Docs Blog News and notes from the Google Docs and Sites teams

Similar documents
Introduction to EndNote X8

Interview with Patti Thorn, co-founder, BlueInk Review. For podcast release Monday, August 4, 2013

YOUR RESEARCH THE MOST POWERFUL TOOL FOR MANAGING QUICK REFERENCE GUIDE FOR MAC

EndNote on Windows: Class Notes. EndNote Training

EndNote for Windows. Take a class. Background. Getting Started. 1 of 17

A Short Introduction to Reference Management Software

Formatting Dissertations or Theses for UMass Amherst with MacWord 2008

Episode #039. Speak English Now! Podcast. How to Pronounce Technology Brands like an American

Guide to EndNote X8. Windows-version

#029: UNDERSTAND PEOPLE WHO SPEAK ENGLISH WITH A STRONG ACCENT

Introduction to EndNote X7

Exercise #1: Create and Revise a Smart Group

Language Use your native form of English in your manuscript, including your native spelling and punctuation styles.

UTS: Library Using EndNote X8 for Windows. A guide to EndNote X8 for Windows by Information Services Staff

EndNote for Mac. User Guide. UTS Library University of Technology Sydney UTS CRICOS PROVIDER CODE 00099F

What does it do? Step- by- step: Collecting stuff to read and cite online

University of Cambridge Computing Service EndNote Basic (Online) for Bibliographies Rosemary Rodd 23 May 2014

TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction About Timo Kiander Step #1: Step #2: Step #3: Step #4: Step #5: Step #6: Step #7: Step #8: Step #9: Step #10:

AGENDA. Mendeley Content. What are the advantages of Mendeley? How to use Mendeley? Mendeley Institutional Edition

Transcription Media File Name: Radio-Burde_Pierotti.mp4 Media File ID: Media Duration: 11:37 Order Number: Date Ordered:

EndNote Menus Reference Guide. EndNote Training

***Please be aware that there are some issues of compatibility between all current versions of EndNote and macos Sierra (version 10.12).

Writing Styles Simplified Version MLA STYLE

Using EndNote X7 to Manage Bibliographies on a Mac!

Free Downloads QuickBooks 2013 For Dummies

Health Sciences Library System University of Pittsburgh. Instructors Andrea Ketchum, MS, MLIS / Patricia Weiss, MLIS /

ONLINE QUICK REFERENCE CARD ENDNOTE

Using EndNote X6 to Manage Bibliographies

Reference Management with. EndNote X8 PC. Guide for Students and Researchers

LED LIGHTING FOR YOUR MODEL RAILROAD by Rick Wade

NHD RESEARCH PAPER STYLE SHEET AND FORMATTING INSTRUCTIONS

EUROPEAN TRANSPORT CONFERENCE 4-6 October 2017

Introduction to EndNote Desktop

Class Notes for Cite While You Write Basics. EndNote Training

Mendeley. By: Mina Ebrahimi-Rad (Ph.D.) Biochemistry Department Head of Library & Information Center Pasteur Institute of Iran

Guide to APA and MLA Writing Styles. Brought to you by the Gateway Technical College Academic Support Centers and Libraries

Choose the correct word or words to complete each sentence.

Mendeley Basics. Get Mendeley. Get Articles and Documents into Mendeley. Import Citations from a Website

PUBLIC SOLUTIONS SERIES:

Using EndNote X7 for Windows to Manage Bibliographies A Guide to EndNote for Windows by Information Services Staff of UTS Library

REPORT. 8/24/2018 Page 1 of 6

The Role of Digital Audio in the Evolution of Music Discovery. A white paper developed by

Running Head: ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY IN APA FORMAT 1. Annotated Bibliography in APA Format. Penny Brown. St. Petersburg College

All about Mendeley. University of Southampton 18 May mendeley.com. Michaela Kurschildgen, Customer Consultant Elsevier

FBLA Word Processing Part 1

Institute for Policy and Economic Development. Publication and Technical Report Specifications with Grant Proposal Writing and Report Editing Timeline

EndNote for Mac. EndNote for PC. User Guide. UTS Library University of Technology Sydney UTS CRICOS PROVIDER CODE 00099F

2. Document setup: The full physical page size including all margins will be 148mm x 210mm The five sets of margins

Getting started with Mendeley

Writing a Critical Essay. English Mrs. Waskiewicz

Information Literacy Program

Free no registration movie streaming

BBC LEARNING ENGLISH 6 Minute Grammar Indirect questions

Chapter 13: Conditionals

Class Notes for EndNote on Macintosh. EndNote Training

JRN 2201 final exam notes 7/20/14

What Is an APA-Style Essay?

