Jeff Montgomery edited intro.tex  about 9 years ago

Commit id: 73eba6ab781075e19a4d131f53b1ff50cfe34908

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Thomson Reuters's reference management system \textbf{\href{http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EndNote}{EndNote}} makes it easy to store, share, and annotate your citations as well as export them in selected formats, preferably with their plug-in for everyone's favorite corporate word processing \href{http://www.fastcodesign.com/1669530/why-microsoft-word-really-sucks-it-was-invented-in-a-paper-powered-world}{legacy software} (especially when it comes to \href{http://thesiswhisperer.com/2011/01/13/is-your-computer-domesticating-you/}{academic writing}).   The trouble is, unlike Zotero and Mendeley (which Authorea easily supports \href{https://www.authorea.com/users/9932/articles/19323/_show_article}{by the way}), EndNote does not have standard export in BibTeX format. You can, however, download the appropriate output style \href{http://endnote.com/downloads/style/bibtex-export}{\textbf{here}}.  \\Once you have installed the BibTeX add-on, following follow  along below: Through the Edit drop-down menu, go to Output Styles > Open Style Manager...