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Re: Non-NB: Any quasi-Orbis programs out there, on a student's budget?



KeyNote is like TreePad.
I like TreePad because it also has a Linux version. (Most programs mentioned do not.) Not all your students may use Windows, now and in the future. In fact, check out how many of them say they're using MS Word but use OpenOffice and just save to a Word-compatible format. I use Windows for three programs -- NB, Dragon NaturallySpeaking, and KeyNote. The rest of my programs are programs also available on Linux, and if I could switch I would. (I could substitute TreePad for KeyNote, but there's nothing like NB, and there is only one good continuous speech recognition system right now, and that's DNS. Something to think about, for the mildly finger-impaired.) I've been after all of them for years to make Linux versions, but the market isn't there yet.

Alan Ehrlich wrote:
You also might look into TreePad or any of the tree-type organizers. TreePad has a great search capability and their "business edition" has a lot
 to offer academics. Cost is within range.




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