Mac Trick

Last night I came across this relatively useless but fun little Mac keyboard trick.

Pressing the following key combination does a cool color reverse on your display:

Cmd+Opt+Ctrl+6+8

I’m not sure what the utility of this could be, but it’s a fun little trick. Actually, I could see using this if working in a dark room in order to reduce the brightness of the screen (I know, you could just adjust the brightness as well). I might also invoke this if looking at photographs for use in promo materials–postcards for shows or theatre programs or websites–to see if a particular picture might look more startling or powerful in negative.

Currently listening: Alpha Yaya Diallo – N`Dare

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Posted in Mac

Your Opinion Needed

What should LtL focus on in 2010?

  • Social & Political Information & Rants (33%)
    Social & Political Information & Rants -/> 33% (2 Votes)
  • Personal Observations & Ruminations About Life, Love, etc. (17%)
    Personal Observations & Ruminations About Life, Love, etc. -/> 17% (1 Votes)
  • Essays on Writing and other Artistic Processes (17%)
    Essays on Writing and other Artistic Processes -/> 17% (1 Votes)
  • Humor (17%)
    Humor -/> 17% (1 Votes)
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    Reviews of Books/Movies/TV/Theatre/Music -/> 17% (1 Votes)

Total Votes: 6

Starting & Finishing

I have great ideas. I love starting new projects. I tend to be pretty terrible with follow through however. D. Keith Robinson’s article Starting vs. Finishing, has some good thoughts on the process of finishing a project. In particular, his argument to make sure you finish before you re-start something instead of starting-over in the middle–or sometimes near the end–of a project.

I’ve found it very, very important to actually get to the end of something before you even think about starting over. I don’?t know how many things in life get stuck in the middle of nowhere because half-way through someone decides to start over from scratch. I feel it’?s much better to end and close something completely and then, only if you have to, start all over again from the beginning.

I have found that if I restart without finishing the first draft, that the project generally never, ever gets done. No matter how excited I was about it to begin with, starting over kills it. But if I finish, even if I know that the story or the screenplay will end up needing massive rewrites or that whole sections will be cut or added, if I finish and then go back to do those changes, the project will move forward. By binding the work into a cohesive unit, despite how much change might be necessary, you allow yourself to have a sense of power over the project that you never achieve if you continually start over. Completing even a crappy draft is an accomplishment pure and simple, and can give you the renewed interest and energy for revisions as they become necessary.

Drop a comment if you have some particularly useful techniques or strategies for finishing projects.

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