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authorSacha Chua <sacha@sachachua.com>2020-12-24 00:49:52 -0500
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-WEBVTT
-
-00:00:00.320 --> 00:00:02.639
-good afternoon or good evening everyone
-
-00:00:02.639 --> 00:00:03.040
-uh
-
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-today my talk is going to be on org mode
-
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-and or group for skulls and researchers
-
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-leo has talked about like the overall
-
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-picture of orgrim and or
-
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-uh bibtex or groundbreak tech I will be
-
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-talking more about
-
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-the research process itself using these
-
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-tools
-
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-all right so just to introduce that the
-
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-research process is really messy
-
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-um you're always working in like
-
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-piecemeal tasks and things move around
-
-00:00:31.039 --> 00:00:32.960
-all the time and so
-
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-there needs to be a system where you can
-
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-organize all these tasks
-
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-all these ideas in a way that is
-
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-flexible and effective
-
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-so my motivation is that research is
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-hard and
-
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-writing about it is even more difficult
-
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-and my goal is to add some structure to
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-this whole madness
-
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-so here's a list of some of the stuff
-
-00:00:52.800 --> 00:00:54.480
-that I've been using since I first
-
-00:00:54.480 --> 00:00:57.199
-learned about Emacs in 2019
-
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-and what I've what I've found useful um
-
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-during my res uh like um
-
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-within my research process all right so
-
-00:01:05.199 --> 00:01:07.920
-I've organized org mode for researchers
-
-00:01:07.920 --> 00:01:10.400
-and scholars within the writing process
-
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-into three modules first there's like
-
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-the planning aspect of it
-
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-then you've got the writing and the
-
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-reference management which I will join
-
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-together
-
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-by looking at the example of doing your
-
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-literature review
-
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-all right so when we're talking about
-
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-planning we're talking about either task
-
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-management or
-
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-time management with task management
-
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-you've got
-
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-org modes to do's and tags and
-
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-categories these are really powerful
-
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-tools that you could use
-
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-um in your org files to just um
-
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-uh like organize your tasks and
-
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-your appointments so there are different
-
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-types of to-do's that you can either set
-
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-globally in your init file or they can
-
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-be file buffer specific
-
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-so that means based on context based on
-
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-the type of
-
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-manuscript you're working on whether
-
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-it's like a literate programming
-
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-report or your actual thesis slash
-
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-dissertation
-
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-um also these to-do's are either created
-
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-as a set tree like think of them as
-
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-headings and sections if you use latex
-
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-or inline text which are like org inline
-
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-tasks I
-
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-like organ line tasks because like I can
-
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-add
-
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-to do's between two paragraphs and that
-
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-way it doesn't show up
-
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-in the table of contents when I export
-
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-into pdf or html or
-
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-anything else all right so this is an
-
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-example of buffer specific to do's
-
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-and and this is example of like a little
-
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-programming report that I was working on
-
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-where I was like dealing with
-
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-data and like analysis and all of that
-
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-stuff and so
-
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-I needed um context specific to do's to
-
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-use them within this buffer
-
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-um and that's how I would organize it
-
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-and there's also also another example
-
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-of an org inline task where you could
-
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-see it
-
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-in the middle between the two headings
-
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-that way it wouldn't show up in the
-
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-table of contents and it would look like
-
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-nature within the
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-text when you export it
-
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-oh but I also added a tag of no export
-
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-so it won't show up at all
-
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-when I export it into like either pdf
-
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-which I use all the time all right so
-
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-another useful tool
-
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-um for the research and just like
-
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-general planning
-
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-is the org capture um when I first
-
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-started with Emacs
-
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-actually it was for org agenda and I
-
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-went crazy with my capture template I
-
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-created a template for
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-everything um because I was just so
-
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-excited
-
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-but with time I was using less and less
-
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-of them so I kept taking them out
-
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-and now this is my simplified um
-
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-capture templates that I use either for
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-a general to do
-
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-um for a regular appointment a fleeting
-
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-note research tasks because like those
-
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-are what I focus on
-
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-like my bread and butter and then
-
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-finally with meetings which I find
-
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-sometimes I don't use it as much because
-
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-I would just like
-
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-have the org file ready instead of
-
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-needing to capture
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-you know open a capture template
-
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-right or agenda um that's how I got into
-
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-Emacs
-
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-I needed to um organize my life and I
-
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-found Emacs and
-
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-it's been great ever since um it
-
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-populates all your to-do's and
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-appointments into a singular view so the
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-default view I think it's a weak view
-
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-however I use org super agenda love this
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-um package and I set up my agenda as a
-
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-daily view with just appointments
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-deadlines and a habit tracker um and
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-a side note you guys I'm still
-
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-struggling with organizing the perfect
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-agenda so it's a process
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-and take it easy all right
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-so this is just an overview of my daily
-
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-agenda as you can see they're just like
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-appointments that I import from gmail
