![]() Here is an example of a fairly recent review I wrote on the iTunes store for the Track Changes podcast (a podcast that I highly recommend, by the way). A link back to the review on the site on which it is posted (I’ll come back to this shortly.).Most sites require some short title of the review, and since the review is already associated with the product, the title of the review is something different. Typically my review consists of three parts: When I finish the book (or Podcast, or album, etc.) I’ll sit down and write the review. Sometimes, if I am planning on writing a review ahead of time, I’ll create the note before I am finished with the book (or whatever I am reviewing) and jot notes there about things I want to include in the review. I title the note with the product I am reviewing (often, but no always, a book). When I am ready to write a review, I will create a new note in my Reviews notebook. I have a Reviews notebook in my Reference notebook stack into which all of my reviews go. My process is pretty straight-forward: 1. Rather than writing the reviews directly on those sites, I tend to write them first in Evernote. ![]() However, I’ve found that the interfaces provided by places like Amazon and Apple to write reviews are clunky and awkward. I don’t write reviews nearly as much as I used to. It seems to me that in my entire Going Paperless series, I never mentioned this particular use case, so I figured I’d talk about it now. For my blogging, I generally write the posts in Ulysses before publishing them. There are generally four types of writing that I do:įor my fiction and nonfiction, I use Scrivener these days.
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