

I helps me stay focused on the task at hand. That’s where I make note of the things that come up that I don’t want to explore at the moment. I have a notebook (in my Genealogy stack) called Genealogy clues/puzzles to check out. Full disclosure: I don’t do it each and every session I just do it when it feels right. I have a very simple template in Evernote in which I jot down what I’ve researched that session. So here’s a source list of ways I use Evernote in my genealogy life: Before I do, though, I want to emphasize that this isn’t the best way or the only way to use Evernote. I thought it might be helpful to some people for me to describe how I’m using it for genealogy. I’ve become a big fan, though no one would describe me as a power user. Well, it’s two years later and I’m happy to report that I am actually using Evernote to help organize a bunch of things in my life, including certain aspects of my genealogy research. In 20 I posted here about how I wanted to give Evernote a(nother) try to help me organize certain aspects of my genealogy research. or view the traditional LibraryThing entries.I have to admit I have been a slow adopter of Evernote. In the last 12 months my local genealogy group, Cooroy-Noosa Genealogical & Historical Research Group, approved the move to to this online catalogue and one can now search the collection through the Tin圜at OPAC. 3brBWcISZM- Tim Spalding February 2, 2021 Secret: Every account comes with a separate, "traditional" library catalog or "OPAC." It's better than most OPACs, and free for all personal use, very cheap for small libraries, schools and so forth.

Tim Spalding, the founder and LT guru, just mentioned this feature again on Twitter. A lively discussion on #ANZAncestryTime about genealogy books prompted me to revisit a 2018 post Once upon a shelf wherein I discussed the use of LibraryThing and its associated OPAC Tin圜at for listing both personal and institutional collections of books.