-
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-using org gcal
-
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-a simple habit tracker of like daily
-
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-free writing
-
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-as you can see there are a lot of times
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-where I'm skipping and the asterisk is
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-the one where I've completed that day
-
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-so you know it's a process and then just
-
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-like regular deadlines
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-so what happens is that I have other
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-to-do's that I have
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-not scheduled or not added a deadline
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-but they're just
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-tasks that keep piling up when I first
-
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-started with Emacs and org agenda
-
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-I had everything in there and it got
-
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-overwhelming and then I decided no
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-I'm not gonna even let them show up so
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-what I would do
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-at the beginning of each week or the
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-night before
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-um I would sit down look at all my to
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-to-do's that I have
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-not assigned yet to a deadline or a
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-schedule or just a simple
-
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-timestamp um and I would organize them
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-throughout the week
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-so here's an example of what I did
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-so on that wednesday from my gmail I had
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-all these appointments but
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-one of them is I have a writing group
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-session
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-and so I looked at my tasks and I
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-thought okay then I will just
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-assign um like for example my emac
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-slides
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-or the framework diagram into that
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-writing session
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-and all I did was just add an active
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-timestamp
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-that is all I needed to do and it went
-
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-straight into my
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-appointment now if I miss that
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-it won't show up on the next day so if
-
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-you put in a deadline
-
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-it will show up as an overdue but if you
-
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-have no deadline or schedule it will not
-
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-show up in your daily org agenda
-
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-so just a star
-
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-all right another way of accessing your
-
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-to do's is that if it's
-
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-um file specific org file specific
-
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-buffer specific
-
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-and so like when we talked about like
-
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-whether to have a big ass org file or
-
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-like tiny files
-
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-it all depends and this isn't the the
-
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-um you know the way this depends
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-because if you're working on like a
-
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-dissertation um it's a huge manuscript
-
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-you need to like work
-
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-on that org file all the time um
-
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-then yes it might do should be in that
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-file specifically because every time if
-
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-I'm
-
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-if I'm visiting this org file all the
-
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-time I should be able to just look at my
-
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-tasks from uh within that buffer
-
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-and so I use org sidebar to
-
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-keep all these specific uh to do's
-
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-within that org file
-
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-I find it helpful okay
-
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-now that we're going into the writing
-
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-and reference management
-
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-we'll call it a literature review um
-
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-and this is something I've built as a
-
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-schema
-
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-I think that it works for now
-
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-um and it requires one outside pack
-
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-of outside software which is zotero what
-
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-I use it's an open source reference
-
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-management
-
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-software um it's great
-
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-but the things to keep in mind is that I
-
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-use two um
-
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-plugins that is really needed for when
-
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-we work with orgrim bibtex and orgrim
-
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-and org mode um and the zap file so
-
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-better bibtex organizes your reference
-
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-keys
-
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-um in um in a way like in a fashion that
-
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-works for you so for me all my reference
-
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-keys are like
-
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-last author and gear um and with zap
-
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-file I um I let it like rename all the
-
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-pdf files
-
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-the same way that I have for my bit of
-
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-my bib keys which is like
-
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-last name of author and year all right
-
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-once you export your entire
-
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-library as a bib file then you can work
-
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-on it within org mode and Emacs
-
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-using um the following packages
-
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-all right so with orgrim bibtex it
-
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-creates an org file for each bib entry
-
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-and you have the option of like
-
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-templating and doing other stuff with it
-
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-and then finally there's like this orb
-
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-pdf scraper
-
-00:08:56.240 --> 00:08:58.800
-I've used it briefly but I think the
-
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-potential
-
-00:09:00.240 --> 00:09:02.880
-with or pdf scraper is if you're gonna
-
-00:09:02.880 --> 00:09:05.920
-do a bibliometric study or like a
-
-00:09:05.920 --> 00:09:08.320
-systematic literature view there's
-
-00:09:08.320 --> 00:09:10.000
-something there but I have to look
-
-00:09:10.000 --> 00:09:10.959
-through it
-
-00:09:10.959 --> 00:09:14.399
-anyway so once you create your you know
-
-00:09:14.399 --> 00:09:16.880
-your reference file of reference x and
-
-00:09:16.880 --> 00:09:18.160
-you're writing your notes
-
-00:09:18.160 --> 00:09:20.240
-you can either go like with going
-
-00:09:20.240 --> 00:09:22.399
-through org mode you're writing
-
-00:09:22.399 --> 00:09:24.080
-your ideas you're writing your notes
-
-00:09:24.080 --> 00:09:26.080
-you're assigning tasks
-
-00:09:26.080 --> 00:09:27.839
-and then there's org transclusion which
-
-00:09:27.839 --> 00:09:30.480
-I will mention briefly at the end
-
-00:09:30.480 --> 00:09:32.240
-and ways to extract if you're going to
-
-00:09:32.240 --> 00:09:35.360
-go through the orgrom
-
-00:09:35.360 --> 00:09:36.640
-things that you're going to use within
-
-00:09:36.640 --> 00:09:38.720
-orgrom it's a great way to build your
-
-00:09:38.720 --> 00:09:40.000
-database you start making the
-
-00:09:40.000 --> 00:09:42.880
-connections and you can visualize your
-
-00:09:42.880 --> 00:09:44.959
-notes and like how these references are
-
-00:09:44.959 --> 00:09:46.240
-linked to each other
-
-00:09:46.240 --> 00:09:48.839
-through the organ server or or ground
-
-00:09:48.839 --> 00:09:50.240
-graph
-
-00:09:50.240 --> 00:09:53.120
-all right this is just notes for later
-
-00:09:53.120 --> 00:09:53.680
-okay
-
-00:09:53.680 --> 00:09:56.240
-so this is an example of like an orgram
-
-00:09:56.240 --> 00:09:57.360
-file that I have
-
-00:09:57.360 --> 00:09:59.279
-for example if I'm working on adaptation
-
-00:09:59.279 --> 00:10:01.760
-policy I have these hyperlinks that are
-
-00:10:01.760 --> 00:10:02.560
-linked to other
-
-00:10:02.560 --> 00:10:04.959
-concepts and ideas such as either
-
-00:10:04.959 --> 00:10:06.640
-climate security
-
-00:10:06.640 --> 00:10:08.720
-um changing global environment so on and
-
-00:10:08.720 --> 00:10:10.560
-so forth and the backlinks
-
-00:10:10.560 --> 00:10:13.920
-are other references that talk about
-
-00:10:13.920 --> 00:10:15.839
-this specific concept
-
-00:10:15.839 --> 00:10:17.680
-so this is really helpful and then when
