Slate Magazine on the market for "Zenware"
Sort of an add-on to the New York Times piece Merlin linked the other day about Scrivener and its cohort of new writing applications, Jeffrey MacIntyre at Slate coins a new term for programs that eschew the familiar, bloated twiddliness of Microsoft Office for simplicity:
There’s an emerging market for programs that introduce much-needed traffic calming to our massively expanding desktops. The name for this genre of clutter-management software: zenware.
The philosophy behind zenware is to force the desktop back to its Platonic essence. There are several strategies for achieving this, but most rely on suppressing the visual elements you’re used to: windows, icons, and toolbars. The applications themselves eschew pull-down menus or hide off-screen while you work. Even if you consider yourself inured to their presence, the theory goes, you’ll benefit most from their absence.
MacIntyre’s word processor of choice is WriteRoom, but he also includes desktop managers like Spaces, Spirited Away, and various interface tweaks in the zenware category.
I’m a Scrivener fan, and like everyone who’s dealt with the auto-formatting, self-correcting madness of Word out of sheer necessity for all these years, the most drastic change I noticed when I started using it was that it let me jump right in and start writing. This may have been my own form of procrastination, but I always had this little ritual with Word every time I started a new document: set the margins, adjust the font, fill the headers and footers, etc. You still have to do this with Scrivener and its ilk, but the trick is that it’s done after the fact, when you’re finished writing and you’re ready to export for printing or emailing. It’s an artful dodge; Scrivener didn’t remove or try to automate the necessity of formatting, it just shifted its timing to a place more conducive to the writing process. “Zenware” is a little too cutesy; that’s just smart.
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LaTeX
I write a lot of scientific reports using LaTeX. It wouldn’t count as zenware (at least not using my current Windows GUI; guess I could go back to writing everything in vi) but this post got me thinking. Quite apart from the advantages over Word regarding formulae etc., writing in a markup language allows me to concentrate on the content, without worrying about the presentation (a familiar meme from coding webpages). I know that the typesetting and arrangement is mostly taken care of, or can be worried about at a later date, and all I’m staring at is unformatted plain text.
Interestingly, students who are learning LaTeX normally find this hardest to assimilate. They worry more about why picture x is on page y than they do about the accompanying text. Flavours of Merlin’s perfect apostrophe.