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ChatGPT: The AI-Powered Proofreader

August 28, 2023 by RDesprez Leave a Comment

Chat­G­PT, a text-gen­er­at­ing mod­el devel­oped by Ope­nAI to sim­u­late respons­es that resem­ble human con­ver­sa­tions, saves you time and effort by edit­ing your documents.

Copy a page of con­tent into Chat­G­PT and request that it sum­ma­rize the infor­ma­tion. In sec­onds, it sum­ma­rizes the mate­r­i­al before your eyes—much faster than any human that I know.

For a tool that is just emerg­ing, it is sur­pris­ing­ly ver­sa­tile. You can ask it for help with pro­gram­ming, brain­storm­ing, writ­ing head­lines (Chat­G­PT sug­gest­ed the head­line for this blog post), trans­la­tions, mar­ket­ing mate­r­i­al, and plan­ning a trip.

A quick simple test

I decid­ed to give it a test. I copied an ear­li­er blog that I draft­ed about Mad­Cap Flare and delib­er­ate­ly added errors (high­light­ed in red) to the text. In my state­ment to Chat­G­PT, oth­er­wise known as a prompt, I wrote, “Check the fol­low­ing con­tent for incon­sis­tent acronyms, con­sis­tent spelling of com­pa­ny names, gram­mar and typos, and make sure all num­bers under 10 are spelled out.” 

In under 10 sec­onds, the AI tool gen­er­at­ed a new ver­sion of the con­tent and sum­ma­rized the edits made:

Chat­G­PT quick­ly caught all the errors and even cor­rect­ed the case of “Robo­Help,” which is the offi­cial name of the help author­ing tool.

Purge passive voice using ChatGPT

Many tech­ni­cal writ­ing depart­ments fer­ret out exam­ples of pas­sive voice and strive to re-write the con­tent so it is active because the writ­ing is more suc­cinct and eas­i­er to under­stand (of course, there is a place for pas­sive voice). In the fol­low­ing exam­ple, I asked Chat­G­PT to revise the fol­low­ing sen­tences that use pas­sive voice:

In moments, Chat­G­PT revised the sen­tences so they were active:

ChatGPT does have limitations

The AI tool does have its limitations:

  • Lacks under­stand­ing: If you write a tech­ni­cal report about a mine or a pro­pri­etary soft­ware pack­age, it will not under­stand the details of the con­tent. Sub­ject Mat­ter Experts must still vet the accu­ra­cy of the content.
  • Good prompts are required: Typ­ing vague com­ments like “edit this doc­u­ment” and the tool may not edit what you require. If you want to check a doc­u­ment for pas­sive voice, include the specifics of what you need.
  • Chat­G­PT was last updat­ed in 2021: If you require cur­rent infor­ma­tion about a major world event last year (such as Rus­sian’s inva­sion of Ukraine), Chat­G­PT will be “in the dark.”
  • Be care­ful of con­fi­den­tial­i­ty. See Gen­er­a­tive AI Chat­G­PT Can Dis­turbing­ly Gob­ble Up Your Pri­vate And Con­fi­den­tial Data, Fore­warns AI Ethics And AI Law

Still, it is sur­pris­ing­ly pow­er­ful and fast tool that can help with writ­ing and edit­ing. Check out ChatGPT. 

Filed Under: Career Development, Professional Development, Robert Desprez | Vancouver technical writer | Blog, Technology Tagged With: chatgpt, editing, technology

First impressions of MadCap’s purchase of IXIASOFT

March 8, 2023 by RDesprez 2 Comments

Mad­Cap Soft­ware’s pur­chase of IXIASOFT makes sense to me as it broad­ens Mad­Cap’s offerings.

I like Mad­Cap Flare and have rec­om­mend­ed it to a few clients over the years. While Flare already uses an XML-based archi­tec­ture, I have nev­er seen it used with Dar­win Infor­ma­tion Typ­ing Archi­tec­ture (DITA). By buy­ing Mon­tre­al-based IXIASOFT, Mad­Cap broad­ens its offerings—it now can sell a com­po­nent con­tent man­age­ment solu­tion that is based on the DITA standard.

It also shakes things up for Mad­Cap. I’ve heard from a few writ­ers and man­agers that Flare is start­ing to feel “dat­ed.” One client I worked with won­dered whether it should be offered as a soft­ware as a ser­vice (Saas). Even with reg­u­lar updates to the soft­ware, the first ver­sion of the soft­ware is more than 15 years old. One of Mad­Cap’s co-founders over­saw the devel­op­ment for Robo­Help, anoth­er help author­ing tool that start­ed in 1992. 

