Skip to the content
FuseBase FuseBase
  • Why FuseBase

    Why FuseBase
    Book a demo with our experts to build your custom workflow
    • Solutions

      Solutions
      Mid-Size Companies

      Growing 50–1000+ Employee Companies

      Professional Services

      Get one-stop-shop for collaboration

      Agencies

      Align teams and clients in one branded space

      Consultants & Coaches

      Deliver exceptional client service

      Wedding and Events

      Stress-free way to organize events

      Book a demo with our experts to build your custom workflow
      • Pricing
      • Resources

        Resources
        Blog

        Read the latest collaboration tips

        Guides

        Answer your FuseBase questions

        Roadmap

        See what waits for you in the future

        Templates

        Save time on creating all from scratch

        Affiliate partners

        Find new opportunities and benefit with us

        Webinars & eBooks

        Expand your knowledge of client collaboration

        Media Kit

        Get the assets to mention and refer to our brand

        Contact us

        Get growth advice from our experts

        Book a demo with our experts to build your custom workflow
        • Book a demo Get Started Free
        • Book a demo with our experts to build your custom workflow
        • Sign in
        • Book a demo
        • Get started for free
        Categories
        • All articles
        • Best Practices & Templates
        • Client Relationships
        • Knowledge Base
        • Personal Productivity
        • Super Documents
        • Teamwork
        • Updates and News
        TEST BANNER
        • Home
        • Blog
        • Best Practices & Templates...
        • How to Organize Personal and Collaborative Projects
        Best Practices & Templates

        How to Organize Personal and Collaborative Projects

        • by Dildora Rozikhodjaeva
        • December 2, 2021
        • 5 Min read

        Carmen Mandel-Cesáreo is a citizen scientist collaborating with NASA, LIGO, NAOJ and other international space observatories on big-data global projects. She shared with us how she uses FuseBase (formerly Nimbus) to organize her work and keep all important information structured.

        Carmen Mandel-Cesáreo’s bio

        Carmen classifies many subjects, such as glitches in the detection of gravitational waves, stellar luminosity, radio signals, galaxies, exoplanets, space signals and the Mars terrain, among many other collaborations. Her university background is in Computer Science, System Analysis and Mathematics. After a successful corporate career, she began to volunteer her technical skills as a technical translator, technical writer and photographer to non-profit organizations dedicated to animal welfare and non-human legal rights. Outdoors, Carmen uses long-distance jogging to collect coastal plastic litter and derelict fishing gear for international projects on the mitigation of marine debris and plastic pollution. She advocates for a healthy environment through ethical veganism and conscientious living.

        Use Case written by Carmen Mandel-Cesáreo:

        Greetings everybody!

        I was kindly invited to share my FuseBase (formerly Nimbus) use case.

        Before using FuseBase (formerly Nimbus), I had personal projects and ideas in mind along with new scientific collaborative projects coming up. I wanted to organise both aspects while keeping them separate and orderly, all under one information management tool.

        Using FuseBase desktop, I created two workspaces: one for personal notes and projects entitled “My Desk”. For scientific notes and collaborative projects, I created the workspace “Scientific Collaboration”.

        personal workspace

        Personal workspace

        scientific workspace

        Scientific workspace

        I divided each workspace into Folders. In each folder I created varied notes with text, embeds, whole article clips, links, images, video, highlighted paragraphs and more.

        My Desk Workspace

        I divided this workspace into two main activities: blogging and note-taking. I gave different colours to the folders through the right-click options.

        all notes

        The “My Notes” folder serves as a container of ideas, clips, videos, notes, test-drive of templates, new FuseBase features, designs, miscellaneous material and more. Material for blogs will then move into the “Blogging” folder.

        Scientific Collaboration Workspace

        In this workspace, I organize projects and information in dedicated folders, which I personalize with emojis.

        folders

        There are currently two collaborative projects that deserve extensive note-taking and study material beyond classification duties: LIGO Gravitational Waves and NASA Cloud Observation.

        Let us take a look at each one, which excel in simplicity as this is what works best for me in order to manage the information related to my activities.

        Folder Gravitational Waves

        My collaboration as a citizen scientist with the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) yields a great deal of interesting material that I keep in the folder “Gravitational Waves” for future reading, learning, reviewing and writing.

        Then, I created notes in this folder with different content.

        Folder Gravitational Waves

        In the note “The GW150914 signal” I pasted an article on a historical astronomical event with a lot of information related to my collaborative task. I keep this as reference material. In the second note below, “Notes Miscellanea GW”, I collect more general information on gravitational waves as I read and research on the web. Assigning a colour to a note makes it pop out with a little dot on the left side. In the third note, “Draft Gravitational Waves”, I keep drafts to polish for my public postings.

