When you're giving notes on a screenplay, it can be hard to keep your ideas organized. I'm often jotting ideas in the margins or messing around with Adobe to leave myself little notes. Or leave notes for others. But the real difference maker for me was when Scriptation burst onto the scene. It was an easy way to give notes while reading, and since its inception, it's only been improving. Their new release, 5.0, actually has a ton of tools useful for people other than writers. Today, I wanted to go over their latest update with you, and highlight a few tools I think are useful for writers.Let's dive in. Scriptation 5.0 The new 5.0 of Scriptation has a few key elements I wanted to highlight. The first is called Read, and it basically allows you to assign an AI voice to your screenplay to read it aloud to you. I find that useful to get the reading pace of some people and to listen for typos or run-on paragraphs. You can customize this by having the voice only read dialogue or other elements, in order to focus entirely on one thing at a time, if you work better that way. You can also use the Rehearse tool if you're an actor, to have AI read one set of the lines, and then you can work to memorize and do your lines with the computer as your scene partner. It'll auto highlight your lines so you can know exactly where they...
Published By: NoFilmSchool - Tuesday, 12 November