![]() Remember, there are 66 miles of shelving in that vault locked away underground beneath the Vatican. Because of their desire to control through their crusades and inquisitions, they decided they would create the first Express Trust, called "Unam Sanctum" which was written on a papal bull and placed in their vault. The Roman Catholic Church has a very long history of tyranny and oppression dating back to the very beginning of it's organization. which indicates chattel to a Corporation. ![]() ![]() In fact, your Social Security card is issued to you with your name in all capital letters. Like the bank holds the title to your car because you are indebted to them. They have registered you and that is the title to your Soul. Your birth certificate is the title of the Soul that they own in their registries. because no one has dared challenged their claim. Since the bull declared that the Roman Pontiff has supreme control over the material world, he states that the body (our body) is governed by the soul and the soul is governed by the ruler of the spiritual, therefore - the Roman Pontiff is Governor of both Soul and body.īasically, what it is saying is that all of the Souls in the world belong to the Roman Catholic Church and apparently, at least in theory, they do. “Furthermore, we declare, we proclaim, we define that it is absolutely necessary for salvation that every human creature be subject to the Roman Pontiff." You can download Werdsmith here.On 18 November 1302, Pope Boniface VIII issued the Papal Bull called "Unum Sanctum."Īside from all that was written, the bull ends with the following statement: Werdsmith works fairly well if you’re up to accept its nature of simple utility I’d like to see, however, the iCloud syncing engine rewritten to be more like Day One, as it’s not really immediate in this 1.1 version.Įven if you’re accustomed to more powerful solutions, you should take Werdsmith for a spin – it’s free and it works with iCloud. Keep in mind, though, that Werdsmith isn’t meant to be a text editor – rather, I see it as an iCloud-based scratchpad for writers, and it’s pretty decent at that. You can’t export notes in any format (only email sharing, and that’s it), there is no support for Markdown formatting (a must-have these days) and you can’t tag, search, or move notes around. Werdsmith is really simple, perhaps a little too simple for my tastes. A percentage will indicate how far you’ve gone into completing your project, and when you’re done you can tap on ‘Finish’ to archive it. You can save ideas as quick notes and leave them in your inbox, or you can make one a project and start writing against that word count. Werdsmith is aimed at writers, so a project will basically consist of a single note with a title and a goal – the latter being a minimum word count for your next essay, journal entry or blog post. In Werdsmith you can save ‘ideas’ and turn the most complex ones into ‘projects’. There is an annoying bug with scrolling long lists on the iPhone that sometimes requires a complete restart of the app I hope it’ll be fixed with an update. ![]() Overall, the design of the app is very clean, and reminds me of Wunderlist. This banner slides down when your list of ideas and projects is empty, but otherwise it’s got no specific use in the app. Werdsmith features a very peculiar interface with a wooden tab bar and a creepily awesome ‘mustache banner’ at the top. Such app is Werdsmith from Australian developer Nathan Tesler, free with in-app purchase to unlock more space and available as a universal app for iPhone and iPad (no Mac version yet). Instead, what I’m seeing is a trend towards simpler note-taking applications that allow you to jot down quick notes and have them synced on iOS and, sometimes, Mac clients with iCloud support. Wildly popular when it comes to Dropbox sync (just to name a few: Elements, Notesy, Notely, Nebulous Notes), there hasn’t been a full-featured text editor to show up with iCloud sync yet. From preference syncing ( Consume, Instacast) to actual library storage ( Day One), it appears developers are now fully realizing the potential of iCloud as an automatic syncing solution across Apple’s devices (iCloud isn’t without its flaws, many developers say, and I hope the upcoming release of iOS 5.1 will also bring this kind of fixes).Īn area that’s been strangely absent from my App Store watch list of iCloud-enabled apps is that of text editors. In the past couple of weeks, I’ve seen an increasing number of developers implement iCloud’s documents & data storage in iOS and Mac apps. ![]()
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