![]() Updated 7/15/17 to add instruction about Multitasking in iOSįiled Under: Audiobooks, Narrators, Videos Tagged With: Evernote, iAnnotate, pronunciation A Place For Everything… ![]() If you decide to get an Evernote account, I’d love it if you used my referral link: This way, everyone who sees the note will know its owner and can contact me and/or connect with me on social media. If you scroll to the bottom of that note, you’ll see that I added branding info. You can view the Evernote note used in this demo at: If you don’t have a Multitasking option, you’d need to switch between Evernote and iAnnotate with the Home button on the iPad. Check Settings/General to see if you have a Multitasking option. Note: You can use iOS Slide Over with iPad Pro, iPad (5th generation), iPad Air and later, or iPad mini 2 and later. I’ll tell you why and show you how I use Evernote for pronunciation research in this 7:37 explainer video. As a reminder, I advise that you find a library that includes access to Lynda. You can find no shortage of tutorials to learn how to use it, including on. The more notes you enter into it, the more powerful it becomes. My method is different because I store all of my pronunciation research in Evernote.Įvernote is described as a note-taking app that works on and syncs across all of your devices. Most people in the discussion either added their pronunciation research to the PDF in iAnnotate or copied it to an Excel spreadsheet. Like many narrators, I use the iAnnotate app for the text since it allows us to read the book from a tablet and noiselessly turn pages. Recently, several audiobook narrators discussed in a Facebook group how we do our pronunciation research. Members of my site can watch my 12-module video course on iAnnotate to learn how to use this software to its fullest advantage in prepping audiobooks.įiled Under: Away From the Mic, Business, Narrators Tagged With: Adobe Export PDF, iAnnotate Why Use Evernote for Audiobook Pronunciation Research Then, tap on each search result to go to the next instance, and highlight the word. With the search results showing on the right side of your iAnnotate screen, tap the Highlighter tool on the left side with your document. Once you’ve made all the global changes you want in Word, iAnnotate automatically opens Word files and converts them back to PDF.īy the way, you can pretty quickly manually highlight your iAnnotate search results if you don’t want to transfer the doc to Word and back. If Word can’t open your PDF, you can cheaply and easily convert it to a Word file using Adobe Export PDF. As long as a document is a PDF, you have no ability to change the size, color, or type of the font. PDF means “portable document format” and was devised as a method to present the text in the same way to all users regardless of their software or hardware. Of course, you also can change the font type and size for the entire document in Word, which you can’t do in iAnnotate. You can even change the font, its size, and color on each search result. In addition to or instead of highlighting the text, the Find and Replace formatting box lets you make font changes like underline and bold to the search results. However, good ole MS Word - even my 2004 copy for Mac - has that option under Find and Replace. As far as I know, iAnnotate software doesn’t have a way to automatically highlight all your search results.
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