![]() ![]() Outlines and mindmaps can be rearranged in MarginNote and the rearranged report exported. In LiquidText you have to add a comment separately. A MarginNote highlight extract can have a title and comment added to it. Notes in MarginNote can be tagged and color-coded. MarginNote cannot export an annotated PDF.īoth apps can import from built in browsers, it is a little less obvious how to do this in MarginNote. LiquidText can export an annotated PDF that uses standard PDF annotation objects. LiquidText interacts with the common cloud services for importing PDFs and exporting PDFs or notes. MarginNote can export/import from Evernote. LiquidText exports an annotated PDF or the highlights and comments as RTF. As well as in Anki format (flashcard app). MarginNote can export in mind map (.mmap) and OmniOutliner format, for the mind map and outlines, respectively. MarginNote can sync “notebooks” between the two platforms. I think a LiquidText version on a desktop or laptop would be quite different than the IOS version because it depends so much on touch interaction with the user. MarginNote has an OS X version, LiquidText does not. I’ve been using MarginNote and LiquidText and can point out a few differences: Does that add a lot to the utility of the program? ![]() Is there anyone who has used both and can comment on the differences? Obviously, Marginnote has the mind mapping capability that LiquidText lacks. ![]() LiquidText works great on the pdfs that I read for work-generally journal articles. This seems really similar to LiquidText, which I have been using for some time. I don’t own iThoughts for the Mac but I have it on my iPad and that transfer seems very solid.įor $32, the OS X version seems decent to me. I’ve exported the mind map to OmniOutliner on my Mac and that works well, also. I shoot files back and forth to the iPad via wifi and that seems just fine. I emailed the developer and he sent me a link to the OS X version. I’ve been using it on my iPadPro for quite awhile and it’s very interesting to use with memorable topics I encounter. I have been working with it for a bit and find the OS X version is a faithful porting of the iOS version, and it will be a good addition to the category of OS X PDF annotation tools. The non-App Store version does not sync with iCloud (it syncs with Dropbox). I think he’s waiting for the Mac App Store before making an announcement on his web site, but the non-App Store version is available for trial-and in-app purchase-from his Facebook page or: The developer has now released an OS X version. The annotations can be arranged however you wish in the mindmap view and additional notes added to them. It’s an interesting product for annotating PDFs and taking notes. This is more like three different views of your notes. MarginNote for iOS is PDF annotation app + mind mapper + outliner. ![]()
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