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Ulysses: Cocoa Writer's Tool

UlysseslogoMy 30-day demo copy of Ulysses has only been running for three days, but it already feels like a must-have addition to my Applications folder.

Ulysses is a text editor for writers. That’s it. It doesn’t make code, draw pictures of your kitty, or pop kettle corn. It just helps you plan, organize, track, and write your stuff in a way that I find entirely intuitive. The features page and screenshots are plenty informative, so I’ll just add my favorite bits.

  • It’s Cocoa - That means i-Search, AutoCompleter, OS X Services and spell checking, and all the Cocoa keybindings work from the first time you open the app. No hacking or remedial keystroke classes required. Dear every Mac app developer: please go Cocoa. Please. Now.
  • Projects - All the files for a novel, a long article, or what have you are contained in a single file. Searching across files and copying is a breeze thanks to the editor preview window. The tabbed interface also makes it easy to jump around your files quickly.
  • Exporting - Output any or all of the files in a project as plain text, rich text/MS Word, or LaTeX. Just enough controls and prefs to tweak the look without being a big distraction.
  • Labels & Status - Smart metadata for marking your drafts, tagging your notes, or identifying which version is the publisher-ready final draft.
  • Per-document notes - A separate window for your notes keeps your manuscript tidy.
  • Skinnable - Choose your type and size, sure, but even the colors of the various interface widgets are customizable. Troglodyte mode? Not a problem.
  • Fullscreen mode - Battling writer’s block? Try running Ulysses for an hour in fullscreen mode, where the entire screen is nothing but your words on a plain background—no chrome. Talk about focus.
  • Elegance - It’s been gratifying, over time, to watch OS X apps get simpler—better at doing a few things very well. This is a program that appeals unapologetically to people who write, and the feature set reflects that. There’s not a lot of cruft, and that feels good.

My only major quibble is the price, which seems a bit steep at EU100 (~US$130), or EU50 for educational use. I’ll probably end up buying it anyhow, but I would like to see that price come down. Still, if you spend all day working medium- to large-sized writing projects, it might be worth the dough to you. Either way, have a look at the demo. It’s a pretty swell little app.

Adam's picture

At first I read everybody's...

At first I read everybody's kind comments and thought "maybe it is worth it, writers earn it back if it encourages productivity", after all it's a good forward thinking Mac app and €100 ($200 AUD) is a lot, but not that much in the grand scheme of things... but then I got to thinking what if everybody did it.. surely if Ulysses can charge a price like that out of "moral courage" the other developers deserve it too. Superb forward-thinking Mac applications like: SubEthaEdit, Delicious Library, NetNewsWire, MacJournal, Desktop Manager, NewsFire, Quicksilver, Butler, TextMate, Watson, Konfabulator - none of them charge(d) more than $50US for their software, all sterling applications. Perhaps they deserve more in general... But if a text-only application like Ulysses can get away with charging €100 for their application we are only encouraging those specific developers, not all the other great developers in general. Maybe these guys are just more honest about the real costs of developing good Mac software. I also realised 2 things: -It's asking for another developer to undercut them at a more reasonable price (Even €50 seems like a premium price). -Although in some way I feel it could be worth it (because of the essential value of every creation), I just can't justify buying it because I would be trashing the effort of all the other great developers asking so much less.

 
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