

MMSW has always been the poor red-headed stepchild to Final Draft due to inertia favoring the "industry standard" (read: "what everyone else is using") despite being comparable or superior on a features front. No Sale of Copyrighted Material or Sharing of Confidential Material Posts Made by ( u/deleted) Accounts are Subject to Removal Observe Dedicated Weekly Threads for Loglines, Memes, Etc Provide Descriptive/Informative Titles for Posts Screenplays MUST be properly formatted/Do not post your film without the screenplay.

No Contest, Coverage or Service AdvertisingĬomplaints About Paid Feedback Must Include Script and Evaluations No Socks, Trolls or Shitposting, Spam or Off-Topic Postsĭon't post personal blogs, personal websites, or unapproved self-promotion. Without the proper syncing plugin in place from the get-go, the initial user reviews in iTunes are decidedly negative if everything goes smoothly from here on out, perhaps they'll improve steadily and the $10 mobile app can make some inroads for Celtx - not just in terms of popularity, but profitability as well.WIKI: FAQS & FORMATTING INFO AND RESOURCESĭo not personally attack fellow redditors respect privacy, be encouraging, use your manners. It looks like the developers are going through some growing pains, however, as Apple's variable approval time took the team by surprise as their app went live on a Saturday. This is a welcome surprise given how clunky and homely the desktop Celtx application is on OS X. Celtx Script (US$9.99) is the first iPad screenwriting app that “just works” in the way that Apple users expect. Kudos to Celtx for figuring out exactly what to include and what to leave out when designing a screenwriting app for mobile devices. "Digital rebel" Stu Maschwitz kick off his post on Celtx with the following: However, it seems the just-released mobile version of Celtx is ahead of the game instead of playing catch-up. As a desktop screenwriting application, Celtx has never threatened industry stalwarts Final Draft and Movie Magic Screenwriter, despite its advantage (in terms of adoption) of being free.
