186 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
186 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 3764
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Title: HPR3764: My text-focused journey into tech
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3764/hpr3764.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 05:08:22
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3764 for Thursday the 5th of January 2023.
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Today's show is entitled, My Text Focused Journey Into Tech.
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It is the first show by Newhost Ennis Tello and is about 19 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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This summary is, My Journey Into Technology Covering Some of the Pro's Raking Technology
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I've used along the way.
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Hi, this is Ennis Tello, you're listening to Hacker Public Radio.
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We're very short of episodes at the moment, so if you've ever wanted to record a podcast,
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grab a microphone, go and record something that you think people might be interested
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in and get yourself out there and become a broadcasting star, my son.
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It's traditional on HPR to have your first episode or your first recording to describe
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your journey into technology, at least.
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That's what I've heard a few times over the last year or three that I've been listening
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to HPR.
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So I thought I'd do the same by trade on a writer as in text or prose.
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And what became apparent while I was scribbling some notes for this episode was that my journey
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arc, if you like, through technology was pretty much step by step in with my use of technology
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as a writer.
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So I thought I'd discuss the two together and maybe share some of the writing tools and
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tips that I've picked along the way might be useful and interesting for anyone who writes
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any type of prose, might be documentation, might be blog posts, there are a few things
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I've picked along the way and there's a few techniques as well which hopefully you guys
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might find interesting.
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So to start at the beginning, I've first got into computing back in 1981, I won't say
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how old I was, there was a computer kicking around our house at home called ZX81 made
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by a company called Sinclair coming out of Cambridge here in the UK.
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So I learnt programming basic on that and also Z80 assembly.
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I guess the ZX81 came with one K of RAM which obviously is very limiting.
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So we bought the 49 pounds worth of 16 K RAM pack which sort of plugged into a proprietary
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port in the back of the ZX81 and you had to type on a membrane keyboard which there
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was a particular technique to it and it involved wiping your fingers across each key.
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All very physical and of course that had the effect as well of wobbling the computer slightly
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which meant that the RAM pack wobbled slightly which meant it crashed all the time.
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The RAM pack as well as providing 16 K also provided some seismic instrumentation in
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that if someone dropped a pin in the next room from where you were trying to write your
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code bite by bite and the whole computer would crash because the connection between the
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RAM pack and the computer would break momentarily and then you get this kind of grey fuzzy
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screen on your television in front of you which meant the computer had borked itself.
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So after that having learnt to do a bit of programming we progressed in our household
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anyway to the risk computers from ACON, another Cambridge based computer company, risk of
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course now being really quite popular and you can track obviously arm computing right
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back to Cambridge in the 80s. The computers we used were the BBC Micro A and B and the ACON
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Electron, these are computers I think that never really got far from the UK so I guess
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it was about the same kind of time as the TSR80 was big in the US and early Apple machines
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as well we're coming out the Apple 2 I think was floating around that time so we're talking
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about that sort of era of technology and they were running on, was it 6502 processes I think
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they were cool so again our programed on those in basic and also some assembly as well and
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then I guess when I went away to college I discovered very early 386s and 486s running
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DOS, DOS 3.1 and the first word processor I ever used was WordPerfect which I think was version
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6 and had this fantastic white on blue display of text which I still used to this day actually
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at least that colour scheme and it was great because what it would do as a word processor it would
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show you literally how it was putting together your page so rather like HTML tags or XML tags
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if you wanted to select italics you could see if you turned on this mode you could see
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the computer insert the italics tag and then your type whatever text it was you wanted in a
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and then when you turned off italics mode it would insert another tag so you could see literally
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exactly what the computer was going to do to your text and it would show you spaces it would show
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you new lines it would show you underlines and so on and so forth using these tags so you could
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predict incredibly accurately what your page was going to look like and this I found to be absolutely
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fantastic when I eventually got my first computer which was a Macintosh LC 475 I think there
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was also a performer version and a quadraversion of the 475 depending on which market you're in
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I used WordPerfect on that Mac until it was eventually stopped and it stopped being developed
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and I was unfortunately pushed onto having to use Word by Microsoft for Mac and it was there really
