#AI tools for Export
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At Terra Sourcing, we are import export platform to connecting importers with high-quality, verified exporters. Our platform ensures reliable partnerships that pave the way for successful trade and growth.
#import and export#B2B marketplace#Export training#Exporter webinar#terrasourcing#export import business#post#Import Export Business In India#International Trade Leads#AI tools for Export#Product Market Research reports for Exporters
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Chinaâs Rare Earth Export Controls: What Manufacturers Must Know
Chinaâs new rare earth export controls are reshaping global manufacturing supply chains. In this short clip, Certivo CEO Kunal Chopra explains the real-world impact on procurement, pricing, and supplier reliability.
đ Longer lead times â +30 to 45 days in procurement cycles đ Price volatility â Up to 200% cost spikes on key materials đ Heavier documentation â Composition, origin & processing info required đ Supplier uncertainty â Even trusted partners now face disruptions
đ± Watch this short clip: https://youtube.com/shorts/4dstdWn581k
đ„ Full podcast episode: https://youtu.be/teq9bXymluc
đ Rare Earth Compliance Help: https://www.certivo.com/solutions
đ Visit Certivo: https://www.certivo.com/
#China rare earth export controls 2025#Manufacturing impact of rare earth regulations#Rare earth procurement delays for manufacturers#Rare earth price volatility 2025#Supply chain disruptions due to China policy#Compliance software for rare earth sourcing#Rare earth certification and documentation#AI tools for supply chain compliance#Certivo rare earth regulatory support#Supplier risk from Chinese export licensing
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How to navigate the world safely with AI
#AI#WE#data#AI and Data#E-commerce exports#Cybersecurity AI tools#Virtual assistants in smart homes#Data protection best practices#AI in healthcare#AI-driven fraud management
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hey if you write in microsoft word, you should get libre office. it's free, constantly updated, doesn't use AI, and has all the features you're used to. there are lots of user guides and add-ons to make it as easy for you as possible, and it's been around for a long time now.
write in google docs instead? try ellipsus. it's in beta and free to join and use. it's being actively worked on and improved, openly opposes AI, and has all the features you need for a collaborative document tool while also being extremely easy to navigate. it's also made by fans, for fans, with a promise that anything you can write is allowed.
i've used both of these programs extensively and can vouch for them, ellipsus especially. ellipsus currently only imports .md files if you wanna move your stuff over, but gdocs can export those no problem and copy + pasting rich text also works fine. (they're also going to add more formats.) ellipsus also has an import to ao3 function that pastes your document's raw html into a new work window as long as you're logged into ao3. remember how gdocs formats weird in ao3 unless you do some html fuckery to fix it? yeah, this makes that a non-issue.
don't give big corporations your money and/or data. you can always start small, and picking a better program to write fic in is a great place to begin. i promise these programs are both way more worth your time than their mainstream counterparts.
#tox.txt#every time i see some new post about msword's ai bullshit or whatever google is doing i want to scream#free yourself from those shackles!!!!#god i love ellipsus. just absolutely baller program. the one issue i had with it was solved within days of me discovering it even existed.#if you join the beta please give them some feedback when they ask!
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Migrating Off Evernote
Evernote, a web-based notes app, recently introduced super-restrictive controls on free accounts, after laying off a number of staff and introducing AI features, all of which is causing a lot of people to migrate off the platform. I haven't extensively researched alternative sites, so I can't offer a full resource there (readers, feel free to drop your alternative sites in notes or reblogs), but because I have access to OneNote both in my professional and personal life, I decided to migrate my Evernote there.
I use them for very different things -- Evernote I use exclusively as a personal fanfic archive, because it stores fics I want to save privately both as full-text files and as links. OneNote I have traditionally used for professional purposes, mainly for taking meeting notes and storing information I need (excel formulas, how-tos for things I don't do often in our database, etc). But while Evernote had some nicer features it was essentially a OneNote clone, and OneNote has a webclipper, so I've created an account with OneNote specifically to store my old Evernote archive and any incoming fanfic I want to archive in future.
Microsoft discontinued the tool that it offered for migrating Evernote to OneNote directly, but research turned up a reliable and so-far trustworthy independent tool that I wanted to share. You export all your Evernote notebooks as ENEX files, then download the tool and unzip it, open the exe file, and import the ENEX one by one on a computer where you already have the desktop version of OneNote installed. I had no problem with the process, although some folks with older systems might.
