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Ulysses: Cocoa Writer's Tool
Merlin Mann | Nov 22 2004
My 30-day demo copy of Ulysses has only been running for three days, but it already feels like a must-have addition to my Applications folder. Ulysses is a text editor for writers. That’s it. It doesn’t make code, draw pictures of your kitty, or pop kettle corn. It just helps you plan, organize, track, and write your stuff in a way that I find entirely intuitive. The features page and screenshots are plenty informative, so I’ll just add my favorite bits.
My only major quibble is the price, which seems a bit steep at EU100 (~US$130), or EU50 for educational use. I’ll probably end up buying it anyhow, but I would like to see that price come down. Still, if you spend all day working medium- to large-sized writing projects, it might be worth the dough to you. Either way, have a look at the demo. It’s a pretty swell little app. 51 Comments
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I do a good deal...Submitted by Jeffrey Windsor (not verified) on November 23, 2004 - 6:03pm.
I do a good deal of research for my fiction, and the uses for Endnote are pretty straightforward. For example, when working on a historical novel I had a library of roughly 45 items, everything from maps to journals to photos in historical archives to scholarly articles and a couple of books. In this case, it was simply the easiest way to maintain my notes and keep them in an organized way. Technically, it was all "prewriting" rather than writing, but, for me (and I presume that most writers are the same) it is an evolving, organic process, which revolves around itself and only gradually resolves on a coherent story. I suppose I should mention that I do typically start with fictional characters set in a real historical past. If I were writing fantasy or sci-fi or YA romance, or contemporary suburban realism for that matter, I probably wouldn't need to do as much research, and Endnote would be irrelevant. Then again, my wife would argue that most of my research is simply procrastination with another name... » POSTED IN:
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