Post by account_disabled on Dec 28, 2023 12:09:12 GMT 5
Technology moves forward and today, in the era of mobile browsing and with tablets and smartphones increasingly present in our (your) lives, there are those who have wanted to simplify the writer's profession. There are apps to do everything. You point your smartphone at the starry sky and read the names of stars and constellations, you point it at the mountain landscape and read the names of the mountains. You can draw with an app, and today you can even write an entire book . Yes, 9 apps for writing a book : the dream of every writer in this digital age. #1 – App grease ideas anytime, anywhere I'm full of recycled paper. I have reams of printed paper, with one side blank. I have receipts of all kinds, printed only on one side.
There are hundreds and hundreds of sheets accumulated Special Data over the years, which I use to jot down my ideas , to mark the work to be delivered this week, or even just for the many memoranda. I jot down my ideas anywhere, anytime . Even on your smartphone. There is the Memo application made as an app . Ideas can come when you least expect it. Working on the computer, I read constantly, even for fun. At my desk I read my books and comics in my free time and write my stories. I can't do without a pile of paper in which to write down everything that comes to mind, even if it's a nice phrase read to use as a quote. #2 – App render narrative techniques Given that you never stop learning, my process was my own stories: I started writing straight away starting from an idea, not even a very strong one.
It was the period of naivety, as I like to call the time in which the writer writes blindfolded, without any knowledge. Learning narrative techniques : how? When I started writing novels – obviously, needless to say, they remained unfinished – it was the 80s and, as there were no computers in homes yet, I wrote on foolscap paper. When I started writing stories, it was the early '90s and the computer, at least in my house, didn't yet exist: I wrote on printouts free on one side, copying across sheets of notebook paper. Now that blogs on fiction and creative writing are flocking, it is no longer acceptable to start writing blindfolded, without any knowledge. You can learn storytelling techniques in many blogs and forums. #3 – App art and don't get distracted When I write, I have to be alone. Secluded, without distractions. People are distracting, you can't write in community.
There are hundreds and hundreds of sheets accumulated Special Data over the years, which I use to jot down my ideas , to mark the work to be delivered this week, or even just for the many memoranda. I jot down my ideas anywhere, anytime . Even on your smartphone. There is the Memo application made as an app . Ideas can come when you least expect it. Working on the computer, I read constantly, even for fun. At my desk I read my books and comics in my free time and write my stories. I can't do without a pile of paper in which to write down everything that comes to mind, even if it's a nice phrase read to use as a quote. #2 – App render narrative techniques Given that you never stop learning, my process was my own stories: I started writing straight away starting from an idea, not even a very strong one.
It was the period of naivety, as I like to call the time in which the writer writes blindfolded, without any knowledge. Learning narrative techniques : how? When I started writing novels – obviously, needless to say, they remained unfinished – it was the 80s and, as there were no computers in homes yet, I wrote on foolscap paper. When I started writing stories, it was the early '90s and the computer, at least in my house, didn't yet exist: I wrote on printouts free on one side, copying across sheets of notebook paper. Now that blogs on fiction and creative writing are flocking, it is no longer acceptable to start writing blindfolded, without any knowledge. You can learn storytelling techniques in many blogs and forums. #3 – App art and don't get distracted When I write, I have to be alone. Secluded, without distractions. People are distracting, you can't write in community.