BRAVO, Keith!

You did a fabulous job. (And obviously so did all the beta testers who helped you.)

I love that the export of a folder retains the research PDFs as PDFs, which means David Hewson’s idea to put all my research in a separate Scrivener project is not only workable but a great idea, because I am fastidious that my research stay in the format I found it.

And your tutorial document (even though I know I was reading the NANOWRIMO draft) is superb. I was always ready for the tea and biscuits and wine just when you brought it up, too. :wink:

Dear Keith,
I’d like to add on to this BRAVO! (I also considered adding to Molly’s Mum, “Gush, gush, gush,” because it expressed my feelings, if not quite my style :slight_smile:). I agree with Ajea that the tutorial document is superb; the manual, too, and I’m glad to have it completed. And I would also add that the new website and videos are superb as well. I found the website especially rewarding of careful studies of the images and pulled a couple into the tutorial (which I annotate with material from the forum, among other places.) I was AMAZED at the richness of the Quick Reference (aka floating windows?). Writing notes in the bottom pane of the window was fantastic–I went through every bit of the image for fullscreen mode, using the image itself to guide exploring the features. (I would love to find a copy of the the fullscreen background image for myself!). Some time ago, you were collecting screen shots (“Post your screenshots here”), and I found those invaluable for learning more about Scrivener. Maybe when life lightens up a bit, you could start another thread of 2.0 screenshots, or maybe even have a page on the website dedicated just to different Scrivener set-ups.

All the best, and thanks for splendid software,
Linn

Thanks for the kind words, much appreciated!

Oh, and yes, we’d like to have a spot for user screenshots in the future. That’s somewhere on the (very long) list…

Thanks,
Keith