Shan writes "DocVerse will literally change the way you think about working with other people on your documents. It is the FIRST product to allow multiple people to edit the same document at the same time. It lets you share documents with each other easily over the web and automatically tracks version history, eliminating the pains of using back-and-forth email attachments".
DocVerse
I'm interested in what happens when we are able to write together in real time. Perhaps you are, too. Let's test that out a bit here. I'm going to publish whatever is in this text box along with an explanation of how we wrote this as a blog post on my blog at http://budtheteacher.com in about a week. Between now and then, it's up to us to write what's going to end up there. You're welcome to post whatever you'd like wherever you'd like, too. You can also share this text with anyone you'd like to be here by sending them this link:
Today we’re featuring a piece by Seth Harwood, an innovative crime fiction writer who has used the tools of Web 2.0 to launch his writing career. Below, he gives you an inside look at how he went from podcasting his books to landing a book deal with Random House.
A newly open-to-the-public web app called doingText, which Mike Gunderloy took a brief look at when it was in closed beta, might be the best and simplest method yet, even beating TextFlow’s latest web-based tool.