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Widening Horizons, Adding New DimensionsFor over a decade, research professionals all over the world have come to rely on ATLAS.ti to help them with their research projects–especially when their data includes more than only text, i.e. images, audio, and video material. We were the first to realize that text alone isn't enough. Expanding the dimensions of the material that our users could draw from has always been our utmost priority. We pioneered the use of multimedia data and made it as easy to analyze as text-based data. Now we have been hard at work to continue the innovation for which ATLAS.ti has always been renowned. What if, we thought, users could draw on not just a handful of formats but on ALL the data sources they like. And what if they could tag not only documents in pretty much any popular format, but no less than the whole world. ATLAS.ti now supports PDF natively. Because of this, not only do you gain access to the myriads of documents published every day in this format, but you can now directly assign the output of any conceivable program in the world that can be saved to PDF--including the Web. And ATLAS.ti now integrates Google Earth™, literally adding another whole dimension to your work. Full Native PDF SupportInfo: Using PDF in ATLAS.ti 6 (323 kB) We’re especially excited about the new full native PDF support that will allow you to work with PDF files in their native layout. Other QDA packages make you strip PDFs down to primitive text files--hardly an adequate way of working. But with ATLAS.ti 6.0 you will be able to keep your original PDFs--layout, graphics, tables and all--so your primary data always remains uncorrupted and complete. Consider the enormous new possibilities:
Geo-CodingInfo: Geo-Coding in ATLAS.ti 6 (652 kB) Another very exciting feature--and one that is likely to change the way you work--is ATLAS.ti's new geo-coding support. ATLAS.ti now embeds Google Earth™ and makes its functionality available from inside the program. This has immense benefits and opens up phantastic new possibilities for your work. Picture, if you will, the world as your ultimate primary document. Freely move around in it and mark any section that interests you. Then, treat that segment exactly the way you are used to in ATLAS.ti. Code it, comment it, and link it to other objects. Use direct hyperlinks from other primary documents for supporting your arguments and for purposes of evidence or illustration. Our geo-coding facility even creates screenshots from any Google Earth™ view and assigns them as graphical primary documents. This "snapshot" helps you save system resources and makes sure that your reference is secured against changes. All features of Google Earth™ are available (including camera angle and height over ground). But the interaction between the two programs is bi-directional, meaning that work done in ATLAS.ti can be directly introduced into Google Earth™. Comment on a marked location in ATLAS.ti, and your comment will be displayed in Google Earth™. Powerful stuff! And that's still not all: Leverage the immense power of community as embodied by Google Earth™ layers, and by the possibility to exchange and directly import Google Earth™'s KMZ files (complex community-created "overlays"). If it weren't so tacky, we'd call it "QDA 2.0." If your work is in or touches on fields such as tourism, geography, urban planning, ethnology, cultural studies, sociology, health, action research, advertising and marketing--or even if you simply like to take and document trips--you are bound to profit from ATLAS.ti's new geo-coding feature. Like us, you will soon wonder how you used to do without it. Audio and Video Transcription and Text-to-Media SynchronizationInfo: Text-to-Media Synchronization in ATLAS.ti 6 (382 kB) Using "F4" software for transcription purposes? ATLAS.ti 6 now lets you import its transcripts directly. But why not cut out the middleman altogether? You may find it more convenient to transcribe directly in ATLAS.ti. ATLAS.ti 6 makes it a breeze to create exact transcriptions from audio and video files either frame-by-frame by typing along with the playback, or customizable by linking an existing transcript to the medium retroactively, i.e. by "striping" it with time code simply by pressing a key. Of course, it also supports the use of foot switches and similar controller devices. For playback, just watch the cursor move smoothly through your text file in sync with the medium (and vice versa)--either document reacts directly to the other one. Your segments can be as long or short as you like. Oh, and if that isn't enough: It also makes for a great karaoke system :) Improved User InterfaceInfo: The User Interface in ATLAS.ti 6 (459 kB) Already previewed in version 5.5, we have further perfected the "magic background" of the ATLAS.ti GUI. Get a quick look at your codes in an original but highly intuitive way right on the main screen. Codes are displayed in a way that is derived from the popular "tag cloud" view typical of Web 2.0 applications. Several unique options for customizing sorting and display make this an unusual but highly interesting new approach, albeit one that must be experienced to be fully appreciated. New kids in the margin: Display code and memo families and network views now show up in the margin area. Code colors can now be explicitly assigned by the user in addition to the dynamic generation of colors (“auto-coloring”) with respect to their analytic properties.
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