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# An example of a cohesive student workflow in Emacs
Daniel Pinkston (he/him) - IRC: bardman, develop dot bard at-symbol gmail dot com

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Most successful students have a go-to system for staying organized. It
might be Notion, Obsidian, a bullet journal, or a simple paper planner.
 The key is finding what fits your personal needs and style. Here's an
interesting option some students might not have considered: Emacs.
It's a tool that's popular with Linux people, but possibly overlooked by
others. For the right person, it could be a game-changer in managing
academic life.

This talk is meant to showcase how different Emacs tools integrate with
each other to create a cohesive work environment for students.

Links:

-   Denote <https://github.com/protesilaos/denote> - the keystone package for my preferred note taking method
-   Logos <https://github.com/protesilaos/logos> - a focus-mode tool for writing
-   PDF-tools <https://github.com/vedang/pdf-tools> - pdf viewer
-   Anki-editor <https://github.com/louietan/anki-editor> - my favorite package for making flashcards in Emacs
-   Org-fragtog <https://github.com/io12/org-fragtog> - auto toggles LaTeX fragments in my org documents
-   Org-download <https://github.com/abo-abo/org-download> - facilitates quick image addition to org documents
-   My Emacs configuration <https://github.com/BardofSprites/.emacs.d> - includes not only writing, but programming

About the speaker:

I am Daniel Pinkston, a high school student (grade 12) interested in Emacs,
Linux, programming, and customizable/libre software. I have been using
Emacs since 2022, starting with DOOM Emacs.



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