Jennifer Dacay. Do I work with documents in my job? How often do I obtain documents via scanner? FineReader helped me

English quiz Quiz1 / September 2016 Class : Grade 9(a,b,c,d) Duration : 50min Obj: Maintain info/tenses

BBC LEARNING ENGLISH 6 Minute English Football songs

3. Give your project a title (suggestion: should be the same title as your Google Doc)

MANUSCRIPT PREPARATION

Desktop. Basic use of EndNote. Important start info 3 tips p. 1. Entering references manually p. 3

Quality Of Manuscripts and Editorial Process

CD SOUNDTRACK SPIN IT, MASTER SOUND MIXER!

DEVELOPING WORLD BIOETHICS: A STYLE GUIDE FOR AUTHORS

INDEX. classical works 60 sources without pagination 60 sources without date 60 quotation citations 60-61

Delta Journal of Education 1 ISSN

EndNote Basic: Organize your references and create bibliographies Creating Your EndNote Basic Account

Fios tv channel guide washington dc

Tools for Researchers

Broadcast News Writing

ELA/Literacy Released Items Grade 9 Conventions. Sample Student Responses (from all 3 released tasks)

Swinburne University of Technology

Don t Laugh at Me. 3 Cs F. Preparation. Vocabulary builder breaker

Software Audio Console. Scene Tutorial. Introduction:

DIFFERENTIATE SOMETHING AT THE VERY BEGINNING THE COURSE I'LL ADD YOU QUESTIONS USING THEM. BUT PARTICULAR QUESTIONS AS YOU'LL SEE

ENDNOTE X6 FOR HEALTH

book downloads download server

Understanding Plagiarism

THE ITC STYLE GUIDE. A quick guide to publishing

Roku express remote instructions

Harmony Smart Control. User Guide

If you have APA questions, please feel free to me at

Introduction to Mendeley

Introduction to Mendeley

Word Tutorial 2: Editing and Formatting a Document

Saratoga High School Library NoodleTools Citation Guide

INTRODUCTION TO ENDNOTE

LMS301: Reference Management Software (Mendeley)

History 326: Women in American History. Document Assignment Women & Nineteenth-century Reform Movements

Watch Mushrooms Grow Lisa Sindorf East Gallery - Formative Evaluation February 2011

I'M DEAD, NOW WHAT? IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT MY BELONGINGS, BUSINESS AFFAIRS, AND WISHES BY PETER PAUPER PRESS

WORD CHECK UP. Debut. Premiere. Hit

Voice and Speech Review Article Formatting and Style Guidelines September 2013

USING ENDNOTE X4: ADVANCED SKILLS

TITLE MUST BE IN ALL CAPS, IN SINGLE SPACE, INVERTED PYRAMID STYLE, CENTERED. A Thesis. Presented to the. Faculty of

About your Kobo ereader...6

Note: Please use the actual date you accessed this material in your citation.

Episode #035. Speak English Now Podcast. #035 Words in English you are mispronouncing

Transcription:

