![]() ![]() Please obey this rule!) Within the PDF, I wanted to put an easy way to read full screen and to jump around using the mouse and arrow keys, so I made a little block grid in Keynote, saved it as a jpg, imported it into Nisus and then opened the file in Adobe Acrobat to insert the live links on top of the picture.Ĭreating the ebooks was a little trickier. Nisus lets you put live links within the file as you’re writing it, and those links come through in the PDF, which is essential for a manifesto–the riff is a launching point, so I wanted to be sure readers could easily click to find out more about the sources I used.įor the screen-read PDF, I used a much smaller page size (all screen-read PDFs ought to be horizontal (landscape) or else the reader is insanely frustrated at having to scroll up to reach the bottom of each page. ![]() To create the printable PDF, all I had to do was change the styles, add a footer and “save as PDF”. ![]() I conformed her changes and took it back into Nisus. When it was finished, I sent it by email to my trusted copyeditor Catherine, who sent it back redlined in Word. Using styles, I was easily able to create a numbered header for each section, and to see what the manifesto would look like when it was read. I wrote the manifesto in Nisus, a fabulous word processor for the Mac. ![]()
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