Keep It Simple

I’ve been spending some time over in the Desk community. Being involved in that community has helped me stay more focused on writing on a more regular basis and in many ways has helped improve my writing.

Today I took a look at some of the feature request posts. I do that occasionally hoping for some insight on what John might be thinking about doing with the app. One of the comments stood out. It struck a nerve with me.

It is only bleedingly obvious to me that the GUI should work like this:
File -> Open
Window shows the registered blogs as folders.
Click on the blog you want to edit
Window shows the most recent posts (options to filter, sort etc)
Click on post
Editor appears with post
That is as far as I know the way every other editor works. Why reinvent the wheel?Thomas Kejser

Screenshot2015-02-1010.22.09.png

Maybe that’s how a blog management system might work. But to me, Desk isn’t just another “me to” content management system editor. It’s a writing tool. Writing is front and center the reason John wrote the app. I don’t think he set out to create a simple desktop front end to a content management system.

This is my workflow for pushing content to my blog.

  • Launch app
  • Write (in Markdown)
  • Add Optional Image
  • Publish

I don’t hit publish until I’m ready. I spell check and grammar check … twice. Then when ready, I publish. If my post includes multiple images I might choose to use Desk for the writing part, push to my blog as a draft, and then upload the image to WordPress and publish from there. I do a lot of things with my images that Desk isn't capable of handling. But I don't want it to.

I think the challenge Thomas is facing is he is publishing too soon. Before he's done with his writing he pushes his post to his blog -- as he's writing it. Why not just finish writing first? Why not just save your edits as a local draft, then when ready, publish? If he took the time — just a few minutes — to check his writing he could make changes immediately. There would be no need (want) for what he’s suggesting.

I think what makes Desk special is what was left out. If John started adding this feature and that feature then Desk would become just yet-another blogging app. There are many of them. You have your choice of the MarsEdit, Blogo, Pixel Pumper etc. Perhaps MarsEdit is a better tool for you. It has a non-trivial amount of knobs to turn but supports slightly fewer publishing platforms than Desk.

I just think that sometimes one must pause to think about what the goal is.

Am I trying to get my thoughts published with as little distraction as possible or am I trying to manage a blog?

NOTE: I apologize if this response seems rude. That’s not my intent.

Published via Desk.

I Support Typed. A New Blogging Platform

Typed.com is a blogging service for writers, journalists, artists, storytellers, and for anyone with something to say. It’s the online writing platform that we’ve been wanting to create and use for years. Typed: A Better Blogging Platform | Indiegogo

I have backed this project because I like the folks at Realmac Software and because John Saddington asked me to. I would be excited if Desk supported Typed.

Published via MarsEdit

Desk - A writing tool

John Saddington worked on his new OS X publishing app, Desk, for about 250 days. I was priveleged to be invited to test the app for a few months so when it was released in the Mac App Store today, I immediately installed a copy.

John designed Desk to remove the distracting clutter from your mind and help you focus on what matters most: Your thoughts. It’s designed to be simple and intuitive, yet powerful and fast. Desk supports a number of publhsing platforms including:

  • WordPress (self-hosted and .com)
  • Blogger / Blogspot
  • Tumblr
  • Squarespace
  • Movable Type
  • Typepad
  • Facebook Notes

1-Desk-App-Screenshot-Platforms

When you first launch Desk, you'll see how minimal the writing experience is. I was presented with little more than a rectangular window into which I could immediately start writing or drag and drop and image. Desk support both WYSIWYG and Markdown style editing. There is no need to switch between these two choice. Desk uses both of these as the same time.

4-Desk-App-Screenshot-Markdown-WYSIWYG

With Desk I can save a draft locally on my iMac for completion later or store it in iCloud and continue editing from my MacBook Air. iCloud keeps everything in sync and automatically saves my edits.

Most of my blogging is done either via the WordPress web GUI or MarsEdit. While MarsEdit gets the job done the user experience is a bit dated and clunky. In comparison, Desk feels modern and light weight. Feature wise, Desk does everything I can do in MarsEdit.

  • Access, edit, and update existing posts and drafts
  • Drag-and-drop images right into the editor
  • Features for each publishing platform (e.g. Featured images, categories, tags, custom slugs/URLs, etc.)
  • Preview mode with real-time updating

2-Desk-App-Screenshot-Speed

One nifty feature of Desk is that I can chose one platform and configuration as a default. Since WordPress is my main publishing platform and most of my posts are images post, I configured Desk so that publishing is just a single click.

One thing I have been paying attention to recently is the length of my blog posts. In the past some of my post have been long but quite a number are very short; about a sentence or two. While I want to increase the amount of long form content I create I also want to have increase the word count of my image post. I want to write at least 500 word per posts. The Desk editor window displays real-time metadata information such as character count, word count and time to read. Files can be exported as HTML, RTF,PDF and DOCX.

5-Desk-App-Screenshot-Edit-Existing-Posts

John says that Desk is a product that has been more than 10+ years in the making and that he came up with the idea for desk in 2002 while on a road trip down the coast of Florida with his brother. It seems a good idea will persist and persistence can bring ideas to reality.

John-Saddington-2014-Desk-App-1