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#advanced editing software
shinelikethunder · 1 year
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back in the Superwholock days there was this post getting passed around my corner of tumblr about "teflon writing vs velcro writing," ostensibly as a nutshell summary of why fandom reacted so differently to Steven Moffat and Russell T Davies as Doctor Who showrunners: slick and polished and easier to admire (when done well) or coolly assess its flaws (when botched) than to get a grip on or pull apart & tinker with, vs. messy and prickly and grippy and tinkering-friendly and prone to getting its hooks in you whether or not you ever wanted that
and that's very funny to look back on with the distance of hindsight, because to this day--a full decade after peak Superwholock--RTD-era Who and Kripke-era SPN remain THE most insane, crazymaking, irreversible-brain-damage-inducing, "compelling in the way where they make me INCREDIBLY ANGRY and ITCHY TO FIX THEM because i am so stupid-invested that they still have me by the balls, even when my engagement is just picking apart the frustrations of how and why they SUCK" turbo-examples of velcro writing i have ever encountered in my LIFE
hell, they aren't even so much like velcro as they're like snagging the folds of a lace circle skirt on a whole branch of actual cockleburs and trying to wash the shrapnel out with fucking gorilla glue
.....and then there's BBC Sherlock. which was neither velcro writing nor teflon writing but an elaborate many-year con, targeted at the EXACT kinds of people who maintain a secret good Supernatural that lives in their heads, whose one neat trick was to bait its marks into collectively hallucinating a brilliant show so that Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss never had to put themselves to the trouble of writing one.
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invinciblerodent · 10 months
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Random Absolutist: "hey, True Soul, what are all these barrels of smokepowder for? Have we ran out of storage downstairs?"
Tav, placing 37 barrels strategically all around the main hall: "It's for, y'know.... don't worry about it"
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transrikuu · 2 years
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fantasticalleigh · 11 months
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one of the most annoying parts about like being an internet person who makes things in any capacity is when you post something new, it will eat up the rest of your day updating all your other socials/etc., and that's not even factoring in all the other maintenance in between
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03349656115 · 25 days
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appleiphone
#Apple’s latest iPhone release has once again created a buzz in the tech world. Known for its innovation and premium quality#Apple has introduced several new features and enhancements in this iPhone series. From design upgrades to advanced performance capabilities#the new iPhhttps://pricewhiz.pk/one is making headlines. Let's dive into what makes this new iPhone stand out.#Design and Display:#The design of the new iPhone continues Apple’s legacy of combining elegance with durability. The latest model features a sleek glass and me#giving it a premium look and feel. The Super Retina XDR OLED display offers stunning visuals with improved brightness and contrast#ensuring a vibrant and immersive experience. Available in different sizes#the new iPhone caters to various user preferences#whether you prefer a compact phone or a larger display.#Processor and Performance:#At the heart of the new iPhone is the A16 Bionic chipset#Apple’s most powerful chip to date. This 6-core CPU and 5-core GPU deliver lightning-fast performance#making multitasking#gaming#and content creation smoother than ever. With its advanced machine learning capabilities#the iPhone adapts to your usage patterns#optimizing performance and enhancing overall efficiency.#Camera System:#Apple has always excelled in mobile photography#and the new iPhone takes it a step further. The upgraded 48-megapixel primary camera captures stunningly detailed photos#even in challenging lighting conditions. Low-light photography has seen significant improvements#allowing users to take clearer#sharper images at night. The iPhone also offers advanced video capabilities#including Cinematic Mode and Pro-level editing tools#making it ideal for both amateur and professional content creators.#Battery Life and Charging:#Battery life has always been a crucial factor for iPhone users#and Apple has made improvements in this area as well. The new iPhone promises all-day battery life#ensuring that you stay connected and productive without constantly worrying about recharging. Fast charging and wireless charging options m#Software and Security:
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techdriveplay · 1 month
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How to Master Digital Photography in 2024
In 2024, digital photography continues to evolve at an unprecedented pace, blending cutting-edge technology with creative expression. Whether you’re a seasoned professional or an enthusiastic beginner, learning how to master digital photography is crucial for capturing stunning images that stand out in today’s visually saturated world. This comprehensive guide will provide you with the essential…
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hob28 · 3 months
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Advanced Photoshop Techniques: Elevate Your Design Skills
Introduction
Once you've mastered the basics of Photoshop, diving into advanced techniques can significantly enhance your creative projects and workflow. These advanced skills will allow you to push the boundaries of your creativity, creating professional-grade designs that stand out. In this guide, we'll explore a variety of advanced Photoshop techniques to help you elevate your work.