-
-00:10:17.680 --> 00:10:19.920
-you visualize it the picture on the left
-
-00:10:19.920 --> 00:10:22.160
-which I'm sure looks really small
-
-00:10:22.160 --> 00:10:24.160
-um you can see the connections that it's
-
-00:10:24.160 --> 00:10:25.680
-making with other
-
-00:10:25.680 --> 00:10:28.160
-references so of course this is just
-
-00:10:28.160 --> 00:10:29.760
-like a buffer
-
-00:10:29.760 --> 00:10:32.720
-network when you look at the entire
-
-00:10:32.720 --> 00:10:34.560
-database network it's it's
-
-00:10:34.560 --> 00:10:38.000
-it's growing okay
-
-00:10:38.000 --> 00:10:41.680
-so going into organ bidtech
-
-00:10:41.680 --> 00:10:44.079
-so it utilizes a combination of the or
-
-00:10:44.079 --> 00:10:46.000
-graph package helmbik tech candidate
-
-00:10:46.000 --> 00:10:46.880
-completion
-
-00:10:46.880 --> 00:10:50.079
-and it works with orgrom functionalities
-
-00:10:50.079 --> 00:10:51.440
-and
-
-00:10:51.440 --> 00:10:54.880
-other good stuff this is an example
-
-00:10:54.880 --> 00:10:57.440
-of my orgrim bibtex file all right so
-
-00:10:57.440 --> 00:10:58.720
-I've created
-
-00:10:58.720 --> 00:11:01.200
-um the template which I pretty much use
-
-00:11:01.200 --> 00:11:02.320
-what leo
-
-00:11:02.320 --> 00:11:05.920
-has uh produced like in his um
-
-00:11:05.920 --> 00:11:08.640
-tutorial so I think it's it's great it
-
-00:11:08.640 --> 00:11:10.160
-works well for me
-
-00:11:10.160 --> 00:11:12.880
-um and what it does is that it works
-
-00:11:12.880 --> 00:11:14.480
-with your bib file
-
-00:11:14.480 --> 00:11:17.519
-so if you're in your bib file you have a
-
-00:11:17.519 --> 00:11:19.519
-sub entry that's called keywords and
-
-00:11:19.519 --> 00:11:21.040
-usually that's within
-
-00:11:21.040 --> 00:11:23.120
-a journal article the author would
-
-00:11:23.120 --> 00:11:24.560
-specify these
-
-00:11:24.560 --> 00:11:27.519
-keywords um when it gets imported into
-
-00:11:27.519 --> 00:11:28.160
-zotero
-
-00:11:28.160 --> 00:11:30.399
-it extracts those keywords and then it
-
-00:11:30.399 --> 00:11:32.399
-gets populated as an org file
-
-00:11:32.399 --> 00:11:34.959
-with orgrim bibtex so I always start
-
-00:11:34.959 --> 00:11:36.959
-with the meta information first and then
-
-00:11:36.959 --> 00:11:38.560
-I would write my notes
-
-00:11:38.560 --> 00:11:42.480
-after that this is an example though
-
-00:11:42.480 --> 00:11:45.760
-for reference of a physical book so
-
-00:11:45.760 --> 00:11:49.120
-I don't have a pdf file for it um
-
-00:11:49.120 --> 00:11:51.519
-so what I've figured out like a new idea
-
-00:11:51.519 --> 00:11:53.920
-for it so if I'm writing notes on it
-
-00:11:53.920 --> 00:11:55.760
-I would create a property that says
-
-00:11:55.760 --> 00:11:57.279
-pages um
-
-00:11:57.279 --> 00:11:58.959
-that way it's easier for you when you go
-
-00:11:58.959 --> 00:12:00.639
-back to citing
-
-00:12:00.639 --> 00:12:02.720
-um certain ideas or something that you
-
-00:12:02.720 --> 00:12:04.720
-have the pages prepared there
-
-00:12:04.720 --> 00:12:07.839
-it's easier that way okay
-
-00:12:07.839 --> 00:12:11.279
-org noter which is something I
-
-00:12:11.279 --> 00:12:13.040
-use a lot especially with journal
-
-00:12:13.040 --> 00:12:14.880
-articles that have pdfs and stuff like
-
-00:12:14.880 --> 00:12:15.600
-that
-
-00:12:15.600 --> 00:12:19.120
-they're really helpful if you are gonna
-
-00:12:19.120 --> 00:12:22.720
-if you've just started using um Emacs
-
-00:12:22.720 --> 00:12:23.760
-and orgrim
-
-00:12:23.760 --> 00:12:26.959
-and you have all these pdfs that have
-
-00:12:26.959 --> 00:12:29.519
-all the annotations and highlighting and
-
-00:12:29.519 --> 00:12:30.079
-the
-
-00:12:30.079 --> 00:12:32.639
-all that stuff with org noter you can
-
-00:12:32.639 --> 00:12:33.200
-just
-
-00:12:33.200 --> 00:12:36.720
-use the org note or create skeleton
-
-00:12:36.720 --> 00:12:39.519
-uh command and it will populate all your
-
-00:12:39.519 --> 00:12:41.200
-notes that have already been
-
-00:12:41.200 --> 00:12:43.760
-um entered within the pdf file if you're
-
-00:12:43.760 --> 00:12:44.800
-using an outside
-
-00:12:44.800 --> 00:12:48.160
-software and creates them like as a neat
-
-00:12:48.160 --> 00:12:52.560
-org file I I highly recommend
-
-00:12:52.560 --> 00:12:55.920
-finally org transclusion um
-
-00:12:55.920 --> 00:12:57.920
-I think this is still in its beta phase
-
-00:12:57.920 --> 00:13:01.040
-but I've been enjoying it so far
-
-00:13:01.040 --> 00:13:02.720
-um I'm guessing people know what
-
-00:13:02.720 --> 00:13:04.800
-translation mean which is sort of like
-
-00:13:04.800 --> 00:13:06.480
-copy pasting text from
-
-00:13:06.480 --> 00:13:09.600
-one org file to another this is helpful
-
-00:13:09.600 --> 00:13:11.839
-I I think I I peeked at a question that
-
-00:13:11.839 --> 00:13:12.959
-was talking about like
-
-00:13:12.959 --> 00:13:16.320
-you know linking um to other org files
-
-00:13:16.320 --> 00:13:18.320
-I think org transclusion could really
-
-00:13:18.320 --> 00:13:20.320
-work okay it's
-
-00:13:20.320 --> 00:13:24.399
-equivalent to the include
-
-00:13:24.399 --> 00:13:27.760
-function within org mode um but I think
-
-00:13:27.760 --> 00:13:29.519
-so like if you have other files
-
-00:13:29.519 --> 00:13:32.560
-that you know which region that you
-
-00:13:32.560 --> 00:13:34.800
-need in another file you could use the
-
-00:13:34.800 --> 00:13:36.079
-include but with
-
-00:13:36.079 --> 00:13:38.160
-org transclusion it's great I mean you
-
-00:13:38.160 --> 00:13:39.440
-just have
-
-00:13:39.440 --> 00:13:42.720
-um you're just linking one part to the
-
-00:13:42.720 --> 00:13:43.360
-other
-
-00:13:43.360 --> 00:13:45.760
-sort of like not refiling but you know
-
-00:13:45.760 --> 00:13:47.760
-hyperlinking
-
-00:13:47.760 --> 00:13:49.680
-so this is an example of what org
-
-00:13:49.680 --> 00:13:51.120
-transclusion looks like
-
-00:13:51.120 --> 00:13:53.680
-um so the highlighted problem statement
-
-00:13:53.680 --> 00:13:54.720
-is from another
-
-00:13:54.720 --> 00:13:57.760
-org file and then what I would do is
-
-00:13:57.760 --> 00:13:58.240
-just like
-
-00:13:58.240 --> 00:13:59.760
-link it to there and there was like a
-
-00:13:59.760 --> 00:14:01.440
-transclusion command
-
-00:14:01.440 --> 00:14:05.440
-I wish I made another screenshot of it
-
-00:14:05.440 --> 00:14:08.399
-and so when you invoke org transclusion
-
-00:14:08.399 --> 00:14:09.120
-mode
-
-00:14:09.120 --> 00:14:12.079
-it turns um it prints it out like that
-
-00:14:12.079 --> 00:14:12.480
-so
-
-00:14:12.480 --> 00:14:15.120
-it's in view mode and then when you want
-
-00:14:15.120 --> 00:14:16.560
-to edit it will take you back to that
-
-00:14:16.560 --> 00:14:18.480
-buffer and you can edit the text
-
-00:14:18.480 --> 00:14:21.839
-however you want all right so thank you
-
-00:14:21.839 --> 00:14:22.720
-so much
-
-00:14:22.720 --> 00:14:26.000
-um I wanted to leave room for questions
-
-00:14:26.000 --> 00:14:29.120
-but special thanks to all the folks that
-
-00:14:29.120 --> 00:14:32.560
-work on orgrom or ground bibtex orgrim
-
-00:14:32.560 --> 00:14:33.440
-server or
-
-00:14:33.440 --> 00:14:36.320
-transclusion and of course alpha papo on
-
-00:14:36.320 --> 00:14:38.240
-or super agenda and org sidebar
-
-00:14:38.240 --> 00:14:43.440
-that's how I got into Emacs thank you
-
-00:14:43.440 --> 00:14:45.600
-all right and uh well thank you so yeah
-
-00:14:45.600 --> 00:14:47.120
-this time I'll be the one asking the
-
-00:14:47.120 --> 00:14:49.120
-question and not I'm in so
-
-00:14:49.120 --> 00:14:51.360
-I'm feeling filling big shoes right now
-
-00:14:51.360 --> 00:14:53.120
-so you'll have to bear with me folks
-
-00:14:53.120 --> 00:14:54.880
-so thank you so much noora for your
-
-00:14:54.880 --> 00:14:56.240
-presentation that is incredibly
-
-00:14:56.240 --> 00:14:57.279
-interesting
-
-00:14:57.279 --> 00:14:58.959
-so would you mind if I fed you questions
-
-00:14:58.959 --> 00:15:00.800
-from the charts yeah
-
-00:15:00.800 --> 00:15:04.000
-go ahead okay so the first one I I've
-
-00:15:04.000 --> 00:15:06.160
-picked on my end was did you try using
-
-00:15:06.160 --> 00:15:07.920
-ebib instead of zotero
-
-00:15:07.920 --> 00:15:10.560
-and if so is it better than zotero in
-
-00:15:10.560 --> 00:15:12.079
-some ways
-
-00:15:12.079 --> 00:15:14.880
-I no I have not used eb I've only used
-
-00:15:14.880 --> 00:15:15.680
-mendeley
-
-00:15:15.680 --> 00:15:18.560
-and then they got bought by el savior
-
-00:15:18.560 --> 00:15:20.320
-and so like I was like okay I'm done
-
-00:15:20.320 --> 00:15:23.040
-I'm going to zotero um there are a lot
-
-00:15:23.040 --> 00:15:25.120
-of plugins with zotero that you can play
-
-00:15:25.120 --> 00:15:26.240
-around with
-
-00:15:26.240 --> 00:15:28.320
-so I can't speak for ebit but definitely
-
-00:15:28.320 --> 00:15:30.480
-zotero it's been a good experience so
-
-00:15:30.480 --> 00:15:32.079
-far
-
-00:15:32.079 --> 00:15:34.880
-yes same I also I also do research on
-
-00:15:34.880 --> 00:15:35.360
-the site
-
-00:15:35.360 --> 00:15:38.079
-as I told you english major and yeah I
-
-00:15:38.079 --> 00:15:39.360
-also do zotero
-
-00:15:39.360 --> 00:15:41.839
-some people have been using uh a
-
-00:15:41.839 --> 00:15:43.759
-connector between zotero and Emacs which
-
-00:15:43.759 --> 00:15:44.160
-has
-
-00:15:44.160 --> 00:15:46.000
-they've had great success with them but
-
-00:15:46.000 --> 00:15:47.360
-personally I haven't touched
-
-00:15:47.360 --> 00:15:50.480
-touched it already so yeah
-
-00:15:50.480 --> 00:15:52.240
-oh go ahead sorry all right so far I
-
-00:15:52.240 --> 00:15:53.920
-don't have any problems with zotero but
-
-00:15:53.920 --> 00:15:54.880
-maybe if I
-
-00:15:54.880 --> 00:15:56.320
-run into something I might check out
-
-00:15:56.320 --> 00:15:58.320
-ebay in the future
-
-00:15:58.320 --> 00:16:00.240
-yeah definitely I think zotero is a very
-
-00:16:00.240 --> 00:16:01.680
-solid project and you know the fact that
-
-00:16:01.680 --> 00:16:02.560
-it's being used
-
-00:16:02.560 --> 00:16:04.959
-by people outside of Emacs also ensures
-
-00:16:04.959 --> 00:16:06.560
-that there's quite a lot of packing
-
-00:16:06.560 --> 00:16:07.680
-behind the software
-
-00:16:07.680 --> 00:16:09.759
-which is reassuring when your livelihood
-
-00:16:09.759 --> 00:16:11.759
-depends on your research
-
-00:16:11.759 --> 00:16:13.519
-right and then I think one more thing
-
-00:16:13.519 --> 00:16:15.600
-with zotero is that you can create
-
-00:16:15.600 --> 00:16:17.519
-groups so if you're in a collaborative
-
-00:16:17.519 --> 00:16:18.079
-project
-
-00:16:18.079 --> 00:16:20.160
-you can create a reference you know a
-
-00:16:20.160 --> 00:16:22.320
-library just for your group and I think
-
-00:16:22.320 --> 00:16:23.759
-that could help because like I
-
-00:16:23.759 --> 00:16:25.279
-I'm going to be in a project next
-
-00:16:25.279 --> 00:16:27.600
-semester that requires that
-
-00:16:27.600 --> 00:16:29.839
-yeah definitely I believe the ability to
-
-00:16:29.839 --> 00:16:31.600
-have folders inside zotero
-
-00:16:31.600 --> 00:16:33.839
-makes it incredibly useful to manage
-
-00:16:33.839 --> 00:16:35.360
-your different projects concurrent
-
-00:16:35.360 --> 00:16:37.440
-projects
-
-00:16:37.440 --> 00:16:39.279
-so moving on to the questions do you
-
-00:16:39.279 --> 00:16:41.279
-have any suggestion on what subjects or
-
-00:16:41.279 --> 00:16:43.440
-things should be tags or separate organ
-
-00:16:43.440 --> 00:16:46.560
-files for cross-linking
-
-00:16:46.560 --> 00:16:50.320
-right um so so far now like I'm having
-
-00:16:50.320 --> 00:16:52.720
-trouble with like should I be combining
