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iPad Diaries: Advanced File Management and Research with DEVONthink

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As I wrote in my story on one year of iPad Pro , I consider cloud services a necessity for managing files on iOS. Dropbox and iCloud Drive make it possible to keep the same sets of documents and app libraries synced across devices, but, more importantly, they help overcome iOS’ file management woes through centralized storage spaces. In the article, I espoused the flexibility of Documents and its tight integration with Dropbox, noting how Readdle had built the missing iPad file manager with features Apple omitted from their iCloud Drive app.

Since early January, I’ve been thinking about my larger writing projects scheduled for 2017 and whether Documents can scale as a reference and research tool. Looking back at 2016 and the time I poured into organizing and referencing files for my iOS 10 review draft in Scrivener (which I covered here ), I realized that neither Scrivener’s built-in file manager nor Documents could meet the basic requirements I have set for this year’s review. These include the ability to search different file types with advanced operators as well as a system to reference individual files and folders throughout iOS with local URLs. It was during this meta-research phase 1 that I decided to try DEVONthink To Go again.

I briefly mentioned DEVONthink To Go last year when I explained how I was archiving PDF versions of our newsletters in the app. DEVONthink isn’t completely new to me: years ago – before my move to iOS – I used DEVONthink Pro as an Evernote replacement on OS X for a few months. I eventually abandoned the app because I didn’t need its power-user features at the time, and Evernote was good enough.

Today’s DEVONthink To Go is a deeply different iOS counterpart than the lightweight client DEVONtechnologies launched in 2010. While the first iOS version was a glorified viewer for the desktop app, the latest DEVONthink To Go is a capable mix of a file manager and research tool that takes advantage of native iOS features. DEVONthink for iOS still doesn’t sport feature parity with macOS (particularly in terms of AI-infused document filing options ), and there are some functionalities I’m not interested in, but there’s also a lot I enjoy and want to implement in my longform writing projects.

In DEVONthink, you can set up multiple databases and individually sync them with multiple cloud services. One of the app’s immediate advantages over alternatives is that you can choose Dropbox sync on a per-database basis and add encryption (with a passphrase) on top.

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In the Location Sync settings, you can even select whether DEVONthink should always keep a downloaded copy of your files or if it should only download them on-demand and discard them once you’re done viewing them. The latter is a nice solution to the problem of keeping thousands of documents in the cloud but having limited storage space on an iOS device.

A semi-hidden feature that piqued my interest is DEVONthink’s support for file and group links. All of the app’s supported document types (plain and rich text files, media, bookmarks, web archives, and more) can be organized in groups (folders). By long-tapping any file or group you’ll get a ‘Copy Item Link’ button that will generate a DEVONthink URL to re-open a document or folder inside DEVONthink from anywhere on iOS. 2

Copying an item link in DEVONthink.

The URL scheme generated by DEVONthink can become a widget launcher in Workflow.

The widget will launch the individual file in DEVONthink with one tap.

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DEVONthink’s item links are consistent across platforms: you can get a link to a screenshot stored in DEVONthink for iPhone and it’ll open the same file on the iPad (and Mac) as well. The ability to create permanent URLs for files and groups is unique to DEVONthink, and I’m considering it as a way to organize my iOS 11 research material this summer. With an easy way to recall external items, I could spend less time in Scrivener’s file manager and insert temporary DEVONthink file URLs in my draft to reference images or PDFs. 3 Plus, I’d be able to set up launchers with Workflow and Launch Center Pro to quickly access items for any longform story I’ll work on throughout the year.

There are a few options to create and send new files to DEVONthink. The ‘Clip to DEVONthink’ share extension is solid: webpages are clipped with a preview image, URL, and description; files such as images and PDFs are copied into the app, and the extension is also supported in Photos for copying multiple images at a time to DEVONthink (which will be nice to batch import screenshots for app reviews).

The DEVONthink extension fetches text and images for a twitter.com link shared from Twitterrific.

Capturing an image from Photos.

Clipping a webpage from Safari to DEVONthink.

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There’s a URL scheme to create bookmarks and text notes in DEVONthink, but I’ve mostly used the app’s built-in ‘New Item’ dialog to manually add files to my database. This menu includes a useful media picker with shortcuts for the last photo taken and a photo from your clipboard. There’s also automatic recognition of copied URLs that prompts you to add a bookmark.

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Speaking of which, bookmarks were one of the reasons I started exploring DEVONthink in the first place. For a while now, I’ve felt the need to permanently archive webpages I may need again in the future (such as technical documents and videogame guides). DEVONthink has some fantastic options for saving webpages from Safari and Safari View Controller.

A webpage shared with the extension can be a bookmark, a Markdown (text-only) version of the page, or a web archive in DEVONthink. Mac users should be familiar with the web archive format : when saved this way, a webpage becomes an offline document that retains the original design and content of the web version. Imagine Reading List’s ability to save articles for offline consumption in their original format, but with actual files that you can organize in a database.

A webpage saved to DEVONthink as a web archive.

A webpage saved to DEVONthink as a web archive.

Webpages saved as web archives in DEVONthink become standalone copies that I can access when I’m offline 4 ; they don’t disappear if the source page is pulled from the Internet, and, unlike PDFs, they’re fully interactive in terms of text selection and tapping embedded hyperlinks. I appreciate being able to manage and categorize web archives alongside images and PDFs, but, mostly, I’m relieved I’m not keeping dozens of open tabs in my browser anymore.

Aside from saving and managing files, DEVONthink stands out thanks to its advanced search feature. There’s nothing like DEVONthink when it comes to searching for text matching specific conditions in a document or group of documents. DEVONthink supports search with Boolean operators, which include the NEAR and XOR flags; with these two options I can search for phrases that are within n words of each other, or where either one result or the other is present, but not both, respectively.

The NEAR search operator lets you find phrases close to each other.

The NEAR search operator lets you find phrases close to each other.

DEVONthink’s Boolean search has been a terrific addition to how I find workflows and apps I already covered in past issues of MacStories Weekly. If I remember I once wrote about the Spotify API, for example, I can search for NEAR(Spotify API, 10) and DEVONthink will look inside the Club MacStories PDF group and return documents where the words “Spotify” and “API” are separated by no more than 10 words. DEVONthink’s search parameters are an aspect of the app I want to master going forward – though I wish these advanced queries could be assembled visually, perhaps with a dedicated search UI like on DEVONthink for Mac .

Finally, I ought to mention that DEVONthink 2.1, released earlier this month, brought a document provider to open and edit files in other apps. If you’ve followed the evolution of document providers on iOS, you know it’s rare to find developers who invest time in integrating their apps’ file management features with iOS’ document provider APIs.

Editing a Markdown file from DEVONthink in Ulysses.

