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by dstillman
1635 days ago
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Just to be clear, Zotero is primarily a local program that saves all data and files to your computer. You don't need an account to use it. There's optional syncing and a web library so you can use it on multiple devices and collaborate with others, and there's a browser extension (which JabRef uses as the basis for their extension) that integrates it deeply with the browser, but in no way is it an "online reference manager". We strongly agree with all the reasons you give, which is exactly why we designed Zotero the way we did. (Disclosure: Zotero dev) |
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There was a forum entry that self-hosting the database is a topic being worked on. That's my number one gripe with Zotero, it just seems weird: if using multiple clients, users have to sync to the Zotero servers, yet the storage space for attachments there is minimal (which is okay; Zotero pricing looks reasonable but of course, own storage via e.g. Nextclodu is much, much cheaper). This basically forces a hybrid solution, with bring-your-own-storage. If all of Zotero's data could be self-hosted, now that would be a streamlined, great experience.
Then again, I am anal about my entries' metadata and often correct faulty data found online. Syncing that to Zotero servers is kind of like giving back? I always thought that data might help improve Zotero's own auto-fill functionalities, which I'd like helping with.