I would like to see a com­pa­ny like Mad­Cap fur­ther broad­en its soft­ware by offer­ing a superb wiki-based solu­tion that a team of writ­ers could use in an orga­ni­za­tion. Ide­al­ly, it would be a wiki devel­oped to han­dle com­plex tech­ni­cal documentation—with sup­port for con­di­tions, vari­ables, and snip­pets. In my opin­ion, it would stand out in the mar­ket­place. I recent­ly used Con­flu­ence again and was dis­ap­point­ed how lit­tle it seems to have evolved since I last used it years ago. 

In sum­ma­ry, I can see why Mad­Cap acquired IXIASOFT. Do you agree with my quick assess­ment? Are there oth­er author­ing tools you would like to see developed?

Filed Under: Help Authoring Tools, Professional Development, Robert Desprez | Vancouver technical writer | Blog, Technology Tagged With: DITA, Madcap Flare, xiasoft

Online Conferences for Technical Writers in 2022

January 30, 2022 by RDesprez Leave a Comment

Here’s a list of inter­est­ing North Amer­i­can and vir­tu­al con­fer­ences. With the pan­dem­ic still with us, it seems that the num­ber of con­fer­ences has dwin­dled, com­pared to pre­vi­ous years.

Lava­con, Octo­ber 23 to 26, 2022, New Orleans, LA
http://lavacon.org

Mad­World Con­fer­ence, June 12 to 15, 2022, Austin, TX and online ver­sion
Mad­World

STC annu­al con­fer­ence, May 15 to 18, 2022, Rose­mont, IL
http://summit.stc.org/

Write the Docs, May 22 to 24, 2022, Port­land, OR
Write the Docs

Filed Under: Professional Development, Robert Desprez | Vancouver technical writer | Blog, Technology, Training Tagged With: career development, conferences, technical writer | Blog, technical writing, vancouver technical writer

Adding Conditions to Microcontent in MadCap Flare 2020

May 30, 2020 by RDesprez Leave a Comment

Mad­Cap Flare 2020 adds improve­ments to its micro­con­tent fea­ture by sup­port­ing conditions.

In this blog post, I delve into the enhance­ments and pro­vide step-by-step instruc­tions on how you can mar­ry micro­con­tent with con­di­tions. Flare recent­ly cre­at­ed a post on some of the micro­con­tent improve­ments in the lat­est release of the soft­ware; this blog pro­vides addi­tion­al details.

What is microcontent?

Accord­ing to Flare’s online help, “Micro con­tent is short, con­cise infor­ma­tion that stands alone and is eas­i­ly con­sum­able.” Com­mon ways to use micro­con­tent in Flare include build­ing FAQs, work­ing with chat­bots, and adding micro­con­tent to search results. In this blog post, I explain how to add micro­con­tent in Mad­Cap Flare 2020 to your online help search results.

What does microcontent look like?

If you search for cer­tain terms, such as “con­di­tions” in Mad­Cap Flare’s online help, you see exam­ples of microcontent.

For years, Google has used the same par­a­digm. For exam­ple, type “how to pow­er wash” (I just bought a pow­er wash­er) and the search engine dis­plays a sum­ma­ry of the steps with­out me even hav­ing to click a website.

Add microcontent in Flare

First, I draft­ed a top­ic called “Adding Vari­ables” that includes five steps and two screen cap­tures. I con­di­tion­al­ized the images so they only appear in the topic.

I con­di­tion­al­ized the images with the Top­i­cOn­ly tag (I assume that you know how to con­di­tion­al­ize con­tent in Flare). This top­ic serves as the mas­ter for the microcontent.

To re-use the top­ic as microcontent:

  1. In Flare, click the Con­tent Explorer.
  2. Under Resources, click Micro­Con­tent.
  3. Right-click the Micro­Con­tent fold­er and select New > Micro Con­tent.
  4. In the Add File dia­log box, type a new name for your micro­con­tent in the File Name field and click Add.
  5. In the Micro­con­tent edi­tor, click the Add a phrase icon.
  6. Type a phrase for the micro­con­tent, such as “Vari­ables.” Phras­es are the key­words that you think users will type in the help’s search field when look­ing for a cer­tain topic.
  7. Option­al­ly, you can type alter­nate phras­es for the top­ic (for exam­ple, “Adding Vari­ables,” “Using Vari­ables,” and so on).
  8. Right-click the phrase(s) and select Add Link.
  9. In the Select File dia­log box, link the phrase to a top­ic (I linked my phrase to the Adding Vari­ables top­ic that I recent­ly cre­at­ed) and click OK.
  10. Right-click the phrase you added and select Prop­er­ties.
  11. Click Micro Con­tent Con­di­tions.
  12. In the list of Tags, select Default.TopicOnly and click Exclude. This step excludes the images that I added in the orig­i­nal help top­ic so they do not appear in the microcontent.
  13. Save your project.
  14. Gen­er­ate your help.

