Useful Writing Tools
Grok Headline matches for Useful Writing Tools
textpattern - writing tools for the web
textpattern - writing tools for the web
05/07/2004 03:41 AMTextpattern: web writing tools .. TextPattern, un nouveau CMS ..
content management systems .. TextPattern beta 1 .. Blogging-Software
.. Textpatternin .. Text Pattern .. his new CMS .. textpattern ..
Allen's
textpattern.com
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Textpattern: web writing tools
Textpattern: web writing tools
05/14/2004 12:23 AMTextpattern is a weblog publishing tool manufactured by Dean Allen ..
Textpattern : A new XHTML based content manager .. Textpattern finally
sees release .. Textpattern 1.10 gamma released ..
find
textpattern.com
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Bad Writing = Good Writing?
Bad Writing = Good Writing?
10/30/2003 11:56 PM Bad Writing
= Good Writing? The academic journal Philosophy and Literature
used to hold a "Bad Writing Contest" to ridicule dense,
unreadable academic prose... but a new book argues headache inducing
sentences are necessary to express subtle theoretical points.
Rapid application development tools,
part 3: More RAD tools
Rapid application development tools,
part 3: More RAD tools
02/13/2004 09:19 AMIn parts 1 and 2 of this series I discussed database front end
development tools and RAD environments for the BASIC language on
Linux. I'll conclude by looking at tools for smaller programming
languages (I won't talk about C++/KDevelop/Anjuta or Java/Eclipse) and
little-known or independently developed languages.
Digidesign Ships Pro Tools TDM 6.4.1
Software for Pro Tools|24 MIX
Digidesign Ships Pro Tools TDM 6.4.1
Software for Pro Tools|24 MIX
09/02/2004 11:16 PMDigidesign Pro
Tools® TDM 6.4.1 software for Pro Tools|24 MIX ships today. Pro Tools
TDM 6.4.1 offers new feature enhancements and is the final Pro Tools
software release to support the Pro Tools|24 MIX product line.
Writing for the Web
Writing for the Web
03/13/2003 10:15 AM
One of the things that traditional journalists find unsettling about
the weblog medium is the notion that you're "working without a net" --
i.e., without an editor. In fact,
everybody edits your stuff,
albeit after the fact. The other day I wrote a column in which I
asked:
How do we tune networks to deliver the right information to the right
people at the right times?
The triteness warning bell sounded in my head, but not loudly enough
to force me to find a better way to express that thought. And sure
enough, somebody
calle
d me on it. (How do I know? I found that URL in my referral log.)
I really enjoy this kind of thing. Writing is infinitely improvable,
and too often mine goes unchallenged. Partly, that's because of my
brain wiring. I have an unusually strong built-in editor, watching
everything I do as I write, and complaining loudly. As a result, what
I write for print publication is very close to what you see in those
publications. If you added up the diffs, over the many hundreds of
articles I've written over the years, they wouldn't amount to much.
...Writing
Writing
03/13/2003 10:23 AMMy writing leaves much to be desired. I've been thinking about it
lately and I have to say that I didn't start blogging to become a
writer as such, let alone a good one. It just helps if you can string
together some sentences with a semblance of meaning. Technically
speaking, there's much room for improvement. Vocabulary wise I'm
circumscribed (like it?) by a short attention span that causes me to
spend too little time searching for suitable, uncommon words.
But beyond possessing a good technical ability when it comes to
writing well, I suppose that being a good writer all-round must surely
mean writing about things that also interest people. There has to be a
middle ground, a balancing act between mono-syllabic grunting about
albeit very interesting subject matter and writing exquisitely well
about excruciatingly boring things.
I can't help but think
that it would be a hell of a lot easier to maintain this blog if I
wasn't confined by the limited range of source material I choose to be
confined by. Perhaps I need a specialism? I can't talk about my work,
well I could but it wouldn't be very interesting and I chose not to
talk about it early on. Perhaps one day. I envy those that can and do.
Nothing wrong with professionals blogging. Speaking of which, the
bag lady's new blog design is the
best I've seen. Seriously, it looks the cat's pyjamas.
On a
different note,
World of Ends
(World Offends?) strikes me as not only a very cool and necessary
thing to do but it inspired me to think about what else we, the people
of the Web, should be doing to help outsiders understand, integrate
and take part in it more effectively. Surely this honourable
responsibility doesn't only lie at the feet of the likes of
Doc Searls and
David Weinberger, however
qualified and bang-on about it they happen to be? Who are the new
thought leaders on the Web? Where can I find them?
