Welcome to Author!
I hope you will like it here. Author is different from other writing software so I strongly urge you to at least skim this document.
A Walkthrough Video Introduction is available at augmentedtext.info/walkthrough though we’ve been working hard on updates so some functions will be a bit different today.
Author is designed by me, Frode, and was inspired by the philosophy of my mentor Doug Engelbart. If you could Rate Author in the macOS App Store that would be very much appreciated indeed, it really helps small developers like me. If you are not happy with something, please email me first at frode@hegland.com, and I’ll do what I can to address your concerns.
The Future of Text is my passion and I therefore host an annual Symposium and publish a series of Books: https://thefutureoftext.org. Author, along with Reader, is where I work to implement parts of how I believe the future of text can–and should–be. I am so grateful that you are giving it a try. Thank you!
Changes for this version are mostly under the hood (more DOI support, export to canvas.json etc.) but we have also changed the layout a little to be in line with Author iOS and visionOS by removing the ‘Focus’ option bottom right and replacing it with ‘Settings’. The Settings & Export have been improved and two new themes have been added. I hope you will like these changes.
Frode Alexander Hegland, PhD
The Augmented Text Company
First, Making Author Yours
Colour, Width & Size. First of all, I suggest you set the colour of the text as you like it, by going to the menu Author then Settings (or cmd-) where you can choose from a range of options. Please note, when you change your Mac to Light or Dark mode, the options here update as well. It is quite incredible how different people prefer to see their text so this is an important part of the setup. The other thing you might very well want to do is set the size of the text and the column width you want to write with. You can do this by going to the View menu, then choosing the Text sub-menu and here you can see how to change the size and width, as well as see the keyboard shortcuts to do it quicker later.
Full Screen. The other thing I suggest you do is hit the ESC key to toggle in and out of full screen, which is not the standard behaviour but I found it useful to be able to quickly go full screen and back. The design aim here is to give you a clean and un-interrupted writing space when you want to, but still easily tied to your other applications. Please note the bold orange text at the start of this paragraph. Do you agree it is easy to see when skimming the document? I call it ‘Structure Text’ and the idea is exactly that, it helps you skim our documents. Note that this text is not included when you export your document-this is for your eyes only.
Control. To control Author you can generally select the text and ctrl-click, or two-finger click if you are using a trackpad, to learn more of the controls available to you. You will also see the keyboard shortcuts or the controls listed next to them, which I strongly urge you to learn over time. If you like to really get to grips with your work and you don’t mind learning a few keyboard shortcuts, Author lets you fly through your work.
Writing
Author is designed to help you author documents, hence the name. It is not designed for page layout so you cannot change font for specific text, you can only change the font for the whole document. Similarly, you can scale the text as much as you like but this will only be for your view, it will not affect the size of text for anyone else reading your Author document or your exported document. In addition to typing you can also dictate what you want in the document, you do not have to worry about saving your document since that is done continuously in the background and you can cut and paste without concern that you may cut something and forget to paste it, since you have Cuttings.
Further. There are specific commands to give you a focus view of your work such as ⌘-/ to go into Focus mode. You can also look at the View menu at the top of the screen for other views to help you keep a grip on your ever growing document, such as view only Names or Defined Concepts.
Editing & Organising
As you write your document it can become a bit unwieldy to keep track of everything, something Author aims to help you with.
Fold. You can turn any text into a heading by selecting the text, ctrl-clicking and choosing the level heading from the menu, or use the keyboard shortcuts (which are listed in the ctrl-click menu).
Once you have assigned text as headings you can do ⌘- – (minus) to fold the document into an outline or click ‘Outline’ at the bottom of the window.
Marking Text. Did you notice how that text really stood out when you skimmed the page? This text is what I call ‘Marked’ text and it is designed to help you, the author, be able to quickly skim and see what different sections are about, giving you a more visual overview of your text since a paragraphs are not particularly visual as a whole. I really hope you will like this feature, so far it really seems to help make the long ‘grey’ column of text more skippable.
To Mark text you need to select text, ctrl-click and choose ‘Mark’ or by doing ⌘-‘ to mark text. A key aspect of marking text that when you export your document is that you can choose to either have the Mark styling (bold and orange) removed or to also have the text itself removed, giving you a choice as to how you want to use this function. You can therefore choose whether this marking is for you to add notes or to highlight what you have written. I humbly mention that from my experience marking parts of text intended for a reader is not often as useful as writing a note and marking it (to be deleted on export) works better since often the sentences we write for others tend to simply be more wordy and less swimmable, but please do experiment yourself. I’d love to learn how you get on with this function.
