400+ Paper to digital | transformation with PDFelement
PDFelement’s OCR conversion is excellent. It’s the best we’ve used, and we won’t think twice about recommending it, especially if you’re dealing with a large number of papers.
PDFelement’s OCR conversion is excellent. It’s the best we’ve used, and we won’t think twice about recommending it, especially if you’re dealing with a large number of papers.
When Messages is integrated with Apple Calendar and Apple Reminders, it can
When we designed an iPad-Windows workflow for Bicycleman’s PDF reading, most of
We have reviewed plenty of apps in the past couple of years.
A few weeks ago, Ropsie showed you guys how she transformed her old French notes into new digital ones. She planned to type out the scanned handouts in the notes, but she hasn’t done it for weeks. So, I thought of doing it for her.
I have kept these for years with the faith that one day I would find a way to preserve them. They are old and fragile, and I was growing tired of fighting for their survival. So, when we created our Paperless X minimalist digital notebooks, I could finally rewrite my French high school notes!
I downgraded my iPad Pro to the 2015 version because when the
I use different study methods depending on the subject I am studying
I don’t follow a concrete organisational protocol. I just have principles that
The iPad 2018 has poorer screen quality. It makes a noticeable noise when writing on it, which I found distracting at first.
During a typical study session, I have Safari opened on the left quarter of my iPad screen and LiquidText on the right. I like studying with Safari open to check spellings and definitions, look up images, etc.
My setup is such that, my personal study notes are in LiquidText and my class notes for the same topic are in Notability.
That is basically how I trace diagrams in Procreate on the iPad; hopefully it can help you do the same.