![]() Obsidian-awesome for note taking! But use whatever works for you.That’s why I, in any case, stuck with a free one that could travel with me. One thing to _maybe_ think about it that even if you are lucky enough to have your school give you a reference manager subscription for free, you might have to pay for it once you graduate. Mendeley-any of the reference managers are good! Mendeley is free.Also if you are not doing technical work, you may find that some journals will require to convert your latex files into word, which is silly, but alas. If you use it, overleaf is a great editor, but maybe even better is sublime text (which is free to try and will ask you to buy a license but never force you to) with various latex plug ins. But I definitely do NOT think it is for everyone. LaTeX-I really prefer LaTeX to word because I don’t like using proprietary file formats and find the control latex gives me really nice. ![]() If you go with a surface, I found drawboard to be the best pdf editor for “inking” with a pen. Both are good! iPads probably better as tablets overall Surface products better as laptop replacements. I have used both iPads and Surface products at various times. iPad or eReader, I did like this a lot for annotating pdfs. ![]() If it is your system, it will (likely) work for you! Things that work for me: For whatever its worth, my strong advice is to experiment with different things maybe over the summer, pick a system and then don’t worry too much about whether it is the *best* or not. I think the best system of note-taking, organizing, word-processing, etc., can vary a lot by person. For whatever its worth, I used mainly paper notes all through grad school and really preferred it. ![]()
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