Navigation. You can select text and do ⌘-shift-k to assign an internal link to make it quick for you to navigate your document. When you export to PDF, this text will remain an internal link. These links use your headings font, not the body text font, so that you can tell what text is an internal link at a glance. External links, to the web, are underlined.
Exporting & Sharing
At the end of the day many of us will need to produce a document of our work in a format someone else requires. It is not enough to have done the thinking. However, this usually results in the document being frozen in terms of how you can interact with it.
With Author, the attempt is to retain as much of the interaction you have when writing, for the reader’s benefit. This is done through being able to export your defined concepts as a Glossary and having your citations automatically added to a References section, the aim is that the knowledge connections you have generated in Author will be accessible and useful for those who may read your document, not just to you, instead of being thrown away when you produce your document. As noted above, any Marked text can be removed or have their bold and orange stylings removed.
Your options for export include standard formats and PDF with automatic cover page, table of contents, in-body citations and references, along with extended metadata (Visual-Meta).
You can also copy snippets of LaTeX (a feature still in Beta) to use in a LaTeX template.
The new 'Export to Markdown' option allows you to copy your text in Markdown format.
Knowledge Management
There are many ways to approach how we can store our notes and our thoughts. Some people like high-tech solutions with rich opportunities for linking and assigning tags to what they add to their knowledge network, which can then later produce sophisticated views of their knowledge. Others like analog notepads where they write notes and expect to not have to look them up again, since it’s the act of writing which helps them remember. Author’s approach is to give you a Journal and the means through which you can define and connect the concepts in your work:
Defining Concepts. In Author you can select any text and do ⌘–D to ‘Define’ the text as a concept.
You define a concept simply by writing what you feel it is–this is about your point of view and how you see the concepts in your work–it is not for trying to write a neutral dictionary definition.
Please note that when you write a definition and something you write already has a definition assigned to it, that text becomes bold and you can click on it to load that definition. Clicking on this bold text is quite a useful way for you to navigate around your own defined concepts network.
You can also switch to the Map view and see all the concepts you have defined. If you click on any, you will see lines going from the selected concept to any other concepts it mentions, if it mentions any.
If you define concepts in your Journal, you can copy them across to any document you like by simply copying a section of text and pasting into the document. It’s not the most elegant way of doing it, and we aim to put in a better copy mechanism in a future update, but this means you can grow your defined concept space in your Journal and have it available for any document you author.
When you export your work to PDF, you can choose to have the Defined Concepts exported as a Glossary so that your readers may benefit from the knowledge connections you have defined.
The Journal. In addition to regular documents, you can also do the keyboard shortcut ⌘–J to launch your Journal where you can write freely, or with a specific structure if you prefer. Note: The Journal is a regular Author document which you cannot accidentally delete, it has exactly the same interactions as any document in author. The key is that you can instantly launch your Journal when you are in Author and that you can use all the tools of Author to find and view your notes. A key example is that if you choose to highlight something, maybe an action/To Do item, when you fold the document into an outline, the highlighted text will appear, making it easy to see. When something no longer needs such highlighting to stand out, you can instantly remove the highlight.
Ideas & Inspirations. This is the same kind of regular Author document as the Journal is, but with a different intention. Here you can jot down thoughts you’d like to find later which you feel might not fit a more time based Journal.
You can use this for research since any citation you create, you can click on and then choose ‘Copy’ and paste into a working document. When you export that document the citation will be correctly formatted (such as showing it in brackets or superscript number) and added to an automatically appended References section. You can also click ‘Open’ which will then open the source document, if it was cited from a PDF in Reader. This is further elaborated on in the Journal section below.
Control
- ctrl-click (or two finger-click on a trackpad) on any selected text for commands
- ESC key for instant in-and-out of full screen
- To Fold pinch-in on your trackpad or ⌘ – (minus)
- To Unfold pinch-out or ⌘ = (plus)
- You can toggle Focus Mode through ⌘-/ and all paragraphs other than the one your cursor is in, will fade
- You can ESC to quickly toggle into as well as out of full screen view. So useful it’s worth reminding you
- f you forget if you have used a certain word or phrase–in a click you can see if you have (over-)used it elsewhere in your document.