-
-00:16:52.720 --> 00:16:55.360
-certain concepts together as one like
-
-00:16:55.360 --> 00:16:55.839
-this is
-
-00:16:55.839 --> 00:16:59.360
-where the the thought process you know
-
-00:16:59.360 --> 00:17:00.959
-starts coming to fruit is that when you
-
-00:17:00.959 --> 00:17:02.959
-start you know combining
-
-00:17:02.959 --> 00:17:04.880
-ideas together so you won't need a
-
-00:17:04.880 --> 00:17:06.480
-specific tag
-
-00:17:06.480 --> 00:17:09.199
-and another one that are like similar in
-
-00:17:09.199 --> 00:17:11.280
-ideas
-
-00:17:11.280 --> 00:17:12.720
-I'm not sure if that answers the
-
-00:17:12.720 --> 00:17:14.799
-question but like so far I've been using
-
-00:17:14.799 --> 00:17:15.919
-the orgrum
-
-00:17:15.919 --> 00:17:17.919
-you know the default way which is like
-
-00:17:17.919 --> 00:17:19.039
-many small
-
-00:17:19.039 --> 00:17:22.160
-um files and then just
-
-00:17:22.160 --> 00:17:24.400
-linking them to my like either if I have
-
-00:17:24.400 --> 00:17:26.319
-a report to write or if I have a like
-
-00:17:26.319 --> 00:17:26.959
-you know
-
-00:17:26.959 --> 00:17:32.240
-essay to write
-
-00:17:32.240 --> 00:17:35.360
-I think you're muted
-
-00:17:35.360 --> 00:17:37.760
-q and I just I did two stupid things the
-
-00:17:37.760 --> 00:17:38.400
-first one
-
-00:17:38.400 --> 00:17:40.640
-was filling up my water the second one
-
-00:17:40.640 --> 00:17:42.320
-was peeking without actually turning on
-
-00:17:42.320 --> 00:17:43.760
-my microphone
-
-00:17:43.760 --> 00:17:45.760
-so let's just hope that nothing is going
-
-00:17:45.760 --> 00:17:47.760
-to fry in the near vicinity of me right
-
-00:17:47.760 --> 00:17:48.320
-now
-
-00:17:48.320 --> 00:17:49.840
-but uh yeah I believe you've answered
-
-00:17:49.840 --> 00:17:51.440
-the question so don't worry about it I'm
-
-00:17:51.440 --> 00:17:53.200
-slightly wet right now which is not a
-
-00:17:53.200 --> 00:17:55.280
-very agreeable feeling but we'll have to
-
-00:17:55.280 --> 00:17:57.280
-carry on I suppose
-
-00:17:57.280 --> 00:17:59.360
-another question is there a place where
-
-00:17:59.360 --> 00:18:01.600
-people are collaborating on research
-
-00:18:01.600 --> 00:18:04.320
-about Emacs so do you want to try to
-
-00:18:04.320 --> 00:18:06.160
-take this one
-
-00:18:06.160 --> 00:18:08.559
-um I don't know but I'm definitely
-
-00:18:08.559 --> 00:18:10.559
-interested in the user experience of
-
-00:18:10.559 --> 00:18:12.480
-Emacs so
-
-00:18:12.480 --> 00:18:14.720
-if anyone wants to work on that I'm
-
-00:18:14.720 --> 00:18:16.400
-happy
-
-00:18:16.400 --> 00:18:18.320
-well you do have a a pretty good
-
-00:18:18.320 --> 00:18:19.760
-candidate in front of you if I
-
-00:18:19.760 --> 00:18:22.080
-should say so myself I'm incredibly
-
-00:18:22.080 --> 00:18:22.960
-interested about
-
-00:18:22.960 --> 00:18:25.039
-um the ability to do research in Emacs
-
-00:18:25.039 --> 00:18:26.960
-and about the ability to
-
-00:18:26.960 --> 00:18:30.480
-um preach the floss way
-
-00:18:30.480 --> 00:18:32.480
-to academia and to the academe
-
-00:18:32.480 --> 00:18:34.080
-especially because I believe there's
-
-00:18:34.080 --> 00:18:35.280
-really something
-
-00:18:35.280 --> 00:18:38.240
-great to be done sorry I'm just looking
-
-00:18:38.240 --> 00:18:39.919
-at the puddle of water on the side which
-
-00:18:39.919 --> 00:18:41.840
-is slightly oozing my way
-
-00:18:41.840 --> 00:18:45.039
-which is not a very good feeling really
-
-00:18:45.039 --> 00:18:46.880
-but yeah I believe I believe some work
-
-00:18:46.880 --> 00:18:48.320
-could be done and if people are
-
-00:18:48.320 --> 00:18:50.000
-interested in the chat right now
-
-00:18:50.000 --> 00:18:52.320
-I mean do get in touch with us both
-
-00:18:52.320 --> 00:18:53.440
-neuron and I
-
-00:18:53.440 --> 00:18:56.480
-are on our slack channel yes I know
-
-00:18:56.480 --> 00:18:57.280
-slack
-
-00:18:57.280 --> 00:19:00.080
-the corporate hive mind that it's like
-
-00:19:00.080 --> 00:19:01.919
-but we've decided with orgrim to use
-
-00:19:01.919 --> 00:19:02.720
-slack
-
-00:19:02.720 --> 00:19:05.520
-but you can find us very easily and uh
-
-00:19:05.520 --> 00:19:06.880
-if you want to talk about these topics
-
-00:19:06.880 --> 00:19:07.360
-yes
-
-00:19:07.360 --> 00:19:08.720
-by all means do and we'll be very
-
-00:19:08.720 --> 00:19:10.720
-interested to answer your questions
-
-00:19:10.720 --> 00:19:12.640
-so I have a question here says like how
-
-00:19:12.640 --> 00:19:15.520
-does the view for time blocking works
-
-00:19:15.520 --> 00:19:18.640
-um I use org super agenda so
-
-00:19:18.640 --> 00:19:22.000
-um what happens is that my active
-
-00:19:22.000 --> 00:19:23.200
-timestamps are
-
-00:19:23.200 --> 00:19:26.960
-only in my gmail or file
-
-00:19:26.960 --> 00:19:29.200
-so if you use org gcal you have to
-
-00:19:29.200 --> 00:19:30.080
-specify
-
-00:19:30.080 --> 00:19:32.559
-a certain org file and when it you know
-
-00:19:32.559 --> 00:19:34.320
-imports them it imports them as like
-
-00:19:34.320 --> 00:19:35.679
-active
-
-00:19:35.679 --> 00:19:38.400
-timestamps and I make sure whenever I
-
-00:19:38.400 --> 00:19:40.480
-create a to-do or even a research task
-
-00:19:40.480 --> 00:19:42.480
-that it doesn't have a time stamp on it
-
-00:19:42.480 --> 00:19:45.039
-because what I want to do is go back
-
-00:19:45.039 --> 00:19:48.480
-and then move around um these tags
-
-00:19:48.480 --> 00:19:50.160
-according to my you know either weekly
-
-00:19:50.160 --> 00:19:51.919
-schedule or monthly or however long you
-
-00:19:51.919 --> 00:19:52.960
-want to do it
-
-00:19:52.960 --> 00:19:56.480
-um so yeah only active timestamps or
-
-00:19:56.480 --> 00:19:59.679
-deadlines um appear in your time grid
-
-00:19:59.679 --> 00:20:03.280
-so that could work um that's very good
-
-00:20:03.280 --> 00:20:05.440
-just just to uh interject for a second
-
-00:20:05.440 --> 00:20:06.320
-about this
-
-00:20:06.320 --> 00:20:07.840
-you know with orgrim right now we're
-
-00:20:07.840 --> 00:20:10.720
-mostly uh focused on optimization
-
-00:20:10.720 --> 00:20:13.039
-but we're hoping to move on to ux very
-
-00:20:13.039 --> 00:20:14.720
-soon so all those matters about
-
-00:20:14.720 --> 00:20:16.720
-you know having to do's in your files it
-
-00:20:16.720 --> 00:20:18.159
-is something that we've been thinking
-
-00:20:18.159 --> 00:20:20.000
-about with jethro kwan who is my main
-
-00:20:20.000 --> 00:20:20.880
-commentator
-
-00:20:20.880 --> 00:20:23.280
-or grow and we'll be working on this in
-
-00:20:23.280 --> 00:20:24.480
-the coming months so don't worry too
-
-00:20:24.480 --> 00:20:26.080
-much about it and stay tuned
-
-00:20:26.080 --> 00:20:29.760
-yeah um so I've got the ebib
-
-00:20:29.760 --> 00:20:33.200
-and what else um what subjects I think
-
-00:20:33.200 --> 00:20:34.080
-okay
-
-00:20:34.080 --> 00:20:35.919
-what is this question have you seen the
-
-00:20:35.919 --> 00:20:37.120
-project papi's
-
-00:20:37.120 --> 00:20:40.400
-I'm not sure what oh it's a zotero
-
-00:20:40.400 --> 00:20:41.280
-alternative okay
-
-00:20:41.280 --> 00:20:43.840
-I'll look into it thank you I don't know
-
-00:20:43.840 --> 00:20:45.919
-I don't know about it either so
-
-00:20:45.919 --> 00:20:49.600
-please look into it and let me know yeah
-
-00:20:49.600 --> 00:20:53.200
-um have we covered all the questions
-
-00:20:53.200 --> 00:20:55.679
-I believe we have and we have about
-
-00:20:55.679 --> 00:20:56.880
-two-minute leeway
-
-00:20:56.880 --> 00:20:58.880
-for me to move into the next talk so
-
-00:20:58.880 --> 00:21:00.240
-we're right on time
-
-00:21:00.240 --> 00:21:01.760
-all right thank you so much really
-
-00:21:01.760 --> 00:21:04.159
-appreciate it and good luck everyone
-
-00:21:04.159 --> 00:21:05.440
-well thank you and thank you so much for
-
-00:21:05.440 --> 00:21:07.600
-coming and uh doing allowing me not to
-
-00:21:07.600 --> 00:21:08.400
-be the only one
-
-00:21:08.400 --> 00:21:11.440
-talking about all room today sounds good
-
-00:21:11.440 --> 00:21:14.559
-all right thank you both very much
-
-00:21:14.559 --> 00:21:16.799
-yes
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--17-org-mode-and-org-roam-for-scholars-and-researchers--noorah-alhasan.vtt b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--17-org-mode-and-org-roam-for-scholars-and-researchers--noorah-alhasan.vtt
new file mode 100644
index 00000000..53ce5b05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--17-org-mode-and-org-roam-for-scholars-and-researchers--noorah-alhasan.vtt
@@ -0,0 +1,1631 @@
+WEBVTT
+
+00:00:00.320 --> 00:00:02.639
+Good afternoon or good evening, everyone.
+
+00:00:03.040 --> 00:00:05.440
+Today, my talk is going to be on Org Mode
+
+00:00:05.440 --> 00:00:07.759
+and org-roam for scholars and researchers.
+
+00:00:07.759 --> 00:00:10.559
+Leo has talked about the overall
+
+00:00:10.559 --> 00:00:12.639
+picture of org-roam and
+
+00:00:12.639 --> 00:00:15.120
+org-roam-bibtex. I will be
+
+00:00:15.120 --> 00:00:16.240
+talking more about
+
+00:00:16.240 --> 00:00:20.320
+the research process itself using these
+tools.
+
+00:00:20.320 --> 00:00:22.400
+All right. So, just to introduce that the
+
+00:00:22.400 --> 00:00:25.039
+research process is really messy.
+
+00:00:25.039 --> 00:00:28.080
+You're always working in
+
+00:00:28.080 --> 00:00:31.039
+piecemeal tasks and things move around
+
+00:00:31.039 --> 00:00:32.960
+all the time.
+
+00:00:32.960 --> 00:00:35.280
+There needs to be a system where you can
+
+00:00:35.280 --> 00:00:36.880
+organize all these tasks,
+
+00:00:36.880 --> 00:00:39.360
+all these ideas in a way that is
+
+00:00:39.360 --> 00:00:41.760
+flexible and effective.
+
+00:00:41.760 --> 00:00:44.767
+So my motivation is that research is
+hard
+
+00:00:44.767 --> 00:00:47.120
+and writing about it is even
+more difficult.
+
+00:00:47.120 --> 00:00:49.600
+My goal is to add some structure to
+
+00:00:49.600 --> 00:00:51.120
+this whole madness.
+
+00:00:51.120 --> 00:00:52.800
+Here's a list of some of the stuff
+
+00:00:52.800 --> 00:00:54.480
+that I've been using since I first
+
+00:00:54.480 --> 00:00:57.199
+learned about Emacs in 2019
+
+00:00:57.199 --> 00:01:00.160
+and what I've found useful
+
+00:01:02.000 --> 00:01:05.199
+within my research process.
+
+00:01:05.199 --> 00:01:07.920
+I've organized Org Mode for Researchers
+
+00:01:07.920 --> 00:01:10.400
+and Scholars Within the Writing Process
+
+00:01:10.400 --> 00:01:12.400
+into three modules. First, there's
+
+00:01:12.400 --> 00:01:14.320
+the planning aspect of it,
+
+00:01:14.320 --> 00:01:15.759
+then you've got the writing and the
+
+00:01:15.759 --> 00:01:18.320
+reference management, which I will join
+together
+
+00:01:18.320 --> 00:01:20.560
+by looking at the example of doing your
+
+00:01:20.560 --> 00:01:21.920
+literature review.
+
+00:01:21.920 --> 00:01:25.467
+When we're talking about planning,
+
+00:01:25.467 --> 00:01:27.360
+we're talking about either task
+management or
+
+00:01:27.360 --> 00:01:30.880
+time management with task management.
+
+00:01:30.880 --> 00:01:31.600
+You've got
+
+00:01:31.600 --> 00:01:33.840
+Org Mode's TODOs, tags, and
+
+00:01:33.840 --> 00:01:36.159
+categories. These are really powerful
+
+00:01:36.159 --> 00:01:38.479
+tools that you could use
+
+00:01:38.479 --> 00:01:41.600
+in your Org files to
+
+00:01:41.600 --> 00:01:44.799
+organize your tasks and
+
+00:01:44.799 --> 00:01:47.040
+your appointments. There are different
+
+00:01:47.040 --> 00:01:49.040
+types of TODOs that you can either set
+
+00:01:49.040 --> 00:01:50.960
+globally in your init file or they can
+
+00:01:50.960 --> 00:01:52.799
+be file-/buffer-specific.
