But what if we have to weigh a big car or big truck. So in a beam balance if you have to weigh something on left pan then you have to put equal weight on the right pan. Have you seen a beam balance in any shop? Because learning properties about Solids and Liquids will also help us in everyday life. Properties of Solids and Liquids chapter will help you to understand the important properties of solids and liquids. Properties of solids, liquids, and gases are different from each other. It also decreases distraction due to breaks of a workflow in between apps: Now I can highlight in MN and take my reading notes in TB, stating the page number they refer to if needed, in order to later link quotation (in DT or TB) and annotation in TB.As you know solid, liquid, gas is the most observable state of matter in our everyday life. This is important for Tinderbox’s AutoFetch and Watch features, as it will avoid deleting or missing the links of a note that went from MN to DT to TB. As a consequence, DEVONthink will mark the reimported notes as duplicate, so that it is easy to delete the later version. Therefore, now notes can be recurrently exported at any reading stage and the file name will not be altered in successive exports. MN is pretty accurate at using the page number printed in the pdf, instead of the order of the page in the pdf file -nearly perfect for citations, but even better for the preservation of the quotation, as one will always be able to manually locate it in the pdf. MarginNote has just made a significant improvement: it starts each individual file exported to rtf with the page number printed in the pdf it belongs to, instead of numbering each file consecutively. Both developers are super nice and responsive. If I had to choose to delete one or the other, I would delete LiquidText. There’s no bright line separating the two apps. (Yes, I know documents can be linked / containerized – I just don’t use it that way.) And MarginNotes when researching taking notes on a topic involving numerous documents and web content. So, I use LiquidText when I want to just focus on a single document. Took me ages to figure out that’s why documents I captured on iOS never showed up on the Mac. MN syncs via iCloud – WebDAV is coming soon they tell me – but to sync notebooks you have to make sure there is at least one annotation added to the notebook. It is also a bit rougher around the edges – the UI is unusual and sometimes confusing. MarginNote has a much broader set of features than LiquidText – and many more options for exporting notes. MarginNote is also better for research – text in a document can be selected and a browser opened to find additional web content related to that text. If I have 5 or 10 related documents in the same topical notebook, I can easily make an outline or mind map in MarginNote and link together clippings / notes / images / scribbles from across all those documents into one mind map. As I mentioned in the other thread, I love MarginNote’s ability to quickly consolidate multiple documents into a single “notebook”. MarginNote is sort of like LiquidText but maybe the overlap is more in the order of 50% or so. It’s easy to put all of one’s notes on the clipboard on an iPad and then open Tinderbox on the desktop and paste (and perhaps explode) the notes. I’d mention that the absence of Mac version is no problem now that we have Universal Clipboard and apps such as Copied. If someone doesn’t need that, then LiquidText is fine. I prefer my notes separated into individual documents or nodes in an OPML outline. Export is all-or-nothing – and only exports to PDF, DOCX, or the LiquidText custom document format. There is a bit of a downside in getting notes and comments out of the app. As a PDF annotation tool, I don’t think it can be beat. I’ve been with LiquidText since the first beta, and have admired how it has evolved – with increasing polish and features attentive to how users actually work. MarginNote looks similar, but with a Mac app and maybe more polished UI, with a heftier price tag. LiquidText I just bought an iPad Pro mostly because I’ve become very enamored of LiquidText and wanted more room to work (and also because the Macbook Pros are simply too expensive for what they are). Not to derail this thread, but I’m wondering if you might say more about MarginNote vs.
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