent info structuring and presentation tool.We have done a tonne of videos on MarginNote.They mostly focused on how to use the application. The first three excel in non-linearity and, IMHO, are better suited to learning over research. In these and also Notion, you can attach and, to some degree, annotate. Someone from the team pinged me about it on Twitter, and I haven't had a chance to check it out yet.ĥ) Obsidian, Remnote, and Roam Research continue to grow in functionality and are all pretty flexy. It isn't, as I mentioned, much of a replacement for LiquidText and MarginNotes.Ĥ) Check into a new, enhanced reader called Matter. But you'll have to play around with it to see if it's useful to you. Feedly will also collect newsletters, and Twitter feeds, allows grouping by feed lists and notebooks, integrates like a dream with Pocket and Evernote, and has subscriptions at a bunch of price points. If you're a Mozilla user, it's a good bet. Pocket is an old standby that's probably over-priced unless you're already invested in it. But for web research, it's still my go-to, even though I now have an iPad.ģ) LINER, Pocket, and Feedly all offer feed aggregation and reader formatting with highlighting and notes. It hasn't gotten a lot of love beyond its cult following since it first started up in 2004, so while the team continues to make improvements, it doesn't have the spit-shine LiquidText has. An expensive piece of paper replacement, but I am completely hooked on the ease, natural feel, simplicity, and lack of distractions.Ģ) Diigo bookmarking is more notable for tagging, web clipping, sharable annotations with stickies, and outliners for aggregating bookmarks and notes by topics it also offers interest group communities you can create and administer yourself and a pretty professional, education-oriented customer base. Highlighter pens in grayscale convert to colors. None are free, though some (Diigo, Notion, Pocket, Feedly) offer limited starter plans for free.ġ) The reMarkable tablet - getting better all the time, offers access to your cloud storage, pdf reading, and annotation, including the ability to add pages inside pdfs, inking, plain text entry, and handwriting recognition, plus the ability to send anything to anyone via email. None of these below are the same as LiquidText or MarginNotes, but they offer annotation and research features I've found very useful. I wish I had better suggestions: I'm looking for the same thing myself. ![]()
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