Would it be Sensible to Use Zotero to Index and Cross Reference a Wiki?
I have 2000+ page wiki. I use extensive bookmark tagging in Firefox to do a number of workflow tricks (scheduling, sorting, categories, etc). Sort of like a semantic web, but still very much a prototype. I'm trying to build my next generation organizer/planner, but I'm finding it very hard to imagine I can rely on Firefox to maintain my capability to do this after June 2018.
So three questions:
(1) Can Zotero maintain 10,000 tags to index, cross-reference, and workflow my wiki?
(2) Alternativelty, do you have any advice for running that indexing off board on my Wiki? Also, how might that wiki app interact with Zotero.
(3) What should be on my "must read list" to understand how to do this in Zotero?
The above is likely to seem unclear. I just now got serious about learning Zotero and seeing if I can rebuild my research environment with Zotero, and so my natural level of confusion is .. uh .. enhanced.
I welcome questions and calls for clarification. Thanks!
So three questions:
(1) Can Zotero maintain 10,000 tags to index, cross-reference, and workflow my wiki?
(2) Alternativelty, do you have any advice for running that indexing off board on my Wiki? Also, how might that wiki app interact with Zotero.
(3) What should be on my "must read list" to understand how to do this in Zotero?
The above is likely to seem unclear. I just now got serious about learning Zotero and seeing if I can rebuild my research environment with Zotero, and so my natural level of confusion is .. uh .. enhanced.
I welcome questions and calls for clarification. Thanks!
So, I'm not sure that Zotero will be the best tool for your use here. I'd recommend looking into more general content/qualitative data analysis (CAQDAS) software, like NVivo or atlas.ti. You can save the pages of the wiki using tools that produce single-file archives, such as https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MHTML, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Webarchive, or https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/singlefile/mpiodijhokgodhhofbcjdecpffjipkle
Thanks for the pointers!
My wiki is a sort of combination organizer/planner/annotated-bibliography/research-journal. In those wiki pages, I can render pandoc markdown, graphviz, latex, etc. One thing it should have become is the (annotated) bookmark system for a web-browser, but that seems to not be the future of browsers.
Would I replace the wiki with Zotero (directly or indirectly with Zotero plugins)?
I don't need to snapshot the wiki pages. Probably should snapshot the URLs the wiki pages point to. (I had a notion of working in the intelligence somewhere to get bookmarks to track re-directions, etc, but .. browser.)
I'll get back to studying the Zotero Documentation and experimenting.
Firefox's stability for this mission is nervewracking. I have no idea whether I can pull off a port of my tag query plugin (and API's to support it) in time (June 2018). Then I don't know if it would continue to be supported fro the rest of my life. Sometimes it seems like I could pull this off, and other times, I just really want to get off the foundation of now quicksand. The alternatives don't look much better, and have the "might go away at any time" problem too.
Zotero currently seems to be my leading alternative. Since it largely abandoned Firefox, I'm thinking that whatever it does and how it does it is worth investigating. So I wrote my first note from orbit (or 20,000 feet) to see if it seemed plausible that I could do some of what I had been doing by using Zotero or interfacing to it with plugins.
At this point, I'm thinking I should "land" (from orbit) by figuring out Zotero enough to ask reasonable questions instead of beating people up with my misunderstandings of it.
I do think my current workflow is very slow and clumsy, and I have half-baked ideas on how to improve it. I've been stuck in that coarse approximation for so long that it is hard to both think outside that box AND remember what I came up with.
I'd also recommend looking at organization tools like DevonThink or the CAQDAS tools that bwiernik mentions.