![]() It is not my job to study software use, and, like most people, I often stick to old ways of doing or to the first way of doing I stumbled upon, just because I lack the motivation, time, energy, or money to try other ways.Īn overview of the tech tools I use for teaching and research in philosophy.ĭisclaimer: I do not think that the tech tools I use are the best for the job, nor that the way I use them is best for everyone (not even that it is best for me). I haven't updated this page for more than a year and some of its information is out of date.Updated info about my hardware (16 December 2014).Removed an outdated comparison of GoodReader and iAnnotate (16 December 2014).Removed outdated information on the iOS text editors I use (16 December 2014).Added a short note on RSS feeds (18 December 2014).Added a short note on the sudden death of Circus Ponies Notebook (13 January 2016).Replaced outdated information about my reference manager (14 January 2016).Added information about TaskPaper (16 January 2016).Added a note about the new iAnnotate 4 ().I occasionally drop random notes about the tech tools I use on Arno's tech blog. I have added notes and disclaimers to this page to indicate this. More about notes and information management.Reading and annotating PDFs on the iPad (GoodReader and iAnnotate).Dedicated outliners (including NeO, OmniOutliner and others).I will try to find time to gradually replace or remove outdated information (12 December 2014). I use an iMac 21.5 inch (2.7 Ghz Intel Core i5, 16 Gb MHz DDR3 RAM) with Mac OS 10.10 (Yosemite), a Magic Trackpad and an Apple Keyboard with Numeric Keypad. Support the development: your purchase supports the continued development of ReadKit.My MacBook Air (1.8 GHz Intel Core i5, 8 Gb 1600 MHz DDR3) with Mac OS 10.9 (Yosemite) rapidly becomes the computer I most often use. ![]() Upcoming new features: access to all upcoming premium features.Import and export OPML: import and export of feed subscriptions via OPML.Themes and app icons: unlocks all themes and allows you to select a custom application icon on iOS.Image cache: caches images from articles for offline reading.Manage folders and tags: allows to organize feeds and read-later articles into folders or tags. ![]() Unlimited feeds: unlocks the limit of 20 feed for the built-in RSS service.Reader mode: displays the full text of article, even if it's not included in the feed source.Unlimited smart folders: more than one smart folder per account.Allows you to save articles from RSS feeds to read-later accounts. Multiple accounts: use it with two or more accounts at the same time.In addition to the universal ReadKit Premium, separate lifetime plans are now available for iOS/iPadOS and macOS, and a free trial is also offered. It unlocks all premium features and removes all restrictions on both platforms. If you like it and want to unlock additional features, you can do so through by subscribing to ReadKit Premium with a single universal purchase. ReadKit's core functionality is available for free, completely free - no ads, no data mining. Share articles with apps, social media accounts, and other services via share sheet.Filter articles by read or starred status.Mark as read above or below from context menu.Mark articles as read on scroll or mark them all by a tap of a button.Import and export of feed subscriptions via OPML.Search for articles by content, title or source.Preference to display unread items on the app badge.In-app browser for viewing links and other references. ![]()
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