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Stvad2012-01-09 23:07:17
Electronics
Stvad, 2012-01-09 23:07:17

Options for keeping a fully electronic note?

The essence of the problem:
I am a student, lately I have been trying to transfer the note-taking completely to an electronic basis (by this I mean, for example, sealing the text of lectures instead of recording, etc). And if there are no problems with subjects where the lecture material is mainly textual, then where it is necessary to draw pictures / write formulas, problems begin. What options for quick convenient input of graphical information / formulas (+ preferably with integration into the text of the lecture after the fact) exist?

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9 answer(s)
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TimID, 2012-01-10
@TimID

As a teacher, I tell you:
Arrange with the lecturer and put an HD video camera at the blackboard to record all the lectures. If you then type all the texts and draw the drawings in Corel Draw (for example) and, of course, make a copy of all the materials for the teacher, then he will only thank you.
Of course, the copyright belongs to the teacher. You can only act as a technical editor when publishing, even though you will do all the main typesetting and drawing work yourself.
But I would only welcome a student who would do this work. It is very likely that one could think about publishing in co-authorship with a minimum circulation (for the library) and further posting on the website of the university for free download by students.

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AlexanderG, 2012-01-09
@AlexanderG

Microsoft OneNote and a tablet, of course. The program has support for handwriting with text recognition and a forum, the ability to draw, create audio notes, etc. You can somehow do synchronization through Live, but I did not use it. Plus, it is possible to work with the book through the web interface.

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mastini, 2012-01-09
@mastini

I haven't used it yet, but I'm thinking about ordering Inkling for myself . Prices are only too high :(
It is not clear whether it is convenient for writing text, but it is much better than analogues where special paper is needed.

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skvot, 2012-01-09
@skvot

I used to take pictures of the whiteboard on my phone and throw images on the netbook via bluetooth. And the text was just typed.

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Eternalko, 2012-01-10
@Eternalko

Completely agree with Alex.
Only Microsoft OneNote.
I tried everything. There is nothing better than him in this regard.

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bagyr, 2012-01-09
@bagyr

From what I saw, it is most convenient to enter formulas in Mathematica, there is also text with formatting. I can’t imagine how to draw non-banal graphs/diagrams quickly.

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dem0n3d, 2013-09-04
@dem0n3d

If this question is still relevant, check it out: itunes.apple.com/en/app/lecture-notes-texts-drawings/id693052161?l=en&ls=1&mt=8

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de927, 2017-05-24
@de927

LectureNotes note-taking program, Trial and paid version
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com....

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Diana Burmistrova, 2019-06-02
@artpyatnica

If you study on an iPad, you can buy the Affinity Designer software (one-time payment, no subscription fees) plus a stylus to draw on the iPad. Draw in Affinity and then paste the drawing into the lecture. But this is not the most budget option.

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