I suspect I might need to do some cleanup post-import but some of that is down to how Evernote fucked around with tags a while ago, and so far looking through my notes it appears to have imported formatting, links, art, and other various aspects of each clipped note without a problem. I also suspect that Evernote will not eternally allow free users to export their notebooks so if nothing else I'd back up your notebooks to ENEX or HTML files sooner rather than later.
I know the number of people who were using Free Evernote and have access to OneNote is probably pretty small, but if I found it useful I thought others might too.
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Experimenting with new ways to present my Mononoke 3D models. Watching them tenbin spin off-sync is oddly mesmerizing - like a pair of hanging mobiles swaying in the breeze.
These will be the first of (hopefully) a series and slightly cleaned up models!
Update 05/23/24: Now updated with colors! đ
Q&A below the cut!
How did you create these models? Using gratuitous amounts of reference images, I made schematics in Adobe Illustrator and/or Photoshop. Then I import the 2D images into Google Sketchup 2017 to sculpt! I used the camera animation feature to cobble together a spinning animation, which I then exported as a MP4 and converted to a GIF in Photoshop.
Why did you make these models? They were for my most recent Mononoke fan art. A lot of work went into these models, so I wanted to showcase them more thoroughly! Additionally, I noticed that fan artists had difficulty depicting these complicated props on-model. I want to contribute a resource which this community can draw from!
What other models do you intend to create? Coming down the immediate pipeline are the classic exorcism sword and medicine box. Later on, I want to tackle their 2024 counterparts. The current version of the 2024 sword model is too messy and needs remodeling. The 2024 medicine box hasn't been modeled yet, as I haven't collected enough references.
May I use these as reference? As long as it isn't being used for the likes NFTs and/or generative AI, yes! Credit is appreciated but not mandatory as these designs don't belong to me. I would love if you tagged me in your creations though!
Can you render these in a different camera angle? Yes, but it'll have to be an image rather than a GIF as I'm not familiar enough with SketchUp's animation tools to do much beyond this. Please send requests to my ask box!
Can you render these in different poses? Send me an ask with a description of the specific pose. Depending on its complexity I may be able to pull it off.
Can you make a colorized version of these? As of 05/23/24, yes! Though the colors aren't 100% accurate due to how lighting is set up in SketchUp. Please refer to my non-animated turnarounds instead!
Are these models available for download? At the moment, I'm not comfortable sharing my working files. Please don't pester me about this, as it'll likely discourage me from changing my mind in the future.
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The genocide is also experimentation on living beings
Israel is currently testing new weapons in Gaza, some of which will soon be sold globally as "battle-tested," according to Antony Loewenstein, an author who has written a widely acclaimed book on the issue.
For years, the Israeli defense sector has used Palestine as a laboratory for new weapons and surveillance tech, he told Anadolu, adding that this is also the case in the current ongoing war on Gaza.
One of the main reasons why "many nations, democracies and dictatorships support Israeli occupation" of Palestine is because it allows them to buy these "battle-tested" weapons, asserted Loewenstein, author of The Palestine Laboratory: How Israel Exports the Technology of Occupation Around the World.
Another aspect of Israel's war on Gaza has been the use of artificial intelligence technology, he said.
According to Loewenstein, AI has been one of the key targeting tools used by the Israeli military in its deadly campaign of airstrikes, leading to mass killings of Palestinians-now over 28,500-and damage on an unprecedented scale.
The current war on Gaza is "inarguably one of the most consequential and bloody," he said.
He described Israel's use of AI against Palestinians as "automated murder," stressing that this model "will be studied and copied by other nation-states" and Tel Aviv will sell them these technologies as tried and tested weapons.
In the last 50 years, Israel has exported hi-tech surveillance tools to at least 130 countries around the world.
To maintain its illegal occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem, and blockade of the Gaza Strip, Israel has developed a range of tools and technologies that have made it the world's leading exporter of spyware and digital forensics tools.
But analysts say the intelligence failure during the Oct. 7, 2023 Hamas attacks casts doubts over Tel Avis's technological capabilities.
Israel's reliance on technology "is an illusion of safety, while imprisoning 2.3 million people under endless occupation," said Loewenstein, who is Jewish and holds Australian and German nationalities.