+
+00:01:52.799 --> 00:01:54.867
+That means, based on context,
+
+00:01:54.867 --> 00:01:57.759
+based on the type of manuscript you're
+working on, whether
+
+00:01:57.759 --> 00:02:00.033
+it's a literate programming report
+
+00:02:00.033 --> 00:02:03.759
+or your actual thesis/dissertation.
+
+00:02:03.759 --> 00:02:05.840
+Also, these TODOs are either created
+
+00:02:05.840 --> 00:02:07.759
+as a subtree, like think of them as
+
+00:02:07.759 --> 00:02:11.440
+headings and sections if you use LaTeX,
+
+00:02:11.440 --> 00:02:15.233
+or inline tasks, which are like Org
+inline tasks.
+
+00:02:19.120 -> 00:02:17.760
+I like Org inline tasks because
+I can add
+
+00:02:19.120 --> 00:02:21.520
+TODOs between two paragraphs. That
+
+00:02:21.520 --> 00:02:22.879
+way, it doesn't show up
+
+00:02:22.879 --> 00:02:25.360
+in the table of contents when I export
+
+00:02:25.360 --> 00:02:27.280
+into PDF, HTML, or
+
+00:02:27.280 --> 00:02:30.879
+anything else. So this is an
+
+00:02:30.879 --> 00:02:34.319
+example of buffer-specific TODOs,
+
+00:02:34.319 --> 00:02:37.360
+and this is an example of a little
+
+00:02:37.360 --> 00:02:39.120
+programming report that I was working on
+
+00:02:39.120 --> 00:02:40.800
+where I was dealing with
+
+00:02:40.800 --> 00:02:44.080
+data and analysis and all of that
+stuff.
+
+00:02:44.080 --> 00:02:47.519
+I needed context-specific TODOs to
+
+00:02:47.519 --> 00:02:49.440
+use them within this buffer.
+
+00:02:49.440 --> 00:02:52.080
+That's how I would organize it.
+
+00:02:52.080 --> 00:02:54.319
+There's also another example
+
+00:02:54.319 --> 00:02:57.200
+of an Org inline task where you could
+
+00:02:57.200 --> 00:03:01.360
+see it in the middle between the
+two headings.
+
+00:03:01.360 --> 00:03:03.040
+That way, it wouldn't show up in the
+
+00:03:03.040 --> 00:03:04.959
+table of contents, and it would look
+
+00:03:04.959 --> 00:03:06.480
+neater within the
+
+00:03:06.480 --> 00:03:09.519
+text when you export it.
+
+00:03:09.519 --> 00:03:11.920
+I also added a tag of :noexport:
+
+00:03:11.920 --> 00:03:13.280
+so it won't show up at all
+
+00:03:13.280 --> 00:03:16.400
+when I export it into either PDF,
+
+00:03:16.400 --> 00:03:19.360
+which I use all the time.
+
+00:03:19.360 --> 00:03:21.599
+Another useful tool
+
+00:03:21.599 --> 00:03:24.159
+for the research and just
+
+00:03:24.159 --> 00:03:25.200
+general planning
+
+00:03:25.200 --> 00:03:27.920
+is the org-capture. When I first
+
+00:03:27.920 --> 00:03:29.120
+started with Emacs,
+
+00:03:29.120 --> 00:03:32.080
+actually, it was for org-agenda.
+
+00:03:32.080 --> 00:03:34.239
+I went crazy with my capture template.
+
+00:03:34.239 --> 00:03:35.360
+I created a template for
+
+00:03:35.360 --> 00:03:38.640
+everything because I was just so
+excited.
+
+00:03:38.640 --> 00:03:40.720
+But with time, I was using less and less
+
+00:03:40.720 --> 00:03:42.400
+of them, so I kept taking them out.
+
+00:03:42.400 --> 00:03:46.319
+Now this is my simplified
+
+00:03:46.319 --> 00:03:48.239
+capture templates that I use, either for
+
+00:03:48.239 --> 00:03:49.599
+a general TODO,
+
+00:03:49.599 --> 00:03:52.159
+for a regular appointment, a fleeting
+
+00:03:52.159 --> 00:03:54.159
+note, research tasks (because those
+
+00:03:54.159 --> 00:03:55.200
+are what I focus on,
+
+00:03:55.200 --> 00:03:56.959
+like my bread and butter), and then
+
+00:03:56.959 --> 00:03:58.720
+finally with meetings, which I find
+
+00:03:58.720 --> 00:04:00.879
+sometimes I don't use it as much because
+
+00:04:00.879 --> 00:04:03.519
+I would just have the Org file ready
+instead of
+
+00:04:03.519 --> 00:04:04.879
+needing to capture,
+
+00:04:04.879 --> 00:04:07.920
+you know, open a capture template.
+
+00:04:07.920 --> 00:04:12.400
+Right. Org Agenda. That's how I got into
+Emacs.
+
+00:04:12.400 --> 00:04:15.439
+I needed to organize my life.
+
+00:04:15.439 --> 00:04:19.199
+I found Emacs and it's been great
+ever since.
+
+00:04:19.199 --> 00:04:20.479
+It populates all your TODOs and
+
+00:04:20.479 --> 00:04:22.720
+appointments into a singular view. So the
+
+00:04:22.720 --> 00:04:25.280
+default view, I think, is a week view.
+
+00:04:25.280 --> 00:04:29.120
+However, I use org-super-agenda. Love this
+
+00:04:29.120 --> 00:04:31.919
+package. I set up my agenda as a
+
+00:04:31.919 --> 00:04:34.160
+daily view with appointments,
+
+00:04:34.160 --> 00:04:37.360
+deadlines, and a habit tracker.
+
+00:04:37.360 --> 00:04:38.720
+A side note, you guys: I'm still
+
+00:04:38.720 --> 00:04:40.639
+struggling with organizing the perfect
+
+00:04:40.639 --> 00:04:42.320
+agenda, so it's a process.
+
+00:04:42.320 --> 00:04:45.360
+Take it easy, all right?
+
+00:04:45.360 --> 00:04:47.919
+So this is just an overview of my daily
+
+00:04:47.919 --> 00:04:50.320
+agenda. As you can see they're just
+
+00:04:50.320 --> 00:04:55.520
+appointments that I import from Gmail
+using org-gcal;
+
+00:04:55.520 --> 00:04:57.919
+a simple habit tracker of daily
+
+00:04:57.919 --> 00:04:58.880
+free writing--
+
+00:04:58.880 --> 00:05:00.960
+as you can see, there are a lot of times
+
+00:05:00.960 --> 00:05:02.800
+where I'm skipping, and the asterisk is
+
+00:05:02.800 --> 00:05:05.199
+the one where I've completed that day,
+
+00:05:05.199 --> 00:05:08.479
+so, you know, it's a process--and then
+
+00:05:08.479 --> 00:05:10.080
+regular deadlines.
+
+00:05:10.080 --> 00:05:12.639
+So what happens is that I have other
+
+00:05:12.639 --> 00:05:17.120
+TODOs that I have not scheduled or not
+added a deadline
+
+00:05:17.120 --> 00:05:19.933
+but they're just tasks that keep piling
+up.
+
+00:05:19.933 --> 00:05:22.320
+When I first started with Emacs
+and org-agenda,
+
+00:05:22.320 --> 00:05:24.880
+I had everything in there, and it got
+
+00:05:24.880 --> 00:05:26.880
+overwhelming. Then I decided, no,
+
+00:05:26.880 --> 00:05:29.680
+I'm not gonna even let them show up.
+
+00:05:29.680 --> 00:05:30.800
+So what I would do
+
+00:05:30.800 --> 00:05:33.120
+at the beginning of each week or the
+
+00:05:33.120 --> 00:05:34.479
+night before,
+
+00:05:34.479 --> 00:05:36.800
+I would sit down, look at all my
+
+00:05:36.800 --> 00:05:40.720
+TODOs that I have not assigned yet to a
+deadline or a
+
+00:05:40.720 --> 00:05:42.639
+schedule or just a simple
+
+00:05:42.639 --> 00:05:45.360
+timestamp, and I would organize them
+
+00:05:45.360 --> 00:05:46.320
+throughout the week.
+
+00:05:46.320 --> 00:05:49.520
+So, here's an example of what I did.
+
+00:05:49.520 --> 00:05:51.680
+On that Wednesday, from my Gmail, I had
+
+00:05:51.680 --> 00:05:53.039
+all these appointments, but
+
+00:05:53.039 --> 00:05:56.560
+one of them is I have a writing group
+session.
+
+00:05:56.560 --> 00:05:58.400
+So I looked at my tasks and I
+
+00:05:58.400 --> 00:05:59.759
+thought, okay, then I will just
+
+00:05:59.759 --> 00:06:03.520
+assign, for example, my Emacs
+slides
+
+00:06:03.520 --> 00:06:06.319
+or the framework diagram into that
+
+00:06:06.319 --> 00:06:07.280
+writing session.
+
+00:06:07.280 --> 00:06:10.800
+All I did was just add an active
+timestamp.
+
+00:06:10.800 --> 00:06:12.960
+That is all I needed to do, and it went
+
+00:06:12.960 --> 00:06:14.000
+straight into my
+
+00:06:14.000 --> 00:06:17.120
+appointment. Now, if I miss that,
+
+00:06:17.120 --> 00:06:20.080
+it won't show up on the next day. So if
+
+00:06:20.080 --> 00:06:21.520
+you put in a deadline,
+
+00:06:21.520 --> 00:06:24.639
+it will show up as an overdue, but if you
+
+00:06:24.639 --> 00:06:26.560
+have no deadline or schedule, it will not
+
+00:06:26.560 --> 00:06:29.280
+show up in your daily org agenda.
+
+00:06:29.280 --> 00:06:32.960
+So, just a star.
+
+00:06:32.960 --> 00:06:35.680
+All right. Another way of accessing your
+
+00:06:35.680 --> 00:06:37.520
+TODOs is that if it's
+
+00:06:37.520 --> 00:06:40.880
+Org file-specific,
+
+00:06:40.880 --> 00:06:42.160
+buffer-specific,
+
+00:06:42.160 --> 00:06:44.160
+and so... Like when we talked about like
+
+00:06:44.160 --> 00:06:46.400
+whether to have a big-ass Org file or
+
+00:06:46.400 --> 00:06:47.680
+like tiny files,
+
+00:06:47.680 --> 00:06:50.720
+it all depends. This isn't the...
