![]() ![]() I had moved from doing work exclusively in the Office Developer space to general development, web development, even PowerShell development. I have been away from my blog for quite a long while. Have fun and let me know what you think! Posted in Office Development, office.js, Productivity Tagged trello, wordjs Productivity and Trello More importantly, it is a useful tool that I think might benefit other writers that use Trello, or writers looking for a new way to keep their notecards and thoughts in a more digital, accessible from anywhere type of format. It was also a fun exercise for me to combine the two types of extensions I have found to enjoy writing (Office and Trello). Now, I can remain in Word, select the cards I want, and insert them without ever leaving Word. Then I found myself copy/pasting the information from Trello into Word getting lost on the task switching. I do research on the web for various topics and send snippets and pages to Trello cards where I organize and refine them. It is a simple add-in that connects Word to your Trello boards, so that you can insert information you have collected in Trello into your documents. The add-in is called the Trello Taskpane for Word. ![]() It is true that necessity is the mother of all invention. After years and years of blogging about it, I wrote an add-in for something I needed. I have done it! I have published my very first Office Web Add-in to the Microsoft Store. Posted in Browser Extensions, Productivity, Trello Tagged chrome, edge, javascript, trello New Trello Power-Up: Board Wiki □Īdd it to your browser and let me know what you think. Because Trello is a digital version of notecards and it is available everywhere and stored in the cloud, you don’t have to worry about the dog eating your homework. This browser extension is useful if you are a student writing a paper (supports MLA and APA formats), an author writing a book, or a blogger or someone doing research and keeping track of references using notecards. The following screen shots show you what it looks like when you are using it: Extension in action on my website. I published this to both the Microsoft Edge and the Google Chrome store: ![]() It takes the page you are on and then creates an MLA or APA reference and then adds it to a card in Trello for you. So, here is an extension I created that will do just that. And because I like to store information in Trello, I wanted something that combined both. I find myself wanting to tag pages so that I can reference them later in something I am writing or working on. One area I thought I would give a try is browser extensions. I have been in full-bore developer mode of late, trying new things and writing a lot of code. ![]()
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