He described Israel's response in Gaza as "apocalyptic," stressing that the killings of Palestinian civilians, including children and women, is "on a scale of indiscriminate slaughter."
- 'BLOOD MONEY'
Loewenstein, who is also a journalist, said Israel has honed its weapons and technology expertise over decades as an occupying power, acting with increasing impunity in the Palestinian territories.
This led a small country like Israel to become one of the top 10 arms dealers in the world, he said, adding that Israeli arms sales in 2021 were "the highest on record, surging 55% over the previous two years to $11.3 billion."
In his book, Loewenstein explores thoroughly Israel's ties with autocracies and regimes engaged in mass displacement campaigns, and governments slinking their way into phones.
The Israeli NSO Group sold its well-known Pegasus software to numerous governments, a spyware tool for phones that gives access to the entire content, including conversations, text messages, emails and photos even when the device is switched off.
Israeli drones were first tested over Gaza, the besieged enclave that Loewenstein referred to as "the perfect laboratory for Israeli ingenuity in domination."
Surveillance technology developed in Israel has also been sold to the US in the form of watch towers now used on the border with Mexico.
The EU's border agency Frontex is known to have used Israeli drone technology to monitor refugees.
Loewenstein explains in his book that the EU has partnered with leading Israeli defense companies to use its drones, "and of course years of experience in Palestine is a key selling point."
"So again, one sees how there are so many examples of nations that are wanting to copy what Israel is doing in their own area in their own country on their own border," he said.
These technologies and "are sold by Israel as battle-tested," he said.
In other words, he contends that Palestinians essentially have become "guinea pigs," and despite some nations and the UN publicly criticizing the Israeli occupation, in reality "they're desperate for this technology for themselves for their own countries."
"And that's how in fact, the Palestine laboratory has been so successful for Israel for so long," he said.
In his exhaustive probe into Israel's dealings with arms sales around the world, he noted that the country has monetized the occupation of Palestine, by selling weapons, spyware tools and technologies to repressive regimes such as Rwanda during the genocide in 1994 and to Myanmar during its genocide against the Muslim Rohingya people in 2017.
"This to me is blood money. I mean, there's no other way to see that and again, as someone Jewish, who has spent many, many years reporting on this conflict, both within Israel and Palestine but also elsewhere, it's deeply shameful that Israel is making huge amounts of money from the misery of others," he said.
"This is not a legacy that I can be proud of."
- 'NO NATION ACTUALLY HOLDING ISRAEL TO ACCOUNT'
Profiting from misery is to some extent the nature of what capitalism has always been about, but Israel does this with a great deal of impunity, "because Israel does what it wants," said Loewenstein.
"There is no accountability, there is no transparency, there is no nation actually holding Israel to account," he added.
Israel's regime is shielded from any political backlash for years to come because nations are reliant on Israeli weapons and spyware, said the author.
Israel may not be the only player employing surveillance technology that leads to human rights violations, but it still plays a dominant role, which is why Loewenstein insists that it deserves singular attention.
Israel's foreign policy has always been "amoral and opportunistic," he said, calling on all nations to take a stand and hold Israel accountable, and acknowledge that the world is buying what Israel is selling.
#free palestine#animal rights#govegan#animalrights#free gaza#gaza strip#gaza genocide#palestine#veganism#animals
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Have you speced out what it would take to make a tool to allow for export of a tumblr blog to a wordpress.com instance?
Tumblr has a full export available, and WordPress has imports and exports for pretty much everything under the sun, largely developed by the open source community. I want to give Tumblr users a chance to tap into the flexibility and customization of WP, but it will be a tricky migration. New technology coming online (including AI) will make it easier.
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The Whole Sort of General Mish Mosh of AI
Iâm not typing this.
January this year, I injured myself on a bike and it infringed on a couple of things I needed to do in particular working on my PhD. Because I had effectively one hand, I was temporarily disabled and it finally put it in my head to consider examining accessibility tools.
One of the accessibility tools I started using was Microsoftâs own text to speech thatâs built into the operating system I used, which is Windows Not-The-Current-One-That-Everyone-Complains-About. Iâm not actually sure which version I have. It wasnât good but it was usable, and being usable meant spending a week or so thinking out what I was going to write a phrase at a time and then specifying my punctuation marks period.
Iâm making this article â or the draft of it to be wholly honest â without touching my computer at all.