1. Mastering Layer Styles and Blending Modes
Understanding and utilizing advanced layer styles and blending modes can create stunning effects and bring your designs to the next level. Layer styles like Bevel & Emboss, Drop Shadow, and Gradient Overlay can add depth and dimension to your designs. Experiment with blending modes such as Multiply, Screen, Overlay, and Soft Light to blend layers creatively and achieve unique visual effects.
2. Advanced Masking Techniques
Mastering advanced masking techniques allows for precise control over image adjustments and compositions. Using layer masks, you can seamlessly blend multiple images or selectively apply adjustments to specific areas. Refine Edge and Select and Mask tools help create intricate selections for complex subjects like hair or transparent objects, ensuring smooth and realistic composites.
3. Non-Destructive Editing with Smart Objects
Smart Objects offer a powerful way to apply transformations and filters non-destructively, preserving the quality of your original images. Convert layers to Smart Objects before resizing, warping, or applying filters. This way, you can make changes without degrading the image quality, and you can always revert to the original state if needed.
4. Creative Use of Filters and Effects
Applying creative filters and effects can transform your images and add unique artistic touches. Use the Liquify filter for surreal distortions, the Oil Paint filter for a painterly look, or the Tilt-Shift filter for miniaturization effects. Combine multiple filters and effects to develop your own signature style, and use the Filter Gallery to preview combinations.
5. Advanced Retouching and Healing Techniques
Advanced retouching and healing techniques can help you achieve professional-quality results in portrait and product photography. The Healing Brush and Clone Stamp tools are excellent for removing blemishes, imperfections, and unwanted elements. Frequency Separation is a technique that separates texture and color, allowing for precise and natural-looking skin retouching.
6. Using Actions and Scripts to Automate Workflow
Automating repetitive tasks with actions and scripts can streamline your workflow and save valuable time. Photoshop Actions record a sequence of steps that you can apply to multiple images with a single click. Scripts, written in JavaScript, offer even more advanced automation possibilities, such as batch processing and complex adjustments.
7. Creating Complex Selections with Channels
Channels provide a powerful method for creating complex selections, especially when dealing with intricate details like hair or fur. By isolating the color information in different channels, you can create precise masks. Use the Alpha channel to store and refine selections, combining them with layer masks for detailed compositing work.
8. Advanced Typography and Text Effects
Elevate your text designs with advanced typography techniques and text effects that stand out. Use Layer Styles to add shadows, glows, and textures to your text. Explore the capabilities of the 3D Text tool to create dynamic and realistic text effects. Combine text with clipping masks and layer blending modes for creative and impactful typography.
9. 3D Effects and Compositing
Explore the world of 3D in Photoshop to create immersive effects and complex composites. Use the 3D workspace to build, texture, and light 3D objects. Integrate 3D elements with 2D images to create realistic scenes. Experiment with depth maps, extrusions, and 3D layers to add an extra dimension to your designs.
10. Leveraging the Power of Camera Raw
The Camera Raw filter offers advanced tools for photo editing, providing greater control over exposure, color, and detail. Use Camera Raw to make global adjustments, such as correcting white balance, enhancing contrast, and sharpening details. The local adjustment tools, like Graduated Filter and Adjustment Brush, allow for precise, targeted edits to specific areas of your image.
Conclusion
By incorporating these advanced Photoshop techniques into your skill set, you can push the boundaries of your creativity and produce professional-grade designs. Mastering layer styles, blending modes, and advanced masking techniques will refine your compositing skills, while non-destructive editing and automation will streamline your workflow. Embrace the power of Photoshop's advanced features, and watch your design capabilities soar.
