1/30/2024 0 Comments Outline read and annotateBut they’re all a big mess and look like a blogs tag bubbles, with different words I assume were taken from the Titles, appearing in various sized fonts from really small to really large. Both new bookmarks, as well several other recent additions I hadn’t noticed, never made it into the Lists I’d assigned them to. I checked “My Outliners” and sure enough, I now have two Outliners I did *not* deliberately create. I made several more attempts before finally noticing the banner near the top of the screen stating that the “List Feature has been deprecated.” Thinking maybe the Sync had failed, I went back and re-added them, but still they didn’t show up. It *seemed* as though all bookmarks, except the ones I’d added earlier in the day, were there as well. Later when I when I opened the Android Diigo app to pull up one of those sites, all my Lists were there as per normal. Later I added another bookmark to the same list, and again, no problems that I could see. It seemed to work just fine exactly as it always has. * I filled everything in and picked the List I wanted the bookmark in, then Saved and Synced it to the Servers. At the very bottom was the Description area where I can leave notes as short as a line or two, or as large as several paragraphs. The URL was at the top, then a space for a Title, and below that were the two ticķbox options where you choose whether to make it a Private or Public Bookmark. * The usual “New Bookmark” window popped up. I tapped on Share, then picked Share to Diigo. * I hit the Home button on my phone, which brought up the standard menu of action options. Each time, I did what I’ve always done when adding a bookmark from my Android smartphone: I only just discovered yesterday that the List Feature has been *completely* deprecated when I tried to add a couple new bookmarks to one of my Lists, several times. (Money being tight, I have to be really careful about every penny.) You see my husband thinks he’s at last found a solution to a problem PayPal has been having with the auto-renewal subscription plans that companies like yours and other online services such as Evernote, have instituted. I love it so much, that I was finally all set to take the plunge and upgrade to Standard Premium annual Plan last night when my husband got home from work. Overall, I’ve been loving it…until now that is. I’ve been using Diigo casually for about a year now as a kind of test drive. And, if you can find the time to respond, it would be greatly appreciated! I hope despite that, you’ll take the time to read it anyway. Okay, this turned into a much longer post than originally intended. We think the tree structure in the outliner is better than mindmap when you want to organize bookmarks. It combines information collecting and organizing. Please install the latest Diigo chrome extension, then, add bookmark from chrome extension to an outliner, organize bookmarks in the outliner, that’s the typical use case. You can even convert annotations to sub-bullet points. The numbers in the yellow squares stand for annotation number. Basically, you can use outliner to organize items in your diigo library. I’m just trying to figure exactly what justifies this claim.īlue items are your bookmarks/notes. I’m not trying to be difficult, but something that is “the best way to structurally organize your information and thoughts” is very enticing. Evernote)? For that matter, what are the advantages over low-capability outlining, like that in Microsoft Word or ?įinally, can Diigo Outline be used for nonlinear organization of material, such as in concept maps? For example, Zotero is well integrated with the Web and automatically produces citations and references for organization it has folders, tags, and saves searches as virtual folders it also has notes but it also integrates with Vue (Visual Understanding Environment), an open source concept and content mapping program from Tufts. What is the advantage of Diigo Outline over other outlining applications on the Web that allow links as items in outlines (e.g. How does Diigo Outliner really work? Does it automatically add headings like “Lecture x,” where “x” is the number of the lecture, when things are added to a particular level? Does it automatically renumber “x” when things are moved around? What is the relationship between items in the outline and items in one’s Diigo library? Etc. Does the fact that some items in the sample outline are blue have any significance? What about the numbers in the yellow squares? I watched the video and read this page, but I don’t really understand this.
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