        When I received an extensive answer from a scientist, I created the note “Sine Waves”, clipping the whole post from a webpage and pasted it directly into this new note.

        Sine Waves note

        Sine Waves note

        The answer contained a great deal of explanations and extensive information addressing my questions, all condensed into a single post. In the original and dynamic webpage, this post would have quickly become buried under many other newer topics; hence, I kept it handy here. The note retained the good original format, thus saving editing cleanup time. Then, I highlighted text for study, further questions and investigation. I capture lengthy scrolling articles with the handy Nimbus Capture Select & Scroll tool:

        nimbus capture

        Folder NASA Collaboration

        collaboration

        By capturing and sending atmospheric data in collaboration with NASA as a Cloud Observer, I find myself investigating other topics. It is easy to insert different types of media files into a note while controlling the overall format.

        Folder NASA Collaboration

        In the “Hubble and Light Processing” note above, I keep images, articles and links about the Hubble telescope and the colour-rendering techniques. In the folder “Astronomy Notes”, I clip miscellaneous articles in various formats related to the study of the universe.

        When approaching an additional topic, I create a new note to keep all relevant topics together. I added the note “Cloud Formations” to collect images and information on the various types of clouds and weather phenomena.

        Cloud Formations

        A picture with added background

        I gave the picture on supercells a coloured background through the image options in the three-dot button on the left corner of the image.

        Folder My NASA Interview
        In this folder, I keep an interview article NASA GLOBE did on my collaboration as a citizen scientist. I clipped the whole webpage into a note, which kept the format of the original, thus producing a tidy copy. It became significantly helpful to have this interview in a note when the original webpage domain happened to be changed, making the interview inaccessible for a very long time.

        My use of FuseBase (formerly Nimbus) is pretty straightforward, yet it yields good information management to my needs. The numerous tools make it easy to keep expanding with a clean design.

        Thank you, FuseBase.
        Carmen Mandel-Cesáreo

        Many thanks to Carmen Mandel-Cesáreo for sharing her ideas on organizing information with FuseBase!

        Your experience can be a great inspiration for our whole community

        Write us here

        Related Articles

        Exporting Your Notes From Evernote
        Best Practices & Templates

        Exporting Your Notes From Evernote

        • by kuzmasaf
        • 5 Min read
        Improving Productivity for Remote Teams
        Teamwork

        Improving Productivity for Remote Teams

        • by kuzmasaf
        • 5 Min read
        Top 3 Best Lean Canvas Templates to Use for Business Planning
        Best Practices & Templates

        Top 3 Best Lean Canvas Templates to Use for Business Planning

        • by kuzmasaf
        • 6 Min read
        Contest of Nimbus templates
        Updates and News

        Contest of Nimbus templates

        • by kuzmasaf
        • 3 Min read

        Dildora Rozikhodjaeva

        Found it useful? Share the article with your community


        Related Articles

        Exporting Your Notes From Evernote
        Best Practices & Templates

        Exporting Your Notes From Evernote

        • by kuzmasaf
        • 5 Min read
        Improving Productivity for Remote Teams
        Teamwork

        Improving Productivity for Remote Teams

        • by kuzmasaf
        • 5 Min read
        Top 3 Best Lean Canvas Templates to Use for Business Planning
        Best Practices & Templates

        Top 3 Best Lean Canvas Templates to Use for Business Planning

        • by kuzmasaf
        • 6 Min read
        Contest of Nimbus templates
        Updates and News

        Contest of Nimbus templates

        • by kuzmasaf
        • 3 Min read
        Subscribe to our blog!

        Get weekly tips and insights on how to grow your business

        Our solutions
        • Client Collaboration
        • Project Management
        • Knowledge Management
        • Data collection
        • FuseBase AI
        • Agencies
        • Consultants & Coaches
        • Nimbus Portals
        • Nimbus Note
        • Nimbus Capture
        • Nimbus Clipper
        • White Label
        Plans & Pricing
        • Pricing
        • Affiliate partners
        Company & Contacts
        • Templates
        • Blog
        • Guides
        • Roadmap
        • Media Kit
        • Contact us
        Compare with
        Fusebase Logo
        • English
          • Deutsch (German)
          • Türkçe (Turkish)
        FuseBase - Client collaboration platform for professional services | Product Hunt
        • g2
        • sourceforce
        • g2
        Copyright © 2025 FuseBase is a product of Nimbus Web Inc., a Delaware company

        Get a Sneak Peek on Managing Your Projects

        Watch how you can boost your results by setting workflow with Nimbus Platform

        Book a demo
        Get started

        Unlimited time on Free plan

        This site is registered on wpml.org as a development site. Switch to a production site key to remove this banner.