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gagliandi · 6 months
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Discovering the Power of Reaper: My Go-To DAW for Music Production
In the expansive world of digital audio workstations (DAWs), Reaper stands out not just for its robust features and affordability but as my DAW of choice for all my music production needs. From the intricate beats crafted for the Garlic Farm project to the diverse soundscapes explored in my other works, Reaper has been an indispensable tool in my creative arsenal. Here’s why Reaper has earned its…
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the-learning-hub · 2 years
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Beginner-friendly video editing software options
Beginner-friendly video editing software options
Are you tired of shelling out big bucks for professional video editing software? Fear not, my friend, for the internet is chock full of free options that will have you turning out cinematic masterpieces in no time. First on the list is Lightworks. Now, I know what you’re thinking – “Lightworks? More like Light-jokes!” Ha! I’ll be here all week, folks. But seriously, don’t let the cheesy pun turn…
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tofupixel · 9 months
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uh. aseprite starter tips? i’m kinda lost
Aseprite Tips for Noobs !!
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Get the software: Aseprite (the pixel software of all time) Video tutorial:
Aseprite Crash Course in 30 minutes by AdamCYounis If you already have it you can skip ahead to 'the workspace' timestamp in the video.
If you have ever used another art software, Aseprite will be familiar to you but all the keybinds will be messed up. You can go to edit > keyboard shortcuts, search what you're missing and rebind it to whatever you're used to.
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Most important keybinds (to me):
Brush: B
Eraser: E
Undo: control + Z
Redo: control + Y
Quick colour picker: hold alt and click
New layer: shift + N
New frame: alt + N
Lasso select: Q
Quick outline: shift + O
Help! I pressed a button by accident and now I don't know how to fix it
These are a couple keybinds that are actually really useful for pros but a pain in the butt if you hit them while you're learning
Put the animation timeline back: tab
Undo snap to grid: shift + S
The window fills my screen and i cant see the pc bar: F11
The tools are gone: ctrl + F (might have to press it 2 times)
I can give some more advanced tips if anyone wants, but I dont want to overwhelm. If youre stuck there is official aseprite documentation where you can search for what you need. Or just ask me. Everything you have could possibly stuck on I have got stuck on it before 20 times.
Direct link to keybinds quick reference (keybinds are life
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Take it slow and have fun! It will take a while to get used to everything but the software is amazing! Trust the process!
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the-kremblin · 2 years
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was thinking of doing inktober again this year because i am a masochist apparently but the prompts are actually garbage i'm sorry
drop ideas for other october art stuff if you want but i might just work on a shitty pmv with my ocs or something
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tinystepsforward · 7 hours
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autocrattic (more matt shenanigans, not tumblr this time)
I am almost definitely not the right person for this writeup, but I'm closer than most people on here, so here goes! This is all open-source tech drama, and I take my time laying out the context, but the short version is: Matt tried to extort another company, who immediately posted receipts, and now he's refusing to log off again. The long version is... long.
If you don't need software context, scroll down/find the "ok tony that's enough. tell me what's actually happening" heading, or just go read the pink sections. Or look at this PDF.
the background
So. Matt's original Good Idea was starting WordPress with fellow developer Mike Little in 2003, which is free and open-source software (FOSS) that was originally just for blogging, but now powers lots of websites that do other things. In particular, Automattic acquired WooCommerce a long time ago, which is free online store software you can run on WordPress.
FOSS is... interesting. It's a world that ultimately is powered by people who believe deeply that information and resources should be free, but often have massive blind spots (for example, Wikipedia's consistently had issues with bias, since no amount of "anyone can edit" will overcome systemic bias in terms of who has time to edit or is not going to be driven away by the existing contributor culture). As with anything else that people spend thousands of hours doing online, there's drama. As with anything else that's technically free but can be monetized, there are:
Heaps of companies and solo developers who profit off WordPress themes, plugins, hosting, and other services;
Conflicts between volunteer contributors and for-profit contributors;
Annoying founders who get way too much credit for everything the project has become.
the WordPress ecosystem
A project as heavily used as WordPress (some double-digit percentage of the Internet uses WP. I refuse to believe it's the 43% that Matt claims it is, but it's a pretty large chunk) can't survive just on the spare hours of volunteers, especially in an increasingly monetised world where its users demand functional software, are less and less tech or FOSS literate, and its contributors have no fucking time to build things for that userbase.
