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Writing Fiction Using SubEthaEdit

Phil Shapiro writes "The recent blizzard on the East Coast makes for some great collaborative creativity opportunities of various sorts, including group fiction writing using SubEthaEdit. Did you know you can write fiction about collaborative fiction writing using collaborative fiction writing tools? We didn't either." Man, the best fiction I've ever produced is some of the project plans created using SubEtha.

13 of 185 comments (clear)

  1. An honor? by Lifereaper0 · · Score: 5, Funny

    "national teaching award from Radio Shack" What an honor to win such a thing. What's next? Best movie award from /. ?

    1. Re:An honor? by daeley · · Score: 4, Funny

      Worst part about it is they ask you for your address and phone number before they'll give you the award! ;)

      --
      I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser gate.
  2. For those who don't know... by diamondsw · · Score: 5, Informative

    ...this is SubEthaEdit. It's a rendezvous and network-aware text editor designed for collaborative coding that seems to be finding more use. Meanwhile, it's also just a damn nice text editor for general use, and is free (yes, I know that TextWrangler is also free now).

    --
    I don't know what kind of crack I was on, but I suspect it was decaf.
  3. Ummmm, Okay. I'm Following Along, I Think... by RobotRunAmok · · Score: 4, Funny

    Man, the best fiction I've ever produced is some of the project plans created using SubEtha.

    The greatest lasagne recipe I ever wrote was crafted in MS Word 6.0.

    OK, OK, Courier 12 point, if you must know.

  4. Writing fiction by misrepresenting science by Ingolfke · · Score: 4, Funny

    An excellent example can be found here.

    The formula is as follows.
    1.) Write article based entirely on misrepresented sensational claims about the end of the world.
    2.) Get slashdotted
    3.) Sell more ads for website based on high traffic volumes (use only averages when representing numbers to ad buying customers.)
    4.) Profit!

  5. Re:Sorry by KingDaveRa · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Its a shame there's not a windows/*nix version, or a similar thing using AIM or MSN Messenger. Do similar tools exist and I've never seen them maybe? I'd like to do some online collaborations.

  6. Reminds me of some forum fun we had when bored by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Each new post describing a choice. How geeky...

    You come up to the entrance to a crumbling dungeon, where the fabled ruby of souls resides. Rummaging around in your pockets, you fish out your trusty dagger. Well...dagger..ish. Ok, it's a butter knife. hopefully you can find something better. Looking up at the cavernesque mouth of the dungeon, a chill runs down your spine, and a small spider crawls up your leg. Ick! you quickly swat it, then ponder the situation at hand. a set of vines snakes all over the sides of the tower that overlooks the dungeon courtyard. you could probably get a good view from there. then again, it looks reaaaaaly high up, and you've been known to get dizzy on a stepladder. maybe it's best to just not know what's ahead...

    Will you:
    A: try to climb up to the tower?
    B: press on into the dungeon?
    C: Go home and have tea?

    B: press on into the dungeon.

    Being scared of heights, you choose to press on into the dank dungeon, smelling the foul nastiness that is this thing. You find a copper sword on the ground, bending it as you smash it dirt wall of the dungeon. "Eh, my knife is better than this piece of pooh." You open a nearby door, and watch a dog eating some gecko thing on the floor. You hear a message echoing throughout the dungeon: "Dog has killed a gecko." Upon approaching the dog, you notice some writing on the ground.

    "I$ #ou c$n r!@ t#i@ &u% m$*t be sm@r$."

    Do you:
    A: north [enter]
    B: write with knife [enter]
    C: /me ill-it-errr-it [enter]

    A: Enter the area

    You suddenly realize that you are in the middle of a NetHack game, and that the little dog is at least 5 times stronger than you. Frantically searching your pockets, you find something squishy. Aha! tripe, your favorite midnight snack. with a mighty heave, you lob the ball of smelly meat at the dog, which greedily devours it, then looks at you lovingly. Aww, how sweet, you made a friend. Now that you have a chance to search the room, which reveals a well-hidden, and very sturdy looking door.

    Will you:
    A: Open the door carefully?
    B: Kick the door down?
    C: Kick the dog?

    C: Kick the dog

    With a mighty hoof you poot the dog in the side of it's belly. For a moment it does nothing, before letting out a strange welp noise, then making a bolt for the door. It smashes it down, whining as it goes. You look on through the now defunct doorway to see a band of Half-Clay Superorc beyond, flattened by your pooch's charge. In the distance you can hear the mutt whining, surely far into the dungeon and out of audible reach. Walking into the corridor, you notice three exits. Which will you take?

    A: North
    B: South
    C: Dennis

    etc...

  7. Re:Mac OSX only... by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 4, Interesting

    like?

    and BTW.. SubEtha has been around for years.. prior to the name change 3 years ago they were known as HydraEdit.

    --



    I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
  8. WTF? by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 4, Funny
    Did you know you can write fiction about collaborative fiction writing using collaborative fiction writing tools?


    My internal English parser barfed on this sentence. WTF is the parent talking about???
    --
    You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
  9. IT JUST WORKS™ by jdwest · · Score: 4, Informative

    On a whim, I installed SubEthaEdit for a recent collaborative project for use on a P'book and a friend's iBook. Both of us were editing (wirelessly) the same document within five minutes -- w/o reading a line from TFM . Nothing scientific to back it up, but we agreed that it saved us a good amount of total project time (and it completely changed our workflow on all projects from that time forward).

    --

    Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet ...
  10. Re:This only solves the technical problem. by Rick.C · · Score: 4, Funny
    Name one good novel that was written by committee.

    The Bible. Council of Nicea, 300 AD.

    It's been on the best-seller list for centuries. I filed my copy under "Historical Fiction."
    --
    You were 80% angel, 10% demon. The rest was hard to explain. - Over The Rhine
    "Math in a song is good."-Linford
  11. Re:This only solves the technical problem. by tb3 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Sorry, but I have to disagree with you there.
    The plot rambles, the protagonist is completely unlikable, the writing style is dull and repetitive, and it really bogs down in the final chapters.

    --

    www.lucernesys.comHorizon: Calendar-based personal finance

  12. Re:what about wiki? by revscat · · Score: 4, Informative

    While Wiki is designed for collaboration, it doesn't allow simulatenous changes that are immediately visible to all collaborators. If you and I were working on a document in SubEthaEdit you would see any changes I make as I make them, and I yours.

    All that and syntax highlighting, too. It's basically the difference between a text editor you run yourself vs. typing a message into Slashdot.