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Although I haven’t tried it personally, from what I saw in the video tutorials provided by the website, it seems that LiquidText can do memo-writing and stuff like that. I completely agree with you! And yes, I think LiquidText does more than comparisons. LiquidText is very interesting – export is better than the other two apps, IMO.ĭon’t forget the other annotation options for PDFs – there are dozens. Some macOS-version bugs were fixed, and an iOS/iPadOS app came to market. As a product, it seemed to be abandoned for a long time, then came back to life. I like Highlights, but unfortunately do not trust it. If you want to focus on one-off PDFs that do not need to be managed as a group, then Highlights is OK for this. For me, MarginNote is unique in its ability to handle that. Personally, I have large corpuses of dual-language source texts comprising thousands of pages of text in deeply intertwined (cross-referenced) documents. I have them all, and prefer MarginNote - though it has some weird and frustrating interface issues.īacking up to the beginning though – the question is what’s your use case? Are you taking notes for academic research? For personal records? Something else? If you are taking notes on a corpus of PDFs that are related to one-another, and want to bring in web-resources into the notes then MarginNote is very good for this. Hmmm, MarginNote, LiquidText, Highlights are not suddenly new – they’ve all been around for several years.
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