What I am doing right now is playing my voice into Audacity. Then Iâm going to use Audacity to export what I say as an MP3, which I will then take to any one of a few dozen sites that offer free transcription of voice to text conversion. After that, I take the text output, check it for mistakes, fill in sentences I missed when coming off the top of my head, like this one, and then put it into WordPress.
A number of these sites are old enough that they can boast that theyâve been doing this for 10 years, 15 years, or served millions of customers. The one that transcribed this audio claims to have been founded in 2006, which suggests the technology in question is at least, you know, five. Seems odd then that the site claims its transcription is âpowered by AI,â because it certainly wasnât back then, right? Itâs not just the statements on the page, either, thereâs a very deliberate aesthetic presentation that wants to look like the slickly boxless âwebsite as applicationâ design many sites for the so-called AI folk favour.
This is one of those things that comes up whenever I want to talk about generative media and generative tools. Because a lot of stuff is right now being lumped together in a Whole Sort of General Mish Mosh of AI (WSOGMMOA). This lump, the WSOGMMOA, means that talking about any of it is used as if itâs talking about all of it in the way that the current speaker wants to be talked about even within a confrontational conversation from two different people.
For people who are advocates of AI, they will talk about how ChatGPT is an everythingamajig. It will summarize your emails and help you write your essays and it will generate you artwork that you want and it will give you the rules for games you can play and it will help you come up with strategies for succeeding at the games youâve already got all while it generates code for you and diagnoses your medical needs and summarises images and turns photos of pages into transcriptions it will then read aloud to you, and all you have to focus on is having the best ideas. The notion is that all of these things, all of these services, are WSOGMMOA, and therefore, the same thing, and since any of that sounds good, the whole thing has to be good. Itâs a conspiracy theory approach, sometimes referred to as the âstack of shitâ approach â you can pile up a lot of garbage very high and it can look impressive. Doesnât stop it being garbage. But mixed in with the garbage, you have things that are useful to people who arenât just professionally on twitter, and these services are not all the same thing.
They have some common threads amongst them. Many of them are functionally looking at math the same way. Many or even most of them are claiming to use LLMs, or large language models and I couldnât explain the specifics of what that means, nor should you trust an explainer from me about them. This is the other end of the WSOGMMOA, where people will talk about things like image generation on midjourney and deepseek (pieces of software you can run on your computer) consumes the same power as the people building OpenAIâs data research centres (which is terrible and being done in terrible ways). This lumping can make the complaints about these tools seem unserious to people with more information and even frivolous to people with less.
Back to the transcription services though. Transcription services are an example of a thing that I think represents a good application of this math, the underlying software that these things are all relying on. For a start, transcription software doesnât have a lot of use cases outside of exactly this kind of experience. Someone who chooses or cannot use a keyboard to write with who wants to use an alternate means, converting speech into written text, which can be for access or archival purposes. You arenât going to be doing much with that that isnât exactly just that and we do want this software. We want transcriptions to be really good. We want people who canât easily write to be able to archive their thoughts as text to play with them. Text is really efficient, and being able to write without your hands makes writing more available to more people. Similarly, there are people who canât understand spoken speech â for a host of reasons! â and making spoken media more available is also good!
You might want to complain at this point that these services are doing a bad job or arenât as good as human transcription and thatâs probably true, but would you rather decent subtitles that work in most cases vs only the people who can pay transcription a living wage having subtitles? Similarly, these things in a lot of places refuse to use no-no words or transcribe âbadâ things like pornography and crimes or maybe even swears, and thatâs a sign that the tool is being used badly and disrespects the author, and itâs usually because the people deploying the tool donât care about the use case, they care about being seen deploying the tool.
This is the salami slicer through which bits of the WSOGMMOA is trying to wiggle. Tools whose application represent things that we want, for good reasons, that were being worked on independently of the WSOGMMOA, and now that the WSOGMMOA is here, being lampreyed onto in the name of pulling in a vast bubble of hypothetical investment money in a desperate time of tech industry centralisation.
As an example, phones have long since been using technology to isolate faces. That technology was used for a while to force the focus on a face. Privacy became more of a concern, then many phones were being made with software that could preemptively blur the faces of non-focal humans in a shot. This has since, with generative media, stepped up a next level, where you now have tools that can remove people from the background of photographs so that you can distribute photographs of things you saw or things you did without necessarily sharing the photos of people who didnât consent to having their photo taken. That is a really interesting tool!
