ANNOUNCING THE NEW

NOTA BENE 15

COLLABORATION • COLLECTION • CLARITY

“I have used Nota Bene since 1986,
and I have eagerly anticipated and embraced all your revisions.

This leap to version 15 is the most astonishing.”

Josef Barton
Departments of History and of Spanish and Portuguese Northwestern University

BUILT FOR COLLABORATION

DOCX ↔ Nota Bene Conversion

“One of the biggest achievements of NB 15 is the ability to directly write DOCX files and to write them back to NB files.
Since I am constantly in touch with editors
who don’t (yet) use NB, this is a major advance for me.”

Daniel Boyarin
 Former Taubman professor of Talmudic Studies
University of California, Berkeley

SEAMLESS BI-DIRECTIONAL CONVERSION

Nota Bene now writes virtually “lossless” DOCX files directly, converting all the document’s elements exquisitely and precisely, making it unlikely that the recipient will even know that the file was not created natively in Word. This powerful new capability is bi–directionalthe converted file can be read into Nota Bene with the edits and formatting changes made in Word fully preserved, becoming part of your smarter Nota Bene document.

Compatibility in Nota Bene 15 reaches enviable levels of accuracy. Use all of Nota Bene’s unparalleled research capabilities in a converted DOCX document without a worry.

ADD NOTA BENE SMARTS TO DOCX FILES

Nota Bene’s “Smart Conversion” represents the most sophisticated solution for those who have written research projects in the DOCX format, but who wish to benefit from Nota Bene’s extraordinarily powerful research and writing tools without losing any of their previous efforts.

Every detail is precisely formatted according to the rules of the selected academic style. All segments of the document are accounted for, including the title, abstract, body text, bibliography/reference list.

A wizard guides you through the file, identifying headings and applying consistent styles (with your preferred numbering scheme, if any), along with body-text segments and indented blocks.

The new structure is both conceptual and visual.

Zotero citations entered into the DOCX document are automatically imported as native bibliographic records into the user’s Ibidem database, providing Ibidem’s state-of-the-art dynamic citations and bibliography / reference list formatting following the rules of the selected academic style manual.

These newly “smart” citations can thus be contextualized–changing form (full to short, ibid., op. cit., etc., depending on the style) as citations are added, deleted, or moved.

(Citations not entered from a Zotero database remain formatted as they were in the original document.)

EFFORTLESS EDITORIAL COLLABORATION

The DOCX ↔ Nota Bene opens up new possibilities beyond a simplified way to share finished work with colleagues or publishers by enabling collaborative work—track change edits and deletions, and related comments, entered into Opus or Word are carefully retained in both the import and export processes.

It’s now possible for you to do your research and writing in Nota Bene, create a DOCX version which your editor can mark up and comment, and then bring everything back into your smarter Nota Bene document, making the desired corrections, before sending off a final version to your publisher.

(And there’s actually much more—as noted below, the process of working with track changes in Nota Bene has been radically improved.)

BUILT FOR COLLECTION

Data-Discriminant Web Magnet

Radius is a revolutionary and essential tool that is now included in the Workstation.

It can capture anything on the web, academic or personal, saving and organizing it both as structured data for access in Ibidem and as free-form text searchable by Orbis.

SOURCING

Radius captures well-formed bibliographic references to populate your Ibidem database and for citing in papers.

Radius works especially well with structured academic sources, where bibliographic metadata is already well-defined.

  • University library catalogs
  • WorldCat and union catalogs
  • JSTOR, Project MUSE, PubMed, etc.
  • Google Scholar results pages

These sources contain clean fields (author, title, publisher, date), which Radius can parse directly into Ibidem-ready records.

Radius can extract bibliographic details directly from publisher pages.

  • Academic publishers (Cambridge, Oxford, Springer, etc.)
  • Journal article landing pages
  • Online book previews and listings

 

It captures citation data along with publisher info, abstracts, and links, keeping everything connected.

Radius can pull structured book data using ISBN-based sources.

  • Amazon and other online bookstores
  • ISBN lookup sites
  • Publisher catalog pages

 

Even when data is embedded in page text, Radius can identify and structure it into usable bibliographic entries.

Unlike typical tools, Radius doesn’t require a “formal” database.

  • News articles
  • Blog posts
  • Essays and online publications
  • Institutional or organizational pages

It can extract author, title, date, and page content, even when the structure is less standardized.

Radius handles documents beyond web pages.

  • Academic PDFs
  • Reports and white papers
  • Digitized articles

 

It captures both full text and any available metadata, making them searchable in Orbis and usable in Ibidem.

One of Radius’s biggest strengths is handling complex pages.

  • Pages with citations + links + embedded media
  • Bibliographies within articles
  • Resource lists or syllabi

 

Radius can separate different data types from a single page into multiple structured entries.

Radius isn’t limited to formal research environments.

  • Personal research notes online
  • Web-based documents or archives
  • Niche or non-academic websites

 

These can still become organized, searchable, and citable data within your system.

Radius lets you gather bibliographic data from **anywhere on the web—structured or unstructured—**and transforms it into:

  • Structured entries for Ibidem
  • Searchable full text for Orbis

SAVING

Everything captured in Radius is automatically organized for immediate and long-term use—and securely saved to your hard drive, ensuring it remains accessible even if the original content disappears from the web.

Web content, citation data, and linked files are stored in structured formats that flow directly into Ibidem, while full-text content remains available for Orbis searching.

This dual approach—structured data plus free-form text—ensures that nothing is lost and everything stays usable, whether you’re building a bibliography, compiling notes, or organizing large research projects.

SEARCHING

Once captured, your data becomes instantly searchable through Orbis, transforming your collection into a powerful research engine. Radius indexes everything—from full-text documents to keywords and metadata—so you can retrieve exactly what you need in seconds. With support for both simple queries and advanced Boolean searches, it allows you to move seamlessly from collecting information to actively using it in your writing and analysis.

BUILT FOR CLARITY

A Cleaner, More Intuitive, Interface with More & Simpler Options
OR CONTINUE WITH THE LEGACY INTERFACE YOU ARE FAMILIAR WITH

 

“Looks great.
Rea Irvin* would be prouda truly Art Deco interface!”

 

Lawrie Cherniack
Canadian lawyer now focusing on conflict resolution [to] bring people together

 

 *Rea Irvin was the de facto first art editor of The New Yorker and the creator of its iconic Eustace Tilley top-hat figure and its traditional New Yorker typeface. 

 

All new interface elements are optional,

and you can revert to your existing interface.

All new interface elements are optionalthey can be individually or globally suppressed; you can also continue to use your existing interface.

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