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Evernote Web Clipper

Evernote Web Clipper

Altmetric Bookmarklet More details on how to get started To install the Bookmarklet, just drag it into your browser's bookmark bar - this is typically underneath the address bar. All set? Great, take it for a spin! Here are some example articles to try it out on. Just visit them, then click on the "Altmetric it" bookmark you just added: See the Bookmarklet in action Troubleshooting Nothing happening when you drag the link? If you can't see a bookmark bar on Firefox, go to the View -> Toolbars menu and check Bookmarks Toolbar. Need more help?

Evernote Web Clipper Google Scholar Citations for Zotero Démarrage rapide – Aide & apprentissage Evernote Démarrage rapide Evernote Web Clipper est une extension simple pour votre navigateur Web qui vous permet de capturer des articles entiers, des images, du texte sélectionné, des emails importants et toutes les pages Web qui vous inspirent. Enregistrez tout dans Evernote et gardez-le pour toujours. Disponible pour Chrome, Safari, Internet Explorer (IE) 7+, Firefox et Opera Enregistrez vos premières captures Web en 3 étapes : Lancez Web Clipper pour faire vos premières captures Cliquez sur le bouton Evernote situé dans la barre d'outils de votre navigateur pour lancer Web Clipper. Sélectionnez un type de capture pour capturer des pages Web dans leur intégralité ou des sections d'un article de presse ou d'un article de recherche par exemple. Annotez des informations importantes Faites des captures d'écran de pages Web puis sélectionnez un outil dans "Annoter" pour faire ressortir des informations et ajoutez des repères, comme des flèches, pour indiquer des éléments qui vous paraissent importants.

Lazy Scholar Zotpress Zotpress brings your Zotero library and scholarly blogging to WordPress. Zotero is a free, cross-platform reference manager that integrates with your browser and word processor. Features Displays your individual and group Zotero items through in-text citations, bibliographies, and searchable librariesSupports thumbnail images through WordPress's Featured ImageSupports selective CSS styling via IDs and classesProvides a range of additional features, such as allowing visitors to cite and download citationsAnd more! Compatible with Firefox, Safari, Chrome, IE7, IE8, and IE9. Special thanks to Joe Alberts for substantial contributions to the code, comprehensive testing, and design ideation. Requirements jQuery included in your theme (Zotpress will do this for you if it isn't already included), and an HTTP request method supported by WordPress enabled on your server: cURL, fopen with Streams (PHP 5), or fsockopen.

LibX SFM Documentation Center Edition By using this extension you may send the URL of pages you are currently visiting to your library's catalog server. Such information is sent only if you are actively using the extension; it is never sent automatically. If you wish to avoid this you must turn off the referrer URL by setting network.http.sendRefererHeader to 0 in your preferences. In addition, you may be sending information such as ISBN and ISSN numbers to OCLC, DOIs to CrossRef's server, and PubMed IDs to the PubMed server in order to retrieve metadata information. For more information about LibX, visit the LibX Homepage. Starting with LibX 2.0, we are using Google Analytics to track how users interact with LibX. First-time installation of LibX. LibX users can turn off (opt-out) Google Analytics in the preferences.

Google When? Most people use Google multiple times a day; likely a few of those searches are looking for some kind of help or solution to a problem. When jumping through search results you can identify links that you’ve already visited by their purple color, but sometimes you want to know exactly when you clicked the link so you can remember what you were doing at that time. If you have this problem a lot, the Chrome extension Google When? Thus, if you’re searching madly for help with a programming question, looking for solutions when Windows update keeps failing, or any number of other problems (especially recurring ones), you’ll know when you tried a page. If you’re searching to fix a problem that’s popping up after you fixed it last week, for example, it will help to know if you just visited a page ten minutes ago (and you left because it didn’t help), or if you visited the page last week when you had the same problem (and it fixed your issue then). Depending on your needs, Google When?

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