Editing a Markdown file from DEVONthink in Ulysses.

Not only does DEVONthink let you pick files stored in its database from other apps – it lets you edit them externally, too. This opens up some intriguing possibilities: Ulysses and iA Writer can now edit Markdown documents stored in DEVONthink; webpages in Safari can look for files in DEVONthink when you tap an ‘Upload’ button; perhaps more impressively, you can open a DEVONthink PDF in PDF Expert , make edits in Readdle’s app, and find your changes automatically reflected and still editable in DEVONthink.

Like others, I don’t use document providers on my iPad as much as I should, but DEVONthink’s multifarious editing tools and integrations are a good reason to start.

DEVONthink To Go goes beyond Apple Notes’ simple but effective note-taking and Documents’ traditional file management features. On the surface, it’s an advanced file manager that can be used to move notes and files around, but I see it more as a powerful research tool for documents you need to reference, search, and integrate with other iOS apps.

I believe DEVONthink’s thoughtful blend of excellent capturing and search tools, unification of file formats, and inter-app document linking can help me offset the limitations of file management on the iPad. For this reason, I’m going to adapt DEVONthink to my writing workflow for longform stories I have planned this year. I’m glad I took DEVONthink for another spin.

iPad Diaries is a regular series about using the iPad as a primary computer. You can find more installments here and subscribe to the dedicated RSS feed .

  • Research about research tools? Sounds about right.  ↩︎
  • Tomorrow’s issue of MacStories Weekly (#67) will include a tip about DEVONthink’s ‘Copy Item Link’ for advanced note organization within the app.  ↩︎
  • Which would be especially convenient with Scrivener and DEVONthink in Split View on the iPad Pro. For context, last year’s iOS 10 review research material consisted of 20 sub-folders in Scrivener with about 1200 screenshots and dozens of PDFs.  ↩︎
  • I’ve run into a bug where the same web archive can be accessed offline on the iPhone, but it throws up an error if I’m offline on the iPad Pro.  ↩︎

Unlock More with Club MacStories

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In that time, members have enjoyed nearly 400 weekly and monthly newsletters packed with more of your favorite MacStories writing as well as Club-only podcasts, eBooks, discounts on apps, icons, and services. Join today, and you’ll get everything new that we publish every week, plus access to our entire archive of back issues and downloadable perks.

The Club expanded in 2021 with Club MacStories+ and Club Premier . Club MacStories+ members enjoy even more exclusive stories, a vibrant Discord community, a rotating roster of app discounts, and more. And, with Club Premier, you get everything we offer at every Club level plus an extended, ad-free version of our podcast AppStories that is delivered early each week in high-bitrate audio.

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Federico Viticci

Federico is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of MacStories, where he writes about Apple with a focus on apps, developers, iPad, and iOS productivity. He founded MacStories in April 2009 and has been writing about Apple since. Federico is also the co-host of AppStories , a weekly podcast exploring the world of apps, and Unwind , a fun exploration of media and more.

He can also be found on his other podcasts on Relay FM: Connected and Remaster , two shows about Apple and videogames, respectively.

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DEVONthink for Mac

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Downloading DT

* Note: The Download links are available only on Mac web browsers, which are grayed out on Windows web browsers.  

* Free trial:  DT can be downloaded from the Download page on the DEVONtechnologies site.

  • After the trial period of 30 days or 150 hours of runtime, whichever is later, it requires a license key.
  • Each license comes with two seats, allowing two installs on different computers.  
  • Note: Take advantage of some benefits using your student/staff/faculty account)   

Installation

Installing DEVONthink

1. Once DT is downloaded, go to the Downloads folder on your Mac and double-click DEVONthink_3.dmg to install.

Start DT3

2.  Copy DT3 to the Applications folder.

Copy DT3 to App Folder

3. Go to Applications , start DT3.

Starting DT3

4. Once DT3 is started, select Install Add-Ons under the DEVONthink 3 menu ( DEVONthink 3 -> Install Add-Ons …). 

Install Add-Ons

*Note: The Safari browser extension is installed by default in DT3, but you must get to Safari's Preferences > Extensions and enable it.

Enabling Safari extension

The following extension options are recommended as we notice some inconsistencies in using the browser extensions: 

Installing add-ons

5. Go to the quick access tool bar called “the Dock” at the bottom of the screen, and right-click Keep in Dock.

Keeping DT3 in Dock

  • << Previous: Getting Started
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Updates to DEVONthink are done per the schedule set in Preferences > General > Check for Updates .

If you need to manually update the software, follow the previous installation instructions, but allow the Finder to overwrite the old version. Your database(s) will not be affected. To avoid any potential problems, do not use a third-party uninstaller utility. Just replace the current version, as directed.

Uninstalling

If for some reason you need to fully uninstall DEVONthink from your Mac, trash the following files and folders ( ~ stands for your account's home folder):

Icon

Item logo image for Clip to DEVONthink

Clip to DEVONthink

Clip selected web content to your DEVONthink database. Press Shift-Control-C to activate from the keyboard.

Use this extension to quickly clip selected web content to your DEVONthink database directly from Chrome. You need to have DEVONthink from DEVONtechnologies installed to make use of this extension.

3.4 out of 5 37 ratings Google doesn't verify reviews. Learn more about results and reviews.

Review's profile picture

Jean Goodwin Sep 12, 2023

Not sure why all the super-negative reviews. I've been using this web clipper for years. It's reliable for webpages not behind a paywall. Devonthink is so much more than a way to collect random webpages, so even if it didn't work at all I wouldn't "delete Devonthink."

Review's profile picture

Julia Keller Aug 2, 2023

It simply doesn't work, just downloads a blank page. Considering Devonthink is priced at $100, it's pretty silly that Evernote's *free* web clipper and even Chrome's default, built-in save as PDF feature work way better.

Review's profile picture

Christopher McKenna Mar 9, 2023

I see a lot of negative reviews from years ago but, I've had no issues with their clipper tool for the browser with their latest version in 2022-2023 DevonThinkPro. It's much smoother and faster than Evernote Pro. I've been an Evernote user since 2014 and have had a number of issues with Evernote's web clipper either crashing or hanging or not clipping HTML content thus what promoted the move over to DevonThink Pro and Web Agent Tool. I've used the PDF, HTML and various file formats and flo... Show more

  • Version 1.5.2
  • Updated May 7, 2021
  • Report a concern
  • Size 14.22KiB
  • Languages English
  • Developer Eric Böhnisch-Volkmann DEVONtechnologies LLC Großingersheimer Straße 21 Bietigheim-Bissingen, Baden-Württemberg 74321 Deutschland Website Email [email protected]
  • Non-trader This developer has not identified itself as a trader. For consumers in the European Union, please note that consumer rights do not apply to contracts between you and this developer.

