War on Entropy 1: software for your field notes

By mandevu at 10:53 am on Sunday, August 12, 2007

Those of you who are on the job might appreciate the recent round-up of software useful to anthropologists (and those of us who poach anthropological methods) over on the anthropology blog, Savage Minds. The post itself is an aggregation of software which was bandied about on the East Asian Anthropology Listserv. Be sure to check the comments, too. It is an interesting list, though it is somewhat skewed towards Windows and Mac users.

I have been looking for software to help me get my work organized. My own system is pretty unsophisticated– in the field I take notes in my locally-procured exercise books. When I first got started a few years back, I was keen on the Rite-in-the-Rain line of field books. However, after a chiding from a committee-member when I included water-proof notebooks as a line item in a proposal budget (at something like $14 each, they just looked fishy in the budget), I shifted to whatever notebooks I could find when I landed wherever I was going. Luckily for me, most of my note-taking currently takes place under houses rather than out in the rain.

I write up notes and brainstorm using a text editor, either Kate on Linux or NoteTabLight on Windows. I am neither a Kate nor a NoteTab advocate– I remain open to other programs. But they are both free, and I just like the cross-platform flexibility of text files.

One of my serious organizational problems right now is my PDF files. After 6 years of study, I have accumulated quite a mess of scientific literature in PDF format. It is, of course, scattered across several locations and with file names spanning several different conventions (as my naming system has changed over the years, I have not retroactively updated the names of older files). Searching for particular articles by title or author is often tricky, and by subject or key-word is nigh on impossible. So now I am looking for a program which will let me tag my PDFs so that I can keep them all in one place, and search by tag. A library manager, if you will. My cursory search has turned up little so far. If I come up with a program I like, I will post about it. If you know of one, I’d appreciate the tip so share it in the comments.

Sadly, my hard copy files suffer from the same problem; though, several moves between apartments and offices have probably left them in even worse condition. But, they are back home. So I cannot worry about them right now.

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10 Comments »

1
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Comment by Maytel

12 August 2007 @ 3:39 pm

I just use endnote…link to pdf

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Comment by eve

16 August 2007 @ 4:24 am

that was really interesting - an inside look at the accumulation, filing and using of field data.

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Comment by eve

16 August 2007 @ 4:25 am

and the struggles of getting into usable order.

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Comment by Dmitriy

18 August 2007 @ 12:18 am

Endnote X (10) allows you to link to individual PDF files (and website location for that matter) all the references in a given library. So, what I am planning on doing one day is sitting down and forcing myself from that moment on to adhere to a system where I add the PDF paper that I downloaded to the library (and I keep them all in the same folder on the disk) and link it to the actual file. This way you can search for specific PDFs in the endnoteX library.

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Comment by mandevu

18 August 2007 @ 5:01 pm

Endnote, huh? I think that I have Endnote 5 around somewhere, but have not played with it for several years now. I still do my bibliographies the old fashioned way, surrounding myself with heaps of articles and notes, and rooting through them for the citations I need. I will look at Endnote 10. Does it allow for some kind of tagging or keyword searching?

There is another program, Shoka (http://www.mauropiccini.it/projects/shoka/), which looks promising. And, it is open source too, which is nice. But I have not tried it yet– I think that it is still a work in progress.

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Comment by Maytel

18 August 2007 @ 5:09 pm

wow, that is old school….I’ve got far too much material to deal with to do that…my advice…get end note

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Comment by MTBradley

5 September 2007 @ 4:01 am

You can use Zotero to keep track of your PDF collection. It would be labor-heavy to have to start over, though.

http://www.zotero.com

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Comment by mandevu

6 September 2007 @ 8:17 am

Thanks for the Zotero suggestion! I have just loaded it, but have yet to play with it. As for the labor, you are right on– I am digging my way out of a collapsed paper mine…

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Comment by grandma

22 November 2007 @ 12:20 pm

Your grandpa had the same problem with mountains of genealogy research. Will discuss when you get home.
SOOON WHEEEE

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Comment by Todd Silver

7 August 2008 @ 8:51 am

Saw your note about field notes. I work at http://www.riteintherain.com. We’ve just made a RITR digital fieldbook which works with the Anoto digital pen system. You can write in the outdoors in the RITR fieldbook as always, doc the pen and all your notes & diagrams go into your computer. Highlite your handwritten notes onscreen and easily convert them all into text. You can even do word searches that scan all your fieldnotes and list each entry by feildbook page!You can buy the system at http://www.adapx.com A very cool new system.
Todd

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