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that I discovered or using Word for Mac it was there that I discovered this distraction thing and
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what I mean by that was that I would try and write something and if my line of thought wandered off
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course or I got distracted I call it writer's block it's probably blowing it up a bit really I
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don't think it was ever that grandiose but let's say you know I lost my way a bit well then I
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found that I could adjust the margins or change font or find a setting that would indent the first
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line of every paragraph and do things like remove orphans and all these things that a graphical
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user interface in a word processor will do for you anyway after a while of you know
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using comic sands and then switching back to times or aerial or gill sands or whatever font
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I found most attractive that day I realized actually I was spending a lot more time playing with
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the layout than I was actually writing and obviously this is something that a word processor offers
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you all the time and it's a real distraction and so it was from there really that I started to get
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into distraction free word processing or distraction free text environments and these are fantastic the
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one I used on the Mac which is still going to this day it's called write room which you can
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customize to a massive degree so you can have kind of funky luminous green text on a black background
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with a block cursor that blinks to kind of make you you know like something out of 80s or 90s
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hacker movie it offers you this thing called typewriter mode which only shows you three lines
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three or four lines of what you're writing and blurs the rest out so there's no even glancing
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back into your previous text it really does keep you focused when I switched to Linux in the
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I would say the early naughties perhaps not full time perhaps not as a daily driver but I
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certainly began to use Linux about that time I was using crunch bang Linux on a Samsung 10-inch
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netbook I discovered various text editors in the Linux world some of which I use to this day the
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one I'm using at the moment in Linux is called focus writer which is great through other like
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write room and obviously there are dozens of these so I'm just mentioning a couple and again
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you can configure it you can put a a black screen or any color you can put an image around your text
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you can blur text you're not concentrating on out just show a few lines the blinking cursor white
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on black black on white whatever you fancy really the idea being that you can if you want even
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you know turn off things like spell correction as you go along normally as you're typing away
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in most text editors or prose text editors you can see words you've misspelled with an underlining
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or a red wobbly line under a word you've misspelled well with a distraction free text editor I would
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say turn that off because if you're typing a long sentence it's really tempting to go back and
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correct your spelling as you go along and that way you lose your thread and it slows you down it's
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for me at least it's much so much better just to splurge the text out and then go back and do all
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the fun stuff like formatting and spell correction and grammar correction and things like that
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it is something that drives me crazy actually the whole system and the way that computers have now
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centralized communication as well as work into one place into one desktop environment often
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for instance the latest iterations of the Mac OS turning off notifications is really quite
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difficult it's a bit like android you have to go through each application and turn off notifications
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one by one or make sure that the do not disturb mode lasts all day and all night personally I don't
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that doesn't work for me at all in fact if I've got a serious job of work on I'll turn off all
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notifications on my phone on the computer I'll even go and put my phone or tablet in the room next
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door so if it pings or burrs or words or rings I'll just ignore it while I'm concentrating
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on what I'm doing and this works for me very well I suppose it's analogous to using distraction
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text editors it just keeps me concentrated on exactly what I'm doing when I go into the office in
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which I work a few days a week it always amazes me that the people younger than me in the office
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are sometimes on their phones they're writing or surfing or doing their work and at the same time
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they're switching application and just typing in a WhatsApp message into a web page or they're
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picking up their phone and just sending off a you know quick text or posting on Instagram that kind
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of thing and that really doesn't work for me I find that if my train of thought shifts for just a
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few seconds it can take me 10 20 30 seconds to kind of get back on track and I'm not saying that
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people who switch from communicating on various platforms to their work I'm not saying they do a
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better or worse job than me particularly all I know is that it doesn't work for me and I wonder
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how they can because I know that I can't work like that and this kind of brings me back now to
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technology and the way that I use it I tried them or VI first and then moved onto them both in
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graphic and keyboard shortcut modes and I didn't get on with them too well mostly because I'd be
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typing and you know would miss out the first four or five letters of each word um well it's when
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I first started typing because I wouldn't be in I wouldn't be in insert mode I'd be in some command
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mode and I found that I never really got into the habit of being able to switch modes particularly in
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them having said that what I do like about them is that it's all or it can all be keyboard controlled
