Papers vs Mendeley

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Papers and Mendeley are two competing PDF viewer/organizers intended for scientists. I've never really bought much software, but if you are on a Mac, I recommend that you give Papers a try over Mendeley. It must be purchased after 30 days, but is totally worth it. I use it to take all of my notes, build all of my reference lists, and of course organize all of my papers.

When I want ideas for a paper I'm writing, I look at what I've already written on the article. When I want to know what journals to submit to, I sort my paper collection by journal to see what I read the most in what category. When I want to know what Japanese researcher to work with this summer, I type in the word Japan to search PDFs, notes, journal titles, and whatever else to see what institutions I am reading work from. When I am writing a paper, I collect everything relevant to it in a folder. When I want the bibtex for that library of papers, I export it (though I've had to use Bibdesk as an intermediary to clean the .tex). When I want to share a paper, I drag it into Gmail.

At this point Mendeley does some things better than Papers. It is currently

  • better

suited for people who write in tex (Paper's accommodation of metadata is a little weak),

  • it stores non-PDFs
  • it is cross platform
  • free

Papers also does some things better than Mendeley

  • search is + better in Papers,
  • note taking is ++ better,
  • reading

is ++,

  • interface is +++, and
  • speed is ++ or +++)

There are also ways that the two are just different:

  • the way they handle auto-filling of metadata
  • Mendeley's

social network thing.

Until a week or so ago I was a little concerned that my preference for Papers over Mendeley was just the sunk costs speaking. It would be really hard to switch at this point. But I tried anyway and moved my entire paper collection over. I gave Mendeley a really fair try, and came out decisively in favor of Papers. No more regret.

Regarding the downsides, the developers are fairly transparent about their future plans and it looks like my biggest qualms with the software are on their todo list. Updates come out about once every six months. I know it costs money ($40 after a 30 day free trial), and Mendeley doesn't, but I also know that the Mendeley folks are crippling certain features so that they can start charging soon as well. So the free-ness of Mendeley, and its advantages, may not last.

So yeah, Papers by mekentosj is worth a try.