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Studying from PDF books? Use Evernote — A complete guide

January 10th, 2013

As a student—and I hate to admit it—I haven’t quite found my studying preferences yet. I am close, but definitely not there. This task is quite difficult to tackle as it needs years of practice, experimentation, dedication and hard work. I am still a fan of hand-written notes and, amazingly, textbooks in spite of digital ones when it comes to studying. Cognitive processes when studying the material on physical textbooks work better, I think, or I’m just getting old extremely fast and can’t cope with technological advancements anymore.

The main problem when studying with digital books (PDF, epub, etc) is not found in the book in itself; on the other hand, it’s the note-taking process. An external but direct process from, and, and sometimes also on the book. (Parenthesis: I think note-taking is a great way to help you study as it enhances your thought process; you think twice—when reading and when writing things down. Hence my focus on it.) iBooks on the iPad and Preview on OS X have great highlighting tools but they lack in exportability. There is no gain if my carefully crafted highlights and notes stay only in a specific program, which in fact, is completely unrelated to the note-process.

That’s where Evernote comes handy.

Evernote was introduced to me by my friend Zac something like a year ago but I didn’t use it much until June when I interned in New York. It was a great tool to help me take notes, write down thoughts and ideas for the job as well as to explore the city. I learned to love it and was quickly moved to my iPhone home-screen — a sacred (sarcasm) place of only the most-used and important apps. Simplicity, man.

While being still hesitant to study from a PDF textbook, I gave it a try recently. And, suddenly, it just striked me!

[blackbirdpie url=”https://twitter.com/apas/status/289101058716884992″]

For the last month I am using Evernote’s Chrome add-on (when I read something on the web and feel it’s quite worthy, I highlight, right-click, Evernote Web clipper > Clip Selection, and boom—it’s a note, full of metadata like URL, formatting, etc) I thought “hey, I can do the same with the textbook.”

Evernote Web Clipper
Evernote Web Clipper in action

“So, how does this actually work?” you might ask. You’ll be amazed how easy this actually is. First of all, you have to specify your organizational plan. How you’ll break things down. Evernote doesn’t use folders — it has Notebooks, notes and tags. Tags are quite irrelevant in this example; don’t look much into them. Also, Evernote offers some form of nesting. You can group multiple notebooks under one — call it a “Stack.” I have a stack named Comp Sci Notes and every book I study has a notebook within this stack. And every notebook/textbook has one note per chapter.

Evernote Organizational Plan
I tried to visualize the logic behind this organizational plan

This is my organizational plan – of course yours can be different. The more interesting part though, it’s the actual note-taking process.

The Note-taking Process
When studying, highlight selected text, copy and paste onto the note and you’re good to go. Also remember: close all distractions when studying (IMs, Twitter…)

When reading from the textbook, just highlight the text, copy and paste it within Evernote’s note. I used to use drag and drop because Evernote keeps some kind of formatting but just because it keeps “some kind of formatting” it isn’t as good as plain old copy and paste.

When it comes to more complex text structures (like, code, for example) or graphics (images, diagrams, etc) the best way to insert them onto the note is to screenshot them. In OS X is dead-simple: cmd+shift+4, select the desired area and the screenshot is ready in your desktop. Then, just drag and drop it into the note — Evernote is awesome with such kind of input material.

Images within an Evernote note
This is how images (the diagram and code block) look inside a note, Evernote is great when it comes to them

You can even search (both notebook/note-wide Evernote search and cmd+f within the note work) within images for text, thus creating a digital, searchable and indexable archives of your notes. Best part? No messy handwritten characters — everything’s in Arial. And because I’m still a “print” guy, I can print each chapter-note, bind them together, thus instantly creating a smaller version of the book, only with the notes. And as said, no messy handwritten characters.

Evernote's search and text recognition functionality
With Evernote’s search and text recognition functionality everything’s searchable

In conclusion, I am only using this system for a few days now but I can safely say it’s a great asset in my “studying arsenal” and a productivity booster. If you’re a student (or doing something similar, anyway) just give it a try—even if you haven’t used Evernote before. You’ll love it and will see that the “digital brain,” as many people describe Evernote, is true.

PS: There’s this great The Verge article called The Verge at work: backing up your brain in which Thomas Houston explains how he uses Evernote as a memory tool for deep reading, writing, and research. It’s a must read if you want to delve deeper into the Evernote-hole.

The next big thing

November 10th, 2012

I am constantly reminded, how much important mobile is now while I’m always trying to seek new, creative and innovative ways on how to get things done.

A constant inquiry of what’s ahead after mobile bugs me lately a lot.

Right now, we see a huge disruption on how we interact with things, search for information, consume content (not only media/video) due to the very nature of “the new mobile” — local, ubiquitous, always online, fast, condensed. And, frankly, the catalyst for these innovations was the iPhone.

But I feel that we are — slowly or fast doesn’t matter — coming to a point where we need to start working on the next big thing. Mobile is saturated. I still can see many innovations for it, many new uses and meaningful features (eg. Passbook, Square, Simple, etc). Don’t get me wrong. I love mobile. It made the huge difference from “I will connect to the Internet” to “I am in the Internet.”Always, everywhere, online.

I’m not pessimist towards mobile; on the other hand, I am totally optimist. There’s so much more to do. Let’s just not focus building the ν-th photo sharing app.

So what could be the next big thing? This thing that will, once again, change how we interact and perceive our world.

The most profound and quick answer that comes to my mind is Google Glass. I love its potential. And for the nay-sayers: no, you don’t look stupid, on the other hand it’s pretty cool — you look like Vegeta and, please, oh please, just imagine the potential. Retina-embedded layers.

Retina embedded fucking layersThe awesome is too damn high!

Aside Project Glass, though, what else could determine and build the post-mobile world? We live in a post-PC thanks to the iPad. How will post-mobile look, even if it’s something entirely new or mobile itself transforms into an entirely new form and format. This gets me excited.