#Sente go how to#
I will also show you how to import Endnote, Zotero, and other bibliography formats (i.e. for ad hoc projects, for re-assembling and modifying bibliographies for publication, etc.), and quick adding reference items.
The next post–Sente for PDF Management on the Mac and iPad (3): Quick Add, Zotero Workflow, and Automated (Re)searching - will mostly conclude your understanding of Sente’s organizational features, then transition to a demonstration of how to use the software both for strictly building up bibliographies without attachments (i.e. I will conclude this post with an introduction to some of Sente’s basic organization features: reference panel tags, hierarchical “quick tags,” star ratings, and statuses.
In previous posts, I introduced Digital Workflows for Academic Research for Mac, and discussed the basics of managing PDF chaos. In this post, I will continue exploring more of the main capturing functionalities of Sente, starting off by re-capping ways to add files and entries, demonstrate proper editing of metadata using a sample PDF, then showing you how to add items to libraries and capture PDFs in Sente’s internal browser.
In the first post on Sente, Sente for PDF Management on the Mac and iPad (1): Capturing and Organizing PDFs, I showed you how to make PDF and bibliographic libraries using Sente, and made some suggestions for how to set up your library bundles, namely so that they look like this.