Share Report Abuse Next Blog» Create Blog Sign In Docs Blog News and notes from the Google Docs and Sites teams Guest post: Writing a book using Google Docs Monday, November 01, 2010 Labels: documents, Google Apps Blog, Guest Post Guest post: November is National Writing Month and to celebrate, we ve invited Dr. Steven Daviss to talk about how he used Google Docs to write a book with two colleagues. Dr. Daviss is currently the Chairman of Psychiatry at Baltimore Washington Medical Center in Maryland and has been increasingly leveraging his clinical and administrative experience towards a career merging health care policy, informatics, and health care reform. Looking for posts on your favorite product? Google Sites Documents Spreadsheets Presentations Forms Drawings Docs list Archives Archives Site Feed Follow us on Twitter twitter.com/googledocs Followers Follow with Google Friend Connect Two other psychiatrists (Anne Hanson and Dinah Miller) and I have been writing a popular blog (Shrink Rap) about the practice of psychiatry since 2006. A year later, we started a podcast (My Three Shrinks) that has received great reviews in itunes. Late in 2007, we decided to take some of those posts and weave them together to write a book. Followers (5351) More» We started out using a desktop word processor to write the book, each chapter being a separate document. We learned about the limitations of making edits and sending out each of our revisions to the other two: we very quickly had multiple out-of-sync versions and the whole thing was a mess. This is from one of Dinah s emails back then: With 3 people doing this, I need to be able to keep track of what everyone wants to write. As I revise it, I'll change the file to reflect the date, but remember that if you and steve are sending me changes and edits simultaneously, I may not see them or it may get very confusing. Your color is red. Already a member? Sign in After several weeks of this, we were all seeing red, which was causing a lot of unnecessary tension. I had used Google Docs collaboratively before to write a couple articles and a few grant proposals, but wasn t sure if we could successfully use it to write an entire 250-plus page book. But I knew it had to be better than what we were doing. Once we switched to Google Docs, writing the book together became a much more fluid process because we were able to focus on the writing and not on the complications of getting the technology to keep up with us. We imported the first couple chapters and proceeded from there, making each chapter a separate document shared by the three of us and (eventually) our editor. We could write We Love Feedback Have a story to tell? Let us know how you're using Docs. Visit our Google Group to discuss Google Docs. Useful Links Google Docs Home

our own chapters privately until they were ready to show our co-authors, then sharing was as simple as clicking a couple buttons. Whenever we changed our minds about what to take out, we were able to restore sections from previously saved versions. We didn t have to think about which version of word processing software someone was using, or if the documents would lose formatting between Mac and Windows. And, I could see when my co-authors were also working on the book, so I knew when to call and talk about the project. Eighteen months after getting the book contract, we had a completed manuscript ready for copy editing. Google Docs also helped to save our relationship. Initially, despite being good friends, the three of us had many conflicts about the technology and about the way we wanted to write (e.g., grammar, tense, tone, characters). When we were using emailed versions of documents, our arguments increased. After switching to Google Docs, we went back to our usual level of bickering ;-). Help Center Help Forum Product Tour New Features For Work or School Google Apps Blog These posts and more from other apps. More Blogs from Google Visit our directory for more information about Google blogs. The book is being typeset now by Johns Hopkins University Press and will be out in May of 2011. And we have Google Docs to thank. Posted by: Steve Daviss MD Email Post Share: 12 comments: Saqib Ali said... Subscribe to receive posts via email Email: Subscribe Visit this group This blog is powered by Blogger. Start your own weblog. Question for Dr. Daviss, It is helpful to have a grammar checker, especially when you are co-authoring a 250+ page manuscript. How did you cope with fact that Google Docs doesn't have built-in automated Grammar Checker? Did that increase the arguments about the correct grammar among the three authors? Or did you cut and pasted the manuscript in MS Word during the compilation process to check for grammatical errors? Thanks, Saqib Hillary said... 11/1/10 10:55 AM I actually wrote a blog post about using Google Docs for NaNoWriMo and for writing a fiction last week if your readers might find it helpful. Why Google Docs is a writer's best friend: writing on the go, instant back-ups, advanced organization & tons of space I highly recommend Google Docs for just about any writing project! 11/1/10 11:34 AM Antonello said... I write my novel with google docs! Very nice ;) "Face to Facebook" (italian language) http://blogaiuto.blogspot.com/p/face-to-facebook.html 11/1/10 11:40 AM Christian Bokhove said... Can I make a ToC in Google Docs 11/1/10 11:41 AM