+
+00:06:50.720 --> 00:06:54.560
+you know, the way this depends,
+
+00:06:54.560 --> 00:06:55.759
+because if you're working on a
+
+00:06:55.759 --> 00:06:58.400
+dissertation, it's a huge manuscript.
+
+00:06:58.400 --> 00:06:59.680
+You need to work
+
+00:06:59.680 --> 00:07:02.880
+on that Org file all the time.
+
+00:07:02.880 --> 00:07:05.759
+Then yes, my TODOs should be in that
+
+00:07:05.759 --> 00:07:07.680
+file specifically, because every time,
+
+00:07:08.000 --> 00:07:09.680
+if I'm visiting this Org file all the
+
+00:07:09.680 --> 00:07:12.479
+time, I should be able to just look at my
+
+00:07:12.479 --> 00:07:15.520
+tasks from within that buffer.
+
+00:07:15.520 --> 00:07:18.639
+And so I use org-sidebar to
+
+00:07:18.639 --> 00:07:21.599
+keep all these specific TODOs
+
+00:07:21.599 --> 00:07:22.960
+within that Org file.
+
+00:07:22.960 --> 00:07:26.560
+I find it helpful. Okay.
+
+00:07:26.560 --> 00:07:28.400
+Now that we're going into the writing
+
+00:07:28.400 --> 00:07:29.759
+and reference management...
+
+00:07:29.759 --> 00:07:33.039
+We'll call it a literature review.
+
+00:07:33.039 --> 00:07:36.639
+This is something I've built as a
+schema.
+
+00:07:36.639 --> 00:07:40.240
+I think that it works for now.
+
+00:07:40.240 --> 00:07:45.919
+It requires one outside software, which
+is Zotero, what
+
+00:07:45.919 --> 00:07:47.680
+I use. It's an open source reference
+
+00:07:47.680 --> 00:07:51.759
+management software. It's great.
+
+00:07:51.759 --> 00:07:53.599
+But the thing to keep in mind is that I
+
+00:07:53.599 --> 00:07:58.319
+use two plugins that are really needed
+for when
+
+00:07:58.319 --> 00:08:01.039
+we work with org-roam-bibtex, org-roam,
+
+00:08:01.039 --> 00:08:03.840
+Org Mode, and the ZotFile.
+
+00:08:03.840 --> 00:08:07.039
+Better BibTeX organizes your
+reference keys
+
+00:08:07.039 --> 00:08:10.560
+in a way, in a fashion that
+
+00:08:10.560 --> 00:08:13.360
+works for you. For me, all my reference
+
+00:08:13.360 --> 00:08:17.280
+keys are last author and year.
+With ZotFile,
+
+00:08:17.280 --> 00:08:21.120
+I let it rename all the
+
+00:08:21.120 --> 00:08:22.319
+PDF files
+
+00:08:22.319 --> 00:08:24.400
+the same way that I have for
+
+00:08:24.400 --> 00:08:26.000
+my Bib keys, which is
+
+00:08:26.000 --> 00:08:29.360
+last name of author and year. All right.
+
+00:08:29.360 --> 00:08:33.440
+Once you export your entire
+
+00:08:33.440 --> 00:08:37.120
+library as a Bib file, then you can work
+
+00:08:37.120 --> 00:08:39.440
+on it within Org Mode and Emacs
+
+00:08:39.440 --> 00:08:42.880
+using the following packages.
+
+00:08:42.880 --> 00:08:45.040
+So with org-roam-bibtex, it
+
+00:08:45.040 --> 00:08:47.839
+creates an Org file for each Bib entry.
+
+00:08:47.839 --> 00:08:49.519
+You have the option of
+
+00:08:49.519 --> 00:08:52.240
+templating and doing other stuff with it.
+
+00:08:52.240 --> 00:08:54.880
+Then finally, there's this
+
+00:08:54.880 --> 00:08:56.240
+orb-pdf-scrapper.
+
+00:08:56.240 --> 00:09:00.240
+I've used it briefly but I think the
+potential
+
+00:09:00.240 --> 00:09:02.880
+with orb-pdf-scrapper is if you're going to
+
+00:09:02.880 --> 00:09:05.920
+do a bibliometric study or
+
+00:09:05.920 --> 00:09:08.320
+a systematic literature review, there's
+
+00:09:08.320 --> 00:09:10.000
+something there, but I have to look
+
+00:09:10.000 --> 00:09:10.959
+through it.
+
+00:09:10.959 --> 00:09:14.399
+Anyway, so once you create
+
+00:09:14.399 --> 00:09:16.880
+your reference file of reference X and
+
+00:09:16.880 --> 00:09:18.160
+you're writing your notes,
+
+00:09:18.160 --> 00:09:20.240
+you can either go... Like, with going
+
+00:09:20.240 --> 00:09:22.399
+through Org Mode, you're writing
+
+00:09:22.399 --> 00:09:24.080
+your ideas, you're writing your notes,
+
+00:09:24.080 --> 00:09:26.080
+you're assigning tasks,
+
+00:09:26.080 --> 00:09:27.839
+and then there's org-transclusion, which
+
+00:09:27.839 --> 00:09:30.480
+I will mention briefly at the end,
+
+00:09:30.480 --> 00:09:32.240
+and ways to extract. If you're going to
+
+00:09:32.240 --> 00:09:35.360
+go through the org-roam...
+
+00:09:35.360 --> 00:09:36.640
+Things that you're going to use within
+
+00:09:36.640 --> 00:09:38.720
+org-roam... It's a great way to build your
+
+00:09:38.720 --> 00:09:40.000
+database. You start making the
+
+00:09:40.000 --> 00:09:42.880
+connections. You can visualize your
+
+00:09:42.880 --> 00:09:44.959
+notes and how these references are
+
+00:09:44.959 --> 00:09:46.240
+linked to each other
+
+00:09:46.240 --> 00:09:48.839
+through the org-roam server or
+
+00:09:48.839 --> 00:09:50.240
+org-roam graph.
+
+00:09:50.240 --> 00:09:53.120
+All right. This is just notes for later.
+
+00:09:53.680 --> 00:09:56.240
+So this is an example of an org-roam
+
+00:09:56.240 --> 00:09:57.360
+file that I have.
+
+00:09:57.360 --> 00:09:59.279
+For example, if I'm working on adaptation
+
+00:09:59.279 --> 00:10:01.760
+policy, I have these hyperlinks that are
+
+00:10:01.760 --> 00:10:04.959
+linked to other concepts and ideas such
+as either
+
+00:10:04.959 --> 00:10:06.640
+climate security,
+
+00:10:06.640 --> 00:10:08.720
+changing global environment, so on and
+
+00:10:08.720 --> 00:10:10.560
+so forth. The backlinks
+
+00:10:10.560 --> 00:10:13.920
+are other references that talk about
+
+00:10:13.920 --> 00:10:15.839
+this specific concept.
+
+00:10:15.839 --> 00:10:17.680
+This is really helpful. Then, when
+
+00:10:17.680 --> 00:10:19.920
+you visualize it, the picture on the left
+
+00:10:19.920 --> 00:10:22.160
+(which I'm sure looks really small),
+
+00:10:22.160 --> 00:10:24.160
+you can see the connections that it's
+
+00:10:24.160 --> 00:10:25.680
+making with other
+
+00:10:25.680 --> 00:10:28.160
+references. Of course, this is just
+
+00:10:28.160 --> 00:10:32.720
+like a buffer network. When you look at
+the entire
+
+00:10:32.720 --> 00:10:34.560
+database network...
+
+00:10:34.560 --> 00:10:38.000
+It's growing. Okay.
+
+00:10:38.000 --> 00:10:41.680
+So going into org-roam-bibtex...
+
+00:10:41.680 --> 00:10:44.079
+It utilizes a combination of the
+
+00:10:44.079 --> 00:10:46.000
+org-ref package, helm-bibtex,
+
+00:10:46.000 --> 00:10:46.880
+bibtex-completion.
+
+00:10:46.880 --> 00:10:50.079
+It works with org-roam functionalities
+
+00:10:50.079 --> 00:10:54.880
+and other good stuff. This is an example
+
+00:10:54.880 --> 00:10:57.440
+of my org-roam-bibtex file. All right. So
+
+00:10:57.440 --> 00:11:01.200
+I've created the template which I
+pretty much use,
+
+00:11:01.200 --> 00:11:05.920
+what Leo has produced in his
+
+00:11:05.920 --> 00:11:08.640
+tutorial. I think it's great. It
+
+00:11:08.640 --> 00:11:10.160
+works well for me.
+
+00:11:10.160 --> 00:11:12.880
+What it does is that it works
+
+00:11:12.880 --> 00:11:14.480
+with your bib file.
+
+00:11:14.480 --> 00:11:17.519
+So if you're in your bib file, you have a
+
+00:11:17.519 --> 00:11:19.519
+sub entry that's called keywords, and
+
+00:11:19.519 --> 00:11:21.040
+usually that's within
+
+00:11:21.040 --> 00:11:23.120
+a journal article. The author would
+
+00:11:23.120 --> 00:11:27.519
+specify these keywords. When it gets
+imported into
+
+00:11:27.519 --> 00:11:30.399
+Zotero, it extracts those keywords and
+then it
+
+00:11:30.399 --> 00:11:32.399
+gets populated as an Org file
+
+00:11:32.399 --> 00:11:34.959
+with org-roam-bibtex. I always start
+
+00:11:34.959 --> 00:11:36.959
+with the meta information first, and then
+
+00:11:36.959 --> 00:11:38.560
+I would write my notes
+
+00:11:38.560 --> 00:11:42.480
+after that. This is an example, though,
+
+00:11:42.480 --> 00:11:45.760
+for reference of a physical book, so
+
+00:11:45.760 --> 00:11:49.120
+I don't have a pdf file for it.
+
+00:11:49.120 --> 00:11:51.519
+So when I've figured out a new idea
+
+00:11:51.519 --> 00:11:53.920
+for it, if I'm writing notes on it,
+
+00:11:53.920 --> 00:11:57.279
+I would create a property that says
+pages.
