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alternative to Endnote

Do you know any open source alternative to the bibliography database software endnote where one could export endnote files into?
thanks in advance

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  • Waluyo Adi Siswanto · Universiti Tun Hussein Onn Malaysia
    You can try Jabref bibliography manager
  • Charles Warner · Nonaffiliated
    I have tried Zotero; the fact that it is tied to the browser makes it rather difficult to use, in my experience (which mkay be due to my own lack of expertise/understanding). I like the way Mendeley works, but have trouble with how Mendeley automatically records citations for documents I have stored locally, with no way to edit the citation manually that I have been able to figure out.
    What I like about Mendeley is that I can do all of my research on a single platform- break research up into projects, have a localized list of the documents I am currently working with, annotation, and highlighting are easy to use, and I can create my working document within the same environment. Mendeley, however, was designed to be web-based, for collaborative work, and seems to lack the flexibility (i.e., ability to correct the erroneous citation information manually).
    Most of my research is not intended to be published, although it occasionally results in something worth sharing. I do it as a hobby. On the other hand, the wife is a lawyer, and I can see some real application for her work with something like Mendeley.
    Jabref seems to be only a mangement tool for building a bibliography. Mandeley and Zotero offer functions for capturing my thoughts while reading the documents, tying them to the source material.
    A major problem I have with web-based approaches is that links to on-line resources are not always stable. Try recovering a document you discovered a couple of years ago. All to frequently, the original link no longer works, and the search effort has to begin all over again. Not all documents are in the public domain- if one has purchased the reference material, trying to link to a web copy is not going to work. If the citation is not recorded properly and one eventually publishes the work, others are going to have trouble following the trail...
  • Charles Warner · Nonaffiliated
    Zettlekasten looks very promising, but I am a bit concerned about it being Java-based- especially since it requires the "Official" Java 6 rather than the Open Source Java. I am not sure this still applies, since Sun Java no longer exists- it is now Oracle Java...
    LitLink looks promising, and older versions appear to have been tested with Wine, with some issues- pretty dated test results. It might be worth testing in VirtualBox, but right now I am limited to Win 98SE in my VirtualBox installation, and LitLink wants XP or later. Also, I suspect my German is a bit too rusty to handle the documentation...
    I will have a look at both of these programs in the near future...Thank you.
  • Johann Höchtl · Danube University Krems
    Zotero is easy to use an integrates well with online research. Plugins for openoffice/libreoffice/word give additional benefit. Some overly complicated citation styles are not handles by Zotero though.