- Select text and ⌘–F to instantly see only the paragraphs in the document which contains that text
- ⌘–F again or click ‘Exit’ in the bottom to cancel out of this view, or
- Click on a sentence to jump to it in the document
- Select text the text you want to Define as a Concept and do
- –D (for Define) then write your definition in the resulting dialog
- Toggle in and out of the Map by clicking ‘Write/Map’ at the bottom of the screen or
- -M
- Double-click and type anywhere in the Map view. What you type will automatically be italic unless it is already a Defined Concept.
- To decide what should be shown, click on ‘Show’ lower left, for help with layout of select nodes click ‘Layout’ lower right
- Double-click on text to perform a Find function which shows you all the occurrences of the text in the Write view. Click in the margin or ‘Exit’ at the bottom of the window to return to the Map. You can also click on an occurrence to jump to that section in the document
- Select text and c to turn text into ALL-CAPS
- Select more than one piece of text and
- –} to align right
- Select more than one piece of text and
- –{ to align left
- Select more than one piece of text and
- -| to center align
- Double-click to enter text
- Move cursor out of the margin to fade away text
- Click in Margin to make text re-appear
- ⌘-shift-H to Highlight Text
- ⌘ – (minus) on your keyboard to fold, also shows the highlights
- pinch-in on your trackpad does not show highlights, giving you a clean heading view alternative
- ⌘-click
- ⌘-click
- ⌘-click on a heading to add notes for yourself for that Heading. Click outside to dismiss
- Furthermore, y
- ⌘–T to search books by title or author and have the citation information retrieved for you. You can even take a picture of a page of the book if you are reading a paper book, then select that text, using Apple’s Live Text feature and use that text to search for a book since Author uses the Google Books database
- Copy the DOI from an academic PDF and paste it in Author to have it resolved into a citation for you automatically.
- Copy text in Safari, ⌘–T and choose ‘From Safari Copy’ which will fill in the available citation information for you apart from author name since that can’t be extracted from the web page
- Click on any image you have dragged into Author to add citation information
- To add an image to your document you can drag and drop from the desktop or Photos
- You can even copy a picture from your iPhone or iPad and then instantly paste it into Author, thanks to the universal clipboard.
- To add a web link, select text and ⌘–K If you already had copied the link, it will be attached automatically, otherwise you need to type it in manually
- Paste a web link directly and once you add a space, it will become a live link. This is probably the best way to link since your document can change formats over the years and underlying tags could be lost and it is understandable by just looking at it, since a link assigned to text can go to anywhere. When you export to PDF please note that your links do need to be visible (as in not assigned to any text)
- To add an internal link, select text and ⌘-shift-K to link to a heading or image within your own document. The text will then change from the body text font to the heading font, to indicate that the link is to a heading and that the reader of your exported PDF can click on it. ⌘–[ after following a link to return to the link, which can be very useful for jumping to a location in your document to do some writing or editing, then returning to where the link was
- ⌘–J to open your Journal document
- Option-⌘–I to open your Ideas document
- Option-⌘–R to open your Research Notes document
- ⌘–E to add an Endnote
- ctrl-V to see your Cuttings
- Say the name of the punctuation mark, such as “exclamation mark” or “full stop” in UK English or “period” in US English since they are locale dependent
- Say “new line” (equivalent to pressing the Return key once) or “new paragraph” (equivalent to pressing the Return key twice). After you say “new line”, the new line only appears when you’ve finished dictating
- Cmd-shift-E to Export
- Cmd-Enter in your document to assign a ‘page break’ to prepare your document for PDF export
- -, or clicking at the bottom right of your window where you can do the following:
Fold
To fold the document into an outline to only show the Headings:
Focus Mode
There are two levels of focused writing in Author:
Find
The Find command allows you to instantly see all the sentences in the document with your chosen keyword. This is useful when editing your document–without losing your place or spending time scrolling. It is also useful i
Define Concepts
A key difference between Author and other software is the integrated Concept Mapping. You can define concepts, view them in the Map and have them turned into a Glossary on Export. The benefit of this approach is that it actively helps you learn what you are writing about, since you ‘spell-out’ what the key concepts are, simply by writing what you feel they are. As you do so, you can toggle into the Map view (see below) where you can place the concepts in useful groups and further interact with them.