View the search results with microcontent

When users type the phrase “Vari­ables” in the search field, they see micro­con­tent that is based on the top­ic but does not dis­play any images as we con­di­tion­al­ized them to not dis­play. We are try­ing to just dis­play crit­i­cal con­tent in a con­cise way. Here’s an example:

Of course, the full top­ic is also avail­able in the help includ­ing the images.

Why is this a welcome improvement?

This enhance­ment is a worth­while devel­op­ment as you can re-use exist­ing top­ics and opti­mize the con­tent so it’s ide­al­ly suit­ed for micro­con­tent. For depart­ments who are already using micro­con­tent, this fea­ture is a wel­come addition.

Filed Under: Help Authoring Tools, Online Writing, Professional Development, Robert Desprez | Vancouver technical writer | Blog, Technology Tagged With: conditions, Madcap Flare, microcontent, single-sourcing

Online Learning Resources for Technical Writers

April 12, 2020 by RDesprez Leave a Comment

Once a year, I com­pile a list of upcom­ing tech­ni­cal writ­ing con­fer­ences in North Amer­i­ca and pub­lish a blog post. With the coro­na virus affect­ing all aspects of our lives, take a look at the Soci­ety for Tech­ni­cal Communication’s online con­fer­ence in May and some online resources to investigate.

STC Virtual Conference (May 17 to 20, 2020)

https://summit.stc.org/

There are some addi­tion­al “in-per­son” tech­ni­cal writ­ing con­fer­ences sched­uled for lat­er in the sum­mer and fall. I expect that these events will be post­poned or re-imag­ined as vir­tu­al events.

MadCap’s webinars

https://www.madcapsoftware.com/resources/recorded-webinars.aspx#flare

Adobe’s webinars

https://meetus.adobeevents.com/technicalcommunication/

Lynda.com courses

In the region I live, the local library offers res­i­dents a free mem­ber­ship to Lynda.com. If you don’t already have a paid mem­ber­ship, you may want to check whether your library pro­vides com­pli­men­ta­ry access. Here is a sam­pling of some cours­es relat­ed to tech­ni­cal writing.

Acro­bat DC Essen­tial Training

GitHub

Work­ing Remotely

Learn­ing Confluence

Instruc­tion­al Design

Get­ting Start­ed in User Experience

List of Good Technical Writing Books

List of books

Podcast on Technical Writing Trends for 2020

Pod­cast

Other Online Resources

While not spe­cif­ic to tech­ni­cal writ­ing, here’s a list of pop­u­lar mas­sive open online cours­es (MOOCs),  online pro­grams with unlim­it­ed par­tic­i­pa­tion and open access via the Inter­net. The list includes a diverse selec­tion of cours­es on arti­fi­cial intel­li­gence, phi­los­o­phy, the chem­istry behind cook­ing, the future of sto­ry­telling, pro­gram­ming, and learn­ing how to learn.

I hope you find this list help­ful. Stay healthy!

Filed Under: Career Development, Professional Development, Robert Desprez | Vancouver technical writer | Blog, Technology, Training Tagged With: massive open online courses, MOOCs, online courses, technical writing, virtual conferences

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About Robert Desprez

I have worked as a Vancouver technical writer for more than 20 years, working at some of British Columbia's largest high-tech firms. I have served in leadership positions for the Society for Technical Communication and have worked as a writing instructor at Vancouver's Simon Fraser University.

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Vancouver Technical Writer. Former Instructor at Simon Fraser University. Dog Lover. Coffee Drinker. Tennis and Piano Player.

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Recent Blog Posts

  • ChatGPT: The AI-Powered Proofreader
  • Four Ways Confluence Could Be Better
  • First impressions of MadCap’s purchase of IXIASOFT
  • Online Conferences for Technical Writers in 2023

About Me

Robert Desprez I have worked as a Vancouver technical writer for more than 20 years, working at Kodak, Boeing, Teck Resources, and FortisBC. In addition, I have worked as a writing instructor at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver.

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