Contact a live Zotero support person
Help!! Is there a way I can have a telephone number so I can talk with a live Zotero support person. I can't get started.
thanks,
Madeline Muller
thanks,
Madeline Muller
This discussion has been closed.
What did you do, do you use Windows or Mac, have you used Zotero before?
Since Zotero is a free, open source project, it doesn't have the resources to provide phone support for its users. This forum is the main place people come for support, but if you'd like in-person support, you might want to try resources within your institution. Many libraries have come to embrace Zotero, and they may have technical support or reference staff who can introduce you to the software.
But as mark said above, just post your questions here and we (the forum users) will try to help you as best we can.
1. You are using Firefox and
2. have successfully installed Zotero?
If so, have you actually entered any documents?
http://www.zotero.org/documentation/reporting_bugs
I think I have successfully installed Zotero
How do I enter documents?
I saw a drop down menu in the video tutorial
If you have looked up the documents you need on a website, you may see a little icon on the right end of the address bar; if you click that icon, Zotero will try to save the bibliographic information for the item you are looking at in Zotero.
Try adding some documents using these two methods, and explore the interface. To organize your documents, you may want to create collections, using the (+folder) icon at the top-right corner of the Zotero panel. You can then drag items from your main library "My Library" into these collections.
Start working with the software and collecting items of interest-- the interface takes some getting used to, but the Zotero developers have worked hard to make it intuitive. If you run into specific issues after playing with the software, follow Dan's advice above and explain what happened in detail.
Maybe it's me, but I think this should probably be a little bit more explicit in the help tutorials for us old folks who are a little behind on the fancy technology and just need the most obvious things explained :)
Thanks for any help!
Please take a look at my comments above, as well as the pictorial depictions of adding items at Getting stuff into your library, which Mark noted above. If you still find this confusing, then post what you've tried to do and we'll try to help out. I would like to encourage you and anyone else to also look into the availability of resources within your institution; departmental technical support staff and library staff may be able to help.
On a related note, I wonder if Zotero would benefit from local users' groups, a la TUGs, LUGs, and MUGs. For many people, there won't ever be a screencast clear enough to make Zotero make sense; they need a real person to explain and troubleshoot in person.
Even as a seasoned geek, if I wasn't writing essays and a dissertation, I'd find the whole bibliographic manager concept a bit bewildering. You need to start at the start (the research question) then move onto finding stuff (catalogues and databases) documenting it (zotero) and then finally writing and referencing (word processors + zotero). And all the other stuff!
I think the advice on finding a friendly local zotero user to guide you through the process is really Colleen's best bet for making progress with this. Colleen: have you tried your local IT HelpDesk for your institution?
I don't know Colleen's situation in particular, but I imagine there are plenty of seasoned researchers who understand how to do research-- what they need is an introduction to migrating from their card file or other previous system. Academic in such a position are unlikely to be interested in someone teaching them "research skills."
There is certainly room for improvement in the user documentation for Zotero, and I hope we can identify what the roadblocks are for new users and improve documentation in those areas.
Finally, might it be possible to create a list of local Zotero community support people at institutions on the Zotero site? This could include university offices that support Zotero as well as individuals who have expressed their willingness to help colleagues.
I have to say that everyone I have talked to and showed Zotero so far has enjoyed how intuitive it is. I think the getting started page is great and the screencasts are very good for beginners (though they should probably be updated at some point).
I don't think beginners being totally lost is a rampant issue (the ratio of "I started using Zotero today and am totally blown away" to "I started Zotero today and don't undertand anything" feels like 20:1), but I'm perfectly happy to help to improve documentation.
But for that we'd have to know where people are struggling and except for Nuckols above I have heard very little specific issues mentioned by people who fail at Zotero basics.
On the content, I experimented with using Zotero in my grad seminar this past term. In general, people didn't struggle with the basics (getting started grabbing citation data and such). But some did struggle a bit with the groups functionality, and only a couple ventured into installing the plug-in and using it for their papers.
1) colleenEccles has already posted the same problem elsewhere.
2) We're not offering live technical support at this time.
Before closing it out, though, I will add my thoughts to ajlyon's, fbennett's, adamsmith's, and bdarcus's insightful comments. Research management software of any kind is not a panacea, and users will always need to have some sense of the practices of conducting research. Users will also need to have a basic grasp of word processing and web-based technologies, though our forum contributors are incredibly helpful resolving even very mundane technical issues unrelated to Zotero.
While of course I believe that Zotero better meets the needs of today's researchers than does competing software, I'm also well aware that the majority of scholars don't use ANY such software, particularly in the humanities. It's heartening to encounter people like colleenEccles who are taking the plunge, and I hope that we can address her concerns satisfactorily. So colleenEccles, please let us know, as specifically as possible, what's not working for you.