Ideologically, Iâm really in favor of the idea that you should be able to opt out of being included on the internet. Itâs illegal in France, for example, to take a photo of someone without their permission, which means any group shot of a crowd, hypothetically, someone in that crowd who was not asked for permission, can approach the photographer and demand recompense. I donât know how well that works, but it shows up in journalism courses at this point.
Thatâs probably why that software got made â regulations in governments led to the development of the tool and then it got refined to make it appealing to a consumer at the end point so it could be used as as a selling point. It wouldnât surprise me if right now, under the hood, the tech works in some similar way to MidJourney or Dall-E or whatever, but itâs not a solution searching for a problem. I find that really interesting. Is this feature that, again, is running on your phone locally, still part of the concerns of the WSOGMMOA? What about the software being used to detect cancer in patients based on sophisticated scans I couldnât explain and you wouldnât understand? How about when a glamour model feeds her own images into the corpus of a Midjourney machine to create more pictures of herself to sell?
Because admit it, you kinda know the big reason as a person who dislikes âAIâ stuff that you want to oppose WSOGMMOA. Itâs because the heart of it, the big loud centerpiece of it, is the worst people in the goddamn world, and they want to use these good uses of this whole landscape of technology as a figleaf to justify why they should be using ChatGPT to read their emails for them when thatâs 80% of their job. Itâs because itâs the worst people in the worldâs whole personality these past two years, when it was NFTs before that, and itâs a term they can apply to everything to get investors to pay for it. Which is a problem because if you cede to the WSOGMMOA model, there are useful things with meaningful value that that guy gets to claim is the same as his desire to raise another couple of billions of dollars so he can promise you that he will make a god in a box that he definitely, definitely cannot fucking do while presenting himself as the hero opposing Harry Potter and the Protocols of Rationality.
The conversation gets flattened around the basically two poles:
All of these tools, everything that labels itself as AI is fundamentally an evil burning polar bears, and
Actually everyone who doesnât like AI is a butt hurt loser who didnât invest earlier and buy the dip because, again, these people were NFT dorks only a few years ago.
For all that I like using some of these tools, tools that have helped my students with disability and language barriers, the fact remains that talking about them and advocating for them usefully in public involves being seen as associating with the group of some of the worst fucking dickheads around. The tools drag along with them like a gooey wake bad actors with bad behaviours. Artists donât want to see their work associated with generative images, and these people gloat about doing it while the artist tells them not to. An artist dies and out of ârespectâ for the dead they feed his art into a machine to pump out glurgey thoughtless âtributesâ out of booru tags meant for collecting porn. Even me, I write nuanced articles about how these tools have some applications and we shouldnât throw all the bathwater out with the babies, and then I post it on my blog thatâs down because some total shitweasel is running a scraper bot that ignores the blog settings telling them to go fucking pound sand.
I should end here, after all, the transcription limit is about eight minutes.
Check it out on PRESS.exe to see it with images and links!
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Youâre so self centered itâs silly
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Hello, hope you are doing well. I've always wondered, for those fanvids that overlap music with dialogue (and just in general) how do you remove the show's original soundtrack or music?
Hi there, this is a great question! Iâm not that familiar with removing background audio so I went to the vidding discord to ask for help. Here are the recommendations Iâve found for you.
Audio Editing Tips and Resources
@bingeling used Adobe Premiereâs built-in audio filters and found decent success with the majority of the clips where they needed to edit audio. @eruthros pointed out that if the original video file is in 5.1 surround sound you can actually just mute the individual tracks in your video editor. Audacity has a lot of audio editing features and theyâve also introduced some AI tools to isolate and separate vocals. Audacity has long been a go-to for fanvidders for audio editing and something I used early on in my viddding experience, too. (edited to add: thank you to searchingweasel for this suggestion too!) Spleeter has been recommended by @sandalwoodbox and @Januarium. Lalal.ai is recommended by @Januarium, they used it in their fanvids and thought it worked well. Adobe Enhance comes recommended by by @vielmouse. If you have questions about any of these tools or other questions about fanvidding, gathering source, music resources, exporting help, youâre welcome to join the vidding discord. Thereâs also channels for sharing wips, recs and lots more. Hope this helps! Thank you for the ask! And thank you to the vidding discord for sharing your knowledge with us!