Clip to DEVONthink has disclosed the following information regarding the collection and usage of your data. More detailed information can be found in the developer's privacy policy .

Clip to DEVONthink collects the following:

This developer declares that your data is.

  • Not being sold to third parties, outside of the approved use cases
  • Not being used or transferred for purposes that are unrelated to the item's core functionality
  • Not being used or transferred to determine creditworthiness or for lending purposes

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, visit the developer's support site

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Bear Chrome extension

Send to Bear.app snippets, url or entire web pages

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Save to GoodLinks

Save links to GoodLinks app.

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Obsidian Clipper

A small chrome plugin that let's you easily clip things to Obsidian

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Roam Toolkit

Roam force multiplier

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MarkDownload - Markdown Web Clipper

This extension works like a web clipper, but it downloads articles in markdown format.

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Readwise Highlighter

Save a page to Readwise Reader

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Eloquent: Quick Capture and Highlighting

Eloquent is an intelligent personal knowledge management tool that helps you leverage AI. Supercharge how you use ChatGPT by…

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Roam Portal

A data visualization and analytics powered search engine in Roam. Built for exploration and discovery.

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Clip to DEVONthink by DEVONtechnologies, LLC

Clip selected web content to your DEVONthink database directly from Firefox.

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Tsaritsyno: The idyllic palace park where Muscovites escape the big city (PHOTOS)

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Tsaritsyno Park offers one of the most impressive examples of Russian garden design from the 18 th and 19 th centuries. Located in southern Moscow, it is just a short walk from (you guessed it!) Tsaritsyno metro station .

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Visitors often crowd around an enormous fountain near the park’s entrance, but you’ll find the palace towers a bit farther away among the trees.  

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The estate originally belonged to Dimitrie Cantemir, a Moldavian prince allied with Imperial Russia. He built a church and a wooden palace on the site .

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His French-style garden was designed according to the baroque architectural styles of that time and included pathways and flowerbeds that were made according to strict geometrical rules .

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Catherine the Great fell in love with the estate so much that she decided to buy it. At the time, English-style gardens that artistically imitated natural landscapes were popular, and so two gardeners named John Munro and Francis Reid were brought over from England to work on the estate .

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There’s nothing better than wandering through the forest along the winding cobblestone pathways, which are lined with antique statues and pavilions with huge pillars. As you walk, you hear the melodic singing of birds, which heightens the whole experience and takes you away from the chaos of the city center .

Monument to the architects Vasilii Bazhenov and Matvei Kazakov

Monument to the architects Vasilii Bazhenov and Matvei Kazakov

Tsaritsyno’s construction began in 1779 under the supervision of architect Vasili Bazhenov. Unfortunately, just as construction work was almost complete, Catherine visited the palace and expressed dissatisfaction with its design. In 1785, she ordered the palace to be demolished and rebuilt. This time, she tasked Matvey Kazakov, one of Bazhenov’s students, with overseeing the project .

Main palace

Kazakov designed a three-story building that he hoped would capture the glory of Catherine’s reign. However, when work was suspended for three years due to a lack of funds, the empress ordered him to alter the plans, advising him to construct a two-story building and simplify the design of the roof .

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Following Catherine’s death in 1796, work on the project came to a standstill once again, and the unfinished palace was left in ruins throughout the 19 th century. Local residents ransacked the place, removing window frames as well as stone walls .

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Between 1950 and 1980, the ruins of the Grand Palace even became an unexpected rock-climbing site .

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This finally changed between 2006 and 2007, when the city undertook a huge construction project to restore the park and architectural complex, bringing it back to its original beauty and splendor .

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The main building still contains ornate reception rooms, but the annexes have been turned into a museum.

You might even stumble upon a ballroom scene in the middle of the forest, like something straight out of a movie, except with older people gathering to dance to electro or disco music .

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These vast green spaces serve as a haven for Muscovites looking to escape the hustle and bustle of the city and find respite in a tranquil, serene setting. A lot of people come here just to lounge on the grass, play badminton or take a peaceful stroll in the shade .

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If you wander around the forest, you might even come across a strange sight under the treetops: a sacred site maintained by local followers of Shamanism. Here you’ll find totem poles decorated with ribbons, symbols and all sorts of offerings, such as pieces of bread, semolina or candy (which you can see being stolen from right under our noses by a squirrel in the picture above).

Read more: What to do in Kolomenskoye, one of Moscow's oldest parks

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  • 10 best central Moscow parks to escape the summer heat
  • Before and after: How Moscow looked in the 19th century and today (PHOTOS)
  • 12 places in Moscow you gotta visit (according to expats)

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Moscow Tours & Travel Packages 2024/2025

60 moscow trips. compare tour itineraries from 45 tour companies. 308 reviews. 4.7/5 avg rating., popular moscow tours.

St Petersburg & Moscow in Style - Winter

St Petersburg & Moscow in Style - Winter

  • Explore the majestic St Petersburg & Moscow on private city tours
  • Admire the rich Russian history, art and architecture
  • Travel to Moscow on a highspeed train
  • Enjoy the local cuisine in stylish restaurants

Lower Volga Voyage

Lower Volga Voyage

  • Visit magnificent Red Square and Kremlin and examine the collection at theKremlin’s State Armory.
  • Experience Russia’s diverse musical traditions at lively folk music performances
  • Explore Volgograd, the site of the decisive battle of World War II’s eastern front

Volga Dream Russian River Cruise

Volga Dream Russian River Cruise

St Petersburg & Moscow in Style - Summer

St Petersburg & Moscow in Style - Summer

White Russian - 7 days

White Russian - 7 days

  • Discover Moscow's UNESCO-listed Red Square, home to spectacular St Basil’s Cathedral, Lenin's Mausoleum and the historic GUM Department store
  • Explore the grounds of Moscow's mighty Kremlin, with its numerous governmentbuildings, gold-domed cathedrals and the giant tsar bell
  • Celebrate New Year's Eve in Moscow!
  • Take in the highlights of St Petersburg including a guided tour of the exquisite Church on Spilled Blood, Peter & Paul Fortress and Cathedral
  • Take a guided tour of the remarkable Hermitage Museum at the Winter Palace

Vodka Shot - 6 days

Vodka Shot - 6 days

  • Explore the beautiful city of St Petersburg, including the exquisite Church on Spilled Blood, Peter & Paul Fortress and Nevsky Prospekt
  • Marvel at the dazzling array of art and exhibits in the world-famous Hermitage Museum, at the Winter Palace in St Petersburg
  • Discover a lavish residence of the tsars on a day trip to Catherine Palace at Tsarkoe Selo (winter: mid-October to April) or Peterhof Palace and gardens (summer: May to mid-October)
  • Take in the highlights of the capital on a walking tour, visiting Moscow's famous Red Square, home to the historic GUM Department Store, Lenin’s Mausoleum and spectacular St Basil’s Cathedral
  • Take a guided tour of the Moscow Kremlin, Russia’s political power house. Stroll around the grounds of this fortified complex, visit the Kremlin's cathedrals and see the mighty Tsar Bell

