Nature featured a news article about digital lab notebooks, which launched a discussion in various places (including the comments of the article itself) about whether or not they’re useful.What do you think? Would you use a digital lab notebook in your lab, or would you rather keep your old paper notebook? Or maybe you already keep all your notes in a digital format only. You’re all web-savvy Node readers, of course, but let’s see how digital you are when it comes to benchwork. Here’s a poll:
(Photo by zmtomako on Flickr)
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https://www.dropbox.com/
Maybe the Node could have a little section on handy freeware for scientists?
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It probably makes the most sense to have it as a post, so that people can suggest their own in the comments (and make it more complete). Do you want to collect a few suggestions and start a post? I’ve been out of the lab too long to know what’s actually useful/free these days.
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The main problem I came up against was running out of space (I eventually paid for some). If you’re dealing with large files a lot (such as sorting through microarray data or other computational-heavy data, or lots of immunocytochemistry images), you’ll probably want to buy some space.
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One feature I have not used yet is to migrate the digital notebook online, which presumably would let me access and maintain it from anywhere with internet access.
Finally, I can’t imagine using OneNote for writing complex mathematical formulas, but that’s not what I do. So for my purposes the simplicity of this software has been enough of an incentive to stop me from maintaining a paper lab notebook.
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