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[PUBLIC POST] Tools of the trade
What do you write with? What's your workflow like? Is there particular software that you like to use for certain purposes, or do you prefer writing in longhand and transcribing to a computer later on? Has technology affected your writing process in any way?
I have a mix of processes. Generally I like Scrivener for its ability to organize snippets of writing and to keep all my research in the same place, but its lack of mobile options means I use Evernote a lot when I'm away from my computers. I'm also fond of longhand writing when I'm in libraries and on public transport. This means I have a lot of scattered notes and bits in different places, all of which I swear I'm going to transcribe to my Scrivener project someday.
A major boon for research purposes is Zotero, a citations database program where I can organize my citations and take extensive notes, with search and tag functions available for later reference. Like Scrivener via Dropbox and Evernote it's all synchronized online, meaning it's automatically backed up and available on whatever machine I log into.
The availability of cloud and synchronization technology like Dropbox, Evernote, and Zotero made things easier in some ways and gave me peace of mind in the form of automatic backup, but I also have a lot of paper notes that are one careless placement or a house fire away from getting lost forever. Better get to it, I guess.
I have a mix of processes. Generally I like Scrivener for its ability to organize snippets of writing and to keep all my research in the same place, but its lack of mobile options means I use Evernote a lot when I'm away from my computers. I'm also fond of longhand writing when I'm in libraries and on public transport. This means I have a lot of scattered notes and bits in different places, all of which I swear I'm going to transcribe to my Scrivener project someday.
A major boon for research purposes is Zotero, a citations database program where I can organize my citations and take extensive notes, with search and tag functions available for later reference. Like Scrivener via Dropbox and Evernote it's all synchronized online, meaning it's automatically backed up and available on whatever machine I log into.
The availability of cloud and synchronization technology like Dropbox, Evernote, and Zotero made things easier in some ways and gave me peace of mind in the form of automatic backup, but I also have a lot of paper notes that are one careless placement or a house fire away from getting lost forever. Better get to it, I guess.
no subject
Of course it'd be a bit of work to make that splitpane with the current scene...
Thanks for poking around. I don't know if I'll do this again because it is a lot of work to set up. GDocs isn't really made for mass-creation of a bunch of similar documents. To create a new document takes an extra click and then there was the naming thing. (This project, on my computer, in Scrivener, does not have scene names.)
(And note for anyone intending to copy me: I opted to preface scene names with aaa, bbb, ccc, etc, rather than just a, b, c. If I'd used single letters, adding something in the middle would be awful; you'd have to rename everything after it. This way it's possible to, e.g., add in a bbc or bbd or bbe in between bbb and ccc. I did feel that prefacing titles with eee made them seem excessively excited.)
Yeah, this is not exactly Scrivener. It's sort of the same features but not nearly as user-friendly.
By the way, did you get a single email notif that the whole folder was shared, or did Google spam your inbox with separate notifs for every scene?
Anyway, thanks for helping test this!
no subject
I got a single notification for the whole folder.
No problem! Interesting concept, and interesting AU too.