Several years ago I came across an online word processor named Writely. Unlike others I’d tried before it wasn’t buggy, actually worked the same on Mac or Windows, and totally won me over. I started using it for all of my writing. It was also so good that Google bought it and rechristened it as Goggle Docs. It has consistently been one of my most used tools and it still works wondefully, except for one small, teensy bit of epic fail.
See, here we are, over two years after the iPhone came out, and I still can’t create or edit a document from my phone. I can create and edit spreadsheets (though it’s a bit kludgy and not at all appealing) through Google Docs, but no text documents. I could understand if, say, any complex formatting wasn’t allowed, but I’m just looking to put words in basic paragraph form. I can even compose emails through Google Mail so they clearly have the tech to allow text entry.
As I started looking at getting back into writing prose recently I knew I needed a solution that would allow me to edit a file from anywhere, my work computer, home computer, iPhone, girlfriend’s laptop, a computer on the top of Kilimanjaro, etc. If I can write from any device then I have no excuse for not doing so whenever I have a free moment. But Google Docs, my most trusted writing tool for the past several years, fails on the one device that is always at hand. I searched for other solutions, but none of the other online word processors I found worked with the iPhone either.
So I checked out word processors on the iPhone. While they all had some method for getting files to and from the phone, most of them working quite well, none really involved a true sync method and/or online access. I know me. I know how lazy I can be. If I have to manually transfer files before I can work on them, it ain’t going to happen. I finally decided I’d just stick with Google Docs and accept that I could only work when I had a computer around.
Last night though, as I was checking yet again to see if any word processor apps might finally be what I need I came across WriteRoom.iPhone. I’d seen that it existed before but had ignored it as it seemed to be nothing more than a simple Notes replacement app. I’d toyed around with the Mac version before, but the lack of any screenplay formatting kept it in my “cool, but not really useful” file. For those unaware, the computer version’s essentially a full screen text editor. Not just full screen like most programs, it completely fills the screen, no menu bar, no dock, nothing but black screen and whatever words you type. Great for blocking any distractions and just getting the words out. The iPhone version seemed to be more of the same and just didn’t appeal to me.
However, it is now the coolest app on my phone. First off, it syncs your documents to an online site, simpletext.ws. A site where you can edit them (and a site you can use completely on it’s own even if you don’t have an iPhone or any of the company’s software, just sign in with a Google account). Ding. Major requirement for a writing tool knocked out of the park. I can edit the same file either on my phone or through any web browser. Secondly though, and this is where it gets really cool, you can edit the files on the phone from a web browser. Just fire up the app, launch a browser on whatever computer you’re at, go to the IP address of the phone, open a file, and start typing.
That second feature solves an annoyance that has always lingered at the back of my mind. As of this summer my iPhone almost reached feature parity with my old Palm PDA (actually a Handera 330, oh how that device spoiled me for all other handheld tech). The one big feature still missing is the ability to use an external keyboard. While the onscreen keyboard is great and works for 90% of the typing I do on my phone, occasionally I want the ability to plug in (or connect with bluetooth) a bigger keyboard with real keys just like I could a decade ago with my PDA. Thanks to WriteRoom.iPhone I now sort of have that ability as long as I have WiFi and a computer.
So now I can write online from any computer, on my phone, or edit the file on my phone from any computer all thanks to WriteRoom.iPhone. Which now means I really have no excuse for not getting more writing done.
Addendum: While I have continued to use Google for most writing, all my screenwriting has been done with Celtx. It’s free, but very robust and truly cross platform. As long as the platform in question is Windows, OS X, or Linux and not an iPhone. A little while back though I discovered what still seems to be the only screenwriting app for the iPhone, a program simply called Screenplay. It’s a great start and once the 1.1 update goes live should be an excellent tool for screenwriting on the go, putting my iPhone one step ahead of that old Handera PDA.
Nothing new on the making side. On the watching side though I finally saw Inglorious Basterds last weekend. I quite enjoyed it, particularly that, given the setting, the usual pop culture chatter was restricted to early German cinema. And thankfully, Mike Meyers managed to restrain himself from hamming it up.
magic (and now magick too)
I’m still exploring my renewed interest in magic and determining if I’m more interesting in actually performing tricks or just academic study. Whichever direction, I’m still trying to pick up little tricks. On that front my interest is still more in looking for tricks I can perform with little to no prep and as few props as possible.
