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Product Details
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| Powerful Outliner | |
| See How All The Pieces Fit Together |
| Limitless Space for your Big Ideas | |
| Visualize and Outline Using Any Structuring Method |
| Track Important Aspects of your Project Click a button and Outline 4D highlights portions of your project connected to selected tracks. Instantly see where specific items or concepts appear in your project. It's the ultimate way to get an overview of your project. | |
| Print an Impressive Map of your Project |
| Connect to other Powerful Writing Tools For the screenwriter or playwright, Outline 4D can take your project text and with the click of one button export it to Write Brothers' Movie Magic Screenwriter, the most powerful screenplay word processor available. Within seconds your script is automatically paginated according to professional screenplay standards, ready to print and distribute to readers. | |
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
25 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
For writers only,
By
This review is from: Outline 4D (CD-ROM)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
The back of the software box describes the program as "the most powerful way to outline, plan, and present your ideas....lets you brainstorm, create structure, and organize your ideas....timeline format that is vastly superior to index cards...." They had me at "index cards." Having previously organized my tasks for an art retrospective spanning several decades on (mostly) color-coded index cards, it was not an experience I wanted to repeat so an organizational structure software with the extra added bonuses of timeline and color-coding features was exactly what I thought I wanted.Facing a similar project again and starting almost from scratch, I wanted some sort of outline structure in which I could organize my thoughts and prioritize my tasks over the two-year planning period. Having tried to do this before using Excel, Access, Word, and index cards, I wanted a more coordinated approach. I could tell from the screenshots that screenplays were one possible application. What I didn't realize was that, this software apparently assumes that writers are the only people who need to structure and organize ideas that flow sequentially and in a timeline. Anyone involved in planning public events or complex extended projects, also needs this type of framework. This seems to be a software written for right-brained (creative) people by left-brained (technical) people. (I'm really not sure how that combination will work out.) Being predominantly left-brained myself, I enjoyed playing with the program even after concluding I would probably not be able to bend it to my will. I attempted to use the most general of the many templates provided for jump starting a project ("4-Level Outline" and "Brainstorming".) Even these templates assume you have scenes and characters. Using "User Defined" seems most likely possibility but also an incredibly complex immersion into a program that is sufficiently complex already. But, in the process, I've noticed the following: * The learning curve for the program, while not difficult, is cumbersome. It doesn't resemble any program that I'm familiar with, such as those from Microsoft Office or Adobe Creative Suite. * Using the templates as a starting point, you start with a certain structure you just have to fill and modify. Defining a structure from scratch, however, is a major production. * There is plenty of help available and a multitude of videos demonstrating specific steps and processes but it seems to me that, until the writer masters the program, he'll have forgotten what he was going to write before he can figure out how to enter it. This seems like an inevitable part of the learning curve. * You might want to go to you-tube and look up some of these videos to see if they go along with your needs or your way of working. I wish I had. * Some menu items and keyboard shortcuts are familiar (such as file>save or the keyboard shortcut "control + S" and all the copy, paste, select all functions.) But the "Event", "Tools", and "Window" menus are foreign territories, and learning shortcuts like "Promote = alt+shift+left arrow" will take a lot of initial effort and memorizing. * The program is really designed to use with keyboard shortcuts (all of which are provided along with the menu items). * The program is, as the title implies, for outlining and creating structure, scene descriptions, purpose and innuendo, keeping track of the character's actions, etc.--but NOT for actually writing out dialog, production details, set design or setting descriptions, or directorial notes. Presumably, you do all that in another program. * You can import text from other programs but the only fairly-common file extension for importing is RTF ( Rich Text Format, which is available from Word under the "save as" option.) You can also export, but I'm not sure to where. * The program is endlessly editable. You start with only the most basic idea outline and eventually flesh it out in the most agonizingly precise detail. You can insert, delete, move anything you want anywhere you want to put it and the timeline is automatically updated to reflect that. * The timeline function seems to be linked to the heading or upper parts of the hierarchy of events. This is mostly things like act and sequence (or scene or chapter) names and numbers. * The same color coding that appears in the text section (your text) will appear in the corresponding spot on the timeline. * The text flows vertically, the timeline flows horizontally. * It helps to have a big monitor to show all this. * There are templates provided for plays, screenplays, commercials, novels, etc. * There are examples provided about how a completed screenplay or book would look to help you pattern your work accordingly. I'm assuming that, since the person studying these examples is familiar with what the finished product was (like the various Star War episodes are laid out in excruciating detail) this in-depth visual reference can be very helpful. * In addition to the color coding in the text and the timeline, there is a small vertical bar that shows color coded graphical representation of the structure that is being constructed. * The program assumes that you think in the same hierarchical structure that it thinks, however, there are preferences that can be set by the user to bring the program more in line with his own vision or workflow. * It doesn't seem applicable for academic publications requiring footnotes. You have to be able to structure your writing into levels such as Chapter/Section or Act/Sequence/Scene. If you can do that, the program can accommodate whatever length or complexity you wish to throw at it. A last note: The program is supposed to run on Windows 7. I was unable to install it and there is a problem that could not be resolved by reinstalling or checking online. I have a virtual XP mode within W7 Pro, and it installed and ran fine there. Despite the fact that, for me, it's probably a no-go, I'm still very impressed with the program.
