Introduction
to Nota Bene
You have probably
never heard of software applications other than the ones considered
to be "market leaders" which are, in all probability, the
ones you use. There are plenty of good reasons for this and there is
plenty of evidence coming from behavioral science experiments that explain
your particular use of computer applications. Part of the reason - actually
a great deal of it - has less to do with capabilities suited to needs
than to marketing. In other words, the best applications do not always
get to be market leaders. But all greatly marketed applications do.
Nota Bene,
TEK, Dreamweaver, Eudora, Pegasus, Star
Office . . . these and other applications are regarded by professionals
to be "the best of breed" - at the top of their respective
fields. However, only the specialists know this and use them. You are
about to join the ranks of those around the world who use Nota Bene
(NB), the suite of applications designed for students and faculty
for their academic research, writing, bibliographic database management,
and non-bibliographic database management.
NB consist of four
applications:
- Nota Bene, the
word processor
- Orbis, the hypertext
search and retrieval application
- Ibidem, the bibliographic
database manager
- Ibid Plus, the
non-bibliographic database manager
Orbis, Ibidem and
- via Ibidem - Ibid Plus can each be accessed by clicking on their respective
icons on the Nota Bene screen (as your mouse pointer hovers over the
icons, each will tell you what it is for). These applications share
the same interface and work seamlessly with each other.

How to represent
what Nota Bene does? Perhaps the best way to create an impression in
your mind of what NBW accomplishes is to ask you to imagine yourself
in the following scenario:
You are sitting
at your desk, writing a paper. The digital equivalent is writing
on
screen in the word-processing application of NB: all the layout rules
of the manual of style are automatically in operation. You are
then
looking for some notes you wrote down and which you need to refer to
for possible incorporation into the paper. The digital equivalent
is
Orbis - and you don't need to recall any names of files, just enter
the search words and click to find your notes about them. You find
your
notes and now you wish to cite the bibliographic reference according
to the capitalization and punctuation rules of the Chicago Manual
of
Style. The equivalent is Ibidem: just click and the citation is done
according to the rules.
For an introduction
to the academic word processing application in Nota Bene, click on Nbwtraining.
You will also find a Web page that will introduce you to another vital
application of the Nota Bene suite with exceptional capacities to search
and retrieve text and to find relationships suitable for qualitative
analysis. This is the purpose of Nota Bene's Orbis.
Finally, you will be building your personal electronic library -- sort
of your own digital card catalog -- and use the bibliographic management
tools provided by Nota Bene's Ibidem.