Zotero 8
Posted by bouchard 23 hours ago
Comments
Comment by ashton314 19 hours ago
I've been a paying member for a few years now. Part of it is for the storage (PDF packrat here) but mostly because I want to support development. Please consider supporting them if they help you in your work—they're worth it. https://www.zotero.org/storage
Comment by tony_cannistra 20 hours ago
Refreshing as a cool breeze on a hot summer's day.
Comment by ulnarkressty 19 hours ago
Comment by bonsai_spool 19 hours ago
Comment by pseudalopex 18 hours ago
Comment by hpfr 15 hours ago
WebDAV support is nice to save money, but from a privacy perspective it’s a huge bummer that the sync servers get all your citation metadata. A better self-hosting story¹ is one path to resolving this. End-to-end encryption² similar to e.g. Firefox Sync is another. Zotero has a security overview³ that shows they clearly care about good practices, but it’s still bothersome to have to trust the server when many other applications have proven E2EE works great even for non-technical users⁴.
Unfortunately from the main Zotero dev’s responses, it seems clear that they have no incentive to implement either and probably never will (look, the same comment from 2½ [now 4!] years ago⁵) without some shift in circumstances (massive increase in funding, new regulatory requirements). Even if a community member implemented the entirety of either solution, dstillman can just (rightly, tbh) claim it will increase their maintenance burden when they are trying to support paying customers.
1: https://github.com/zotero/dataserver/issues/105#issuecomment...
2: https://forums.zotero.org/discussion/comment/380780/#Comment...
3: https://www.zotero.org/support/security
4: https://support.apple.com/guide/security/advanced-data-prote...
Comment by ajb 19 hours ago
Comment by wycx 18 hours ago
Comment by hermanzegerman 18 hours ago
Comment by bonsai_spool 16 hours ago
Comment by mxuribe 18 hours ago
Comment by gdevenyi 19 hours ago
Comment by einpoklum 19 hours ago
Comment by tingletech 19 hours ago
Comment by bayindirh 20 hours ago
Comment by pseudalopex 18 hours ago
Comment by jmhammond 17 hours ago
Comment by pseudalopex 17 hours ago
Comment by jmhammond 16 hours ago
Comment by whimsicalism 21 hours ago
There are many software recommendations that seem sort of hype-y: Obsidian, Notion, Keybase, etc. Zotero is not that and is a daily driver for me for years. It has also replaced Calibre for me although YMMV there.
Comment by kens 18 hours ago
Comment by erredois 17 hours ago
Comment by austinjp 15 hours ago
I used "better bibtex" (?) to ensure files were reliably renamed and moved to an appropriate folder, all automatically.
A real set-and-forget setup that ran without hitch for years.
Comment by whimsicalism 16 hours ago
now i'm interested in the answer to your question - i have my own machine running 24/7 that i would love to use. i like the software enough that maybe i'd pay/donate
Comment by kstrauser 21 hours ago
Thank you for getting the kids started off on the right foot, professor!
Comment by malshe 21 hours ago
Comment by dakiol 21 hours ago
Having said this, I will probably wait a bit before upgrading to V8 (since I use it everyday, so I wouldn't like to face bugs and the like)
Comment by itsrobreally 21 hours ago
I deleted it after it only found about half of my books, which incidentially is my chief problem with Calibre.
Someday I will write an indexer with either a web search tool or an LLM interface to better find info on my books but for now I just spend too much time browsing through the files which makes me sad (but not sad enough yet to overcome the laziness)
Comment by pessimizer 16 hours ago
Just find the citation on the web like at Open Library or somewhere, grab it, and add the book as an attachment.
I wouldn't drop it because all the stuff may not be done automatically. If you're going to read the books, you should be spending hours with them. I myself only put them into Zotero when I start reading them. I don't need to crowd it with wishful thinking. It's bloated and gets slower the more entries you add.
Comment by dhash 22 hours ago
Comment by angry_octet 18 hours ago
https://blog.mendeley.com/2025/07/09/mendeley-is-not-going-a...
Comment by Alifatisk 2 hours ago
Comment by sureglymop 16 hours ago
I'm glad part of their stack is open source but I just wish they made it as easy as a compose file to run this on prem.
Comment by bn-l 4 hours ago
Comment by trostaft 20 hours ago
Comment by Eddy_Viscosity2 16 hours ago
Comment by Scene_Cast2 20 hours ago
Comment by BolsunBacset 13 hours ago
Comment by rossant 18 hours ago
Comment by ricksunny 21 hours ago
Comment by majkinetor 21 hours ago
Comment by mft_ 20 hours ago
Comment by austinjp 14 hours ago
Personally, I used auto-export for all additional functionality. So, I didn't use any Word (LibreOffice) plugins that hooked into Zotero or whatever. I'd just consume a giant .bib file as and when necessary.
On modern hardware Zotero is probably fine. And it's reasonably flexible. A suggestion: export/import a big refs file (plus PDF attachments) and see if it can handle your daily workload. I suspect it will.
Comment by smuenkel 19 hours ago
Comment by catgirlinspace 18 hours ago
Comment by ktallett 5 hours ago
Comment by Tomte 21 hours ago
You might say it was just another excuse to curate my thousands of bookmarks and recreate a new tagging structure yet again, but… well, you wouldn‘t be wrong. :-)
Comment by zvr 18 hours ago
Comment by sureglymop 16 hours ago
Comment by austinjp 14 hours ago
Comment by specproc 7 hours ago
Comment by throwaway_24242 21 hours ago
Comment by ifh-hn 18 hours ago
This is a sneaky edit completely different from the original post I replied to, which was about how bloated zotero was and how the op had uni stalled immediately and gone back to text files on disk.
Comment by vitorsr 21 hours ago
Comment by ifh-hn 21 hours ago
Comment by mxuribe 18 hours ago
I've heard of zotero maybe a year or so ago, and was curious about it, but never took the plunge. I manage the bulk of my info/knowledge base across mostly locally-saved text files, with a few other tidbits leveraging PDFs and word process files (.odt, .docx)...and really i only use the latter for pasting in screenshots. And, then of course simply synching them across devices using syncthing.
While my approach works great for the majority of the time, i can imagine there might be some functions that some other tools might bring me which i might be missing...I suppose one thing that i lack is a graph of linkages for content that might live in different, separate files but might be related, etc. So, would you be willing to share your opinion, experience for what makes zotero better than text files on a disk? :-) Thanks!
Comment by ifh-hn 18 hours ago
I have nothing against text files on the disk but zotero is simply much better as a knowledge/source manager.
Comment by mxuribe 13 hours ago