Route of the Romanovs - 10 days

Route of the Romanovs - 10 days

  • Learn about the last days of the Romanovs in Yekaterinburg, visiting the sites where Tsar Nicolas II and his family were assassinated and buried
  • Straddle two continents at the famous obelisk Europe/Asia border marker in Yekaterinburg
  • Experience the Trans-Siberian railway on an overnight train journey from Moscow to Yekaterinburg

New Year's in Moscow - 9 days

New Year's in Moscow - 9 days

  • Visit Catherine Palace at Tsarkoe Selo on Christmas Day and marvel at the incredible Amber Room
  • Spend a night in Novgorod, an ancient city by the Volkhov River - explore the kremlin, cathedral and other sights and enjoy a traditional Russian banya (sauna)

All Moscow , expedition cruises, self guided adventures and vacation packages. Find the best guided and expert planned vacation and holiday packages. Read more about Moscow

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Small Group Moscow Tours

Small Group Moscow Tours

Back in the USSR - 7 days

Russian Revolution - 9 days

Russian Revolution - 9 days

  • Visit historic Novgorod, an ancient city which straddles the Volkhov River. Explore the attractive riverside kremlin and experience a traditional Russian banya (sauna)

The Snowball - 6 days

The Snowball - 6 days

  • Visit Catherine Palace at Tsarkoe Selo and marvel at the incredible Amber Room

Mood for Moscow - 4 days

Mood for Moscow - 4 days

  • Head underground to visit a Stalinist-era Soviet Bunker on an optional excursion
  • Stroll to the vibrant Izmailovo Market, which lies behind the walls of an ancient Kremlin, and shop for an array of souvenirs

Best Moscow Tours by Duration

Tours, Cruises & Private Trips

Best Moscow Tours by Price

Top Moscow Attractions & Experiences

Moscow Tours & Travel Guide

Moscow Attractions & Landmarks Guide

Moscow reviews & ratings, capitals of the north.

some hotels could have been better

It was jam packed with every place I wanted to go and see. I especially love my photo of us setting out on the night time river cruise in St Petersburg and the Peter...

I really did not buy much and what I did buy was small gifts for others .

Johanna-Marie

Good hotels, some better than others. Interesting itinerary

Too rushed. Optional tour rather too short

See all Moscow reviews

Traveling to Moscow, an FAQ

1. Does Travelstride have all the tour operators?

2. How does the Member Savings program save me money?

3. Can I trust the tour operator and trip reviews on Travelstride?

4. What does ‘Stride Preferred’ mean?

Get Organized — Unleash Your Creativity

Devonthink for mac.

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Focus on your work and let DEVONthink remember all the details. Collect, organize, edit and annotate documents of any kind. Have them automatically analyzed, connected, and filed. Sync them between your Mac, iPhone, and iPad.

DEVONthink keeps all your documents in easy-to-backup databases and presents them to you in a variety of ways. Many documents can be viewed and edited without opening them in another application. Read web pages as if they were local documents.

DEVONthink Pro scans paper documents and makes them searchable, imports email, and even downloads complete web sites.

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Don’t fight the information flood alone. Let DEVONthink for Mac categorize documents based on how you filed similar documents before. Add smart rules to file documents, rename them, or process them in other ways automatically.

Later retrieve the data you need using DEVONthink’s fast and flexible search . Find similar documents with keywords extracted from the document and the unique See Also function , or filter your database by dates, marks, tags, or geolocation.

Smart groups present related data based on saved searches, and reminders make sure you’ll not forget to work on your evil genius master plan. Add interesting materials to the reading list .

Collect, analyze, summarize, write: View all your data in one place, use tags to quickly organize documents, and write in editors optimized for plain text, rich text, and Markdown. Smart templates are a great starting point for new documents.

Insert manual or automatic cross-references , add annotations to any documents, and enrich your data with custom metadata . Imprint PDFs and images with customizable stamps and add Bates Numbers to them. Two full screen modes help you stay focused.

Store your documents in self-contained databases or just add references to external files. Encrypt databases for maximum privacy. Clip data from other apps with a keystroke or write notes and add them to the inbox to file them later. With its many extensions DEVONthink easily integrates into your workflow.

Add links to your documents to all apps that take web addresses , e.g. OmniFocus or Apple Mail, or export your documents in their original file formats. Give your co-workers access with the built-in web interface (Server edition only) . DEVONthink never holds your data hostage .

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Use your databases on all your Macs, iPads, and iPhones by synchronizing them between your devices . You decide what data is synced, when, and where. Strong encryption makes sure that your data belongs to you , not to your service provider or us.

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Have your important documents with you all the time with DEVONthink To Go . Designed as a standalone app it allows you to not only view but also work with your data while you’re away from your Mac. Organize your documents, add notes, annotate PDFs, or clip data from the web. Use the fast search and predefined smart groups to quickly find what you need.

DEVONthink grows with your needs. Add web feeds to your database to automatically import new articles, or download and archive complete web sites . The concordance with its word cloud gives you a real-time analysis of your data.

Flexible smart rules and reminders let you automate recurring tasks without being a programmer. Integrate DEVONthink with other software using AppleScript and script-driven smart templates . The possibilities are endless.

The longer I use this tool, the more elegant my workflow becomes. Frank Thissen, Educator

Which edition of DEVONthink would you like to download?

Version 3.9.6. Requires macOS Mojave or later.

Compare editions

Which edition of DEVONthink would you like to buy?

VAT or sales tax may apply. Version 3.9.6. Requires macOS Mojave or later.

Buy as student or for an NPO

2018 Primetime Emmy & James Beard Award Winner

In Transit: Notes from the Underground

Jun 06 2018.

Spend some time in one of Moscow’s finest museums.

Subterranean commuting might not be anyone’s idea of a good time, but even in a city packing the war-games treasures and priceless bejeweled eggs of the Kremlin Armoury and the colossal Soviet pavilions of the VDNKh , the Metro holds up as one of Moscow’s finest museums. Just avoid rush hour.

The Metro is stunning and provides an unrivaled insight into the city’s psyche, past and present, but it also happens to be the best way to get around. Moscow has Uber, and the Russian version called Yandex Taxi , but also some nasty traffic. Metro trains come around every 90 seconds or so, at a more than 99 percent on-time rate. It’s also reasonably priced, with a single ride at 55 cents (and cheaper in bulk). From history to tickets to rules — official and not — here’s what you need to know to get started.