+
+00:11:57.279 --> 00:11:58.959
+That way, it's easier for you when you go
+
+00:11:58.959 --> 00:12:00.639
+back to citing
+
+00:12:00.639 --> 00:12:02.720
+certain ideas or something, that you
+
+00:12:02.720 --> 00:12:04.720
+have the pages prepared there.
+
+00:12:04.720 --> 00:12:07.839
+It's easier that way. Okay.
+
+00:12:07.839 --> 00:12:11.279
+org-noter which is something I
+
+00:12:11.279 --> 00:12:13.040
+use a lot, especially with journal
+
+00:12:13.040 --> 00:12:15.600
+articles that have PDFs and stuff like
+that.
+
+00:12:15.600 --> 00:12:19.120
+They're really helpful if you are going to...
+
+00:12:19.120 --> 00:12:22.720
+If you've just started using Emacs
+
+00:12:22.720 --> 00:12:23.760
+and org-roam,
+
+00:12:23.760 --> 00:12:26.959
+and you have all these PDFs that have
+
+00:12:26.959 --> 00:12:29.519
+all the annotations and highlighting and
+
+00:12:29.519 --> 00:12:32.639
+all that stuff, with org-noter you can
+
+00:12:32.639 --> 00:12:36.720
+just use the org-noter-create-skeleton
+
+00:12:36.720 --> 00:12:39.519
+command and it will populate all your
+
+00:12:39.519 --> 00:12:41.200
+notes that have already been
+
+00:12:41.200 --> 00:12:43.760
+entered within the PDF file if you're
+
+00:12:43.760 --> 00:12:48.160
+using an outside software, and creates
+them as a neat
+
+00:12:48.160 --> 00:12:52.560
+Org file. I highly recommend.
+
+00:12:52.560 --> 00:12:55.920
+Finally, org-transclusion.
+
+00:12:55.920 --> 00:12:57.920
+I think this is still in its beta phase,
+
+00:12:57.920 --> 00:13:01.040
+but I've been enjoying it so far.
+
+00:13:01.040 --> 00:13:02.720
+I'm guessing people know what
+
+00:13:02.720 --> 00:13:04.800
+transclusion means, which is like
+
+00:13:04.800 --> 00:13:06.480
+copy-pasting text from
+
+00:13:06.480 --> 00:13:09.600
+one Org file to another. This is helpful.
+
+00:13:09.600 --> 00:13:11.839
+I think I peeked at a question that
+
+00:13:11.839 --> 00:13:12.959
+was talking about
+
+00:13:12.959 --> 00:13:16.320
+linking to other Org files.
+
+00:13:16.320 --> 00:13:20.320
+I think org-transclusion could really
+work. It's
+
+00:13:20.320 --> 00:13:24.399
+equivalent to the include
+
+00:13:24.399 --> 00:13:27.760
+function within Org Mode, but I think...
+
+00:13:27.760 --> 00:13:29.519
+So if you have other files
+
+00:13:29.519 --> 00:13:32.560
+that you know which region that you
+
+00:13:32.560 --> 00:13:34.800
+need in another file, you could use the
+
+00:13:34.800 --> 00:13:36.079
+#+INCLUDE, but with
+
+00:13:36.079 --> 00:13:38.160
+org-transclusion... It's great. I mean you
+
+00:13:38.160 --> 00:13:39.440
+just have...
+
+00:13:39.440 --> 00:13:43.360
+you're just linking one part to the
+other.
+
+00:13:43.360 --> 00:13:45.760
+Sort of... Like, not refiling, but you know
+
+00:13:45.760 --> 00:13:47.760
+hyperlinking.
+
+00:13:47.760 --> 00:13:49.680
+So this is an example of what
+
+00:13:49.680 --> 00:13:51.120
+org-transclusion looks like.
+
+00:13:51.120 --> 00:13:53.680
+The highlighted problem statement
+
+00:13:53.680 --> 00:13:54.720
+is from another
+
+00:13:54.720 --> 00:13:57.760
+Org file. Then what I would do is
+
+00:13:57.760 --> 00:13:59.760
+just link it to there, and there was a
+
+00:13:59.760 --> 00:14:01.440
+transclusion command.
+
+00:14:01.440 --> 00:14:05.440
+I wish I made another screenshot of it.
+
+00:14:05.440 --> 00:14:09.120
+When you invoke org-transclusion-mode,
+
+00:14:09.120 --> 00:14:12.079
+it turns... It prints it out like that.
+
+00:14:12.480 --> 00:14:15.120
+It's in view mode. Then when you want
+
+00:14:15.120 --> 00:14:16.560
+to edit, it will take you back to that
+
+00:14:16.560 --> 00:14:18.480
+buffer and you can edit the text
+
+00:14:18.480 --> 00:14:22.720
+however you want. All right. So, thank
+you so much.
+
+00:14:22.720 --> 00:14:26.000
+I wanted to leave room for questions,
+
+00:14:26.000 --> 00:14:29.120
+but special thanks to all the folks that
+
+00:14:29.120 --> 00:14:33.440
+work on org-roam, org-roam-bibtex,
+org-roam-server,
+
+00:14:33.440 --> 00:14:36.320
+org-transclusion, and of course alphapapa on
+
+00:14:36.320 --> 00:14:38.240
+org-super-agenda and org-sidebar.
+
+00:14:38.240 --> 00:14:43.440
+That's how I got into Emacs. Thank you.
+
+00:14:43.440 --> 00:14:45.600
+(Leo: All right. Well, thank you. So yeah,
+
+00:14:45.600 --> 00:14:47.120
+this time I'll be the one asking the
+
+00:14:47.120 --> 00:14:49.120
+question and not Amin.
+
+00:14:49.120 --> 00:14:51.360
+I'm filling big shoes right now,
+
+00:14:51.360 --> 00:14:53.120
+so you'll have to bear with me folks.
+
+00:14:53.120 --> 00:14:54.880
+So thank you so much, Noorah, for your
+
+00:14:54.880 --> 00:14:56.240
+presentation that is incredibly
+
+00:14:56.240 --> 00:14:57.279
+interesting.
+
+00:14:57.279 --> 00:14:58.959
+Would you mind if I fed you questions
+
+00:14:58.959 --> 00:15:00.800
+from the charts?)
+
+00:15:00.800 --> 00:15:04.000
+Noorah: Go ahead. (Leo: Okay. so the first one I've
+
+00:15:04.000 --> 00:15:06.160
+picked on my end was "Did you try using
+
+00:15:06.160 --> 00:15:07.920
+ebib instead of Zotero,
+
+00:15:07.920 --> 00:15:10.560
+and if so, is it better than Zotero in
+
+00:15:10.560 --> 00:15:12.079
+some ways?)
+
+00:15:12.079 --> 00:15:14.880
+Noorah: No, I have not used Ebib. I've only used
+
+00:15:14.880 --> 00:15:15.680
+Mendeley
+
+00:15:15.680 --> 00:15:18.560
+and then they got bought by Elsevier,
+
+00:15:18.560 --> 00:15:20.320
+and so I was, like, okay I'm done,
+
+00:15:20.320 --> 00:15:23.040
+I'm going to Zotero. There are a lot
+
+00:15:23.040 --> 00:15:25.120
+of plugins with Zotero that you can play
+
+00:15:25.120 --> 00:15:26.240
+around with.
+
+00:15:26.240 --> 00:15:28.320
+I can't speak for Ebib, but definitely
+
+00:15:28.320 --> 00:15:32.079
+Zotero has been a good experience so
+far.
+
+00:15:32.079 --> 00:15:34.880
+(Leo: Yes, same. I also do research on
+
+00:15:34.880 --> 00:15:35.360
+the side;
+
+00:15:35.360 --> 00:15:38.079
+as I told you, English major, and yeah I
+
+00:15:38.079 --> 00:15:39.360
+also do Zotero.
+
+00:15:39.360 --> 00:15:41.839
+Some people have been using uh a
+
+00:15:41.839 --> 00:15:43.759
+connector between Zotero and Emacs which
+
+00:15:43.759 --> 00:15:46.000
+has... they've had great success with
+them but
+
+00:15:46.000 --> 00:15:47.360
+personally I haven't
+
+00:15:47.360 --> 00:15:50.480
+touched it already, so yeah.
+
+00:15:50.480 --> 00:15:52.240
+Oh, go ahead. Sorry.) Noorah: All right. So far, I
+
+00:15:52.240 --> 00:15:53.920
+don't have any problems with Zotero, but
+
+00:15:53.920 --> 00:15:56.320
+maybe if I run into something, I might
+check out
+
+00:15:56.320 --> 00:15:58.320
+Ebib in the future.
+
+00:15:58.320 --> 00:16:00.240
+(Leo: yeah, definitely. I think zotero is a very
+
+00:16:00.240 --> 00:16:01.680
+solid project. You know, the fact that
+
+00:16:01.680 --> 00:16:02.560
+it's being used
+
+00:16:02.560 --> 00:16:04.959
+by people outside of Emacs also ensures
+
+00:16:04.959 --> 00:16:06.560
+that there's quite a lot of backing
+
+00:16:06.560 --> 00:16:07.680
+behind the software,
+
+00:16:07.680 --> 00:16:09.759
+which is reassuring when your livelihood
+
+00:16:09.759 --> 00:16:11.759
+depends on your research.)
+
+00:16:11.759 --> 00:16:13.519
+Noorah: Right. And then I think one more thing
+
+00:16:13.519 --> 00:16:15.600
+with Zotero is that you can create
+
+00:16:15.600 --> 00:16:18.079
+groups, so if you're in a collaborative
+project,
+
+00:16:18.079 --> 00:16:20.160
+you can create a reference,
+
+00:16:20.160 --> 00:16:22.320
+a library just for your group, and I think
+
+00:16:22.320 --> 00:16:23.759
+that could help.
+
+00:16:23.759 --> 00:16:25.279
+I'm going to be in a project next
+
+00:16:25.279 --> 00:16:27.600
+semester that requires that.
+
+00:16:27.600 --> 00:16:29.839
+(Leo: Yeah, definitely. I believe the ability to
+
+00:16:29.839 --> 00:16:31.600
+have folders inside Zotero
+
+00:16:31.600 --> 00:16:33.839
+makes it incredibly useful to manage
+
+00:16:33.839 --> 00:16:37.440
+your different projects, concurrent
+projects.