Matt runs Automattic, which is a privately-traded, for-profit company. The free software is run by the WordPress Foundation, which is technically completely separate (wordpress.org). The main products Automattic offers are WordPress-related: WordPress.com, a host which was designed to be beginner-friendly; Jetpack, a suite of plugins which extend WordPress in a whole bunch of ways that may or may not make sense as one big product; WooCommerce, which I've already mentioned. There's also WordPress VIP, which is the fancy bespoke five-digit-plus option for enterprise customers. And there's Tumblr, if Matt ever succeeds in putting it on WordPress. (Every Tumblr or WordPress dev I know thinks that's fucking ridiculous and impossible. Automattic's hiring for it anyway.)
Automattic devotes a chunk of its employees toward developing Core, which is what people in the WordPress space call WordPress.org, the free software. This is part of an initiative called Five for the Future — 5% of your company's profits off WordPress should go back into making the project better. Many other companies don't do this.
There are lots of other companies in the space. GoDaddy, for example, barely gives back in any way (and also sucks). WP Engine is the company this drama is about. They don't really contribute to Core. They offer relatively expensive WordPress hosting, as well as providing a series of other WordPress-related products like LocalWP (local site development software), Advanced Custom Fields (the easiest way to set up advanced taxonomies and other fields when making new types of posts. If you don't know what this means don't worry about it), etc.
Anyway. Lots of strong personalities. Lots of for-profit companies. Lots of them getting invested in, or bought by, private equity firms.
Matt being Matt, tech being tech
As was said repeatedly when Matt was flipping out about Tumblr, all of the stuff happening at Automattic is pretty normal tech company behaviour. Shit gets worse. People get less for their money. WordPress.com used to be a really good place for people starting out with a website who didn't need "real" WordPress — for $48 a year on the Personal plan, you had really limited features (no plugins or other customisable extensions), but you had a simple website with good SEO that was pretty secure, relatively easy to use, and 24-hour access to Happiness Engineers (HEs for short. Bad job title. This was my job) who could walk you through everything no matter how bad at tech you were. Then Personal plan users got moved from chat to emails only. Emails started being responded to by contractors who didn't know as much as HEs did and certainly didn't get paid half as well. Then came AI, and the mandate for HEs to try to upsell everyone things they didn't necessarily need. (This is the point at which I quit.)
But as was said then as well, most tech CEOs don't publicly get into this kind of shitfight with their users. They're horrid tyrants, but they don't do it this publicly.
ok tony that's enough. tell me what's actually happening
WordCamp US, one of the biggest WordPress industry events of the year, is the backdrop for all this. It just finished.
There are.... a lot of posts by Matt across multiple platforms because, as always, he can't log off. But here's the broad strokes.
Sep 17
Matt publishes a wanky blog post about companies that profit off open source without giving back. It targets a specific company, WP Engine.
Compare the Five For the Future pages from Automattic and WP Engine, two companies that are roughly the same size with revenue in the ballpark of half a billion. These pledges are just a proxy and aren’t perfectly accurate, but as I write this, Automattic has 3,786 hours per week (not even counting me!), and WP Engine has 47 hours. WP Engine has good people, some of whom are listed on that page, but the company is controlled by Silver Lake, a private equity firm with $102 billion in assets under management. Silver Lake doesn’t give a dang about your Open Source ideals. It just wants a return on capital. So it’s at this point that I ask everyone in the WordPress community to vote with your wallet. Who are you giving your money to? Someone who’s going to nourish the ecosystem, or someone who’s going to frack every bit of value out of it until it withers?
(It's worth noting here that Automattic is funded in part by BlackRock, who Wikipedia calls "the world's largest asset manager".)
Sep 20 (WCUS final day)
WP Engine puts out a blog post detailing their contributions to WordPress.
Matt devotes his keynote/closing speech to slamming WP Engine.
He also implies people inside WP Engine are sending him information.