    I can not recommend bibus.
  • Damiano Preatoni · Università degli Studi dell'Insubria
    Short answer: use JabRef. Nothing better, IMHO.
  • Karim Mezhoud · Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle
    Pybliography : http://pybliographer.org/
    Mendeley: http://www.mendeley.com/
  • Claunir Pavan · Universidade Federal da Fronteira Sul
    Consider BibDesk (If you are a MAC OS X user).
  • Nico Nolden · Universität Hamburg
    There is an interesting software from Switzerland too. It's called Citavi (www.citavi.com). They offer many functions, but if u want to use it as literature management within a team project it is not very good. For single users, it is the best I know.
  • Charles Warner · Nonaffiliated
    Nico-
    This Cilavi software looks more like what I am after- unfortunately, it seems to be Windows only...I will give it a try in Wine.
  • Charles Warner · Nonaffiliated
    I just came across Mindraider (http://mindraider.sourceforge.net/), which is more along the lines of what I am looking for with regards to organizing a research project, but I am not sure of the citation formating capabilities as yet- haven't had sufficient time to work with it. Seems to provide a platform to consolidating references, notes, ideas, etc.
  • Charles Warner · Nonaffiliated
    Hailey-
    I prefer something not tied to the browser...
  • Ronaldo R. Campos · University of São Paulo
    What about Mendeley (http://www.mendeley.com) ? For me, it works fine. Have a stand alone version with synchronization options on web database and web version as well.
  • Charles Warner · Nonaffiliated
    I have been using Mendeley, but have a couple of issues with Mendeley. Primarily, I haven't been able to figure out how to manually edit a citation- sometimes, the automatic citation gets the details wrong (i.e., recording a completely unrelated Journal as the source of the document- in some cases, even recording the Author incorrectly), and the only way I have figured out how to correct this is to delete the citation and start over- apparently no way to correct the information manually.
    Secondly, Mendeley is document-centered- easy to make notes, highlight important concepts, etc. within a document, but not so easily oriented toward a research topic. For instance, in Zim, it is easy to link documents to my own "working paper"- i.e., the scratch pad I use to generate ideas, describe processes I am experimenting with, etc. So far, I find Zim easier for organizing my own thoughts while Menedeley is handy for making notes while reading. However, Zim tends to hang when one links to excessively large files.
    Zotero was the first application I used- my problem with Zotero being browser-based is speed.
  • Ronaldo R. Campos · University of São Paulo
    OK. I don´t know Zim, yet, and Zotero as well. I tried EndNote and Mendeley.
    About Mendeley, I will try to help a little more.
    Sometimes doesn't work fine with automatic citation? Yes, I think so, but nowadays is possible update information manually. Just click on the field with the information that you want to update and type the correct form.
    I liked your explanation about how to Zim can links documents to "working papers" and the feature to take notes about ideas, process, etc...
  • Christoph Wagner · De Montfort University
    Have you heard of Citavi? It helps you to organize your research in many ways: obviously there are notes and references which you can easily insert into whatever you're writing. It manages quotes, thoughts and summaries. If you have a source saved on your computer as a .pdf file, Citavi will include this in a small reading screen so don't need to open the adobe reader.

    There are two versions, one is free of charge but only allows you to include 100 titles in your bibliography. The pro version is about €100 and you can include as much literature as you like, work in teams, manage an endless number of projects.
  • Charles Warner · Nonaffiliated
    Citavi is Windows only- Wine Appdb provides mixed results, with some work arounds, and one could possibly use this in a virtual guest, but I would prefer something native Linux. Coming out of Europe, I am surprised they do not offer a native Linux version.
  • Anthony Nguy-Robertson · University of Nebraska at Lincoln
    Charles, I have no problem editing citations in Mendeley. Just click on the article in the program (not when inputting into Word) and change the details (list on the right). I find that the software gets the citation right about 60% of the time during the inputting process and almost never when I have an inter-library loan article. So building the database is rather annoying; however, once built though it seems to do a pretty good job.