+
+00:16:37.440 --> 00:16:39.279
+So moving on to other questions, do you
+
+00:16:39.279 --> 00:16:41.279
+have any suggestion on what subjects or
+
+00:16:41.279 --> 00:16:43.440
+things should be tags or separate org-roam
+
+00:16:43.440 --> 00:16:46.560
+files for cross-linking?)
+
+00:16:46.560 --> 00:16:50.320
+Right. So far, now, I'm having
+
+00:16:50.320 --> 00:16:52.720
+trouble with "should I be combining
+
+00:16:52.720 --> 00:16:55.360
+certain concepts together as one?"
+
+00:16:55.360 --> 00:16:59.360
+This is where the thought process
+
+00:16:59.360 --> 00:17:00.959
+starts coming to fruit, is that when you
+
+00:17:00.959 --> 00:17:04.880
+start combining ideas together so you
+won't need a
+
+00:17:04.880 --> 00:17:06.480
+specific tag
+
+00:17:06.480 --> 00:17:09.199
+and another one that are like similar in
+
+00:17:09.199 --> 00:17:11.280
+ideas...
+
+00:17:11.280 --> 00:17:12.720
+I'm not sure if that answers the
+
+00:17:12.720 --> 00:17:14.799
+question, but so far I've been using
+
+00:17:14.799 --> 00:17:17.919
+the org-roam the default way,
+which is
+
+00:17:17.919 --> 00:17:22.160
+many small files and then just
+
+00:17:22.160 --> 00:17:24.400
+linking them to my... Like, either if I have
+
+00:17:24.400 --> 00:17:26.319
+a report to write, or if I have an
+
+00:17:26.959 --> 00:17:32.240
+essay to write...
+
+00:17:32.240 --> 00:17:35.360
+I think you're muted.
+
+00:17:35.360 --> 00:17:38.400
+(Leo: I did two stupid things. The
+first one
+
+00:17:38.400 --> 00:17:40.640
+was spilling out my water. The second one
+
+00:17:40.640 --> 00:17:42.320
+was speaking without actually turning on
+
+00:17:42.320 --> 00:17:43.760
+my microphone.
+
+00:17:43.760 --> 00:17:45.760
+Let's just hope that nothing is going
+
+00:17:45.760 --> 00:17:48.320
+to fry in the near vicinity of me right
+now.
+
+00:17:48.320 --> 00:17:49.840
+But yeah, I believe you've answered
+
+00:17:49.840 --> 00:17:51.440
+the question, so don't worry about it. I'm
+
+00:17:51.440 --> 00:17:53.200
+slightly wet right now, which is not a
+
+00:17:53.200 --> 00:17:55.280
+very agreeable feeling, but we'll have to
+
+00:17:55.280 --> 00:17:57.280
+carry on, I suppose.
+
+00:17:57.280 --> 00:17:59.360
+Another question: "is there a place where
+
+00:17:59.360 --> 00:18:01.600
+people are collaborating on research
+
+00:18:01.600 --> 00:18:04.320
+about Emacs?" So do you want to try to
+
+00:18:04.320 --> 00:18:06.160
+take this one?)
+
+00:18:06.160 --> 00:18:08.559
+Noorah: I don't know, but I'm definitely
+
+00:18:08.559 --> 00:18:10.559
+interested in the user experience of
+
+00:18:10.559 --> 00:18:14.720
+Emacs, so if anyone wants to work on
+that,
+
+00:18:14.720 --> 00:18:16.400
+I'm happy.
+
+00:18:16.400 --> 00:18:18.320
+(Leo: Well you do have a a pretty good
+
+00:18:18.320 --> 00:18:19.760
+candidate in front of you, if I
+
+00:18:19.760 --> 00:18:22.080
+should say so myself. I'm incredibly
+
+00:18:22.080 --> 00:18:22.960
+interested about
+
+00:18:22.960 --> 00:18:25.039
+the ability to do research in Emacs
+
+00:18:25.039 --> 00:18:26.960
+and about the ability to
+
+00:18:26.960 --> 00:18:30.480
+preach the FLOSS way
+
+00:18:30.480 --> 00:18:32.480
+to academia and to the academe,
+
+00:18:32.480 --> 00:18:34.080
+especially because I believe there's
+
+00:18:34.080 --> 00:18:35.280
+really something
+
+00:18:35.280 --> 00:18:38.240
+great to be done. Sorry, I'm just looking
+
+00:18:38.240 --> 00:18:39.919
+at the puddle of water on the side which
+
+00:18:39.919 --> 00:18:41.840
+is slightly oozing my way,
+
+00:18:41.840 --> 00:18:45.039
+which is not a very good feeling, really.
+
+00:18:45.039 --> 00:18:46.880
+I believe some work
+
+00:18:46.880 --> 00:18:48.320
+could be done, and if people are
+
+00:18:48.320 --> 00:18:50.000
+interested in the chat right now,
+
+00:18:50.000 --> 00:18:52.320
+do get in touch with us. Both
+
+00:18:52.320 --> 00:18:57.280
+Noorah and I are on our Slack channel.
+Yes, I know, Slack,
+
+00:18:57.280 --> 00:19:00.080
+the corporate hive mind that is Slack.
+
+00:19:00.080 --> 00:19:02.720
+But we've decided with org-roam to use
+Slack.
+
+00:19:02.720 --> 00:19:05.520
+You can find us very easily.
+
+00:19:05.520 --> 00:19:06.880
+If you want to talk about these topics,
+
+00:19:07.360 --> 00:19:08.720
+by all means, do, and we'll be very
+
+00:19:08.720 --> 00:19:10.720
+interested to answer your questions.)
+
+00:19:10.720 --> 00:19:12.640
+Noorah: I have a question here that says, "How
+
+00:19:12.640 --> 00:19:15.520
+does the view for time blocking works?"
+
+00:19:15.520 --> 00:19:18.640
+I use org-super-agenda, so
+
+00:19:18.640 --> 00:19:22.000
+what happens is that my active
+
+00:19:22.000 --> 00:19:26.960
+timestamps are only in my Gmail
+Org file.
+
+00:19:26.960 --> 00:19:29.200
+If you use org-gcal, you have to
+
+00:19:29.200 --> 00:19:32.559
+specify a certain Org file. When it
+
+00:19:32.559 --> 00:19:34.320
+imports them, it imports them as
+
+00:19:34.320 --> 00:19:38.200
+active timestamps. I make sure
+
+00:19:38.200 --> 00:19:40.480
+whenever I create a TODO or even a
+research task
+
+00:19:40.480 --> 00:19:42.480
+that it doesn't have a timestamp on it,
+
+00:19:42.480 --> 00:19:45.039
+because what I want to do is go back
+
+00:19:45.039 --> 00:19:48.480
+and then move around these tasks
+
+00:19:48.480 --> 00:19:50.160
+according to my either weekly
+
+00:19:50.160 --> 00:19:51.919
+schedule, or monthly, or however long you
+
+00:19:51.919 --> 00:19:52.960
+want to do it.
+
+00:19:52.960 --> 00:19:56.480
+So yeah, only active timestamps or
+
+00:19:56.480 --> 00:19:59.679
+deadline um appear in your time grid.
+
+00:19:59.679 --> 00:20:03.280
+So that could work. (Leo: That's very good.
+
+00:20:03.280 --> 00:20:05.440
+Just to interject for a second
+
+00:20:05.440 --> 00:20:06.320
+about this,
+
+00:20:06.320 --> 00:20:07.840
+you know with org-roam right now, we're
+
+00:20:07.840 --> 00:20:10.720
+mostly focused on optimization,
+
+00:20:10.720 --> 00:20:13.039
+but we're hoping to move on to UX very
+
+00:20:13.039 --> 00:20:14.720
+soon. So all those matters about
+
+00:20:14.720 --> 00:20:16.720
+having TODOs in your files, it
+
+00:20:16.720 --> 00:20:18.159
+is something that we've been thinking
+
+00:20:18.159 --> 00:20:20.000
+about with Jethro Kuan, who is my main
+
+00:20:20.000 --> 00:20:23.280
+co-maintainer for org-roam. We'll be
+working on this in
+
+00:20:23.280 --> 00:20:24.480
+the coming months, so don't worry too
+
+00:20:24.480 --> 00:20:26.080
+much about it and stay tuned.)
+
+00:20:26.080 --> 00:20:29.760
+Noorah: Yeah. So I've got the ebib
+
+00:20:29.760 --> 00:20:33.200
+and what else... What subjects... I think...
+
+00:20:33.200 --> 00:20:34.080
+Okay!
+
+00:20:34.080 --> 00:20:35.919
+What is this question? "Have you seen the
+
+00:20:35.919 --> 00:20:37.120
+project Papis?"
+
+00:20:37.120 --> 00:20:40.400
+I'm not sure what... oh it's a Zotero
+
+00:20:40.400 --> 00:20:41.280
+alternative. Okay.
+
+00:20:41.280 --> 00:20:43.840
+I'll look into it. Thank you.
+
+00:20:43.840 --> 00:20:45.919
+(Leo: I don't know about it either, so
+
+00:20:45.919 --> 00:20:49.600
+please look into it and let me know.)
+
+00:20:49.600 --> 00:20:53.200
+Have we covered all the questions?
+
+00:20:53.200 --> 00:20:55.679
+(Leo: I believe we have. We have about
+
+00:20:55.679 --> 00:20:56.880
+two-minute leeway
+
+00:20:56.880 --> 00:20:58.880
+for me to move into the next talk, so
+
+00:20:58.880 --> 00:21:00.240
+we're right on time.)
+
+00:21:00.240 --> 00:21:01.760
+All right. Thank you so much. Really
+
+00:21:01.760 --> 00:21:04.159
+appreciate it. Good luck everyone!
+
+00:21:04.159 --> 00:21:05.440
+(Leo: well thank you, and thank you so much for
+
+00:21:05.440 --> 00:21:07.600
+coming, and allowing me not to
+
+00:21:07.600 --> 00:21:08.400
+be the only one
+
+00:21:08.400 --> 00:21:11.440
+talking about org-roam today.) Noorah: Sounds good.
+
+00:21:11.440 --> 00:21:14.559
+All right. (Amin: Thank you both very much.)