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When I started residency, I tried several ways to save articles for later reference for learning, and also to use for academic writing. I tried folders on my computer, Google Drive, and Zotero. Then I found Papers by ReadCube. You can drag and drop articles and it automatically will...

30,858 次观看 • 3 年前 •via X (Twitter)

9 条评论

Midhat Patel, MD 的头像
Midhat Patel, MD3 年前

How to use the MS Word plugin:

Parth Kamdar 的头像
Parth Kamdar3 年前

@readcube Sweet, been looking for something like this

Ben Mayo, MD 的头像
Ben Mayo, MD3 年前

@Davembmd @readcube This is what I've been using this year it's amazing

Drew Albert 的头像
Drew Albert3 年前

@readcube Does this just have better user interface than Zotero? What makes it stand out? Can it actually connect to your university library and forward you papers based on preferences? (Sounded like that on the website)

Midhat Patel, MD 的头像
Midhat Patel, MD3 年前

Yeah, it does. I’ll post some screen capture soon showing how you can pull PDF straight from the Internet if you’re logged in through your institution. The interface is much better, smoother, and works much more efficiently than Zotero does. Also saves all PDFs to the cloud and you can pull them up on your mobile app.

Adam M. Gordon, MD, MBA 的头像
Adam M. Gordon, MD, MBA3 年前

@readcube You use this as a citation manager for writing? Does it function with a plugin? Would love to see more. Thanks!

Midhat Patel, MD 的头像
Midhat Patel, MD3 年前

@readcube Yeah it’s incredible. I’ll post it when I get a chance!

Brook Mitchell 的头像
Brook Mitchell3 年前

@readcube Mendeley is best

Abby Joy Garcia, OMS4 的头像
Abby Joy Garcia, OMS43 年前

@TylerWillUIW @readcube Game changer!!! Wow thank you for sharing this

相关视频

Read 100 paywalled research papers for free every month! You don't even need a university account to do this. Here's how to read paywalled papers on JSTOR for free: 1. Go to jstor(dot)org and click on "Register" in the top-right corner. You can register with your personal Google or Outlook account. Or, you can create a JSTOR account manually. 2. Once you've logged in to your JSTOR account, click on "Workspace" in the menu bar. Then click on "Create folder." Choose a name for your folder and click on "Create."Creating folders in Workspace is a great way to keep your papers organized. 3. Type in the keywords in the search bar to find relevant papers. JSTOR willl give you a list of papers. To read a paper for free, click on "Read online." You will see a preview of the paper. Scroll down a bit and click on "Read Online" again. 4. If you find the paper super-relevant to your project, click on "Save" on the top of the article. Choose the folder you just created in your Workspace and save the paper in it. If you go to your Workspace, the paper will show up in the relevant folder. 5. You can also take notes on papers in your Workspace. To do so, click on the "Add Note" button under a paper and start typing. Click on "Save" to your save your note. 6. If you already have a paper and you want to related to it, you can use Text Analyzer. To do so, click on "Tools" and select "Text Analyzer." Upload the paper you have and JSTOR will give you a list of papers related to you original paper. 7. Text Analyzer also lets you callibrate your search parameters. Adjust the priority for different terms by moving the priority scale left or right. You can more related terms and adjust their priority. Text Analyzer will update the results accordingly. 8. If you find a paper interesting, simply click on it and then select "Read Online." 9. You can also add papers to your Zotero library. Open the paper you want to add and click on the Zotero Connector in the top-right corner of your browser. Choose the Zotero collection you want to save the paper in and click on "Done." The paper will show up in your Zotero. Found this post on JSTOR helpful? • Repost to share it with your friends and colleagues. •Follow me for more posts on academic writing.

Mushtaq Bilal, PhD

31,810 次观看 • 2 年前

This is Farzapedia. I had an LLM take 2,500 entries from my diary, Apple Notes, and some iMessage convos to create a personal Wikipedia for me. It made 400 detailed articles for my friends, my startups, research areas, and even my favorite animes and their impact on me complete with backlinks. But, this Wiki was not built for me! I built it for my agent! The structure of the wiki files and how it's all backlinked is very easily crawlable by any agent + makes it a truly useful knowledge base. I can spin up Claude Code on the wiki and starting at index.md (a catalog of all my articles) the agent does a really good job at drilling into the specific pages on my wiki it needs context on when I have a query. For example, when trying to cook up a new landing page I may ask: "I'm trying to design this landing page for a new idea I have. Please look into the images and films that inspired me recently and give me ideas for new copy and aesthetics". In my diary I kept track of everything from: learnings, people, inspo, interesting links, images. So the agent reads my wiki and pulls up my "Philosophy" articles from notes on a Studio Ghibli documentary, "Competitor" articles with YC companies whose landing pages I screenshotted, and pics of 1970s Beatles merch I saved years ago. And it delivers a great answer. I built a similar system to this a year ago with RAG but it was ass. A knowledge base that lets an agent find what it needs via a file system it actually understands just works better. The most magical thing now is as I add new things to my wiki (articles, images of inspo, meeting notes) the system will likely update 2-3 different articles where it feels that context belongs, or, just creates a new article. It's like this super genius librarian for your brain that's always filing stuff for your perfectly and also let's you easily query the knowledge for tasks useful to you (ex. design, product, writing, etc) and it never gets tired. I might spend next week productizing this, if that's of interest to you DM me + tell me your usecase!

Farza 🇵🇰🇺🇸

2,053,982 次观看 • 2 个月前