16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Aimed at a small subset of writers, not a good value for the rest,
By
This review is from: Outline 4D (CD-ROM)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
I'm one of those people who actually did what the English teacher said, and wrote my outlines first. Especially for books and book chapters, I find outlining essential to keep a coherent structure.I used to use tools such as MaxThink and ThinkTank. In fact, MaxThink was the very last DOS-based program that I retired. I've been waiting for a long time for a really good tool for outlining in the Windows world. I'm afraid this isn't it. Outline 4D is more aimed at people doing screenplays and commercials. For general writing, its outlining capabilities are roughly the same as those in Microsoft Word. Since most serious writers already have Word, there's no reason for them to get this. Even for those doing dramatic writing, I can't see that Outline 4D really offers that much beyond what Word's outline view will do. Outline 4D's usability (navigation through an outline, for example) is somewhat better, but not dramatically so. There are some additional features such as a brainstorming template, but I didn't find it nearly as helpful as the brainstorming tools in MaxThink. The minor improvements are then balanced by drawbacks, the biggest one being lack of any decent export capability. The only non-proprietary format for export is Rich Text Format, and RTF does not preserve the outline levels in any meaningful way. They are just given different font sizes in the exported document. To me, the whole point of doing an outline is to give a document structure that gets preserved throughout the writing process, and Outline 4D doesn't do that. If you don't have Word, and if you use other products from this company, you might find this useful. $99 seems a bit steep, but I'm a proponent of writers using the best tools for their purposes they can find. However, writers of general works won't find enough here to justify the cost, I think.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
It Makes the Actual Writing Seem Easy By Comparison,
By
This review is from: Outline 4D (CD-ROM)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
Having written two novels and a number of short stories, I'm always interested in making the job easier.I'm also a big tech addict who is easily bored. Hence, I've written in Word, Pages, StoryMill, Scriviner, and, my current favorite, Storyist. I say all this to let you know I'm not a Luddite - if technology can make my writing easier, I'm all for it! I even like using new software just for the novelty of it. New tools=less boredom=more fun! That being said, Outline 4D confounded me. I found it ugly, cluttered and unusable without running through all the related videos. Some learning curve is OK, but Outline 4D's demands felt oppressive to me. I like to jump in and get started with software with as little upfront study as possible, learning more features as I need them. With Outline 4D, even setting up a simple outline was unintuitive. At some point, I felt Outline 4D's complexity far exceeded its benefits - I could either figure out this behemoth or actually write. As a tool for creative writers, Outline 4D is kind of a turn off. It's not fun, pretty or inspiring to use. It reminded me of project management software - lots of drill-down detail you can record, but demanding and inflexible to use. I'm not even sure what problem it solves - for the novelist, how is it more useful than far simpler outlining solutions? Three of the the program I listed above (StoryMill, Scriviner and Storyist) have built in outliners that use the familiar, time-honored index card paradigm. When I have timeline issues I can't solve with them, I use an actual calendar to keep track of my stories' events. It works brilliantly and doesn't require me to learn a whole new method of recording and understanding how events unfold and overlap. Still, I'm giving the product three stars, as I'm willing to concede that I just might have been smart enough to get it. Also, I know Write Brothers makes other well-regarded writing software, and I hope they continue to innovate in this market. If they do, I hope they bring down the cost or incorporate Outline $D tools into their other offerings - close to a Benjamin for a stand-alone outliner seems excessive.
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