To purchase, you can either get it on the Literature & Latte site or at the App Store. Scapple is available for Mac only you can give it a test drive for 30 days. In the meantime you can view a video that provides a good visual overview. In the next few days, I’ll provide a tutorial on how it works and how you can export it into your Scrivener project. As I become more comfortable with the software, I’m sure I’ll get more creative with the brainstorming and feel less restricted with the thought process. I’ve linked some of the possible relationships with a dotted line, a two headed arrow and a solid line. I’ve also enlarged the font and bolded it. Scrivener is founded upon a rigid outline model, where every item in the binder must have one (and only one) parent item and those items fall in a linear order. I started out with columns, and tend to put stars by my key points, but in this case I put them in two dark, red jagged boxes. Even more important, there is a fundamental disconnect between the information models these two programs use. But I provided a sample of what can be done. It’s not all over the place because I’m still getting used to the program. If you click on the image to enlarge it, you can see this is a somewhat linear way of thinking. You never have to worry about running out of space because the virtual paper fits as many notes as you need. I’m currently playing around with it and here is a sample of how it looks: The notes can be moved around, resized, linked, or deleted. Essentially it’s a virtual piece of paper that allows you to jot down notes during a brainstorming session. When you first take a look at it, you might consider it a mind-mapping software, but it really isn’t. Of Literature and Lattes brings the town of Winsome alive again, and I couldn’t wait to return and savor a story of forgiveness, of fresh starts, of literary delights, and of love.Literature & Latte, the creators of Scrivener, have a new product called Scapple. “Like all of Reay’s novels, Of Literature and Lattes delivers a story with details so vivid you can feel the fabric slipping between your fingers, characters so rich they could slide into the booth across from you, and a message so hopeful and redemptive it will linger in your mind long after you turn the final page. Denton, bestselling author of The Hideaway and Glory Road You'll root for these characters and will be sad to leave this charming town.” -Lauren K. Reay has penned another poignant tale set in Winsome, Illinois, weaving truth, forgiveness, and beauty into a touching, multilayered, yet totally cozy story. “The town of Winsome reminds me of Jan Karon's Mitford, with its endearing characters, complex lives, and surprises where you don't expect them. “In her ode to small towns and second chances, Katherine Reay writes with affection and insight about the finer things in life.” - Karen Dukess, author of The Last Book Party
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