#viddingdora#vidding#the vidding process#answerdora#askdora#textpost#vidding resource#fandom resource#cool resource#fan edit
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Rare Earth Supply Chain Risks: How Chinaâs Dominance Impacts Global Manufacturing
Chinaâs grip on rare earth elements has evolved into a critical supply chain risk for global manufacturing. From strategic investments to 2025 export restrictions, the impact spans electronics, defense, and clean tech sectors. In this short podcast, Kunal Chopra breaks down how we got hereâand what manufacturers must do now.
đ„ Watch full podcast: https://youtu.be/teq9bXymluc
đ Explore AI-powered compliance & supply chain solutions: https://www.certivo.com/solutions
#rare earth supply chain disruption 2025#China rare earth export controls 2025#AI compliance tools for manufacturers#rare earth minerals and global manufacturing#geopolitical risk in manufacturing supply chains#rare earth impact on electronics industry#how to manage PFAS and rare earth compliance#US manufacturers and rare earth dependency#China rare earth strategy explained#Certivo AI-powered compliance solutions
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I know about AI, and basically, the only way I catch that an image is AI, unless it's painfully obvious, is because the notes or tags point it out. I'm really, really bad at spotting them.
Which is totally normal. I think ppl are also crazy harsh on ppl who CANT tell if something is ai. Like why SHOULD you be expected to train yourself to scrutinize every image you see to identify AI markers. It's just so irritating when people who CANT identify AI seem very certain that they can. And also that since, like. Obviously identifying AI is so easy because they can do it (when it's obvious) so if you can't, there's something wrong with you and you should be ashamed of yourself by promoting (reblogging or liking or generally enjoying) ai art.
Like I'm an animator and I can identify a lot of things in an animation. If I see an error, I can usually tell what caused it. As an artist in general there's plenty of times I can identify the program a piece was made in, or what tools might have been used to make it. But it would be insane for me to expect a non artist to be able to identify sai's distinctive water colour brush or clear use of a sony Vegas plug in or even when something is obviously an interlacing issue caused by incorrect export settings. But it's also not a MORAL failing that someone can't identify that, whereas theres this idea that if you can't identify AI art it IS some kind of moral failing on your part. It's not. You're not familiar with how it works. Of course you can't identify it and it's not your job to have to be able to either.
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I finally exported all of my WIPs from Notion, which I stopped using like over a year ago or whatever over its native AI tools, to import into Obsidian. So, I finally am back to accessing all of the fics that I never finished. Maybe I'll finally just post some of them to AO3 tagged as incomplete and abandoned. But, also, now they're back into the ask games rotations lmaooo.
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ForgottenWriter's Guide to Writing: Getting Started, Part One.
So, I mentioned before that I might do this, and a few people were interested. I decided to actually put my money where my mouth was for once; this guide is going to be a practical guide to writing for a beginner. Now, this one is aimed at people who want to do stuff in fandom spaces, but a lot of what I am going to be doing here is also relevant to original work. I'll start you off with the basics, and help to teach you everything I've learned over the many, many, many years that I've been doing this.
True to its nature, this article will be pretty basic, but as we go, I'll get to more advanced stuff and concepts. You want to know how to do a proper character arc? Or characterise someone? Or make dialogue flow naturally? Or attract readers? Or really, anything like that? I'm your girl, and just because we don't cover it right away doesn't mean we're not going to cover it. But before we get into that, who am I and why do I get to give you these lessons? Well, I'm a writer, and a pretty successful one! Not only have I been in fandom species since the early 2000s, I'm also a self published author and writer of commissioned fiction. I live and breath writing, and not only do I think it's incredibly important, but I also treasure it as something that we all can have, and which can help us connect to one another.
I've been writing for a long time. Counting it all, I've been writing for almost two thirds of my span of life. I've done a lot, seen a lot, made a lot, fucked up a lot, and learned from it - hopefully a lot! My list of achievements include a fairly successful web novel-ish quest which ran for multiple years at hundreds of comments, votes and discussion per chapter, a 70K word steampunk novel, and a series of decently successful short stories published under a different, business name.
tl;dr, I'm not saying that I am an expert here and we always have more to learn. But I am saying that i know the basics, and know them well enough to make a living doing this shit, so let me pass on a little bit of what I know to you all if you're in any way interested.
