
Users can subscribe to Celtx Edge on an as-needed basis, e.g., you’re working on a project for 2 months requiring Edge features with a team, then abandon the subscription until the next time you need Edge project management.

#CELTX REVIEW CODE#
Legacy studios will be accessible through the end of the year, but Celtx Edge is the new cloud-based project management system for new users (see Figure 2), and it’s clear Celtx would like to close out its legacy studios (one can only imagine how much new code base has been developed for Celtx Free and Celtx Edge). If you’ve been using Celtx Studios, you’ll need to migrate to Celtx Edge sooner rather than later. Would it make sense for a producer or project manager to subscribe to Celtx Edge, while other project participants stick with Celtx Free? I think very possibly, although if storyboard or schedule collaboration is needed, then multiple project participants may need the monthly Edge subscription.Ī comparative checklist of Celtx Free and Celtx Edge features can be found here.

That divide becomes a little less clear-cut once we factor in Celtx Edge, Celtx’s new “premium cloud service for script & novel writing and media pre-production.”

Implied was that more experienced or entrepreneurial users might still prefer using a locally installed desktop client or mobile app.
#CELTX REVIEW SOFTWARE#
In summarizing the post, I suggested that Celtx Free worked very well for casual scriptwriters and novice novelists, in addition to users prevented from doing any kind of software installs (which is fairly typical in governmental, educational, institutional and corporate environments). In my last post, I reviewed Celtx Free, the fully in-the-cloud script composition and editing tool (usable for novels and comic books as well).
