Portable Writing Solutions

In a previous post, I blogged about my current portable writing solution: my MSI Wind u100. I’ve since doubled its initial RAM; I’ve upgraded to a faster wireless card; and I’ve upgraded its original 3-cell battery to a 9-cell battery, which gives me up to 6 hours of battery life with my current configurations.

I’m always on the lookout for newer, alternative solutions, and so I thought I’d share some of these with you today.

The first is the most cost efficient: at $99, the NEO 2. It’s small and lightweight. It uses AA batteries (the company claims it can run for 700 hours off of one set of batteries!). It features a full-sized keyboard. It only provides you with four viewable lines of text at any given time, but this can be a plus if using this strictly during the drafting process. I imagine editing would be a pain! But, hey, we’re talking about portable solutions here. What portable solution wouldn’t be a pain when compared to a desktop setup, right?

AS Neo

Next, for people looking for additional functionality in a portable package, I provide an Apple iPad with Retina display paired with ZAGGkeys PROfolio+. The two essentially create a lightweight laptop alternative. With its sharp 2038-by-1536 resolution display and up to 10 hours of battery life, the new Apple iPad increases its word processing capabilities with a ZAGGkeys PROfolio+. Although no true Microsoft Word app exists at the moment (I’ve read rumors of a tentative 2014 release date), there are other apps that can function for you in the meantime. Also, the PROfolio+ is a Bluetooh keyboard designed to last 3 months off of a single charge! I like its backlit keys, too.

 

Last, but not least, Apple also released its new Macbook Air lineup for 2013. From the outside, not much has changed from last year. However, I’m most impressed with the 13″ Macbook Air’s battery life. It has been confirmed to last up to 12 hours with light usage. Weighing in at about two-and-a-half pounds, and featuring a full keyboard, it easily trumps my netbook. But it comes at a cost: the standard 11″ Macbook Air retails for $999, while the standard 13″ Macbook Air retails for $1099.

 

Of course, there’s always the classic option of paper and pen.

Moleskineh

Cost: Too low to advertise!

That’s it for this week. However you prefer write on the go, write your heart out.

 

Photo credit: Amir Kuckovic / Foter.com / CC BY-NC-SA

Close Your Email and Turn Off Your Notifications!

When I was in junior high school, I enrolled in a journalism class; and by virtue of being in this class, my teacher assigned me to write an article on something mundane. The rising costs of gasoline? Carpooling? And so I sat at my typewriter, punching keys, watching their metal legs extend and retract. This was how writing was done.

I often think of those days while writing.

We live in a completely different time. Floppy disks are no longer floppy (if ever used at all!). USB flash drives have gone from 1.0 to 2.0 to 3.0. And to trump that, it seems like everyone utilizes cloud services of some kind. And yet, I can’t help feeling that something has been lost. In the past, a writer might have experienced procrastination as illustrated in the following YouTube clip:

 

 

Ha! But now, on top of procrastinating, writers today face new complications spurred by increases in technology.

At any given time, I can be writing for my novel, or writing for this blog, and I can receive a friendly ring from Apple Mail, or an alternate chime from LINE. Instantly, my mind stampedes. Who wrote me? What did they say? If I divert my concentration from my writing for one second, it’s game over. And most of the time, it is. So I can’t emphasize enough, in this day and age, when we need to be writing, we need to close our email and turn off our notifications!

Recently, I’ve started writing immediately after just waking from sleep. Before I ever speak to anyone, using my logical mind, I try my best to carry my dream state directly to my writing. (This is also more easily achieved late at night.)

NetbookAnd I use a netbook. This is important. I use it strictly for word processing. For me, my MSI Wind u100 is only psychologically associated with writing.

After I’ve finished my writing for the day, I eat breakfast and hop on my desktop computer to receive my regular email and notifications. And then, and only then, do I begin the rest of my day. I figure nothing is so important that it can’t wait for me to finish my word count for the day.

 

I’ve found this strategy to be really effective for me. I hope sharing it with you will help increase your productivity, too!

Do you have any tricks up your sleeve that you’d like to share? If so, please post a comment below. 😀

And, as always, write your heart out!

 

Photo credit: Sergey Galyonkin / Foter.com / CC BY-NC

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