My research would remain in NB and Orbis, but with the iPad app, I could also collect research in Scrivener then sync it to my Mac and send it to NB later. Once the draft would be done, I'd send it over to NB for formatting, polishing, citations, etc (since my citations are stored in Ibidem). Scrivener would be super handy for planning/outlining papers and projects, plus it'd likely be good for rough drafts. It's something I'm definitely interested in looking into. I also chatted with some NB users who have integrated Scrivener into their workflow. I watched some videos on Scrivener, and I emailed them about getting a trial when Scrivener 3 is launched. Since I have the other three installed, would there be any reason I'd need to also through Mellel on my system, or am I pretty well set with the other three above? The main advantage of Mellel is its Hebrew support, but I'll be using Nota Bene for that anyway, so I'm not sure if there's another advantage.
I'll be using Numbers for spreadsheets and Keynote for presentations. I don't need Microsoft Word and I'm letting Office 365 go.
First mac word processor pro#
My goal is to use Nisus Writer Pro for everyday and quick documents, Pages for documents where I need better page layout stuff (like letters, etc), and Nota Bene for academic writing. When it comes to Mac word processors, I currently have three installed: Pages, Nisus Writer Pro, and Nota Bene (under WINE I brought over from Windows). With most apps, I'm using single apps as much as possible for work (only using Apple Mail for email, only using Photos for managing photos, only using Numbers for spreadsheets and Keynote for presentations, only using iMovie for editing video that isn't screencasts, etc.). Now that I've moved back to a Mac, I've been mainly using as much built-in Apple apps as possible and only installing third party apps when I need them.