A Brief Introduction Buying Tickets Know Before You Go (Down) Rules An Easy Tour

A Brief Introduction

Moscow’s Metro was a long time coming. Plans for rapid transit to relieve the city’s beleaguered tram system date back to the Imperial era, but a couple of wars and a revolution held up its development. Stalin revived it as part of his grand plan to modernize the Soviet Union in the 1920s and 30s. The first lines and tunnels were constructed with help from engineers from the London Underground, although Stalin’s secret police decided that they had learned too much about Moscow’s layout and had them arrested on espionage charges and deported.

The beauty of its stations (if not its trains) is well-documented, and certainly no accident. In its illustrious first phases and particularly after the Second World War, the greatest architects of Soviet era were recruited to create gleaming temples celebrating the Revolution, the USSR, and the war triumph. No two stations are exactly alike, and each of the classic showpieces has a theme. There are world-famous shrines to Futurist architecture, a celebration of electricity, tributes to individuals and regions of the former Soviet Union. Each marble slab, mosaic tile, or light fixture was placed with intent, all in service to a station’s aesthetic; each element, f rom the smallest brass ear of corn to a large blood-spattered sword on a World War II mural, is an essential part of the whole.

devonthink safari extension

The Metro is a monument to the Soviet propaganda project it was intended to be when it opened in 1935 with the slogan “Building a Palace for the People”. It brought the grand interiors of Imperial Russia to ordinary Muscovites, celebrated the Soviet Union’s past achievements while promising its citizens a bright Soviet future, and of course, it was a show-piece for the world to witness the might and sophistication of life in the Soviet Union.

It may be a museum, but it’s no relic. U p to nine million people use it daily, more than the London Underground and New York Subway combined. (Along with, at one time, about 20 stray dogs that learned to commute on the Metro.)

In its 80+ year history, the Metro has expanded in phases and fits and starts, in step with the fortunes of Moscow and Russia. Now, partly in preparation for the World Cup 2018, it’s also modernizing. New trains allow passengers to walk the entire length of the train without having to change carriages. The system is becoming more visitor-friendly. (There are helpful stickers on the floor marking out the best selfie spots .) But there’s a price to modernity: it’s phasing out one of its beloved institutions, the escalator attendants. Often they are middle-aged or elderly women—“ escalator grandmas ” in news accounts—who have held the post for decades, sitting in their tiny kiosks, scolding commuters for bad escalator etiquette or even bad posture, or telling jokes . They are slated to be replaced, when at all, by members of the escalator maintenance staff.

For all its achievements, the Metro lags behind Moscow’s above-ground growth, as Russia’s capital sprawls ever outwards, generating some of the world’s worst traffic jams . But since 2011, the Metro has been in the middle of an ambitious and long-overdue enlargement; 60 new stations are opening by 2020. If all goes to plan, the 2011-2020 period will have brought 125 miles of new tracks and over 100 new stations — a 40 percent increase — the fastest and largest expansion phase in any period in the Metro’s history.

Facts: 14 lines Opening hours: 5 a.m-1 a.m. Rush hour(s): 8-10 a.m, 4-8 p.m. Single ride: 55₽ (about 85 cents) Wi-Fi network-wide

devonthink safari extension

Buying Tickets

  • Ticket machines have a button to switch to English.
  • You can buy specific numbers of rides: 1, 2, 5, 11, 20, or 60. Hold up fingers to show how many rides you want to buy.
  • There is also a 90-minute ticket , which gets you 1 trip on the metro plus an unlimited number of transfers on other transport (bus, tram, etc) within 90 minutes.
  • Or, you can buy day tickets with unlimited rides: one day (218₽/ US$4), three days (415₽/US$7) or seven days (830₽/US$15). Check the rates here to stay up-to-date.
  • If you’re going to be using the Metro regularly over a few days, it’s worth getting a Troika card , a contactless, refillable card you can use on all public transport. Using the Metro is cheaper with one of these: a single ride is 36₽, not 55₽. Buy them and refill them in the Metro stations, and they’re valid for 5 years, so you can keep it for next time. Or, if you have a lot of cash left on it when you leave, you can get it refunded at the Metro Service Centers at Ulitsa 1905 Goda, 25 or at Staraya Basmannaya 20, Building 1.
  • You can also buy silicone bracelets and keychains with built-in transport chips that you can use as a Troika card. (A Moscow Metro Fitbit!) So far, you can only get these at the Pushkinskaya metro station Live Helpdesk and souvenir shops in the Mayakovskaya and Trubnaya metro stations. The fare is the same as for the Troika card.
  • You can also use Apple Pay and Samsung Pay.

Rules, spoken and unspoken

No smoking, no drinking, no filming, no littering. Photography is allowed, although it used to be banned.

Stand to the right on the escalator. Break this rule and you risk the wrath of the legendary escalator attendants. (No shenanigans on the escalators in general.)

Get out of the way. Find an empty corner to hide in when you get off a train and need to stare at your phone. Watch out getting out of the train in general; when your train doors open, people tend to appear from nowhere or from behind ornate marble columns, walking full-speed.

Always offer your seat to elderly ladies (what are you, a monster?).

An Easy Tour

This is no Metro Marathon ( 199 stations in 20 hours ). It’s an easy tour, taking in most—though not all—of the notable stations, the bulk of it going clockwise along the Circle line, with a couple of short detours. These stations are within minutes of one another, and the whole tour should take about 1-2 hours.

Start at Mayakovskaya Metro station , at the corner of Tverskaya and Garden Ring,  Triumfalnaya Square, Moskva, Russia, 125047.

1. Mayakovskaya.  Named for Russian Futurist Movement poet Vladimir Mayakovsky and an attempt to bring to life the future he imagined in his poems. (The Futurist Movement, natch, was all about a rejecting the past and celebrating all things speed, industry, modern machines, youth, modernity.) The result: an Art Deco masterpiece that won the National Grand Prix for architecture at the New York World’s Fair in 1939. It’s all smooth, rounded shine and light, and gentle arches supported by columns of dark pink marble and stainless aircraft steel. Each of its 34 ceiling niches has a mosaic. During World War II, the station was used as an air-raid shelter and, at one point, a bunker for Stalin. He gave a subdued but rousing speech here in Nov. 6, 1941 as the Nazis bombed the city above.

devonthink safari extension

Take the 3/Green line one station to:

2. Belorusskaya. Opened in 1952, named after the connected Belarussky Rail Terminal, which runs trains between Moscow and Belarus. This is a light marble affair with a white, cake-like ceiling, lined with Belorussian patterns and 12 Florentine ceiling mosaics depicting life in Belarussia when it was built.