For the people sending me stuff from inside companies, please do not do it on your work device. Use a personal phone, Signal with disappearing messages, etc. I have a bunch of journalists happy to connect you with as well. #wcus — Twitter I know private equity and investors can be brutal (read the book Barbarians at the Gate). Please let me know if any employee faces firing or retaliation for speaking up about their company's participation (or lack thereof) in WordPress. We'll make sure it's a big public deal and that you get support. — Tumblr
Matt also puts out an offer live at WordCamp US:
“If anyone of you gets in trouble for speaking up in favor of WordPress and/or open source, reach out to me. I’ll do my best to help you find a new job.” — source tweet, RTed by Matt
He also puts up a poll asking the community if WP Engine should be allowed back at WordCamps.
Sep 21
Matt writes a blog post on the WordPress.org blog (the official project blog!): WP Engine is not WordPress.
He opens this blog post by claiming his mom was confused and thought WP Engine was official.
The blog post goes on about how WP Engine disabled post revisions (which is a pretty normal thing to do when you need to free up some resources), therefore being not "real" WordPress. (As I said earlier, WordPress.com disables most features for Personal and Premium plans. Or whatever those plans are called, they've been renamed like 12 times in the last few years. But that's a different complaint.)
Sep 22: More bullshit on Twitter. Matt makes a Reddit post on r/Wordpress about WP Engine that promptly gets deleted. Writeups start to come out:
Search Engine Journal: WordPress Co-Founder Mullenweg Sparks Backlash
TechCrunch: Matt Mullenweg calls WP Engine a ‘cancer to WordPress’ and urges community to switch providers
Sep 23 onward
Okay, time zones mean I can't effectively sequence the rest of this.
Matt defends himself on Reddit, casually mentioning that WP Engine is now suing him.
Also here's a decent writeup from someone involved with the community that may be of interest.
WP Engine drops the full PDF of their cease and desist, which includes screenshots of Matt apparently threatening them via text.
Twitter link | Direct PDF link
This PDF includes some truly fucked texts where Matt appears to be trying to get WP Engine to pay him money unless they want him to tell his audience at WCUS that they're evil.
Matt, after saying he's been sued and can't talk about it, hosts a Twitter Space and talks about it for a couple hours.
He also continues to post on Reddit, Twitter, and on the Core contributor Slack.
Here's a comment where he says WP Engine could have avoided this by paying Automattic 8% of their revenue.
Another, 20 hours ago, where he says he's being downvoted by "trolls, probably WPE employees"
At some point, Matt updates the WordPress Foundation trademark policy. I am 90% sure this was him — it's not legalese and makes no fucking sense to single out WP Engine.
Old text: The abbreviation “WP” is not covered by the WordPress trademarks and you are free to use it in any way you see fit. New text: The abbreviation “WP” is not covered by the WordPress trademarks, but please don’t use it in a way that confuses people. For example, many people think WP Engine is “WordPress Engine” and officially associated with WordPress, which it’s not. They have never once even donated to the WordPress Foundation, despite making billions of revenue on top of WordPress.
Sep 25: Automattic puts up their own legal response.
anyway this fucking sucks
This is bigger than anything Matt's done before. I'm so worried about my friends who're still there. The internal ramifications have... been not great so far, including that Matt's naturally being extra gung-ho about "you're either for me or against me and if you're against me then don't bother working your two weeks".
Despite everything, I like WordPress. (If you dig into this, you'll see plenty of people commenting about blocks or Gutenberg or React other things they hate. Unlike many of the old FOSSheads, I actually also think Gutenberg/the block editor was a good idea, even if it was poorly implemented.)
I think that the original mission — to make it so anyone can spin up a website that's easy enough to use and blog with — is a good thing. I think, despite all the ways being part of FOSS communities since my early teens has led to all kinds of racist, homophobic and sexual harm for me and for many other people, that free and open-source software is important.
So many people were already burning out of the project. Matt has been doing this for so long that those with long memories can recite all the ways he's wrecked shit back a decade or more. Most of us are exhausted and need to make money to live. The world is worse than it ever was.
Social media sucks worse and worse, and this was a world in which people missed old webrings, old blogs, RSS readers, the world where you curated your own whimsical, unpaid corner of the Internet. I started actually actively using my own WordPress blog this year, and I've really enjoyed it.
And people don't want to deal with any of this.