In the Define Concepts dialogue: When you define a concept, if any of the text also is a Defined Concept, it will be bold and you can click on it to load it (the current definition will be saved) to keep weaving your knowledge web as smoothly as possible. If you want to go back to the first Defined Concept just exit the dialogue and go back in.
⌘
Any Defined Concept will automatically appear on the Map (see Map Concepts below)
NOTE: If you use the Journal and define concepts while working in it, you can copy any defined concept (just the text on the page) from the Journal into a regular document and all your defined concepts will come along. The Journal can therefore become your personal knowledge space.
Map Concepts
All your Defined Concepts appear in the Map view, allowing you to see how they relate in useful ways.
For example: ‘Author’ has been defined as “a word processor from the Augmented Text company” and ‘Augmented Text Company” is also a defined concept. When you click on ‘Author’ in the Map view, a line will appear to ‘Augmented Text Company’, because it appears in the definition of ‘Author’. Please click on ‘Write/Map’ at the bottom of this window to try it.
⌘
This is how you can add any notes you like, it does not only have to be defined concepts
Select text ‘Enter’ to edit the text
Select text and and ⌘–D to edit the Definition of that concept
Formatting Text on The Map
Select text and x to strikethrough
⌘
⌘
⌘
Insert Screenshot of Map View into Write View
There are a few different ways you can insert a standard Mac screenshot of your Map into the Writing View. You can simply take a screenshot of the full screen when you are in full screen mode (⌘-shift-3) for a large image which will then land on your desktop and which you can then insert into your document–as you would with any image–or you can do ⌘-shift-4, then option and draw a box around the area you want to include, which sends the screenshot to the clipboard and you can paste the screenshot into your document anywhere you want.
Magic Margins
You have what we call Magic Margins on either side of your document in full screen mode, and only in full screen mode. They are there because sometimes you just need to jot down some notes, thoughts or keywords which you may or may not write about later. These are notes to help you write, they will not be exported and they will not move with the document when you scroll. You can think of them as little yellow stickies if you like. They work the same as in the main Map view, so remember you can double-click text here to perform a Find in your document to see where you have used that text, or not.
When you click away from the Magic Margin, the text will fade away so as to not be intrusive, and come back when you click in the Magic Margin again.
Mark Text
‘Marked’ text is designed to help you be able to quickly skim and see what different sections are about. Select text and ctrl-click and choose ‘Mark’ or by doing ⌘-‘ to mark text bold and orange.
When you export your document can you choose to either have the Mark styling undone or to also have the text itself removed, giving you a choice as to how you want to use this function.
Pasting Text
A selection on the Clipboard may contain a BibTeX record embedded in other preceding and/or trailing text. To extract just the reference alone and add it as a citation to your document, invoke Paste in the Edit Menu. To insert the full contents of the Clipboard without creating a citation or adding the reference to your document’s bibliography, invoke Match Style in the Edit Menu.
You can also ctrl-click without selecting text and choose the Paste option to paste to Match Style.
LaTeX
Author supports basic export as LaTeX through the Export menu and then the options to Copy various elements into your template. If you create something in a specialised LaTeX editor, such as a mathematical equation, you can choose to control-click in Author and Paste, then <LaTeX> and the text will be pasted in a format which Author keeps plain for export so that when you render your document in a LaTeX template this will be rendered too, giving you the correct equation etc.
Highlight
If you select text and highlight it, then Fold, the highlighted text will appear in the folded outline.
This is designed to let you highlight to yourself what the key parts of a paragraph are, so that when you fold to get an overview of your document, you can see not only the headings–which is useful to a point–but also what you intend to convey. We have found that this is particularly useful for working on long documents, such as a book or thesis, where it is necessary to make sure you have the flow of the document in mind.
We tried many versions of this, including automatically showing the first sentence of every paragraph, but it turns out that in many paragraphs the key text is not in the first sentence, since the first sentence may simply be a lead-in for the reader. Also, many paragraphs may simply be necessary for reasons other than flow, such as introductions and legalese, which then clutters up the folded view. We also tested with showing everything bold, but this became an issue with how you might want to format bold for export, since bold has a standard meaning. You can see all the bold text in the document in a special view anyway, if you like.
Heading Notes
You can add notes to headings to remind yourself of what you need to do with a section and so on.
