Do you find that your writing style, discipline, or quality changes depending on whether you write by hand, on a computer, or by some other means?
For example, when I write on my computer, the words of course fly, but I feel I may get too verbose and wordy. By hand, I of course pause more.
While I've been traveling, I've been writing on my phone with a handwriting app and a stylus, which is almost like writing by hand, but it is a little slower and more cumbersome, and I feel less free as I would on a keyboard.
I've also considered as an experiment using voice-to-type.
>>9594705
>mfw an azn qt is posted and I can't concentrate on the post so I can't even contribute to /lit/
>>9594712
It's used to grab your attention. But you should be intelligent enough to be able to talk about but topic without even commenting on the picture.
/lit used to be good about this.
Bump, and here's some more motivation to enter the thread, you depraved animals.
>>9594705
yeah. if i want to just insert my brain onto the page as a memdump, i just type. if i want to strain my hand with a story that will jump around more than a flea in a bag of cocaine, then i handwrite. i prefer typing, it's easier to edit, and it's less distracting for me. i wish i had the balls to write with a pen at length these days.
>>9595126
Right now I am working on a collection of stories that do not have rigid outlines, so perhaps it is good that I'm not typing these ones out.