I'm told that iAnnotate on the iPad is pretty impressive.
On Jun 10, 2010, at 10:54, Adam M. Goldstein wrote:
> On Jun 10, 2010, at 9:06 AM, Michael McCracken wrote:
>
>> Touché. :)
>> In fact, despite my original motivation for Skim (I don't like wasting
>> paper) - I still often print things,
On Jun 10, 2010, at 9:06 AM, Michael McCracken wrote:
> Touché. :)
> In fact, despite my original motivation for Skim (I don't like wasting
> paper) - I still often print things, especially if they need a lot of
> annotation.
Perhaps it's a generational thing and I'm not well-adapted to working d
Jason Davies wrote:
> On 10 Jun 2010, at 14:06, Michael McCracken wrote:
>
>> However - the specific benefits I see for reading papers on an iPad
>> are:
>
>
> I don't have an iPad and probably won't get one soon (no cash) but if
> you read heavily I can still recommend the iLiad iRex (and other
Thanks for the replies.
The big benefits I see in the iPad are in having the option of leaving my desk
and sitting in a comfy chair to read journal articles, and in being able to
carry bundles of loose documents (e.g. class list, class notes, and course
reader for teaching) in a single device i
On 10 Jun 2010, at 14:06, Michael McCracken wrote:
> However - the specific benefits I see for reading papers on an iPad are:
I don't have an iPad and probably won't get one soon (no cash) but if you read
heavily I can still recommend the iLiad iRex (and other hardware they offer).
There are
Touché. :)
In fact, despite my original motivation for Skim (I don't like wasting
paper) - I still often print things, especially if they need a lot of
annotation.
However - the specific benefits I see for reading papers on an iPad are:
- don't use paper
- capacity - I can carry all the papers
- a