One app doesn’t have to rule all, and I don’t believe it should (or can). I use Scrivener for long-form writing and Byword for weblog posts. I use Asana for shared ideas for Lifehack. I use nvALT for shared ideas for the Mikes on Mics podcast. I use Evernote for ideas that are for my own use. I don’t stick to one app or platform for writing. I have a family that I love spending time with and I need at least one day per week to recharge the battery.īut I do read every day, which makes me a better writer. I take at least one day per week and write absolutely nothing, and usually that’s a Saturday. I simply can’t keep up with that kind of schedule. All of this is a bit of an evolution, considering I’m doing more of what I intended to do now instead of back when I suggested I would. I no longer offer as many “teaser posts”, ProductiVardy no longer exists, and five days a week I’m serving up two posts per day as opposed to just one. I’ve switched to a more prolific writing pattern as of late, and I’ve actually stuck to it more than I ever did with the late 2011 approach. Saturday: A quote to whet your appetite from Talking is Dead’s weekly exchange, a podcast where Anthony Marco and I simply talk.Thursday: A teaser from the latest episode of Dyscultured, which I return to this coming week.Wednesday: Shiny words, straight from the presses…of my mind.Tuesday: Teaser quote and brief summary from the latest episode of ProductiVardy.I don’t do what I said back in November of 2011. So I’m going to do that before I discuss how I get writing done as of today. Still, it’s always fun – and a bit humbling – to go back and look at what I’ve said regarding writing habits and revisit them. This is an ongoing process for me, as priorities shift and new opportunities take hold. I’ve talked a lot about what tools I use to write, how I planned to write and things of that nature.
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