Not writing about war
Not writing about war
03/19/2003 10:44 PMMy guess is that now and in the coming days some people will be
looking for more news and opinion about the war in Iraq—and
other people will be looking for
less, they’ll be
looking for other things to read about.
So, just so you know, I don’t intend to write about the war
either here or on ranchero.com.
Writing RSS 1.0
Writing RSS 1.0
01/09/2004 09:54 PMMore On Writing for the Web
More On Writing for the Web
03/19/2003 10:28 PMOn Writing XML
On Writing XML
01/18/2004 12:24 AMIn a recent essay I
offered, given
demand, to author some XML-writing software. There’s been quite
a bit of feedback, and the consensus seems to be that the Java
community is fairly well-served with XML writing software, but that
this would be real useful at the C level. So that’ll be my coding
fun for the month of February. The rest of this essay lists some of
the Java options that people told me about, and introduces some issues
around the C implementation...
Writing XML
Writing XML
09/03/2002 04:40 PMThis article shows you how to create XML documents using manual
writing, DOM and SAX. It provides you with some excellent learning
material, but using either DOM or SAX for creating XML still looks
like overkill to me.
"zeldman.ming"
Collaborative Novel Writing
Collaborative Novel Writing
05/09/2004 12:45 PM
The Great Mahakali
Write-A-Thon. The Writing Fields
The Writing Fields
01/11/2004 11:16 AMPeople of a certain age mine will remember Prince Norodom Sihanouk as the
incumbent leader of a neutral and relatively peaceful Cambodia, before
the war in Vietnam spilled over Cambodia's borders, leading to the
rise of Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge, the fall of the Cambodian
government, and the killing fields.
Now Sihanouk is an expat
king in his eighties, writing a blog by hand
with his queen, from France. Sources: Stuart Hughes, The
Guardian, Yahoo
News.
Help keep the Bird writing
Help keep the Bird writing
09/14/2004 03:51 AMShelley of BurningBird is broke and needs a little help paying the
hosting bills to keep BurningBird going. Shelley is one of the
earliest weblog writers, and she has a distinctive, original and
beautiful writing voice. She catches a lot of flack because she is
often the one to turn over the rock that everyone would rather leave
lying there, revealing a truth that people don't want to see. Truth be
told, she probably also catches flack because she can be a bit cranky
at times, but she only turns her rhetorical guns against powerful
people, and she is incredibly generous with her time and expertise.
The web would be a much poorer place without her presence and that of
BurningBird, and if you can spare a bit of change, drop some in her
Pay Pal jar. If you can't spare a bit, at least help get the word
out....
Writing for Google
Writing for Google
05/11/2004 04:33 PMTips for writing articles that answer questions posed to search
engines.
Writing in the Margins
Writing in the Margins
02/11/2004 07:35 AMOur new monthly roundup of indie publishing: Junko Mizuno's deranged
manga, Disney's war against the underground, Flann O'Brien on life
during wartime, lefty theorist Mike Davis' children's book (set in
Greenland), and William Upski Wimsatt bombs the 2004 election.
Web writing a whole new experience
Web writing a whole new experience
10/31/2003 01:56 PMCanadian Press via Canada.com Oct 31 2003 12:22PM ET
[VBB] Manifesto writing
[VBB] Manifesto writing
12/17/2004 06:31 PMJoi Ito and Jim Moore are leading a discussion of what could be in a
"manifesto for a better global conversation." The first comment is
that generally we care about our families and towns before we get to
worrying about the world. Alex Steffen from WorldChanging says that
our goal should be to expand our notion of family. Ethan says that we
should start from the common ground: All of us are trying to reach out
beyond where we are. The conversation meanders a bit into more
abstract topics. (I am guilty of contributing to it.) Ethan slaps it
upside...
Writing, Briefly
Writing, Briefly
03/29/2005 04:35 PMWriting, Briefly:
paulgraham.com/writing44.html
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Writing a Mailbot in PHP
Writing a Mailbot in PHP
11/08/2002 11:10 AMInteresting article on writing a mailbot in PHP. It's surprising to me
that the author avoided using PHP's IMAP classes and just focused on
parsing mail as sendmail files. [ Go ]
Writing an end to the bio of BIOS
Writing an end to the bio of BIOS
12/30/2003 07:21 AMIntel and Microsoft are set to start pitching "EFI" as an improved way
of starting up a PC's hardware before its operating system begins
loading--a task that's been handled by the BIOS for a quarter century.
