“EndNote
Version 7 represents a major upgrade of this indispensable
bibliographic management application. Used by millions of scholars,
researchers, librarians, and students, this version goes beyond the
standard definition for reference tracking, organizing, and publishing.
Digital publishers will find this program essential in producing any
kind of document that has associated reference listings.”
—The Kleper Report on Digital Publishing, Jan/Feb 2004
Reprinted with permission from The Kleper Report on Digital Publishing,
copyright 2003, Graphic Dimensions, Pittsford, NY
“In
spite of the added functionality and complexity I have always found the
package easy to use.”
—Professor Tom Wilson,
Information Research, Sep/Oct
2003
“Whether
you are a researcher, writer, librarian, information specialist,
student, or consumer, who wants to create citations and bibliographies
instantly and automatically, EndNote 7 provides a nice solution. This
neat program helps you control the organization and output of
bibliographies, and is a super tool that greatly aids with the creating
and editing of scientific papers, especially the citations and the
bibliography of these cited sources.”
—Dale Farris,
Golden Triangle PC Club, July 11, 2003
“If
there is a thesis or dissertation in your future, EndNote 6 can make
every phase of the job easier.”
—Paul M. Shepard, Clinician News, 2003
“The two
new features in this version of EndNote make it very well worthwhile
the upgrade price and, if you haven't used it previously, you might
consider buying it, or urging your institution to take out a site-wide
purchase. I have now used most of the packages of this kind and I keep
EndNote as my personal system—that's the best recommendation that I
can make!”
—Professor Tom Wilson, Information Research, March, 2003
“EndNote
6 performs several functions that ease the work of researchers
immeasurably and perhaps even contributes to their productivity because
it removes many tasks that demand time-consuming attention to
detail.”
“...EndNote is tried and true, like ProCite and Reference
Manager. It has gone through several versions and continues to expand
its features.”
—Marilyn Domas White, Library and Information Science Research, 2003
“This
software should be a useful tool for anyone who does ongoing research,
especially if s/he also writes manuscripts based on it. EndNote does
much more than produce bibliographies for manuscripts—it provides word
processor templates (e.g., for Microsoft Word versions) for creating
the manuscript itself.”
—Dr. Eric Portess, KLIATT, 2003
“Anyone who's
spent hours typing in bibliographic citations—organizing them, sorting them,
fixing them—knows what a pain in the neck it is. Or can be. But with Endnote 6—the
undisputed leader in bibliographic software—much of the pain is gone.
And version 6 runs natively in OS X.”
—John Egan,PhD, The iMac, Nov, 2002
“The 'cite while
you write' feature provides an easy way to search for and insert citations and figures
into manuscripts. You'll save valuable time—and you'll never have to retype a reference!”
—Robert McGuinness, Oak Creek Apples Newsletter, Oct, 2002
“This is the king of bibliographic
generators.”
—The Kleper Report on Digital Publishing, Aug 2002
Reprinted with permission from The Kleper Report on Digital Publishing,
copyright 2003, Graphic Dimensions, Pittsford, NY
“Many scientists
already consider bibliographic management software a 'must-have' item. In a
recent poll conducted by The Scientist, 76% of respondents indicated that they
use such a program to organize their reference material collection.”
“Users need only to
key an article into the database once, and then they never need to type that reference
again, no matter how many papers they write that cite that article. This approach minimizes
typographical errors, and helps standardize indexing keywords and reference formats.”
— Deborah Fitzgerald and Greg Erianne, The Scientist, Jan. 7, 2002