You’ve captured the front page of an entire website that you can’t access within Scrivener.Websites can remove content over time, and if you’re counting on clicking a link for your information, you might be sadly disappointed to land on a 404 page.(That’s one reason it takes longer and longer to save.) Your Scrivener file can get bloated from all the web weight.Why this is such a neat trick: Importing web pages into Scrivener is a fantastic feature, and it was so fun that I began dragging sites in with abandon. Now that seems a little repetitive ()ģ. Scrivener can convert web pages into text. If you come to love using Dictation, you can dictate commands that let you move around within the Scrivener workspace.You might prefer an ergonomic break from sitting in your chair, since you can dictate while you’re standing or moving around.You can speak dialogue as you write your novel, since your speech may sound more natural than your typed words.How you can lighten your workload even more:Of course, you don’t need to restrict Dictation to your Scrivener Research folder. Since I don’t mind reviewing and correcting the dictation text-it reinforces my recall-I don’t think that requires much effort. You can find all of the commands, including punctuation, typography, formatting, mathematical, and more, at Apple Support.
How well will it work? You’ll probably need to go back into your dictated text to clean it up a bit, until Dictation gets good at understanding you, and you get the hang of giving commands like New Line, or New Paragraph, or End Quote and so on.