The Best Note-Taking Apps. Alright, now let's check out some note-taking apps. Microsoft OneNote. I think the best note-taking app for Windows and especially for Surface users is Microsoft OneNote. All your notes stay synced across devices thanks to Microsoft's cloud and there are good apps for Android and iOS too. This is where note-taking apps come into play. These handy apps let you keep note of everything from texts to voice memos, all with your smartphone. But with hundreds of note-taking apps available, it can be difficult to pick the right one. Don't worry though, we're here to help. Here are our picks for the best note-taking apps. Leos fortune 0 1. Microsoft OneNote The digital note-taking app for your. Desk NT: A Writing and Notetaking App 1.1 Description Desk NT is a writing and notetaking app for anyone who needs to capture their thoughts in a simple and elegant way. Based on the award-winning 'Best App of 2014' (Desk. Desk is a premium writing experience for all types of writers. Whether you're a casual enthusiast, the weekend writer, blogger, or digital publishing professional, you'll find Desk to be a m. Desk 1.4.1 – A Writing, Blogging, and Notetaking App. August 12, 2015. Desk is a premium writing experience for all types of writers.
A couple of posts back I wrote about a recording and note-taking app called AudioNote. Now I will share my experience with a word-processing app called Scrivener that provides a format and tools beyond what MS Word and Apple Pages can do. It is compatible with both of these operating systems as well as with more industry-specific formats in publishing.Even though I am proficient in probably forty percent of the tools this app offers, I love Scrivener. Beginning with the assumption that any long text is comprised of a collection of much shorter texts that need to be arranged in a cohesive manner, Scrivener allows you to create, organize, manipulate and revise these short sections and then compile them into longer texts.
To make it easy right off the bat, Scrivener offers basic templates for projects in book-length fiction, non-fiction, scriptwriting, poetry and lyrics, and other miscellaneous forms. Because I am working with memoir, I chose the novel template.
When you open this template, you will see a 'binder format' that allows you to view the entire project at once and to create folders for each large chunk of text, as well as folders for each smaller section. In the case of a novel or memoir, this means I can create a folder for each chapter in the book and subfolders within that chapter folder for each scene. The beauty of this is that it allows the writer to seamlessly move between sections. If you get stalled on one scene, you can work on another.You can also choose to view the contents of each folder separately, clicking from one to another, or in 'scrivenings' mode, view one continuous flow of text for each chapter, or for the book as a whole.
There is also a compose view that pulls up only the text you are working on and eliminates the tool bar at the top and binder on the side, as well as other views that I intend to explore more: one that shows individual texts dealing with different scenes or topics as index cards that can be switched around on a Corkboard, and one that provides an outline view to which can be attached labels or status markers (to do; first draft; second draft; done).
As I move into working on the second draft of my client's memoir, I look forward to learning more about the compile function, which provides front matter and compile settings for creating a manuscript using standard submission format, for creating a self-published paperback novel, or for exporting as an e-book.
Below the main binder, (the contents of which, when the project is completed, will be compiled into a final manuscript) Scrivener also provides character and location sketch sheets, a research folder into which web pages, videos, graphics or text can be imported, and a folder of sample output formats for different publishing options.
This app offers far too many features to discuss in this post. For a technologically sophisticated review, see William Fenton writing for PCMag. Or simply plunge in. Scrivener provides an in-depth, interactive tutorial that I go back to time and again, and online support. Last time I looked the PC version cost $40.00 and the Mac version $45.00.
For writing assignments of any sort, Scrivener is an investment that will pay off with your first project.
A couple of posts back I wrote about a recording and note-taking app called AudioNote. Now I will share my experience with a word-processing app called Scrivener that provides a format and tools beyond what MS Word and Apple Pages can do. It is compatible with both of these operating systems as well as with more industry-specific formats in publishing.
Even though I am proficient in probably forty percent of the tools this app offers, I love Scrivener. Beginning with the assumption that any long text is comprised of a collection of much shorter texts that need to be arranged in a cohesive manner, Scrivener allows you to create, organize, manipulate and revise these short sections and then compile them into longer texts.
To make it easy right off the bat, Scrivener offers basic templates for projects in book-length fiction, non-fiction, scriptwriting, poetry and lyrics, and other miscellaneous forms. Because I am working with memoir, I chose the novel template.
When you open this template, you will see a 'binder format' that allows you to view the entire project at once and to create folders for each large chunk of text, as well as folders for each smaller section. In the case of a novel or memoir, this means I can create a folder for each chapter in the book and subfolders within that chapter folder for each scene. The beauty of this is that it allows the writer to seamlessly move between sections. If you get stalled on one scene, you can work on another.You can also choose to view the contents of each folder separately, clicking from one to another, or in 'scrivenings' mode, view one continuous flow of text for each chapter, or for the book as a whole.
There is also a compose view that pulls up only the text you are working on and eliminates the tool bar at the top and binder on the side, as well as other views that I intend to explore more: one that shows individual texts dealing with different scenes or topics as index cards that can be switched around on a Corkboard, and one that provides an outline view to which can be attached labels or status markers (to do; first draft; second draft; done).
As I move into working on the second draft of my client's memoir, I look forward to learning more about the compile function, which provides front matter and compile settings for creating a manuscript using standard submission format, for creating a self-published paperback novel, or for exporting as an e-book.
Below the main binder, (the contents of which, when the project is completed, will be compiled into a final manuscript) Scrivener also provides character and location sketch sheets, a research folder into which web pages, videos, graphics or text can be imported, and a folder of sample output formats for different publishing options.
This app offers far too many features to discuss in this post. For a technologically sophisticated review, see William Fenton writing for PCMag. Or simply plunge in. Scrivener provides an in-depth, interactive tutorial that I go back to time and again, and online support. Last time I looked the PC version cost $40.00 and the Mac version $45.00.
For writing assignments of any sort, Scrivener is an investment that will pay off with your first project.