Twitter is about publishing. Twitter is about writing. And it’s about having fun, making connections and sharing things. I’ve made a focused effort to use Twitter a little more strategically since May as it tied in with some other business aims. And it’s started to work. Here are some ways I use Twitter and some ways I don’t!
Entries Tagged as 'Twitter'
Technical Writing News – FrameMaker Shortcuts, Life-Saving Checklists & Twitter for Professional Development
January 28th, 2010 · View Comments · Adobe FrameMaker, Career, Content Management, Dita, Doc 2 Help, News, Snagit, Technical Writers, Technical Writing, Twitter, Visio
Why are most technical writing blog written by men? Do you think it’s true? This week’s newsletter also has updates on Technical Authoring tools such as ComponentOne’s Editable Data Portals for SharePoint, Morae 3.2 (Techsmith’s best kept secret), and the beta version Microsoft Visio 2010. Learn how to fix Adobe Distiller bugs with Technical [...]
Tags: Acrobat·Adobe Distiller·Adobe Framemaker·Authoring·blog·Checklists·collaboration·ComponentOne·Digital Assets·Distiller·Dita·Documentation·Microsoft Visio·Morae·PDF·SharePoint·shortcuts·Technical Authoring Tools·technical communication·Technical Communication Suite·Technical Writing·Techsmith·Training·trends·Twitter·writing·XML
Technical Writing News – Crystal Balls, Salaries, Metrics & Twitter
January 15th, 2010 · Comments Off · Career, Linkedin, News, Technical Writing, Twitter
The first Technical Writing Newsletter of the year includes some interesting predictions on the future of technical communications, how to justify your role as a technical writer (i.e. metrics), news of Camtasia Relay’s UK Bootcamp and the results of the salary survey for technical writers in Israel.
Tags: Add new tag·Camtasia Studio·israel·metrics·Newsletter·Salary·Technical·Technical Communications·technical writer·Technical Writing·Techsmith·writing
5 UK Technical Writers You Should Follow on Twitter
January 12th, 2010 · View Comments · Career, People, Technical Writers, Twitter
From Shakespeare, Graham Greene, JK Rowling to Colum McAndrew, Ellis Pratt, David Farbey. All have all one thing in common – great writing! As my career started in the Baker Street, London in the 90s, I’ve always carried fond memories of my time in England. Here are some UK based technical writers you might want to add to your Twitter list. By the way, do you notice any difference between UK and US tech writer blogs?
Tags: Cherryleaf·David Farbey·Ellis Pratt·RoboColumn·technical writer·Twitter·UK











