Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.

eyeluvmyimac

macrumors regular
Original poster
Oct 27, 2002
229
1
This is kinda a continuation from "College Computer Usage" but anyways....

I will be heading off to college next semester (PSU) and will be taking notes on my new PB (whatever size screen it may have). I was wondering if anyone here knew of any good ideas for a note-taking program?

Word is too big/slow/akward, and text edit just wouldn't do it for me, not enough features etc.

Thanks.
 
Re: Are you taking notes?

Originally posted by eyeluvmyimac
This is kinda a continuation from "College Computer Usage" but anyways....

I will be heading off to college next semester (PSU) and will be taking notes on my new PB (whatever size screen it may have). I was wondering if anyone here knew of any good ideas for a note-taking program?

Word is too big/slow/akward, and text edit just wouldn't do it for me, not enough features etc.

Thanks.

Well, if you are taking notes, any text editor (text edit, word, etc.) would work. The thing you need to figure out is how you will keep track of your notes.

I used a PC laptop running Win98 and Office97 for taking notes in class (not on battery of course). The key is to go back after class and go over your note and correct typos and make any corrections. This will work mostly for non-math classes, as the moment you hit graphs and equations it will be harder to use the laptop.

My suggestion:
- Use Text Edit to take the notes.
- After class copy and paste your note to AppleWorks/Word and add chapters and titles with the date and class information.
- Spell check and correct mistakes.
- Save each class in its own file.
- BACKUP the files.
- Keep any papers linked to the notes properly labeled (i.e. Jan 20th, Econ 101, Figure 1) and refer to those papers in your notes.

At exam time, print and study, and be the envy of everybody else who sucked at taking notes! :D
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.