BenWilter
New member
- Joined
- Feb 24, 2026
- Messages
- 22
If you're still using folders, please, for the love of your future self, stop. I learned this the hard way last week when my laptop decided to have a moment and I thought I lost a crucial PDF. Thankfully, I had just started using Zotero, and everything was backed up in the cloud. It was a sign.
So my vote is 100% for a reference manager, and I'm team Zotero all the way. I tried Mendeley, and it’s fine, but I found it a little clunky and honestly, the interface felt a bit overwhelming. Zotero is just so… clean. And the browser extension is a lifesaver. You're on JSTOR, you click the little icon, and boom—it saves the source, the metadata, and even grabs the PDF if it can. It’s like magic.
But it's more than just a citation generator. Here's why it's a game-changer for organizing notes too. I used to have separate Word docs with quotes and page numbers, and it was a total mess trying to find anything. Now, in Zotero, I attach the PDF to the library entry, and I can highlight and take notes right on the PDF inside Zotero. Then, when I'm writing my paper, I have Zotero open on one half of the screen and Word on the other. I can see my highlights, drag quotes into my draft, and the citation is already there. It keeps your research connected to your sources in a way folders never can.
The only downside is the learning curve, but it's really not that steep. Watch a 10-minute YouTube video and you're set. The time you'll save when you have to write your bibliography alone is worth it. Plus, it’s free, which is my favorite price.
So yeah, ditch the folders.
So my vote is 100% for a reference manager, and I'm team Zotero all the way. I tried Mendeley, and it’s fine, but I found it a little clunky and honestly, the interface felt a bit overwhelming. Zotero is just so… clean. And the browser extension is a lifesaver. You're on JSTOR, you click the little icon, and boom—it saves the source, the metadata, and even grabs the PDF if it can. It’s like magic.
But it's more than just a citation generator. Here's why it's a game-changer for organizing notes too. I used to have separate Word docs with quotes and page numbers, and it was a total mess trying to find anything. Now, in Zotero, I attach the PDF to the library entry, and I can highlight and take notes right on the PDF inside Zotero. Then, when I'm writing my paper, I have Zotero open on one half of the screen and Word on the other. I can see my highlights, drag quotes into my draft, and the citation is already there. It keeps your research connected to your sources in a way folders never can.
The only downside is the learning curve, but it's really not that steep. Watch a 10-minute YouTube video and you're set. The time you'll save when you have to write your bibliography alone is worth it. Plus, it’s free, which is my favorite price.