The thing is, Matt's right about one thing: capital is ruining free open-source software. What he's wrong about is everything else: the idea that WordPress.com isn't enshittifying (or confusing) at a much higher rate than WP Engine, the idea that WP Engine or Silver Lake are the only big players in the field, the notion that he's part of the solution and not part of the problem.
But he's started a battle where there are no winners but the lawyers who get paid to duke it out, and all the volunteers who've survived this long in an ecosystem increasingly dominated by big money are giving up and leaving.
Anyway if you got this far, consider donating to someone on gazafunds.com. It'll take much less time than reading this did.
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nanowrimo · 11 months
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Write Smarter, Not Harder: 5 Ways to Conquer Chaotic Writing
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Every year, we’re lucky to have great sponsors for our nonprofit events. ButterDocs, a 2023 NaNoWriMo sponsor, is an all-in-one writing app built for productivity, collaboration, and a more joyful writing experience. Today, the folks at ButterDocs share a few tips on organizing your writing to meet your goals:
NaNoWriMo is about to start, and you're champing at the bit to get to 50,000 words. But that's no easy feat! Because life doesn't stop when NaNoWriMo starts.
You're still going to have climb a mountain of chaos to reach your goal: Chaos like not being able to find your notes and outlines when you need them since they're scattered across multiple apps, or the constant lure of internet distractions.
And of course, once NaNoWriMo ends, the writing process continues. You'll need to get feedback, be able to actually easily take advantage of that feedback, and make revisions (especially if your ultimate goal isn't just a rough draft, but a polished novel).
Here are five tips from ButterDocs to beat the chaos and make your writing workflow less work and more flow.
1. Know what you're about to do.
We know you want to start maximizing your word count from Day One, but you'll thank yourself on Day Twenty if you lay the groundwork for yourself. Take some time to organize your research, develop your characters, lay out your major plot points, and consider your themes.
You don't need to buy and learn advanced plotting software. A digital whiteboard can be as intuitive as pinning index cards to a cork board.
2. Write in the best environment for you.
You're about to spend a lot of time writing. It's a good idea to get comfortable.
Think about what environment you write best in. Do you need the hubbub and energy of a busy coffee shop? Or the serenity of a cozy nook?
Once you find the right place, put the same effort into finding a writing app you'll actually enjoy writing in.
3. Stay in your writing flow.
Focus and dedication during NaNoWriMo is the whole ball game. Lose either, and your chances of hitting 50,000 words are harder.
Whatever your NaNoWriMo goals are, give yourself the best chances to succeed with tools that will help you get and stay focused. A timer, word counter, and goal tracker will help you with timed writing sprints and hitting daily writing goals.
4. Recover from distractions.
Distractions will happen. Chaotic writing aside, the human brain wants to wander for dopamine. And life inevitably gets in the way.
What's important is how you recover. Don't let one distraction or missed writing day snowball into another and another. Give yourself tools that help you get back on track. A simple notification to come back to your writing can be a big help.
5. Pull others in to help you move forward.
You may be participating in NaNoWriMo as an individual, but know this: you are not alone.
You have the entire NaNoWriMo community, among many other writing communities and groups you can turn to for any genre of writing.
When you feel stuck or need feedback on a draft, don't be afraid to ask for help. Just be sure to invite people into a writing app where you have control over the collaboration.
ButterDocs Early Access + NaNoWriMo Resources
Conquer chaotic writing by using a writing app built for exactly that. With ButterDocs, you can plan, write, share, and edit your writing all in one place, without the chaos. It's by the team that built Arc Studio, a leading screenwriting app with hundreds of thousands of users.
ButterDocs launches today in early access and we'd love to invite you to check it out for NaNoWriMo.
All NaNoWriMo participants can receive a free year of ButterDocs if you sign up by December 1st, 2023.
We're running a free online event on October 25th for everyone who signs up: "Getting (and Staying) in Your Creative Writing Zone During NaNoWriMo." with Grant Faulkner (Executive Director of NaNoWrimo), Matt Trinetti (founder of London Writers' Salon), and Allison Trowbridge (founder of CopperBooks). If you can't make it, we'll email ButterDocs users the recording afterward.
Visit https://butterdocs.com/NaNoWriMo to learn more about ButterDocs, claim your free account, and enter an exclusive sweepstakes giveaway for NaNoWriMo participants!