devonthink safari extension

Transfer onto the 1/Brown line. Then, one stop (clockwise) t o:

3. Novoslobodskaya.  This station was designed around the stained-glass panels, which were made in Latvia, because Alexey Dushkin, the Soviet starchitect who dreamed it up (and also designed Mayakovskaya station) couldn’t find the glass and craft locally. The stained glass is the same used for Riga’s Cathedral, and the panels feature plants, flowers, members of the Soviet intelligentsia (musician, artist, architect) and geometric shapes.

devonthink safari extension

Go two stops east on the 1/Circle line to:

4. Komsomolskaya. Named after the Komsomol, or the Young Communist League, this might just be peak Stalin Metro style. Underneath the hub for three regional railways, it was intended to be a grand gateway to Moscow and is today its busiest station. It has chandeliers; a yellow ceiling with Baroque embellishments; and in the main hall, a colossal red star overlaid on golden, shimmering tiles. Designer Alexey Shchusev designed it as an homage to the speech Stalin gave at Red Square on Nov. 7, 1941, in which he invoked Russia’s illustrious military leaders as a pep talk to Soviet soldiers through the first catastrophic year of the war.   The station’s eight large mosaics are of the leaders referenced in the speech, such as Alexander Nevsky, a 13th-century prince and military commander who bested German and Swedish invading armies.

devonthink safari extension

One more stop clockwise to Kurskaya station,  and change onto the 3/Blue  line, and go one stop to:

5. Baumanskaya.   Opened in 1944. Named for the Bolshevik Revolutionary Nikolai Bauman , whose monument and namesake district are aboveground here. Though he seemed like a nasty piece of work (he apparently once publicly mocked a woman he had impregnated, who later hung herself), he became a Revolutionary martyr when he was killed in 1905 in a skirmish with a monarchist, who hit him on the head with part of a steel pipe. The station is in Art Deco style with atmospherically dim lighting, and a series of bronze sculptures of soldiers and homefront heroes during the War. At one end, there is a large mosaic portrait of Lenin.

devonthink safari extension

Stay on that train direction one more east to:

6. Elektrozavodskaya. As you may have guessed from the name, this station is the Metro’s tribute to all thing electrical, built in 1944 and named after a nearby lightbulb factory. It has marble bas-relief sculptures of important figures in electrical engineering, and others illustrating the Soviet Union’s war-time struggles at home. The ceiling’s recurring rows of circular lamps give the station’s main tunnel a comforting glow, and a pleasing visual effect.

devonthink safari extension

Double back two stops to Kurskaya station , and change back to the 1/Circle line. Sit tight for six stations to:

7. Kiyevskaya. This was the last station on the Circle line to be built, in 1954, completed under Nikita Khrushchev’ s guidance, as a tribute to his homeland, Ukraine. Its three large station halls feature images celebrating Ukraine’s contributions to the Soviet Union and Russo-Ukrainian unity, depicting musicians, textile-working, soldiers, farmers. (One hall has frescoes, one mosaics, and the third murals.) Shortly after it was completed, Khrushchev condemned the architectural excesses and unnecessary luxury of the Stalin era, which ushered in an epoch of more austere Metro stations. According to the legend at least, he timed the policy in part to ensure no Metro station built after could outshine Kiyevskaya.

devonthink safari extension

Change to the 3/Blue line and go one stop west.

8. Park Pobedy. This is the deepest station on the Metro, with one of the world’s longest escalators, at 413 feet. If you stand still, the escalator ride to the surface takes about three minutes .) Opened in 2003 at Victory Park, the station celebrates two of Russia’s great military victories. Each end has a mural by Georgian artist Zurab Tsereteli, who also designed the “ Good Defeats Evil ” statue at the UN headquarters in New York. One mural depicts the Russian generals’ victory over the French in 1812 and the other, the German surrender of 1945. The latter is particularly striking; equal parts dramatic, triumphant, and gruesome. To the side, Red Army soldiers trample Nazi flags, and if you look closely there’s some blood spatter among the detail. Still, the biggest impressions here are the marble shine of the chessboard floor pattern and the pleasingly geometric effect if you view from one end to the other.

devonthink safari extension

Keep going one more stop west to:

9. Slavyansky Bulvar.  One of the Metro’s youngest stations, it opened in 2008. With far higher ceilings than many other stations—which tend to have covered central tunnels on the platforms—it has an “open-air” feel (or as close to it as you can get, one hundred feet under). It’s an homage to French architect Hector Guimard, he of the Art Nouveau entrances for the Paris M é tro, and that’s precisely what this looks like: A Moscow homage to the Paris M é tro, with an additional forest theme. A Cyrillic twist on Guimard’s Metro-style lettering over the benches, furnished with t rees and branch motifs, including creeping vines as towering lamp-posts.

devonthink safari extension

Stay on the 3/Blue line and double back four stations to:

10. Arbatskaya. Its first iteration, Arbatskaya-Smolenskaya station, was damaged by German bombs in 1941. It was rebuilt in 1953, and designed to double as a bomb shelter in the event of nuclear war, although unusually for stations built in the post-war phase, this one doesn’t have a war theme. It may also be one of the system’s most elegant: Baroque, but toned down a little, with red marble floors and white ceilings with gilded bronze c handeliers.

devonthink safari extension

Jump back on the 3/Blue line  in the same direction and take it one more stop:

11. Ploshchad Revolyutsii (Revolution Square). Opened in 1938, and serving Red Square and the Kremlin . Its renowned central hall has marble columns flanked by 76 bronze statues of Soviet heroes: soldiers, students, farmers, athletes, writers, parents. Some of these statues’ appendages have a yellow sheen from decades of Moscow’s commuters rubbing them for good luck. Among the most popular for a superstitious walk-by rub: the snout of a frontier guard’s dog, a soldier’s gun (where the touch of millions of human hands have tapered the gun barrel into a fine, pointy blade), a baby’s foot, and a woman’s knee. (A brass rooster also sports the telltale gold sheen, though I am told that rubbing the rooster is thought to bring bad luck. )

Now take the escalator up, and get some fresh air.

devonthink safari extension

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Clip to Devonthink Safari extension for Mac disabled

The latest release of Safari Technology Review: Release 80 (Safari 12.2, WebKit 14608.1.16), which I use because of a conflict Safari has with a different third-party extension, no longer supports the Devonthink Clipping extension for Mac Safari. Further it removes all extensions that are not certified for use with the browser.

The extension (v. 1.3) seems still to work with the general release of Safari for Mac. But it would be incredibly inconvenient to keep switching between browsers (loading the same page already open in one into the other…etc.) I also have Firefox and Chrome for the desktop, and these permit the Devonthink clipping extension to operate. But again, the same logisitical problem switching between browsers (and having to compromise with other browser-exclusive anomalies and idiosyncracies).

