To be a writer, you only need a pencil and paper. There are certainly writers out there still using them.
I have a few notebooks and journals that I carry around with me, and I have a lovely roller pen, which my beautiful wife bought for my birthday a couple of years ago.
As we are all aware, technology has advanced dramatically. I am writing this on a computer. You will also be reading this on one.
Let's face it, pencils and paper still cost under £5, even in this current financial crisis. The MacBook Air I'm using is…well, let's say it costs a bit more than £5.
I resisted moving away from Microsoft for many years, but with some inheritance and an NHS discount, I bit the bullet and purchased this MacBook Air with the superb M1 chipset. It certainly opened up a whole new world of technology. It has enabled me to reach out to fellow writers that use Macs, iPads and iPhones and to benefit from the knowledge and expertise of others.
I'm a regular consumer of a YouTube channel, 58keys, which regularly drops on a Wednesday and then on a Friday, I earnestly wait for the latest post on his Self Distract Blog.
59keys is 'for writers like you and me, who use and of course write on Macs, on iPads and iPhones'. That is the tagline of the creator and presenter of 58keys, William Gallagher. I had an exciting and productive month on one of William's Zoom workshops, and I am often in contact with him. He's my writing guru.
I now have a few apps that William has reviewed on his channel and that he uses. They are all based on increased productive writing. Unfortunately, one of the most useful that I would use to write this blog doesn't link to my platform. I have already set myself the task of migrating my blog over to another site by April, which will make writing these posts simpler and quicker.
The app that I use the most is Scrivener. It is a word processor for writers. It is very clever in organising novel files, enabling the writer to quickly move blocks of writing around. Your first chapter can become your fourth if needed! Scrivener also has a template for several forms of writing, including scripts. It is much more advanced than a rival product on another operating system, although if you need to, you can compile it in that format.
Another of this year's aims for me is to have a go at screenwriting. It is something that I have yet to try, and it looks complicated. William gave me a nugget of information about screenwriting when I wrote to him about any courses that might be available. His suggestion was to just read a load of scripts. I had never thought of doing that, and having found a site for TV scripts, I set about reading some of them. They are excellent relaxing reads that take little time. I started with one of my favourite BBC series from a few years ago, Spooks. I can visualise the characters I saw on the TV and compare how they are in the script and how they appear on the screen. There is a difference.
I will be, of course, pitching to magazines and will be using another app, Readly, to research potential markets. The short story market is still out there, and I will gather experience by entering short story and flash fiction competitions regularly.
Can you tell me that I love my MacBook? I used to look askance at any suggestion of buying an AppleMac in the past. This was mainly from my experiences with the very early ones in the 1980s. The promotion of IBM, its clones, and the DOS system bought about that well know the operating system and its many iterations that still dominate the market today.
That's it for this week's post. I hope you have ended it in one piece and that I haven't bored you to sleep. I shall be perusing my notebook for something different to write about next.
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