The Hindu business

Managing pedagogic resources efficiently
A free program such as Foxit Reader can be used for this task

We download lots of educational content (video, audio and text) almost on a 
daily basis. Over time, managing them could become a herculean task. This 
edition of NetSpeak takes a look at this issue and discusses a few tools meant 
for managing scholarly content with ease.
A large majority of web materials (text-based) we come across are available as 
PDF documents. However many of these documents may not even have a proper index 
or table of contents.
Learning process
The learning process can be made more effective and productive if we can 
customise the document with necessary annotations and bookmarks that point to 
specific locations in the document. A free program such as Foxit Reader 
(http://www.foxitsoftware.com/pdf/reader/) could be used for this task. Foxit 
Reader helps generate required bookmarks with a few mouse movements.
Aside this, Foxit Reader can be used to enrich a PDF document with text 
highlights, comments, notes and so on.
Of course, enriching the PDF documents with necessary annotations and bookmarks 
is only a minor step in making the learning process efficient. One might have 
downloaded tens of hundreds of documents pertaining to multiple topics and 
projects. Some mechanism is needed for organising these documents under 
different topics and heads for easy access. For instance, it should offer a 
search mechanism that can pull out documents with specific information (by 
scanning all the documents in our collection). Those of you on the hunt for 
such a solution may find the free software Mendeley (http://www.mendeley.com/) 
rather rewarding. Mendeley allows you to add any document or web page into its 
library by simply dragging and dropping the document into its interface. When 
you add a PDF document on to its library it indexes full-text.
This means if you have hundreds of documents stored on the library you can 
invoke a word/phrase search and filter out the relevant documents. When you add 
a PDF document into the Mendeley library, it automatically extracts the 
document's citation data and keeps it in a bibliographic database. This 
citation data can be easily copied and pasted on to any text document.
It also offers a word plug-in that allows you to easily insert citations and 
reference list. This way, Mendeley functions as a good citation manager as well 
(similar to Firefox extension Zotero discussed in the past).
A notable feature of Mendeley is the facility to add a watch folder. The 
advantage of having a watch folder is that any document placed on this folder 
will get automatically added to the library. Besides the features discussed 
above, Mendeley lets you easily pull resources from the web too.
Using Mendeley's bookmarklet, Web Importer (http://www.mendeley.com/import/), 
one can import documents from a variety of academic databases such as Google 
scholar, JSTOR and so on.
Aside keeping the library content in your local storage, Mendeley allows you to 
sync the desktop content on to its server as well (for this you need to 
register with the service and take a free account). In addition, the service 
allows you to share your library with other Mendeley users as well.
Besides Mendeley, several other document management products are in place. 
Qiqqa (http://www.qiqqa.com/), a free software in alpha stage, is yet another 
tool in this genre.
Virtual CD/DVD drive
As you are aware, a huge collection of video tutorials on a wide variety of 
subjects is available on the Net. Many such tutorials are available as CD/DVD 
images. A CD image is just a copy of the CD/DVD disk and it comes in formats 
such as 'iso', 'bin'and 'cue'.
To access the content of such image files, you need to transfer it on to a CD 
(using a CD-burning software like Nero). But in most cases this could turn out 
to be a waste of time and money, as we may not have any intention to keep these 
tutorials for long.
The best solution to get around this issue is to use a tool that emulates a CD 
drive, a virtual CD drive program. Similar to virtual PC tools (such as the 
Virtualbox software, discussed in the past, 
(http://www.hindu.com/biz/2009/09/21/stories/2009092150011300.htm), a virtual 
CD drive software functions such as a real CD/DVD drive and lets us mount CD 
images.
The advantage is that we can read the image content without transferring it on 
to a CD. This aside, virtual CD drive enables us to access the content of a CD 
even from a computer without CD drive.
Several free virtual CD programs are available. Daemon Tools Lite 
(http://www.daemon-tools.cc/eng/products/dtLite) is a simple easy to use, free 
CD emulation program. The software allows you to emulate a virtual CD drive and 
can be used to read a variety of image formats that include 'ccd',' cue', 'mdx' 
and 'iso'.
The free version allows you to add four virtual drives at one go. Now, if you 
need more than four drives at a time, you can try out the free tool, Virtual 
clone drive (http://www.slysoft.com/en/virtual-clonedrive.html). This software 
lets you create 15 virtual drives at a time (this means you can mount 15 image 
files simultaneously).
A Google a day
Your on-line success generally depends on your skill to locate relevant content 
with ease and this in turn (to a large extent) depends on your Google skills. 
If you are deficient in this essential on-line life skill, you will have to 
seek the services of a search expert. Naturally, by sharpening your Google 
skills, you can keep a search expert away. And to help you in this endeavour, 
Google has started a new project called A Google a Day, which presents a search 
puzzle every day.
To solve these puzzles you need to apply your imagination along with a fair 
amount Google tricks.
An apple a day keeps the doctor away. Likewise Google a day' helps you keep 
junk search results away. So, those of you wish to enhance Google search 
skills, jump over to the search game 'A Google a day': http://agoogleaday.com/.
J. MURALI
He can be contacted at: [email protected]

With thanks and regards



                                (Rajesh Asudani)
Assistant General Manager
Reserve Bank of India
Nagpur
Cell: 9420397185
o: +91 712 2806846
R: 2591349

"The path from dreams to success does exist. May you have the vision to find 
it, the courage to get on to it, and
the perseverance to follow it. Wishing you great journey."
-Kalpana Chawla
(An excert from the e-mail Kalpana sent to the students of Punjab Engineering 
College from aboard Columbia.)
"The path from dreams to success does exist. May you have the vision to find 
it, the courage to get on to it, and
the perseverance to follow it. Wishing you great journey."
-Kalpana Chawla
(An excert from the e mail sent from Columbia
-mail Kalpana sent to the students of Punjab Engineering College from aboard 
Columbia.)


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