Resource material for the technical writer.
When you read something interesting online, you can submit the article’s link to WriterRiver.com through the Submit a Story tab. Everything that looks like a post on WriterRiver.com is really just a link to an article online.
WriterRiver. Resources>Web Design>Technical Writing>Social Networking
A blog about techniques and technologies by an instructional designer beginning to work in technical writing.
Rupa. Writers Gateway (2007). Resources>Writing>Technical Writing>Blogs
The Art of Technical Communication
Blog on technology and its meaning. Explores different themes and techniques in technical communication and rhetoric.
Schwarcz, Mati. Art of Technical Communication, The (2008). Resources>Writing>Technical Writing>Blogs
ITauthor is a British blog about software and technical writing.
Christie, Alistair. ITauthor (2008). Resources>Writing>Technical Writing>Blogs
My name is Miranda, and I am an Information Developer (aka technical writer). I am the junior writer on my team, new to the company, and new to the industry. It’s safe to say, I’m the greenhorn. However, I have the honor to work beside some very experienced and very knowledgeable senior writers, so it’s only a matter of time before their good habits rub off on me.
Bennett, Miranda. On Writing (2008). Resources>Documentation>Technical Writing>Blogs
A blog about technical writing.
Basu, Anindita. Writing Technically (2008). Resources>Writing>Technical Writing>Blogs
Your Writing Dept Blog is a collection of writings from technical writers who would like to develop dynamic, and hopefully, useful content when not creating technical documentation, user guides and training materials. The blog contains useful tips for how to work with a documentation team, and how to best manage documentation project.
Your Writing Dept (2008). Resources>Documentation>Technical Writing>Blogs
An overview of barriers to global communication and how to address them.
Bailie, Rahel Anne. Intentional Design Inc. (2005). Resources>Writing>Localization>Technical Writing
This blog is about technical writing and related topics, particularly for the software industry. Topics include technical communication, open source software, user assistance, interface design, and whatever else I find something to write about.
Swisher, Janet. Techie Tech Writer Blog, A. Resources>Writing>Technical Writing>Blogs
A blog about aspects of technical communication, with special focus on accessibility, quality (work/documentation/etc.) processes, writing, editing, usability, and technology.
Alltop - Top Technical Writing News
An RSS feed aggregator/amalgamator which permits visitors to browse recent posts to 31 influential technical writing blogs (including the TC Library).
The Tim Rosa Associates Technical and Business Writing Blog
A resource center for sharing information and discussing ideas about technical documentation, marketing, regulatory & compliance, training & development, and business intelligence.
Tim Rosa Associates. Resources>Writing>Technical Writing>Blogs
I like to use software applications. I like to help people figure out how to use stuff. I like to write. I am a technical writer.
Often conflicting pressures to produce communications that better fit customer demands as well as stay within tightening constraints on budgets and schedules are leading many technical communications organizations to a topic-based approach to authoring. In fact, 58% of participants in Aberdeen Group's October 2008 DITA and the Technical Communicator’s Transformation study report that they currently follow author content in a topic-based manner, with a vast majority of those remaining planning to implement one in the future. A topic-based approach promotes greater content reuse and is seeing a considerable impact on the authoring efficiency of technical communications projects today. The benefits of topic-based authoring can be compelling, with findings from the The Technical Communicator’s Transformation study indicating that when pursued the right way, topic-based authoring can have a broad range of benefits, enabling an organization to meet authoring and localization cost targets as well as documentation quality expectations, among others. However, as the adoption of this approach spreads, the advantages seen by today's leading organizations will flatten out. This Sector Insight provides a guide for current adoption of topic-based authoring and those still considering it; outlining the changes that are expected to take place in as topic-based authoring goes mainstream.
Jackson, Chad and David Houlihan. Aberdeen Group (2008). Resources>Documentation>Information Design>Technical Writing
Technical Communication blog about products, topics in Tech Comm, tools, teaching tech comm topics, and others
Burton, Sharon. Wordpress (2008). Resources>User Experience>Technical Writing>Blogs
Mike Hamilton covers topics like technology, PDAs, MadCap products, technical communication and more.
Hamilton, Michael. Wordpress (2008). Resources>User Experience>Technical Writing>Blogs
The Art of the Functional Spec
'The Art of the Functional Spec' is a forum for those of us responsible for writing functional specs. We'll discuss the basics of functional spec writing, offer tips, provide examples and respond to your feedback and questions.
Functional Spec (2009). Resources>Writing>Technical Writing>Specifications
Tech Writer - Glossary of Terms and Acronyms 
Some basic terms and acronyms useful to the technical writer operating in Australia.
docDownload (2009). Resources>Dictionaries>Technical Writing>Glossary
Toolkit for New Medical Writers
Medical writing is a great career! The work is interesting and often lucrative, and the demand for medical writers is high. Few people start out to be medical writers; most of us fall into it. Some of us have scientific or medical degrees (e.g., MD, PharmD, PhD in a scientific field) and have worked in the field (e.g., as an academic, bench scientist, physician, pharmacist) or in administration and somehow find ourselves doing medical communications work. Some of us have Journalism or English degrees, work in communications, and end up writing about health and medicine.
De Milto, Lori. AMWA (2004). Resources>Writing>Technical Writing>Biomedical
Technical Writing in Science Class: The Handbook
An organized kit of technical-writing exercises, guidelines, activities, and strategies refined and tested in real high-school classes, with notes and comparisons to help teachers borrow and adapt them. Also used for teacher professional development at the Edward Teller Education Center.
Girill, T.R. STC East Bay (2009). Resources>Education>Literacy>Technical Writing
Top 50 Technical Writers on the Web
I was preparing a report on freelance technical writers and noticed how hard it was to find technical writing sites run by writers, most were recruitment site. So I’ve made a list of the top 50 technical writers with a web presence. Some of these you might know, such as Darren Barefoot and Tom Johnson. I have also added some other writers from India, Russia and Israel to reach out to a wider audience.
Walsh, Ivan. I Heart Tech Docs (2009). Resources>Directories>Technical Writing
The technical writing process consists of four main phases. These are planning, writing, delivery, archiving. These phases are not necessarily set in stone and some variations do exist. Every writer is different and they each have their own way of writing that is distinct.
Technical Writer Blog, The (2009). Resources>Writing>Technical Writing>Blogs
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