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Archives for 2009

Kindle for iPhone

March 4, 2009 Books, Geek Alert, Reading

Long rumored, and [now here](http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewSoftware?id=302584613&mt=8). It’s free, and pretty darn good.

The Whispersync feature suddenly makes a lot more sense. If you’re reading a book on your “real” Kindle at home, but find yourself with ten minutes to kill at the car wash, you can open the book to the exact same place on your iPhone.

Movie speak

March 3, 2009 Books, Film Industry, Rave

When the AD calls out that this is the Abby Singer, what should you do?

Well, nothing, because you’re the screenwriter. But being the observant sort, you might notice that the gaffers start tidying up. Craft service begins putting away the vegetable dip. The second AD dispatches some PAs to make copies of the call sheet.

movie speak bookThe Abby Singer is the next-to-last shot of the day, or at a given location. And if you’ve never heard of it, or some of the other terms mentioned above, I can recommend Tony Bill’s book Movie Speak: How to Talk Like You Belong on a Movie Set. It’s by far the best guide and glossary I’ve seen to all the esoteric terms you hear on a movie set. And real terms, not goofy had-to-be-there catchphrases.

Keep in mind: as a screenwriter sitting at a computer, you’ll never use most of these terms. You’ll never, ever type them in a script. It’s only when you’re on a working set that you’ll hear them. But knowing them might save you some embarrassment and confusion.

(As a reminder, I’ve previously recommended The Hollywood Standard
as a go-to guide for screenplay formatting.)

The Kindle is not good for screenplays

March 2, 2009 Follow Up, Formatting, Geek Alert, News

Many friends and readers have written to ask, so I thought I’d bump this note out of the comment thread. The new Kindle is terrific for books. But it doesn’t yet handle formatted text like screenplays well at all.

This is a sample of Go, converted from pdf:

kindle screen

(I’ve gotten roughly the same results when sending it in Word format.)

Are you an unemployed coder? A wanna-be web entrepreneur? Are you Nima?

Consider this a call to adventure. I’m envisioning a web service to which you could submit (or email) a screenplay pdf (or text file) and have it sent to your Kindle, nicely formatted. Charge a nickel for it, or just do it for free until Amazon buys you out.

Answer Finder

March 2, 2009 Geek Alert, Meta, QandA, Scrippets

I’ve had some version of this site up and running [since 2003](http://web.archive.org/web/20030921223943/http://johnaugust.com/), when I became frustrated with how difficult it was to search through previous columns I’d written for IMDb. ((Remarkably, they’re still running these, even though it’s been years since I’ve written a new one.))

Unlike most blogs, ((I’m using “blog” in the 2009 sense of a series of short posts arranged chronologically, newest first. That is: a blog is a blog because of the way it’s formatted, not because of the content per se. It’s easy to forget that the term blog originally referred to weblogs, or online personal journals.)) many of the 1,000+ posts on this site are still highly relevant today. They’re answers to reader-submitted questions, and most of the questions haven’t changed. It’s often difficult to find these older entries, however, and the chronological blog format doesn’t help. I’ve struggled to find ways to make it easier to dig around.

The category archives at the bottom of (almost) every page are a start. Clicking on [Education](http://johnaugust.com/archives/category/qanda/education), for example, will take you to a listing of all the articles in that category, along with brand-new summaries — most of them written by Matt.

Another option is what I’m calling [Answer Finder](http://johnaugust.com/answers), which takes all the screenwriting-related entries and groups them together in a much more browsable interface. It’s an experiment, and your feedback is certainly appreciated. Two caveats:

* There are known issues with Internet Explorer. In particular, the category box appears too far down the page. It’s a problem with IE’s box model, and if someone wants to grab the CSS and fix it, knock yourself out.

* Some of the older entries have weird formatting, particularly with [scrippets](http://scrippets.org), because the specs have changed over the years. One by one, we’ll be going through old posts and fixing them. But if you see something wonky, feel free to note the URL in the comments to this post.

geek alertFor the truly curious, here’s how Answer Finder works. (You’re welcome to look at the source, of course.)

1. Getting both categories and posts out of WordPress is more difficult than you’d think, which is why I’m happy to have found the plugin [WP Categories and Posts](http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/wp-categories-and-posts/).

2. I hacked the plugin to make it generate DIVs for each category. ((When I say “hack,” I really mean it. It works because it works, not because I really understand it. PHP makes baby Jesus cry.))

3. With a [custom page template](http://codex.wordpress.org/Pages) (an under-appreciated WordPress feature), I used jQuery to hide the DIVs, bind the category menu and place a session cookie to help you come back to the same place when navigating away. ((jQuery, by the way, is awesome. It lets a barely-programmer like me leverage a lot of CSS knowledge. And I have new respect for JavaScript, which is more Pythonic than I was anticipating. Given the speed boosts in the new Safari and Google Chrome, I’m looking forward to seeing what ambitious ideas will be coming down the pipe in 2009.))

Let me know how the new page is working, or not working, over the next week. You may see periodic downtime or wonkiness while things get sorted out.

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