tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8747085902902510837.post9128129060844011472..comments2020-01-26T12:50:22.259+01:00Comments on Andreas Zeller's Old Blog: Turning iPad PDF annotations into anonymous reviewsAndreas Zellerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02016277079276068582noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8747085902902510837.post-28199634295612941172013-10-28T06:53:05.049+01:002013-10-28T06:53:05.049+01:00There is a really simple yet robust tool for extra...There is a really simple yet robust tool for extracting highlights and notes from your pdf-files available at: http://www.sumnotes.net . Not only it supports various advanced features like selective extraction or predictive extraction, but it also allows you to save extracted highlights into TXT or DOC files. All desktop browsers and operating systems are supported. We are in cloud, so no installation is needed. And yes, it is for free. Try it out.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8747085902902510837.post-73663247690953109292012-06-13T11:45:50.388+02:002012-06-13T11:45:50.388+02:00Very useful.
I suggest to also take a look at &qu...Very useful.<br /><br />I suggest to also take a look at "PDF Highlighter" at the App Store. This iPad app supports an export format ("Send Annotation Summaries: Plain Text") for your annotations that already comes very close to the textual format that you would want to send as a review (actually, I suggested this academic use case to the app's author and he promptly agreed to support it — thanks again!).<br /><br />[ I pipe PDF Highlighter's output through a tiny post-processing script that turns the text into a review document that cannot be told from the variants I'd produce manually. Hooray for paper-less reviews. ]<br /><br />Cheers,<br /> —TorstenUnknownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14170101623563118236noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8747085902902510837.post-74688448908239136482012-05-12T00:03:15.738+02:002012-05-12T00:03:15.738+02:00Thanks, this is neat!
GoodReader has an option in...Thanks, this is neat!<br /><br />GoodReader has an option in the settings (under Viewing PDF Files) which allows you to set the "Author Name" for annotations. I've found that changing didn't change existing annotations, though, even if I re-flattened the file.Chrishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03327470068256472110noreply@blogger.com