Once created, the notes will only be accessible when you
the Heading. However, when you Fold the document there will be an asterisk before the *heading, helping you see that there are notes about the section.
For clarity, the heading notes are not visible in the folded view, only the asterisk to remind you there is a note, and then you need to
the Heading to read it.
ou can click ‘Show Options’ in this dialog to set the heading level or add an author for that section, something Visual-Meta will be aware of on export, allowing you to export a PDF document where the main producer of the document is listed as Editor and anyone can be listed as author for specific sections (as marked by headings)
Views
These special views are designed to help you get to grips with your text in useful ways in the Write view:
⌘-shift-D to see only headings and Defined Text (as described in Defined Concepts)
⌘-shift-N to see only headings and Names (macOS-detected names)
⌘-shift-B to fade all non-Bold text to grey.
Citing
Citing is often the bane of student writing but it is also the connective web of academic discourse. Author features ways to help you cite quickly and to not have to spend any time at all fiddling with References on export.
Books
Academic Papers
If you use Author’s free companion application Reader, you can just copy text and paste it in to Author and it will appear as a full citation. See https://www.augmentedtext.info/reader for more details
Web
Images
Thanks Apple, this is one of those magic features which is easy to forget to use
Links
Journal, Ideas & Research
These are regular Author documents which means you can write, edit–and importantly–Find your notes later. You can use the Find and Fold tools along with highlighting and so on. You can also make this where you define the terms which matter the most to you and if you copy from this document into a specific paper you are writing, these terms come with you and are exported as a Glossary.
Journal is designed with having quick access to writing your Journal
Ideas. This is a space only for your ideas and what inspires you so you can go through it in the future without all the ‘everyday’ text in your Journal. We are looking at letting you use this information to inform Ask AI when you do a query, completely privately on your own system, to be part of a prompt which then knows some more about who you are, what you value and what you know. This was presented at ACM Hypertext ’24. This is a preview video: https://youtu.be/B_U3fgkXp3k
Research Notes. As you gather quotes and research notes you can click on the citations to copy them. If you copied quotes from a PDF in Reader you can click to open the original by clicking on the citation and the ‘Open’ since Author retains a link to the original PDF in Reader.
Endnotes
Endnotes are used for adding notes to your documents. Since Author does not deal with pages, you can’t add Footnotes.
The Endnote you add will be indicated by a dagger† icon.When you export, the PDF will contain an Endnote section and the dagger will be replaced by a superscript letter which, if the PDF is opened in ‘Reader’–and you chose to augment the document with Visual-Meta–the reader of your document can click on to see the full Endnote text in a pop-up. Otherwise it will simply appear in the Endnotes Appendix.
Cuttings
In Author, you can cut and everything you cut will remain stored with your document in Cuttings.
You do not have to stress about losing it. Note that what you ‘copy’ will not be in the Cuttings, nor will anything you cut-and-then-paste before you cut again because both of those cases mean you still securely have your original text.
Speech to Text
There is another way to focus of course and that is speaking. You can turn on and off speech with the globe key 🌐 (also called ‘fn’ on some keyboards) and ‘D’.
To insert a punctuation mark or perform simple formatting tasks, do any of the following:
When you’ve finished, press the dictation keyboard shortcut or the Return key, or click Done in the feedback window.
For further commands you can use when speaking have a look at the official Apple Page at:
support.apple.com/en-gb/guide/mac-help/mh40695/mac
If this is not set up on your Mac, have a look at:
support.apple.com/en-gb/guide/mac-help/mh40584/12.0/mac/12.0
Export
When you export your final document you will have a choice of document format. If you export to PDF you can choose to have a Table of Contents created and a Reference section appended, as well as specifying how the citation should appear in the document.
You can also export to LaTeX and Markdown where you are given the option to copy components to systems external to Author which are known to you.
If you choose to have your document augmented by having ‘Visual-Meta’ added, your document will have additional functions when opened in Reader, such as the ability for the user to copy text as citation and to fold the documents using cmd- just as you can here in Author. https://visual-meta.info for more information
‘Defined Concept’ Exports As ‘Glossary’
Author exports your Defined terms as a Glossary which helps you learn and helps you write a clear document which your readers can easily learn more about.
To copy Glossaries from one document to another simply copy some text from the document with Glossaries and paste into the new document. This is not the most elegant solution, we are working on a Global Glossary system, but at least it works, saving you from creating Glossaries from scratch every time.