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mrabubu · 10 months
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A little post for easier navigation. Hi, I'm kishi.
A draw things and animate sometimes. To see it, use #my art tag To see answered questions, use #abubu ask
Tho not all posts with my drawing have this tag, because there are too many of those and I'm too lazy to edit them all...
Just in case, I apologise in advance since english isn't my first language. A note: you can have your ships and headcanons, but don't shove them in my face. I tolerate only x reader.
And another little note, I don't headcanon Leo as gay, so there won't be any leosagi or Leo with male characters. If people will be commenting about it, "fixing" my art by writing that I should've put Usagi there or that Leo is gay and not into girls, I'm going to ban you. More on this in this post.
Also my other blog for reblogs and thoughts: @kishi-in-her-lair
Rise of the TMNT comic: Prologue: Part 1/ Part 2/ Part 3 / Part 4 Heart of stone: Part 1/ Part 2 / Part 3 / Part 4 / Part 5 / Part 6 / part 7 / part 8 / Part 9 / Part 10 / Part 11 / ... Additional stuff: 1 / 2 / 3 / 4 / 5 / 6 / 7 / 8 / 9 / 10 / 11/
Krangified AU
One-shot
Sketches: 1/ 2/ 3/ 4/ 5/ 6/ 7/ 8/ 9/ 10/ 11/ 12/ 13
"You're still you" "Don't look at me" "The wing" Part 1/ 2 / 3
Ana's (my character) reference
Playlist
Hashtag: #krangified au
Software I use: SAI 2, Photoshop (sometimes), Toon Boom Harmony (animation).
My other main accounts: Twitter Instagram YouTube Boosty
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techtimechronicles24 · 4 months
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🇺🇸 Let's embark on a journey through the captivating history and unique features of the Commodore Amiga 1000—a groundbreaking computer that left an indelible mark on the world of computing.
💾 Introduced in 1985, the Commodore Amiga 1000 heralded a new era of multimedia computing, boasting advanced graphics and audio capabilities ahead of its time. It quickly became a favorite among creative professionals and gaming enthusiasts.
💻 Designed by Jay Miner and his team, the Amiga 1000 featured revolutionary architecture with custom chips for graphics and sound, offering unprecedented performance. Powered by a 7.14 MHz Motorola 68000 CPU, it also ran the unique AmigaOS, renowned for its multitasking capabilities and graphical user interface.
🐕‍🦺 The Amiga 1000's case design was inspired by a lunchbox, giving it a distinctive, compact form. Notably, it's the only model featuring the short-lived Amiga check-mark logo. The case's interior even bears the engraved signatures of the Amiga designers, including Jay Miner and his dog Mitchy's paw print.
🎮 Standout features included the ability to display up to 4096 colors and play stereo sound—unmatched by other personal computers of its time. The Amiga 1000 left a lasting impact, influencing digital art, animation, and video editing industries.
🕹️ A powerhouse for multimedia production, the Amiga 1000 enabled creative exploration for artists, musicians, and video creators. It was also a gaming pioneer, with iconic titles like "Defender of the Crown" and "Lemmings" showcasing its graphical prowess.
🎨 In the summer of 1985, Andy Warhol received his first Amiga 1000 home computer from Commodore International and became an enthusiastic brand ambassador. He famously created digital artworks, including a portrait of Debbie Harry using ProPaint software onstage at Lincoln Center, demonstrating the Amiga's capabilities to a live audience.
🌟 Today, the Commodore Amiga 1000 remains a beloved classic among retro computing enthusiasts, embodying the spirit of innovation and creativity of the 1980s computing era. Let's celebrate this iconic piece of computing history!
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techdriveplay · 7 months
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How to Use a Blue Yeti Microphone
Using a Blue Yeti microphone can significantly enhance your audio recording quality, whether you're podcasting or streaming.
Using a Blue Yeti microphone can significantly enhance your audio recording quality, whether you’re podcasting, streaming, or creating content. Known for its versatility and superior sound quality, the Blue Yeti microphone stands out as a top choice for creators. In this guide, we’ll delve into the initial setup, optimal placement, and advanced features to ensure you make the most out of your…
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