Notes — Capture What Matters
A note-taking editor built into Charlie that lets you save your ideas, findings, and references without leaving your search feed.
Emerit Science Team
Notes is where you jot down what you want to remember: a snippet of an answer from Charlie, a relevant reference from a news alert, your own interpretation of a result, a rough draft of a summary, or a draft introduction.
The note editor is designed to open quickly and is well-organized: headings, lists, bold, italics, quotes, links—everything you need to write seamlessly without switching apps.
1. Create and edit a note
- 1 On the Notes tab, click New Note. The title is optional—Charliewill infer it from the first few lines if necessary.
- 2 Use the rich-text editor to write freely: headings, lists, bold, italics, links, and quotes. Your work is saved automatically.
- 3 A note can be up to 5,000 characters long. If it exceeds this limit, create a new note or split it into several entries organized by topic.
2. Capture a segment from a conversation
When you read a response from Charlie that interests you, select the passage and create a note from the selection. The citations are preserved—you keep the links to the source articles directly in your note.
You can also start a note directly from an article page (shareable URL of the type /article/...): this is handy for annotating a publication a colleague sent you, or for preparing an article discussion. Charlie suggests the minimum context on the first visit.
3. Temporal grouping
Your notes are automatically grouped by time period (today, yesterday, this week, this month, etc.). You can see at a glance what you wrote at a specific time without having to scroll through a long list.
4. Integration with Market Intelligence
When you read a monitoring report, you can turn an interesting reference into a note with a single click. This is ideal for building, as you go, a annotated library of publications related to your topic.
Tip
Write down your open-ended questions in a separate note. You can come back to them later using Charlie, without worrying about forgetting them in the middle of a session.
Take your first note
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