    You can also change the citation styles, but unfortunately this is not quite as intuitive as it should be. It requires modifying some code. If you do some google searches, you should be able to find some examples.
  • Charles Warner · Nonaffiliated
    I know about editing the citation when I first add a reference to the library in Mendeley, but sometimes I am in a hurry and don't pay a whole lot of attention to the entries. On occasion, I have had to delete the reference from the library and re-import, because the later changes don't always take...An aggravation, not a show-stopper.
  • Anthony Nguy-Robertson · University of Nebraska at Lincoln
    I am pretty sure you can still edit it after first importing it; however, I agree with your frustration in that it is probably easier to reimport the file/paper. I find most citation software to be rather tedious to initially set-up. Mendeley is probably one of the better ones at it (although far from perfect).
  • Udo Giessing sen. · a7.research
    ...you can try Litlink. It´s open source. An overview you´ll get on the second link from the university of zurich
    http://www.lit-link.ch/
    http://www.id.uzh.ch/dl/sw/angebote/lit/Overwiew.html
  • David Dougall · University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
    Zotero might also be an option (http://www.zotero.org/). Not sure if it has the ability to import endnote files.
  • Jens Langner · Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf
    If you need a non-social networking tool for bibliography then use JabRef (http://jabref.sourceforge.net/) or on OSX use BibDesk (http://bibdesk.sourceforge.net/).
  • Dora Gonzalez-Bañales · Instituto Tecnológico de Durango (ITD)
    Mendeley and zotero ;o)
  • what about the best resource to use from an iPad AND computer?
  • Ludwig Strauss · Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum
    We need just numbering of references in publications. For this purpose Neooffice is used. However, it is running on MACs only. I assume OpenOffice is comparable to that.
  • For MAC: Papers. For Windows: Mendeley Desktop
  • Charles Warner · Nonaffiliated
    An update on my experiences to date. Bear in mind, I am more concerned with keeping a personal record of my sources than generating a formal bibliography for publication, and I use Linux. However, I recently encountered a situation where I wanted to generate a bibliography for sharing with someone else, and I used Mendeley. While the issues I encountered may be related to a lack of experience with this sort of activity, I found that I had to hand-edit the resulting bibliography extensively, especially where multiple authors were listed, and Internet links did not come out as I expected. I am not sure that my final result would comply with conventional "standard" formats. Mendeley seems to be a nice tool for reading documents and annotating them for future return to key information.
    With regards to organizing my own research, I find that Zim Desktop conforms to my personal needs quite nicely (except that, it tends to get a little unstable when one attaches too many large files- better to link to references than attach them), or KNIME, which was developed as a data analysis tool, more than a general literature research tool (depends on what I am doing as to which I would prefer). I haven't had the need as yet to attempt generating a formal bibliography from either of these as yet.
    I find Zotero a little awkward and slow, because of the browser interface- I haven't tried the stand-alone version yet.
  • Charles Warner · Nonaffiliated
    Citavi looks very interesting, but, unfortunately, appears to be Windows only. Hard to do serious work in a Windows environment...
  • Guzlan Miskeen · University of Bradford
    I would recommend Mendeley. It is great!
  • Guzlan Miskeen · University of Bradford
    Http://www.mendeley.com. This is the link
  • Alexander Rauscher · University of British Columbia - Vancouver
    I am using Zotero and I am happy with it. It is worth watching the video tour: http://www.zotero.org/support/quick_start_guide
  • Mikko Karttunen · University of Waterloo
    I have tried a whole bunch (Zotero, JabRef, various BibTeX managers, Sente [for OSX; not free]] and finally converged to Mendeley, It does a pretty decent job and (importantly for me) works in Linux, OSX and Windows. It can export various formats (incl BibTeX) and there are a plugins for LibreOffice and Word. I have a few thousand references and Mendeley is able to handle them nicely.
  • Atif Shahzad · Ecole Centrale de Nantes
    Mendeley seems to be the best so far, despite the fact that it lack some functionalities.
  • Inês Domingues · University of Porto
    I use Zotero!
  • Ronny Gey · University of Leipzig
    I have set up a website which talks about software in the social science research. It will be completed the next days and you can find any kind of software which is or can be used explicitly in the research process. Enjoy.
  • Jens Langner · Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf
    Here in our team we are also using Mendeley for sharing publications. Unfortunately not all members are using it yet and it lacks some important features (e.g. sharing of notes and highlighting in pdfs, better tuning of the bibtex output, more free storage space, etc.) which would help us to make our research more efficient. But I agree to the others here, Mendeley is so far the best platform and application to use as an open and free alternative to Endnote.
  • Ronny Gey · University of Leipzig
    In terms of reference management++ you should also consider Docear which is under heavy development as it seems. They use JabRef as their reference management and add additional features like creating mind maps, projects and the like. And, sorry to correct you Jens, this software is purely free, not like Mendeley which is limited in space....
  • Markus Becker · Leibniz Institute for Plasma Science and Technology
    I,Librarian (www.bioinformatics.org/librarian/) is a free web-based alternative to EndNote and, among others, it supports export to EndNote and BibTeX.
  • Nicolas Guarin-Zapata · Universidad EAFIT
    The fact of Elsevier being the new owner is a good new?
  • Nicolas Guarin-Zapata · Universidad EAFIT
    Oh, sorry. Sometimes is difficult to get the sarcasm when written.

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