Does anyone know anything about this? It seems as browser developers necessarily get security crazy, it’s very difficult for production application developers to keep up with mounting obstacles to operation.

We don’t code for betas or technology previews. The browser extensions are made for public releases.

Thanks for the fast reply. I suspected as much. Easy enough to deduce, as Devonthing clipper works perfectly well in the standard Safari browser. I use Devonthink a lot more than that other clipping extension, so I guess I’ll revert to Safari public release. I had switched at the suggestion of the other vendor. Can you briefly say, without getting into the technicalities, which I wouldn’t understand anyway, whether it gets harder and harder to track and adapt to Apple’s architectural “adjustments?” Thanks again.

whether it gets harder and harder to track and adapt to Apple’s architectural “adjustments"?

Generally, it’s not but their Quality Assurance has been lacking in recent releases (hence Sierra → High Sierra) . And their blurring of the lines between iOS and macOS has created some unexpected trouble, for developers and users alike.

The simple solution is to not use Safari as your primary browser. I find Safari slow, having constant issues with extensions, and poor in displaying a significant number of websites. Other browsers such as Chrome, Chromium, and Firefox are also reported to be more secure and and have desirable features not available in Safari. They also have more flexible user settings. As a personal example Microsoft’s OneNote (can turn webpages into editable articles and allow removal of marketing and ads) runs 3x-5x faster in Chrome than in Safari and gives more consistent results.

Frankly, I am at the point that with all of Apple’s buggy software releases and outrageously priced and closed hardware, if I could find another reliable OS and hardware platform that could properly run Mac Apps, I would dump Mac OS and Macintosh completely. Unfortunately, after 20 years of using Macs, I am so entrenched with Mac Apps that it is simply not practical for me to migrate to Windows or Linux unless there is a practical and reliable method of running Mac Apps, of which I have yet to discover. That said I am quite fed up of being a volunteer beta tester, as we all now are, for buggy Apple products.

I go in the opposite direction with regard to browsers: Safari primary, but I pop over to Brave if I need a particular extension. Almost always, that’s the Buffer extension.

I love DevonThink but I find the clipper almost useless for articles. I go into Readability mode and save a PDF of the page to DevonThink. Hopefully, the DT clipper will improve soon; the fact that Bear and Evernote, to name two examples, have good clippers that are light-years better than DT’s says that this is a solved problem.

I sympathize with GymW, and understand what Mitch_Wagner says. At any time, I have at least four current versions of what I’ll call “major” browsers (let’s say, those with at least 10MM users) on my desktop. Not open at once, but among which I switch for default position. Safari predominates, and it does have its faults and consistently has always done (and as for speed, I think the truth probably lies somewhere between its Jetstream readings—a test that Apple itself devised, so hmmmm…—which make it the fastest, and what Gym_W has to say).

I am also not sure about the status of the clipping extensions that predominate in my research workflow. My problem with Safari (and led to installing the Technology Preview version) was that Evernote Webclipper revealed what is apparently an arcane bug (which, after extensive testing and back and forth with Evernote support, they admitted they were aware of, including its rarity, and were struggling to fix it for a future release) and since I use Evernote with equal frequency to Devonthink, this was a serious problem (especially now that DtO Pro clipping is restricted to the gold release of Safari and not developer versions). In the meanwhile, I am currently using Vivaldi as my default browser—this uses Chrome versions of extensions, and everything is cooking, including my third go-to clipper, Zotero, which was a disaster for awhile on Safari.

I don’t envy developers of productivity tools like Devonthink and Evernote, which are predicated on heavy use of the Internet, and particularly with web access to research resources.

I would attribute the inconsistent behavior of DtPO not to the shortcomings of the extension, but to the vagaries of how a site elects to be configured. Any extension like Devonthink’s, which is scraping content and reformatting it as PDF, has to run the gauntlet of how the site is set to deal, among other things, with Reader View renderings (which may or may not strip out images), with paywall security measures… most sites with page content you want to clip, even when you have logged in as a paid subscriber, interpret the call from DtPO to download content as an attempt to view from someone not logged in. Or the page is simply configured not to give up any more than the URL used to access it. The only alternative in the latter instances, is either to use Mac OS print services to PDF shared to Devonthink and then inside DtPO to add notes and tags and so forth, as well to assign the document to its proper folder in the db, or to open the page in DtPO (signing in in that built-in browser) and saving the PDF from inside the app.

Whatever we do, it seems we are more at the mercy of the developers of the OS and/or the web browsers in question, not to mention Website Management of millions of sites, and less so at those of the hard-working developers who not only have to keep us happy with better and better features and functionality, but have to try to keep pace with the superset of factors out of their control.

I just updated to Safari 13.0 and it disabled the Clip-to-DevonThink extension. I had a look at https://www.devontechnologies.com/support/download/extras and it looks like there is no Clip to DevonThink extension for Safari anymore. What happened? What do you recommend should I do? So far it has not been my plan to upgrade to DevonThink 3.0 and I wonder if this upgrade would solve my problem. I used the extension very much and despite all well-known arguments against Safari I like it.

From DEVONthink 3’s Release Notes…

image

You just need to enable the extension in Safari’s Preferences > Extensions .

I am sorry but to me it looks more complicated. The extension has been there and I am aware of how to handle Safari extensions in general. But now the extension has been taken away by Safari after update to 13.0. And I can’t find it for new installation either on the DevonTechnologies website nor the AppStore.

Did anyone else upgrade to Safari 13 and experience the same?

I see there a second discussion has started on the iusse in the forum named “Safari extension?” (I can’t include the link in the post).

Here’s the link: https://discourse.devontechnologies.com/t/safari-extension/50197

I observe a vast improvement in Web clipper functionality, on both the Mac and iOS versions. I’ve only tried it on a few articles so far, but it seems to work great now. Big changes recently, perhaps in the December update ?

:slight_smile:

IMAGES

  1. DEVONthink-Browser-Safari-Erweiterung

    devonthink safari extension

  2. How to Archive Websites and Articles on Mac

    devonthink safari extension

  3. DEVONtechnologies

    devonthink safari extension

  4. Safari

    devonthink safari extension

  5. Show a badge in Safari extension if visited page is already clipped

    devonthink safari extension

  6. DEVONtechnologies

    devonthink safari extension

COMMENTS

  1. DEVONtechnologies

    DEVONthink has its own browser extension for this purpose. Here's how to install it in most common browsers. Safari: DEVONthink comes with a native Safari extension so it's installed when you first launch the application. To enable it, open Safari's Preferences > Extensions and enable the Clip to DEVONthink extension.

