This video is a highlight-reel look at Saturate's main features including: projects, working with text data, audio data, memoing, coding and searching.
When you are completely done with a project you can archive it. After you've archived your project, Saturate will create a zip file that contains the project's coding (in a csv file), memos, text data, tabular data and a list of webpages (it may take a minute or two for Saturate to create the zip file). Once the zip file is ready, you'll see a download link below the archived project's name as shown in this video.
Suppose that you have some audio data, say some recorded interviews, and you don't want to transcribe the recordings. Now in Saturate you can upload those recordings and directly code and memo the audio. This video shows you how.
Groups in Saturate are now called projects because this better captures how they are used. A project in SaturateĀ is a collection of data, coding and memoing shared between members of a project team.
In Saturate if you delete something and change your mind you can undelete it with Saturate's new undo feature. This video shows you how.
Memoing in Saturate has just been improved in a few ways. Specifically, Saturate is now smarter about incorporating selections and attaching the memo to the source of the selection. Watch this video for details.
I've just made several improvements to coding in Saturate. The main change is that you can now code in more places. For example, when you are looking at all of the data coded with a given code, you can further code portions of that data right on that page. Have a look at this video for details.
In Saturate you can search through your memos, coding and text data. This short video shows you how.