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Reading PDF files using iPad 3
Reading PDF files of papers and textbooks on computers has long been difficult for me. The resolution of the screens has been too low. The computers have been too heavy for reading in couches and beds.
In recent months iPad 3 has made a difference for me. The resolution of iPad 3 is so good that color pictures often look better on screen than in print. iPad lets me read comfortably anywhere. I’d choose to read a book with iPad even if I have the same book in printed form. I wish iPad were available when I was young and had a lot of time for reading. I would have read all these large biology books in bed.
With the help of my sons, I get things organized by using the following software.
- Use Dropbox to hold PDF files. This way I can access papers from any computer. For example, I can use a desktop to download and organize papers.
- Use PDF Expert (an iPad app) to read and annotate PDF documents on iPad.
I synchronize Dropbox and PDF Expert. The synchronization is done automatically whenever the desktop, laptop or iPad is connected to the Internet. This synchronization keeps identical files on all these computers, so I can read and annotate even if these computers are offline. Any annotation I made using PDF Expert is updated.
If I add a paper to Dropbox using the desktop at work, I can read the paper on iPad in bed in the evening. No more file transfer. No more organizing files in different computers. Just reading.
Let me know if you have figured out a good way to read PDF files.
- Zhigang Suo's blog
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The top 10 apps for college professors
Dear Prof. Suo,
You may find the following link very interesting ::
The top 10 apps for college professors
Regards,
Dibakar Datta PhD Candidate ; Major : Solid Mechanics
Shenoy Research Group
BROWN UNIVERSITY
Providence 02912 , USA
This video is wonderful!
This video is wonderful! I'll try some of the apps. Thank you so much for the link.
Yes, the new cloud based
Yes, the new cloud based technologies and these mobile devices have significantly eased the way in which we do research. I used Dropbox, Zotero, Evernote, and LogMeIn during my MS research. The combination of these fantastic tools allowed me to review my documents on the go on my iPhone, retrieve and edit documents on an other computer in another city, and even initiated computer simulations on another computer in another city when I was on the go using the LogMeIn app on the phone. These tools greatly increase productivity, but with that ease should also come a greater output from the researcher.
oh yeah. It is also
oh yeah. It is also extremely convenient if you have some results to show your collaborator while on a road trip.
Indeed, with the combination
Indeed, with the combination of Skype and Dropbox, my group has greatly increased national and international collaboration. Research is going cloudy, not just between people and machines, but also between people and people.
iPad Air, Dropbox, PDF Expert 5. An update
By accident I landed on this old post today. I am still using these three items
I read a lot, mostly papers and textbooks, in PDF format, mostly in bed, when light is not on. PDF Expert 5 allows me to annotate and search. I have nearly completely stopped reading papers and books on paper.
Do you have any update on how you read? Have you discovered any useful software and cloud service?