  2. DEVONthink Safari Extension Tip

    There is a new version 1.0.3 of the extension available that fixes some bugs and also allows the user to set a shortcut to activate the extension. For those of you who are getting icon overload in the toolbar with all the new extensions, note that if you will be using a shortcut, you can customize the Safari toolbar and drag the DEVONthink clipping icon out of the toolbar. Edited to add the ...

  3. DEVONtechnologies

    Safari 13 brings a number of great security enhancements but also one that directly affects you if you're a DEVONthink user: It no longer supports traditional browser extensions including Ghostery or our old Clip to DEVONthink extension. Browser extensions now have to be either mini standalone apps or be part of a larger application.

  4. Safari Web Clipper

    Clipping a selection could be done with the services, accessible in Safari > Services. You could also try setting a hot key for Copy Selection in DEVONthink's Preferences > Sorter. Thank you. I was looking in the wrong place - Safari-> Extensions rather than Safari->Preferences->Extensions.

  5. Safari extension?

    Clip to Devonthink Safari extension for Mac disabled. jongilizwe September 20, 2019, 3:35am 2. Hmmm it's still working for me on DT3. In fact it's the only one of my extensions that is still working . DataDavid September 20, 2019, 6:30am 3. I have the same problem with the upgrade to Safari 13 and I reported it yesterday in a older ...

  6. DEVONtechnologies

    For DEVONthink 3 we have revisited every aspect of the app, ... The Clip to DEVONthink browser extension for Safari is now a native extension. Metadata: New option for adding custom metadata to support situation-specific needs. It supports multiple data types including, e.g., sets, Booleans, and numbers (Pro and Server editions only). ...

  7. In & Out : Extensions and Bookmarklets

    Browser extensions add functionality to your favorite web browser. DEVONthink's Clip to DEVONthink extension usually appears as a nautilus icon in the web browser's toolbar. When clicked, the Clip to DEVONthink will identify data about the current page in the browser and open the Web Clip section of the Sorter.Here you can simply select the location to clip the content or add optional metadata ...

  8. iPad Diaries: Advanced File Management and Research with DEVONthink

    The DEVONthink extension fetches text and images for a twitter.com link shared from Twitterrific. Capturing an image from Photos. Clipping a webpage from Safari to DEVONthink. There's a URL scheme to create bookmarks and text notes in DEVONthink, but I've mostly used the app's built-in 'New Item' dialog to manually add files to my ...

  9. Download/Install

    Installing DEVONthink. 1. Once DT is downloaded, go to the Downloads folder on your Mac and double-click DEVONthink_3.dmg to install.. 2. Copy DT3 to the Applications folder.. 3. Go to Applications, start DT3.. 4. Once DT3 is started, select Install Add-Ons under the DEVONthink 3 menu (DEVONthink 3 -> Install Add-Ons…). *Note: The Safari browser extension is installed by default in DT3, but ...

  10. Is there a way to apply a Safari extension to DEVONthink?

    … to DEVONthink internal browser? I like to use Ghostery to control which sites are allowed to track me and present me with Ads, so I use it in most of my browsers, from which I usually "Clip" webarchives into DT. It would be quite interesting to benefit from this extension in DT. Thank you, Rod

  11. Getting Started : Installing, Updating, Uninstalling

    Download an installer from the Download page. If your browser isn't set to open safe downloaded files, double-click the ZIP file to decompress it. You will see a disk image file. Double-click the disk image to open it. Drag and drop the application from the disk image to the Applications folder shortcut. After the application has copied, press ...

  12. Clip to DEVONthink

    Clip selected web content to your DEVONthink database. Press Shift-Control-C to activate from the keyboard. ... This extension works like a web clipper, but it downloads articles in markdown format. Readwise Highlighter. 4.5 (42) Average rating 4.5 out of 5. 42 ratings. Google doesn't verify reviews. Learn more about results and reviews.

  13. Clip to DEVONthink

    Download Clip to DEVONthink for Firefox. Clip selected web content to your DEVONthink database directly from Firefox.

  14. DEVONthink Safari extension

    I'm running DT v3.0.4, on my 2019 16" MacBook Pro (running v10.15.3), with Safari v13.0.5 installed. In Safari, I have the Clip to DEVONthink v3.0.3 extension installed, and as I watch the toolbar, the extension is "blinking" there/not there. It doesn't matter whether DT3 is launched and running or not. Weird.

  15. Moscow to Revolutionize School Education with Online School ...

    Moscow school children are about to face the new era of education. The city authorities have successfully conducted a one-year Moscow Online School pilot project — innovative educational cloud ...

  16. Tsaritsyno: The idyllic palace park where Muscovites escape the big

    Tsaritsyno Park offers one of the most impressive examples of Russian garden design from the 18 th and 19 th centuries. Located in southern Moscow, it is just a short walk from (you guessed it!)

  17. DEVONtechnologies

    For capturing content, select Tools > Document: Capture and choose your desired format to clip the page to the current group. Alternatively, Control -click the page and select Capture Page from the context menu. Among the various options you will also find Clip to DEVONthink, if you prefer the extension. Drag images or selected text from a page ...

  18. Top Moscow Tours & Vacations 2024/2025 [reviews & photos]

    60 Moscow trips. Compare tour itineraries from 45 tour companies. 308 reviews. 4.7/5 avg rating. Choose your trip style: Design custom trip. Group Tour. Private Guided. Small Group. River Cruise.

  19. Clip to Safari?

    Feeling pretty stupid right now. I've upgraded to DevonThink 3 and am running Catalina. Consequently, I don't have access to the simple extension that DT had in the past where a simple key combo captured the web page address I was on and would then pass it to DT. DT3 apparently has a Clip to Safari feature but I can't for the life of me figure out where it is and how to activate it ...

  20. DEVONtechnologies

    Focus on your work and let DEVONthink remember all the details. Collect, organize, edit and annotate documents of any kind. Have them automatically analyzed, connected, and filed. Sync them between your Mac, iPhone, and iPad. DEVONthink keeps all your documents in easy-to-backup databases and presents them to you in a variety of ways.

  21. How to get around Moscow using the underground metro

    The Metro is a monument to the Soviet propaganda project it was intended to be when it opened in 1935 with the slogan "Building a Palace for the People". It brought the grand interiors of Imperial Russia to ordinary Muscovites, celebrated the Soviet Union's past achievements while promising its citizens a bright Soviet future, and of course, it was a show-piece for the world to witness ...

  22. Clip to Devonthink Safari extension for Mac disabled

    The latest release of Safari Technology Review: Release 80 (Safari 12.2, WebKit 14608.1.16), which I use because of a conflict Safari has with a different third-party extension, no longer supports the Devonthink Clipping extension for Mac Safari. Further it removes all extensions that are not certified for use with the browser. The extension (v. 1.3) seems still to work with the general ...