July 26 at 1:08 pm
- via Bookmarklet
- Link
Susan A. Kitchens, Tom Novak, Sarah Vela and Eric Rice liked this
"SuperNotecard is fast becoming the best way for novelists, biographers, researchers, and writers of every stripe to begin to craft their work using notecards." - looks like an interesting tool for mac based writers - via brad (as in sucks)... - mike "glemak" dunn
via Bookmarklet
There's a Windows version as well (which is what I'm using). The UI is a little funkier than I'd like (probably because it's made by Mac people), but I've been trying my hand at writing again and I like laying stories out as blocks/cards first. - brad sucks
ah cool - i'm on a mac so saw the windows version but it wasn't a hot link so maybe their sensing my o/s - seems cool i do lots of writing on 3x5's (pulp kind) & on windows i've been using onenote for awhile and like it but thought this looked more straight forward - mike "glemak" dunn
this is a life saver. Love it. - Eric Rice
I found this free tool to be helpfull: http://www.celtx.com/ - SocialTechArts
I've been using this to lay out the 22 pages for my first comic; great for putting down a 1-liner of what should happen in the story on each page, and to begin shifting them around. - Do You KNOW Clarence?
DYKC: Celtx now includes comic writing templates, an integrated index card system, and some basic storyboarding support. Just FYI. - Roger Benningfield
@Clarence: what's the comic about? - Barry Wynn
@roger -- I remember hearing about Celtx, I should look into that again. - Do You KNOW Clarence?
@barry -- Let's just say it has to do with aliens, a slacker hero, and the department of motor vehicles. I'm playing it pretty close to the vest, at the moment... - Do You KNOW Clarence?
Interesting. I've got a project where I'm actually really using, you know, actual paper index cards. Method described here: http://is.gd/1cVW . I deliberately chose the old school way, but wonder about digitizing the notecards. Eventually. Will check this app out. - Susan A. Kitchens