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and this is a big thing for me back in the early days of my career I was working as a help less
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technician and obviously I was on a computer all day helping people out on the phone and going
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around the college that I happened to work in helping people with their computers and I found that I
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got really bad RSI repetitive strain injury in my right hand and this was actually in those days
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from using the puck mouse that came with the iMacs that we used at that time and I used to get these
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terrible shooting pains up my right wrist and right at my right arm and so to this day if I am
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forced to use a mouse I have to keep changing the mouse that I use so I'll go from an upright
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mouse to a standard two or three button mouse and then move to a track ball and then move to a
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thumb ball track pad or a whack-on tablet and then back to a mouse and keep changing so that my hand
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it isn't in the same position to control the computer the whole time and this has led to me
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wanting to control the applications that I use almost entirely or at least as much as I can
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using keyboard shortcuts and this is why I first got into using them obviously if you use
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them a lot you hear about other similar packages and of course the elephant in the room there is
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EMacs and it was from my use of EMacs really that I discovered that I had in fact come home or at
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least regressed 40 years and I'm now using EMacs for as much as I possibly can and I'm finding it
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a brilliant environment in which to work I'm experimenting at the moment with exwm which is using
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EMacs as your windows manager it controls the ex window system and you can obviously send email
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read your email browse the web in various forms to various varying degrees of complexity
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all using the same keyboard shortcuts and key bindings right across every application
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and this for me is absolutely fantastic I very rarely have to move my right hand over to the
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emails if ever I find that if I am using a Linux machine which are now my daily drivers I always
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have i3 windows manager on those and I find myself switching between maybe nano EMacs focus writer
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and then if I do have to use a traditional word processor which I do in my line of work mostly
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actually to track changes when the copy that I've written goes to clients and back I use WPS
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office WPS office is closed source it's a proprietary package there is a community version
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it's out of china from a company called kingsoft and the reason why I use it over for instance
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Libre office or any of the alternatives abby word for instance caligra I've also used an
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enjoyed but the reason why I use WPS office on Linux is because it can be skinned or given the user
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interface of what looks like a 1990s version of word for Mac so even though it was word for Mac
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back in the 90s that pushed me on to this road of distraction free text editing and if I'm
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having to use a graphical user interface word processor it'll be WPS office that I use
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tools as well that I use hunspell I find great that's shipped usually with focus writer and you can
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switch between many many languages if English isn't your first language and then there are of
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course variations on English so you can switch between us English UK English Australia and English
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with their particular variations if I'm using emax I use icebell or a spell again switching between
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dictionaries is quick and easy I haven't really got to grips with grammar checking in emax
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I know there's an API on to grammy.com my employer pays for grammy so it is a service I use
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it's not particularly useful but it does pick up things that you think you might correct if you
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had the time to proofread your own stuff more accurately for instance you can start a sentence
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with a plural subject and then use a singular form of a noun and you might not notice you've done
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that but something like Grammily will pick it up a lot of Grammily's suggestions you can ignore
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but it is quite useful on occasion and if you haven't got somebody else another human to do
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your proofreading or sub editing for you and I've yet to plumb in a decent grammar editor into
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emax something I'll be looking at fairly soon I think now whether that's the Grammily API that I
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end up using I don't know I'd be very interested to hear how if there are any other writers out there
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whether they're using a grammar editor at all which one they're using and any emax users out there
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how they're integrating grammar editing into their emax workflows I'll be putting links to all the
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applications that I've mentioned today in the show notes there's a great article I found on
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using VIM as a word process it's really handy I'll also put links to right room I spell
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a spell and Hunspel in the notes so that's about all from me I think thanks ever so much everyone
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for listening into this hope you found it useful as I said at the beginning if you want to record
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a podcast of your own please do feel free to find a microphone make a recording submit it and get
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yourself out there so this is Ennis Dello signing off on Hacker Public Radio thanks for listening
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you have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work today show was
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contributed by a HBR listener like yourself if you ever thought of recording a podcast and click
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on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is hosting for HBR has been kindly
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provided by an honesthost.com the internet archive and our syncs.net on this address status
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today's show is released under creative comments attribution 4.0 international license
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