Storyist may be a good product, but the demo and the so-called "Guide" are IRKSOME. To sum : I feel that I have lost time and money (I pay the downloaded megas). It is clearer than the help menu but it is just a list of features illustrated with some screenshots, not a tutorial. I have also downloaded the guide.pdf from storyist site (indispensable and lacking in both demo files). And when trying to open them from the file (using "open with Storyist"), one gets a message saying "Storyist cannot open files in the Microsoft Word document format" When trying from storyist, the files names are dimmed as inaccessible (I had firsdt checked with Finder info that they were fully readable and writable). docx files are still impossible to import. Therefore, as advised in the reply, I have re-downloaded the demo form, I eventually got a newer and hopefully complete demo called 2.2.6. We liked to be more flexible in Scrivenerville, despite all the press about learning curves and iPAD compatibility. More expensive, fewer templates, and focused only on fiction. On the ‘Most difficult novels’ list on Goodreads, Joyce takes the top two spots, with Ulysses in top position and Finnegans Wake plodding behind for second place. I suppose so because of the reply I got (see below) and because I have found that it was named "Storyist-AutoUpdate-2.1.5.dmg". The Storyist was like Scriveners evil, anal twin sister. I can believe that the Storyist demo.dmg that I have recently downloaded through Mac-update may have been incomplete. But I disliked the inadequacy of its content. I’m a fanIn a few short weeks, Ulysses iOS app has changed the way I write. The iCloud synchronization works seamlessly. As with the Desktop version, everything is very well thought out. I appreciated the quick reply to my review. Ulysses iOS, Storyist, and Scrivener FebruI’ve had the pleasure of working with the Ulysses Beta iOS App for iPhone over the last few weeks.
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