"Save to Zotero" and Automated import from Finder
New to Zotero and still trying to get my mind around how it works.
1. Is there a way to save directly to Zotero? For example, if I click "save as" on a doc or e-mail attachment, is there a folder I can save it to that will make it part of Zotero? (You can do this with DevonThink Pro Office.)
2. Related: Is it possible to create a folder(s) in the Finder that will export new items to a similar folder structure in Zotero? (or just to Zotero at all?)
Thanks!
1. Is there a way to save directly to Zotero? For example, if I click "save as" on a doc or e-mail attachment, is there a folder I can save it to that will make it part of Zotero? (You can do this with DevonThink Pro Office.)
2. Related: Is it possible to create a folder(s) in the Finder that will export new items to a similar folder structure in Zotero? (or just to Zotero at all?)
Thanks!
http://www.columbia.edu/~jpl2136/zotfile.html
Part of the reason for not making this more automatic is that putting an unattached PDF into Zotero is rather pointless in the first place.
Edit: at least with Zotero for Firefox, you can select "save to Zotero" as an option when saving files, though.
The point would be *Not* to have to drag and drop everything.
@adamsmith: Why is it pointless to put PDFs in Zotero? To me the great advantage of Zotero over DTPO is that it syncs to a cloud that provides both backup and multi-platform access. Or do I misunderstand what you mean by "unattached"?
Thanks for the help everybody!
If you just want to sync pdfs to the cloud there are a whole range of other options (dropbox and various varieties thereof) that are cheaper and easier to use that Zotero.
What makes Zotero useful and distinct is that you can attach pdfs to bibliographic data. Without that data, I don't really see much of a reason to have a pdf in Zotero. And if you're going to create that data anyway, you'll have to do that manually for each imported pdf and then a Zotfile-based workflow e.g. would be just as fast.
Or to re-phrase - why do you want your pdfs in Zotero?
I realize there are all kinds of other services that do these various things, but I've found that one of the best solutions to workflow is to minimize the number of nifty tools I use. Somehow the combined value of DropBox + EndNote + DTPO + Evernote + GoodReader + Etc. diminishes the individual value of each of them. I'm hoping Zotero can streamline things for me, so that I only work with Zotero and DTPO (and using DTPO only for OCR--Acrobat would do the same thing if I had it).
Am I off on this? Like I said, I've only been looking into Zotero for a week, and maybe I'm overestimating how multifunctional and streamlined Zotero really can be.
So if that option is a sine qua non for you, Zotero is likely not for you in the near future.
If you can think about ways to adjust your workflow something might be possible. Do have a look at Zotfile, e.g., or see if it won't make more sense to first create metadata and then attach a pdf etc.
rjm95 is right.
surely a small plugin for acrobat to save to zotero is not that hard!?
This seems such basic functionality and I expect would be very useful to a large number of people.
I have tried Zotfile but this does not really work as I need to have already created the citation for the file I am downloading. It would be much easier to start with the file and create a citation from that, even if citation just the file name (it could also have label added "requiring completion") which I could then change later.
But yes, there is a trade-off between the two. Zotero's import of just PDFs isn't as smooth as Mendeley's (though don't underestimate the amount of manual labor that will have to go into revisiting every single PDF you import into Mendeley if you want citations to actually come out right)