Reference Manager

Reference Manager was a commercial reference management software package sold by Thomson Reuters. It was the first commercial software of its kind , originally developed by Ernest Beutler and his son, Earl Beutler, in 1982 through their company Research Information Systems. Offered for the CP/M operating system, it was ported to DOS and then Microsoft Windows and later the Apple Macintosh. Sales were discontinued on December 31, 2015, support ended on December 31, 2016.

Reference Manager
Developer(s)Research Information Systems, later acquired by Thomson ISI ResearchSoft
Initial release1984 (1984)
Stable release
12 / 02-09-2008
Operating system
Available inEnglish
TypeReference management
LicenseProprietary
Websitewww.refman.com

Operation

Reference Manager is most commonly used by people who want to share a central database of references and need to have multiple users adding and editing records at the same time. It is possible to specify for each user read-only or edit rights to the database. The competing package EndNote does not offer this functionality, but Citavi does.

Reference Manager offers different in-text citation templates for each reference type. It also allows the use of synonyms within a database. Reference Manager Web Publisher allows the publication of reference databases to an intranet or internet site. This allows anyone with a web browser to search and download references into their own bibliographic software. It includes the functionality to interact with the SOAP and WSDL standard services.

Updates

After abandoning the development of Reference Manager in 2008, Thomson Reuters discontinued its sale on December 31, 2015 to focus exclusively on EndNote.[1] In 2016, Thomson Reuters sold EndNote to Clarivate Analytics. EndNote X7 can import Reference Manager databases and convert Word documents formatted with Reference Manager into EndNote formatting. Reference Manager databases can also be imported into Citavi;[2] Reference Manager formatted Word documents are converted into the Citavi format. Citavi permits the installation of a database for teamwork locally, as is possible with Reference Manager, while EndNote's team function is cloud-based.

gollark: It's designed for more discord-style persistent chats, for one thing.
gollark: Have people here heard of matrix? It's a decentralized chat thing which seems neat. I'm running a homeserver for it (well, attempting to).
gollark: I installed grafana/prometheus and am now gathering metrics from all things ever.
gollark: If there were bots like that I could make them waste *lots* of money.
gollark: I've done so before on larger discord servers and not experienced any domain harvesting.

See also

References


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