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# Org-mode and Org-Roam for Scholars and Researchers
Noorah Alhasan

Org-mode improved so much over the years, and the use-cases in org-mode are
vast and highly technical. There is something for everyone in org-mode, and
it's important to sift through all of these features and figure out what's
best for a given situation or specific users. Therefore, I will be
targeting academics and scholars that are engaging with literature in the
early stages of a project or their academic careers.

Academics and scholars engage with complex ideas and unstructured research
workflows. I believe that org-mode can add more structure to the madness,
and I will use this talk to clarify a possible solution to reduce such
complexity.  I propose a research workflow framework that utilizes
org-mode, its raw form, and its many associated packages. However, the main
package I will be mostly talking about is Org-Roam, and the way its
underlying principles will revolutionize the research workflow.

This presentation will help researchers organize and build their knowledge
database in a streamlined and effective way. The research workflow is
presented in three phases: planning, note-taking, and reference management.
I will talk briefly about the packages and special-use cases for each stage
and learned lessons along the way. Finally, the presentation concludes with
future considerations and possible org-mode features.

<https://github.com/nalhasan/emacsconf2020/blob/master/presentation.pdf>
<!-- from the pad --->

-   Actual start and end time (EST): Start 2020-11-28T15.17.33; Q&A: 2020-11-28T15.32.18 End 2020-11-28T15.39.00
-   Slides/presentation: <https://github.com/nalhasan/emacsconf2020>


# Questions


## I use org-roam-bibtex to take notes on particular academic papers in conjuction with org-noter. This means all notes for a given paper are in one org file. However while it is possible to link to headings within a file, there is no functionality to easily search through and link to these subheadings. What do you do to overcome this? I've only superficially looked at org-rifle as a possible method.

## Whats this presentation software? Looks really cool.

beamer (LaTeX)

<https://github.com/nalhasan/emacsconf2020> for the slides/presentation


## How does the view for time blocking works?


## have you seen the project papis ? <https://github.com/papis/papis> I think the author is working on an emacs package, what would be your thoughts? (it's a zotero alternative)

"Powerful and highly extensible command-line based document and bibliography manager."


## Did you try using ebib instead of zotero? if so, is zotero better in some way?

Zotero has a lot of plugins you can play with and so far it's been great

Some people have been using a connector between Emacs & Zotero&#x2026;

You can create groups for collaborative projects in Zotero and this is a plus. (thanks for the answers! I'll give it a try!)

- <https://github.com/papis/papis-zotero> maybe useful ^^


## Do you have any suggestions on what subjects/things should be tags/separate org-roam files for cross-linking? I've been struggling with whether making almost every term be a link or only using links for broader subjects.

"Should I be combining ideas together into one&#x2026;?"  So far I've been using the Org Roam default way.


## Meta question: is there a place where people are collaborating on research "about" Emacs?

Definitely interested, but there is no place (yet!)


# Notes


-  org-inlinetasks


-  if you're working on a big org file that you keep coming back to, it's better to keep track of todo's related to that file within that file (e.g. a paper that you're writing)


-  <https://github.com/alphapapa/org-sidebar> to keep track of todo's within a large file


-  using org-gcal to sync gmail calendar with org-file <https://github.com/kidd/org-gcal.el/>


-  org-transclusion <https://github.com/nobiot/org-transclusion> to show (parts of) other files inline and allow editing in a separate mini-buffer


-  There is a Slack channel for org-roam link/backlink pls?