Sadly, today’s post is not about the fun kind of shenanigans, but the type of under-the-radar data grab that companies so often try to perpetrate upon us. Today’s alert is about PayPal, and this post from Ellen Datlow sets up the problem and happily, also provides a solution:
These options may differ depending on your location, but this push to share your data is very much an issue for anyone using PayPal US. I suggest you check your settings to be sure.
Are you laces over Crocs? Pedals over e-bike? Spiral pad over iPad? And are you looking for a tried-and-true way to translate your stories from mind to digital matter?
WordStar’s most recent claim to fame might be that it’s the word processing application on which George R.R. Martin is still not finishing A Song of Ice and Fire.
But many writers loved and still love WordStar, a word processor notably good for actual writing.
Last updated in 1992, Wordstar still has devoted users. Rob Sawyer, all-around nice guy and winner of (checks notes) pretty much every sci-fi award ever, is one of them. He’s also done waiting.
Deciding that the app is now “abandonware,” Sawyer recently put together as complete a version of WordStar 7 as might exist. He bundled together over 1,000 pages of scanned manuals that came with WordStar, related utilities, his own README guidance, ready-to-run versions of DOSBox-X and VDosPlus, and WordStar 7 Rev. D and posted them on his website as the “Complete WordStar 7.0 Archive.”
I’ll be honest, this program probably isn’t for me. But I do love the fact that Rob figured out what works for him, found a way to keep it working for him (no mean feat in our current environment of disposable tech), and wants to share it with the rest of us.
If you are in the market for a head-down, “focus first” approach to writing and don’t mind installing a DOS emulator to use it, check out this beloved program.
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Portions blurred to protect delicate sensibilities. Photo by Senad Palic on Unsplash
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