The latest issue of Genii appeared in my mailbox a few days back and I’ve been really digging it. The majority is devoted to a tribute to an old magic ‘zine called The Jinx that ran from the 20s through the 30s. Hadn’t ever heard of it before, but judging from the content put together for this new “issue”, it’s now high on my list of items to track down.
As for the other field of magic (the supernatural kind, which I’ll go ahead and refer to as magick to keep them straight), I’ve started looking back into that again recently. What started as a bit of research for a story I’m working on is slowly becoming a full fledged pursuit. I’ve just recently worked my way through Promethea as a way to get a bit of an overview of the topic (an idea spawned from attending Damien Williams’ DragonCon presentation [video may be online by now, but I don't have the link]). I would appreciate any recommendations on another good primer/magick 101 tome. From some seeking I’ve done, I’m considering Crowley’s Magick Without Tears as a possible next step, but know that some of you probably have a ready answer.
technology
The Monday after MMS went live on the iPhone, I contacted AT&T tech support (via online chat) to see why I still couldn’t send messages. After having me reset my phone and various other pointless time wasters (if I have to turn off WiFi to send a message, your system is broken), I was told their system is still overloaded and I should try again the next day. Now, it’s a week later and I still can’t send.
I’ve seen numerous reports online from people like me who once had an original iPhone and still had a block somewhere on their account. I mentioned that to the unhelpful tech support person, but he said my account looked fine which is clearly not the case. Despite having been with AT&T Wireless since it was originally AT&T Wireless (pre-sale to Cingular and back when getting a pre-paid phone got you an 800 number instead of a local one), given the questionable network and service, if Apple ditches them next year, I’m going to leave too.
life
is life. Which is to say a mix of work and not-work.
Also, given that my current creative focus is more on writing than making movies, I’m switching out “movies” for “writing” in the sub-head/focus of this site. No that doesn’t mean much of anything to anyone, but just a bit of notation for myself. Any future blogging about movies will be done via the Wacko Productions site (and then reposted here, either in full or in the daily digest).
Figured out a few years back that, by throwing myself so completely into filmmaking, I changed the way my brain works. Instead of thinking in words, my creative thoughts and urges came in the form of pure images. Great for when I have the time and energy to shoot movies.
Lately though I’ve had neither time nor energy. So I’ve decided to write instead. No need to coordinate people’s schedules, track down locations, set up lights, or any of the dozen other tasks required when everything is just in my head.
However, my brain keeps throwing images at me instead of words. Even words to describe those images are proving elusive. So for the past few days I’ve begun a concerted effort to rediscover words.
I can feel the folds of my brain shifting and the old reservoirs of ink slowly dripping down the rusted sluices that lead to my fingers.
Right now I have two stories I’m rolling around. One, a science fiction film idea, started life as a film concept so I’m eking it out as a comic script instead. The other could go prose or comic, it’s a little more developed, but I still don’t have a firm grasp on it.
I need to write more. One remedy for that need which I’ve found works before is to blog more. To make that even easier, I’ve decided to refocus my blogging into four areas: movies, magic, technology, and life.
I think everyone reading knows of my filmmaking and thus interest in movies. By magic I mean not this kind, but this kind. I spend my work days with technology and, heck, much of my personal time as well. Speaking of personal time, my life right now (and for the past eleven months) has been grand thanks to Rosie and so I expect there is much there to write about.
Yes, I am leaving out politics which provided most of my subject matter before. That doesn’t mean I’m any less interested in politics or that I won’t write about them from time to time. I’m just tired of ranting. So less of that going forward (though my next post will in fact be about politics).
Yesterday watched a movie rather incorrectly titled He Ran All The Way in which John Garfield takes a family (father, mother, older daughter, and young son) hostage while hiding from a manhunt (and does very little running). The son wants to fight and is disappointed with his father giving in. Garfield lets the father and daughter leave the house to go to work, warning them that if he sees any police he’ll kill their mother. As he’s there he falls for the daughter and clearly wishes he’d had a family and a life like they have. It was quite good and ended with a beautiful shot of Garfield stumbling towards camera in a rain filled gutter.
Today watching a movie called The Desperate Hours where Humphrey Bogart, along with two accomplices, takes a family (father, mother, older daughter, and young son) hostage while hiding from a manhunt. The son wants to fight and is disappointed with his father for not fighting back. Bogart lets the father leave to run an errand and the daughter go on a date, warning him that if he sees any cops the rest of the family will get shot. Not sure how this one’ll end, but so far it could almost be a remake. One of Bogart’s accomplices has even started to show some of the longing Garfield’s character felt.
All of this is to say, Tivo and TCM make a great resource when writing a noir.