Shawn said... Spell checking is built in. Words that are misspelled are underlined. Right click and you get suggestions. Info is here: http://docs.google.com/support/bin/answer.py? hl=en&answer=57859 Yes you can do a TOC using the headers options (like Word does). Info is here: http://docs.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=106342 11/1/10 1:01 PM Saqib, We relied on our own idea of correct grammar. Mostly, we got it right but there were the occasional disagreements about affect/effect, that/which, and the numerous squabbles about verb tense. I did not miss the grammar checker, to tell you the truth. We did not run any of it through Word's checker (at least, I did not). Our copyeditor made all the revisions after we were done with it, but the majority of the revisions had to do with publishing house styles and writing more clearly and succinctly. 11/1/10 3:15 PM ahab said... Christian, we tried a TOC but found it to be a PIA so we did it by hand. Had we known of the method Shawn points out, it would have been smoother. 11/1/10 3:18 PM "We imported the first couple chapters and proceeded from there, making each chapter a separate document shared by the three of us and (eventually) our editor." "Eighteen months after getting the book contract, we had a completed manuscript ready for copy editing. [...] The book is being typeset now by Johns Hopkins University Press and will be out in May of 2011. " Steve, am I correct - referring to above quotes - that you and your colleagues, found Goggle Docs allowing you to work collaboratively on your book, a most important feature, but the typesetting and size limit (I guess that's the reason you split up the original document in separate chapter documents) lesser features? If you had to advise Google Docs team on which parts of the editor they should enhance which advice would that be? 11/2/10 5:27 AM Ahab, I didn't see either of these things as issues, but I'll think out loud on them a bit here. TYPESETTING: Each publisher has their own rules on things like: o Chapter 9 vs Chapter Nine o 1980's vs 1980s o "a, b, and c" or "a, b and c" o gender usage o use of italics o use of commas, hyphens, and emdashes I don't see a need for Google to address this sort of issue. However, they could make Docs more friendly for editing by others. Compare Docs just doesn't cut it. The annotation feature (highlighting text and insert a comment), for example, could be improved upon so that one click could accept the suggested edit (like Word's Track Changes). A toggle switch to turn on and off text color that is different for each contributor would be helpful -- makes it easy to see who added what. Another VERY useful addition would be a sort of heat map showing the cumulative changes that have occurred to a document. The more changes, the hotter the text-background color gets. Could also maybe toggle the color to indicate the Recency of the edits rather than the Frequency of them. Such additions would make it a lot easier to see at a glance where changes have been made to a group document. Clicking on the hot areas would bring out a pop-up of the chronology of changes over time (hello Wave), allowing reversion to a prior

edit for that segment of text. SIZE LIMITS: Didn't know there were any. We made each chapter a document for ease of our own administration. If Docs had a simple way to package a group of docs into a package, say a folder that one could zip up and send/save, that might help some, but it's not compelling. Pagination tools would be nice. We couldn't share it and say "look at the the 2nd paragraph on page 13" because there were no page numbers and the page formatting changes for each user's printer/screen. Word tools would also be nice. Not just a word count (already present) but a word frequency and word/phrase indexing tool. It would have to be kind of smart -- "walk", "walks", and "walking" would be combined, for example. Finally, a co-editor location tool might be nice. Currently, if a co-editor is in the same document, you can see that they are there but not where (unless their cursor is within the same screen's worth of text that you are looking at). I'm thinking of a simple line representing the entire document and colored dots on the line representing where one is within that document. Like this:... Three people are in the above document, the third being in the middle of the doc, and the first two are on the same page. The dots would pulse to indicate that that person is typing. Imagine what this might look like if 150 people were viewing (or editing!) the 2400-page Health Care Reform bill! 11/2/10 7:36 AM RipperDoc said... Roy said... I am also co-authoring a book using Google Docs. We started a few years ago when Docs was Writely, so we have had to live through all evolutions of the product. I agree with Steves final comments, but my request to the Google Docs team is to be able to count words based on who wrote them. If you are serious in promoting co-authoring, there must be a way to calculate work put into it. It should not be too difficult, considering the new version history shows who wrote what (it just doesn't sum it up for us). Would that be possible to have? 11/3/10 1:02 AM Great idea, RipperDoc! 11/3/10 7:45 AM Ronald Lewis said... Wonderful! I used Google Docs for portions of my book as well. The experience was great! Best, Ronald Lewis Denver, Colorado http://ronaldlewis.com 3/5/11 9:55 AM Post a Comment Newer Post Older Post Home Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

2010 Google - Privacy Policy - Terms of Service