Scrivener is a word processing app designed for writers with a unqiue interface and tool set focused on ‘generating content’ rather than simply allowing for content to be written.
Anything like that for ubuntu?
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Scrivener is a word processing app designed for writers with a unqiue interface and tool set focused on ‘generating content’ rather than simply allowing for content to be written. Anything like that for ubuntu? |
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Scrivener for Linux is actually an option. The Linux version is now approaching release status. The Beta program can be downloaded from the official forums. The Linux version started as an unofficial offshoot of the windows port. However, it is being developed by the same developer that is working on the Windows version (which works well in WINE, incidentally), and there has been continuous work on bug-fixing and feature upgrades since it was first released. Discussion and bug reports can be found and made at the forums at Literature and Latte (the publisher). WikidPad is another option. (Also see WikiPad's Sourceforge home.) Some of the published writers who do the Writing Excuses podcast use Wikid Pad (for the episode where this is mentioned, see #5-34, "Story Bibles"). This part of the description caught my eye:
For WikidPad, there is a PPA available through GetDebs. Otherwise, you can always compile it from source. I've seen a couple people who've said they use Zim Wiki, a simpler wiki-like editor. It is available in the repos. I used it for a while, and liked it, though now I use Tomboy for quick note taking (with Ubuntu One synchronization). Writer's Café is another possibility.
Writer's Café is commercial software, but has a limited demo version available. |
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You could also try Kabikaboo which is in the Ubuntu repositories. It doesn't have all of the features that Scrivener does but it is open source and may be able to help your organize what you write. |
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Storybook is a free (open source) novel-writing tool for creative writers, novelists and authors which will help you to keep an overview of multiple plot-lines while writing books, novels or other written works. |
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Xmind - designed for brainstorming. I use for that plus outlining. Easy to move blocks of ideas or chapters or events around. A recent entry into this space that I'm looking into is "Plume Creator". |
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While you're at it, you could also look at Zim which seems to be very alike Kabikaboo, but I think there are different features implemented (no "subset view", but includes tags, markup, images, etc.). I used it for quite some writing of games. |
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Plume Creator also an option - http://sourceforge.net/projects/plume-creator/ Using it at the moment and seems petty good |
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