Writing about your friends
Writing about your friends
08/09/2004 10:24 PM
Over the years I've become quite friendly with many professional
journalists. It's interesting that two of my best friends are
journalists and they both have told me, "the only bad thing about
becoming your friend is that I can't write about you any more." As a
blogger, I don't think I have any trouble writing about my friends if
I explain my relationship. The issue of professionalism aside, I think
the first person tone of blogging makes it easier to write about your
friends in the context of providing information. It's probably much
harder or impossible to write about your friends objectively in third
person.
Comment -
TrackBack
Writing an End to the Bio of BIOS?
Writing an End to the Bio of BIOS?
12/30/2003 10:55 AMAn anonymous reader writes "Intel and Microsoft are gearing up to move
toward the first major overhaul of the innermost workings of the
personal computer. The ...
Writing Genx
Writing Genx
02/15/2004 08:58 PMIn between beach time and rainforest time, I’ve been coding away on
genx; herewith
some impressions with one important lesson and an interesting bit of
history...
Tom on Community Writing
Tom on Community Writing
03/16/2003 09:52 AM Tom gets at something true in his blogging about writing that creates
a sense of community. It's the sort of thing you think you must have
always known even though you didn't until you read it....
Writing For the Web (Sales)
Writing For the Web (Sales)
03/19/2003 10:28 PMso i have this cool new writing gig . .
.
so i have this cool new writing gig . .
.
02/01/2005 09:52 PMDo you ever have something really exciting that you want to share
with the world, but you're not allowed to talk about it? It drives you
nuts that you have to keep it to yourself, so you quietly mention it
to Janet, but Chrissy overhears you from the kitchen, and thinks
you're dying, so she tells Larry, and pretty soon you're attending
your own wake down at the Regal Beagle. You think this could be a
chance to get Mr. Roper to give you a break on the rent, and maybe get
a little something-something from that Kaylnn girl who passes out
skates at the roller rink, but Mrs. Roper finds out the truth, and
somehow you're learning an embarassing lesson in front of all your
friends, rather than getting lucky on the waterbed in your cousin's
van conversion.
In other words, I've been sitting on this big news for weeks, and I
just got the green light to announce it. So pay attention,
Chrissy:
I am writing a weekly column for The Onion A/V Club! Yeah,
that's right! The Onion A/V Club! Wooo!
Check out the spiffy announcement:
The Onion A.V. Club also extends a hearty welcome to a new contributor
who comes to us from Hollywood via the Internet. Each week,
actor/author/gaming enthusiast/icon/renaissance man Wil Wheaton, who
maintains an online presence at wilwheaton.net, will take a look back
to games past with his Games Of Our Lives column, reaching beyond
Pac-Man and Donkey Kong to find the dusty arcade games and worn-out
cartridges that paved the way for the games of today.
(When I read that, I told my editor, "I love it. Can I just tell
you how happy I am that it's not all 'Star Trek Star Trek Star Trek
Star Trek (tiny font: writes some stuff too.)'?"
He said, "Well, the original draft referred to you as 'the
spunky lad who saved the universe' and then went on to say 'Star Trek,
Star Trek, Star Trek.' Then I had second thoughts.")
Can you freakin' believe that I get to write for them?! Holy shit!
Writing this column is as much fun as doing Love Machine at
ACME each week. I get a chance to be funny, add something pretty
prestigious to my resume, and I finally have an excuse for playing so
many classic video games. I mean, how many people do you know who
could deduct an X-arcade
Controller? :)
I did an interview with The Onion A/V Club in 2002. If you haven't
seen it, you can read it here.
My first Games of Our Lives appears tomorrow. Check it out, and let
me know what you think!
Online writing with my sister-in-law
Online writing with my sister-in-law
07/19/2004 09:53 AMMy sister-in-law the novelist (and general prose-ist) is offering an
online writing class. Here's the pitch: New Online Writing Class With
Meredith Sue Willis The Back-to-School Special Are you or someone you
know looking for a short online prose writing class? The
Back-to-School Special, a private online writing class taught by
Meredith Sue Willis, author of more than twelve books of fiction and
nonfiction, is a four-session online writing class starting in
September for people who would like some feedback from an experienced
teacher on a prose project–fiction, memoir, or personal narrative. The
cost is $160, and classes start September...
Critique Magazine's On Writing III
Critique Magazine's On Writing III
09/15/2004 03:39 AM
Critique Magazine's
On Writing III -
Each year, Critique Magazine's staff
compiles essays by and interviews with writers, teachers, and
translators of merit for inclusion in the special anniversary edition
"On Writing".
Basically, a
shitload of authors provide thoughts on, ahem, writing.
