How to write without being an expert and instead give value
July 22, 2010
Reading the article " 10 Android applications that improve your productivity 'I was angry because it contained a list of those applications that is a year looking at listings, simply Google a little ( Productivity apps android ) to see that any interested person on the subject, ration has been exactly double or triple those 10 apps and some others.
I put a rude comment (which I regret), so I'll tell you what I have done to give weight to the article and the list:
Option 1: Explain that the list comes from other listings.
If, as intro I put "I googled this, I looked at this, this, this and this well-known blogs that have done exactly the same post on productivity apps. The recommended are all following ", I am com or a king. In my opinion there's no harm in citing the sources.
The listed weight is given by the well-known blogs and you will recognize you the research.
Option 2: contact with experts.
Send an email to the three most important blogs on android or productivity and ask them their opinion for an article, then mix well made and you get the item.
Again the weight is given by the experts list and you will recognize you the research.
Option 3: Use tools.
In this case, I come like a glove bubiloop my work and a tool in which we work. Productivity is a category of Android , bubiloop.com have data on both visits as downloads and could sort by those criteria, we the top 10 and well, I do not know if they are the best, but most downloaded
weight as they download.
I leave the top 10 downloads in the category Productivity bubiloop of android for the curious
1. ADW.Launcher
2. ADW.Launcher (donut)
3. Adobe ® Reader ®
4. PocketCloud Wyse RDP / View-BETA
5. SwiftKey Beta Keyboard
6. madridmemata
7. CallTrack
8. Microsoft Tag Reader
9. ASTRO File Manager
10. Georges
They agree with the article but few touch to say that Adobe Reader is not productivity ![]()
Soon we will open this type of tool and will publish the API for anyone to tinker.
Note: the three options I come from the book "The Keys to the argument" Anthony Weston , I reread at least once a year. Not only used for writing, but also to speak.