Easy Upgrade
If you have ‘Author | Basic’ you can upgrade to the full Author any time to export your documents, you will not lose any current documents. You can also copy text from Author to other software should you prefer (even the full document), but this does not give you the benefit of the export formatting.
Preferences
You can access your Author Preference with ⌘
Column Width
Here you can adjust the width of your text column to suit your preference and work mode. Some people prefer wide or narrow but others prefer wide when editing and narrow when writing. Here you can set it exactly the way you like it for whatever you are doing.
Page Color
The default view of your documents is Cool but you can also make it High Contrast, Low Contrast and Cool. Please experiment with how they feel to you and also please note that they will be different in macOS Light and Dark modes.
Fonts
Here you can also change the fonts used for your view in Author. Please note that this is only for your own display and if you open an Author document on another system it will appear in that other font. The default heading font is Avenir, designed by Adrian Frutiger in 1987. The word avenir is French for ‘future’, which we found quite fitting. The body text is the classic Times New Roman which we think looks great on macOS retina displays.
Publish
Here you can set up a WordPress accounts for posting (Beta).
User Info
This tab allows you to specify your name for export on document covers and as metadata.
Continuous Backup
Author supports macOS Time Machine so you can easily go back to earlier versions of your document.
To access an earlier version, go to the ‘File Menu’ and choose ‘Revert to…’ where you can choose from ‘Last Opened’ or to ‘Browse all versions’.
You do not need to save your document as you work, since your document is continually backed up.
⌘-S to mark a ‘Saved’ Version and you can go back to that version easily
Free Companion Software
Reader : PDF Viewer
If you read PDF documents for your use with Author, you can benefit from using Author’s free Reader which is a fast minimalist PDF reading environment where you can copy text and paste it as citation into Author documents: www.augmentedtext.info
Liquid : Instant Text Interactions
Select any text and use the custom keyboard shortcut to use ‘Liquid’ to instantly search based on the text & more. You can also select text and ctrl-click and choose ‘Liquid’. To see how it works, and to download, go to: www.augmentedtext.info/liquid We are very proud of Liquid and think you will appreciate how it will let you work at the speed of thought. It’s a bit difficult to explain what it is so please try it. Remember, it’s free!
The Future of Text
The reason for creating this software is because I feel there is a need for a different kind of interaction with text and this is my personal approach. This is not the only approach that should be taken and I am only a small, independent software developer so I cannot build everything. I have therefore been hosting the annual ‘Future of Text Symposium and published two volumes of the book The Future of Text so far (Hegland, 2020) as well as meeting regularly to support future publications and symposia. Please have a look and see if this is at all interesting to you:
https://futuretextpublishing.com
Postscript
I quote my friend and mentor to make it clear what the reason behind this work is:
We need to become better at being humans. Learning to use symbols and knowledge in new ways, across groups, across cultures, is a powerful, valuable, and very human goal. And it is also one that is obtainable, if we only begin to open our minds to full, complete use of computers to augment our most human of capabilities.
Douglas Engelbart
Reviews of Author
Adam Cheyer, inventor of Siri: “Frode Hegland's Augmented Text tools are essential components for textual thought productivity. These tools espouse many of the philosophies of Doug Engelbart, one of the greatest thinkers in computer science history. Hence, making these tools widely available is quite important both for historical purposes, as well as everyday use practical purposes.”
Bruce Horn, programmer of the original Finder in the original Macintosh: “The original vision for the Macintosh was to bring the power of computing to the creative class. Frode Hegland’s Augmented Text Suite is to writing what the Adobe Creative Suite is to multimedia: an enormously powerful set of tools to enable writers and thinkers to do their best work. There have been few advances in this area since the invention of the word processor, and none as well thought-out or accessible as Author and the accompanying Reader and Liquid apps.”
Vint Cerf co-inventor of the Internet: “Authors experience a new intimacy with the semantics and structure of what they are writing. All of this improves clarity with an economy that is awesome in its simplicity and power” Vint Cerf describes the power of Author in the academic journal ACM Communications: https://cacm.acm.org/magazines/2021/10/255699-the-future-of-text-redux/fulltext
More reviews are available in the macOS App Store and on Author’s website: https://www.augmentedtext.info/author
{Author 10.1}

One thought on “User Guide”
Comments are closed.