{Both sites are worth a look, imo.} Just Plain Good Writing
Just Plain Good Writing
02/05/2005 09:50 PMI linked to Luke's wonderful new site before but moment 9 and moment 12 reminded me why I need to send his URL to all my
friends.
Reading, Writing, and Landscaping
Reading, Writing, and Landscaping
06/03/2004 10:37 AMI guess this article about teacher pay relative to other professions
shouldn't be a surprise .. part-time jobs .. more» ..
more
motherjones.com/news/feature/2004/05/teachers.html
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Writing style and bl0gging
Writing style and bl0gging
01/18/2004 06:02 AMPoor writing style, like bad manners, makes someone appear less
intelligent than they are. Writing style, like manners, can be learned
in many ways. Reading and writing a lot is the first step. Having
people critique your writing is probably the next best thing. There
are many basic writing mistakes that people make, which can easily be
avoided by being aware of them.
I have never been a great writer and I am self-concious about my
writing style. If you are serious about your blogging, I think that
time spent polishing your writing style is well worth the
investment.
My favorite reference is the Chicago
Manual of Style.
Some web pages:
Special thanks to my editors on #joiito.
php-editors.com: Writing Classes in PHP
php-editors.com: Writing Classes in PHP
07/13/2004 08:40 AMIf you've outgrown the simple PHP (procedural programming) and want to
get more into the meat of things, classes just might be the way to go.
Object-oriented code can help you with speed, code reuse, and even
make your code more well structured. So, with all of these advantages,
what are you waiting for to learn this information? Why,
the
right resource, of course.
php-editors.com has their own
new
tutorial posted to aid you in your quest.
I'm writing for Digital Web Magazine
I'm writing for Digital Web Magazine
03/14/2005 06:08 PMI'm now a columnist at Digital Web Magazine. My first column is about
the relationships between web design in the traditional sense and IA
in the modern sense.
After writing that last post I got to
thinking: th ...
After writing that last post I got to
thinking: th ...
03/13/2003 10:22 AM
After writing that last post I got to thinking: that didn't
end on a very positive note, did it? What would I recommend if you
want to add some security to your Mac? That depends on what you want
to do.
For securing files on your computer I suggest using Disk Copy (from
Apple) to create an encrypted disk image upon which you then store
your files. It basically takes a chunk of your hard drive, treats it
like a separate drive and encrypts everything in that chunk.
For encrypting email the MacGPG project is coming
along quite nicely. It does, however, require some comfort with the
command line and the UI of some of the elements leave a lot to be
desired. I'd recommend installing MacGPG and then the following email
utils and then forgetting about it. There's also quite an active maili
ng list available.
To use GPG with Mail.app you'll want GPGMail.
To use GPG with Entourage you'll want EntourageGPG.
Note that in both cases, for Mail.app and Entourage, you need to have
installed and configured MacGPG first.
For securely shredding files under X... I don't know. If you've got
any suggestions for an app that works well, securely and doesn't
causes file system trauma let me know. Discuss
9:45 AM
| Chris
Cummer
SMS Installer FAQ: Writing to the Wrong
Reg Key
SMS Installer FAQ: Writing to the Wrong
Reg Key
02/19/2004 06:10 PMJim Macdonald explains writing
Jim Macdonald explains writing
02/19/2004 12:06 AMJim Macdonald, half of the Doyle-Macdonald writing team, has been
presiding over a hundreds-posts-long running tutorial on how to write
that is unbelievably good and sensible and right. If you want to
write, go read this now.
Well, now, what to put in the opening?
We're going to stick with the chess game metaphor for a while here. In
the opening you're trying to put yourself into a strong position for
going into the midgame (where the exciting action and the exciting
combinations occur), and you do this mostly by getting your pieces off
the back rank as quickly as possible. The pieces are your major
characters. Get them out there, and get them doing things.
Don't neglect your pawns -- your minor characters. You should cherish
your minor characters. They'll save your life. If you have a selection
of minor characters you can pull them out to solve problems later in
the book.
Now, what to put in that first chapter? (Recall that if your readers
don't finish the first chapter they'll never get to chapter two.)
To answer the question of what goes into chapter one, I'm going to
grab the first stanzas from a bunch of Anglo-Scots folk ballads. These
were the popular songs of earlier times, cooked by the folk process so
that only the important and memorable parts remain, they're
entertaining, and they tell stories.
Link
(
via Making
Light)
Writing A Language Filter
Writing A Language Filter
03/06/2004 01:48 AMTeach yourself how to edit obscenities from your user submitted input.
Grok Description matches for Useful Writing Tools
GrokA matches for Useful Writing Tools
Useful Writing Tools