So, what do you need to get started with writing? I'm going to be treating you like you know absolutely nothing here, and handing you some of the basic tools. The first thing you're going to want to have is a word processor of some sort. Back in ye old days, there were really only two games in town: Microsoft word and OpenOffice, but these days, there are a ton more options. I'll go over some of them and weigh the pros and cons.
Microsoft Office Microsoft office used to be the standard. Back in the old days, if you could use this, you would. Believe it or not, I don't hear it used much anymore, but if you happen to have it, it can serve well. It's formatting is still universal, and it provides a good grammar and spelling checker.
The downside of this is that it's paid, and microsoft can be pricey. It tends to be bundled with other programs, so if you already have it, you can use it. If you don't, it's not worth coughing up the cash for this alone. Also, it's had some AI controversies I believe, and some writers don't trust it. LibreOffice LibreOffice is an off-shot of OpenOffice, which was Microsoft's big, open source rival for writing back in the day. OpenOffice boasted that it could offer everything Microsoft offered, but for free. That's true! But I find it has a bit of a steeper learning curve. That said, I don't believe they've dipped into AI, and to this day, they're still free and can export documents into various formats.
If you want an word processor but don't want to pay, this one is pretty near the top of the list, and it's what I used for years and years.
Google Docs Google Docs is also a word processor, but differs from the others in several key ways. The first and most important is that your work is saved to the Cloud; you can access it from any computer. This also means that it doesn't matter what kind of computer you're running - LibreOffice won't run well on a chromebook for example, and Microsoft Office has no hope in hell, but anything will run Google Docs. Docs is also free, and has essentially unlimited space. Technically, limited, but if you're only writing, you'll probably never hit it. In my experience, the spelling and grammar checker is worse on google docs than Libre, but this is a minor complaint, and the main drawback of google docs is twofold.
Firstly, if your google account is ever lost, compromised or blocked, you lose everything. Your documents will be deleted, and you will instantly lose access without warning. Now, I rarely hear about this happening, but it's something to be aware of.
Secondly, AI. Google is very AI happy, and there has been suggestions in the past that they harvest information from google docs without permission. This has never been proven, but comes up somewhat semi regularly within author circles. Make up your own mind how likely you think it is.
Generic Word Processor These are things like Notepad, or some other brand of word processor. Typically, they won't serve as well as the ones I've name-dropped above, but you can write on anything in a pinch. The most important thing is to find something that works and clicks with you.
I spent years operating off LibreOffice, and before that, it's ancestor, OpenOffice, and nowadays I do most of my work via Google Docs.
These are all you will need to start writing in fandom spaces. Now, there are more advanced tools - especially if you're aiming to get published, but we can cover those in a later post. They don't matter right now.
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Should I start using explicit nsfw photos for some of my stories?
This could very well blow up in my face but hey, I was thinking about something and I would like to hear your opinions about it.
So, I'm not someone who uses a lot of images when it comes to my stories or my posts or my characters, and this is mainly because I don't want for people to be mad at me or uncomfortable because I might reblog their stuff or use it for stories that have some topics they might not like - for example: incest - so I always kept out of it, just staying in my lane and don't use photos and other kind of images.
But!
From a couple of months now I started following on Bluesky some blogs that just post this kind of images from different sources and I also started going back to some stories on other sites and such that make use of this as a sort of "cover", we can say, for their chapters, and internally I'm like "should I start make some small post like that? With just reblogs or me saying some character and images remind me of some of the situations from my stories?".
I think it could be fun, even just me repostig a photo of a man head down ass up on a bes, saying stuff like "When Logan goes to a physical check-up at his coach's house" or "Rex waiting for mr. Jordan like the good pet he is" or even some dialogue above it like one of the bullies dads asking Alex to fuck him or some like drabble next to a photo like some sort of idea that isn't really good enough to be a story but it can give some pretty horny dialogue.
This would all be posted on Bluesky, mind you, since you can't do it on Tumblr and exporting images on ao3 is such a pain to do. But I will also post the link here so you can still see it :3
So yeah, brief poll to decide if I should start using photos or keep it as it is?
EDIT: Minor edit that is implicit but better put it out there: THERE WILL BE NO USE OF AI. All photos and images I will use will be real photos from real people. AI is a useful tool, it could help a lot in the right fields, but, in my opinion, it does not have a place when it comes to writing or drawing, so until people realize that I will not use it in any way, shape or form on principle.
Thank you for your time, keep being awesome <3
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