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author | Sacha Chua <sacha@sachachua.com> | 2020-12-20 02:03:32 -0500 |
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committer | Sacha Chua <sacha@sachachua.com> | 2020-12-20 02:03:32 -0500 |
commit | e59a5ca21f16aedfdd709bcf684a9814d05759d9 (patch) | |
tree | ddaa11e61ac761f40dbe28596040309c5b55fe9d | |
parent | 61f2d5d5e4ff576a759e00fb19c7e4aae5472222 (diff) | |
download | emacsconf-wiki-e59a5ca21f16aedfdd709bcf684a9814d05759d9.tar.xz emacsconf-wiki-e59a5ca21f16aedfdd709bcf684a9814d05759d9.zip |
Add subtitles and transcript for 16
4 files changed, 403 insertions, 1978 deletions
diff --git a/2020/info/16.md b/2020/info/16.md index e298e06f..dfb3ddda 100644 --- a/2020/info/16.md +++ b/2020/info/16.md @@ -1,8 +1,9 @@ # Org-roam: Presentation, Demonstration, and What's on the Horizon Leo Vivier -[[!template id=vid src="https://mirror.csclub.uwaterloo.ca/emacsconf/2020/emacsconf-2020--16-org-roam-presentation-demonstration-and-whats-on-the-horizon--leo-vivier.webm"]] +[[!template id=vid src="https://mirror.csclub.uwaterloo.ca/emacsconf/2020/emacsconf-2020--16-org-roam-presentation-demonstration-and-whats-on-the-horizon--leo-vivier.webm" subtitles="/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--16-org-roam-presentation-demonstration-and-whats-on-the-horizon--leo-vivier.vtt"]] [Download .webm video, 720p, 263MB](https://mirror.csclub.uwaterloo.ca/emacsconf/2020/emacsconf-2020--16-org-roam-presentation-demonstration-and-whats-on-the-horizon--leo-vivier.webm) +[View transcript](#transcript) Org-roam is a Roam replica built on top of the all-powerful Org-mode. @@ -96,3 +97,304 @@ has some notes about exporting from Org Roam to regular Org <https://karl-voit.at/2020/07/22/org-super-links/>. - "The point is to make consistency of your notes." - YouTube channel: <https://www.youtube.com/user/Zaeph>. + + +<!-- transcript: 2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--16-org-roam-presentation-demonstration-and-whats-on-the-horizon--leo-vivier.vtt --> + +<a name="transcript"></a> +# Transcript + +Leo Vivier: I'm hoping to keep this talk in 15 minutes. I'll take five +minutes of questions at the end. So, hello again! I suppose you're +starting to get pretty familiar with me and my start(?) right now. +We're getting into the nitty gritty. We started today, I told you +about how I'd ventured from being a user to being a maintainer, and +right now I'm going to get the chance to actually tell you more about +the project that I'm maintaining, which is called org-roam. So even if +I... It would have had a better impact if I didn't scroll the page, +but you know, sadly, I'm out of tea, it's getting late in Europe and +I'm starting to get tired. + +What I'm gonna do during this talk is just to do, really, a survey for +people who do not know what org-roam is about. Some of you might have, +whilst browsing Reddit, found a topic about org-roam and thought to +yourself, "Oh, that looks interesting, but you know, I have my own +workflow and I kinda don't need to change anything about it. I'm +completely fine using my very very large file. Or I'm completely fine +having my database of notes which I've been accruing for 10, 20, 30 +years or so." What I want to do during this talk is both to present to +you what org-roam is about, if you are in this group of people who do +not know what org-roam is about but would like to know more, but also +for people who have close to no experience with Emacs and Org Mode and +who have just found their way. They wanted to find the system to write +their notes, basically, and they discovered this little tool which is +called org-roam, and they'd like to know more about this. + +I've got 13 minutes to convince you to use org-roam. If we go in a +very broad strokes, what is org-roam? org-roam is a way for you to +manage backlinks inside Org Mode. The keyword in what I've just said +is links. Now there is a principle behind org-roam which is called the +Zettelkasten method, which you can see written right there. It's a +German word which means a slip box. If you remember in old libraries, +you had--actually, I believe if I scroll, I should have an example of +this. Yes. So this is a slip box. Basically, in all libraries, you +used to have all the references to the books that the library used to +have inside those boxes. They're called slip boxes because you can +insert stuff into the boxes and you can remove stuff out of the boxes. +Now if I try to summarize as simply as I may what the Zettelkasten +method is about, it's about having a way to work with your notes which +considers elements of knowledge as atoms, as something that is +individual, like a single file. You consider that in order to build +knowledge, you have to combine atoms together, so that when you have +one atom, another atom, if you link them together, you have a complex +thought or a complex molecule. Don't quote me on the chemistry, by the +way. I shall remind you I'm an English major I have no idea what I'm +talking about. + +How does it work as far as a note-taking system is concerned? To do +so, I'm just going to switch really quickly to my Emacs, if I may. So +I'm just going to screenshare onto my Emacs. Just give me a second to +get the windows all right. Okay, it's loading up. Oh no, I think +Firefox has crashed again. Okay, so you're gonna have to give me a +second. I need to figure this out. Okay. So everything is frozen right +now. Just to tell you, so you're gonna have to deal with my lovely +voice. Amin, can you confirm that if I switch to a new (tty?), you can +still hear me? So can you still hear me now? Okay. So I'm gonna have +probably to kill firefox and log in again. I'm sorry. It's gonna cost +us two minutes, but I'm gonna try to be as fast as I can. Okay (Amin: +Okay. No problem, thanks. All right. I guess no event is a good one +without one or two technical difficulties. I guess this is our share +of technical difficulties this year. No problem.) Leo: All right. +Guess who's back? It's not Britney. It's just me, sadly, so you're +gonna have to make do with me. (Amin: Welcome back.) Leo: Well, thank +you. I'm just gonna turn back on the camera, if I may. All righty. I'm +going to make myself a presenter. I'm going to share my screen with +you. So, if my calculations are correct, you should be able to see my +monitor right now. (Amin: Yep, but not your webcam feed.) Not my +webcam feed. Okay. So I'm going to stop it. Sorry for the little +delay, folks. You know, it's... The show must go on. Can you see it +now? (Amin: Not yet.) Leo: Still not? Damn it. Can I stop it? Okay, so +I'm gonna... (Amin: yeah, maybe try like sharing a webcam first.) Leo: +All right, I'm back now. So I'm going to share my webcam first. (Amin: +Okay.) Leo: All righty. So can you confirm whenever you've got my +webcam working? (Amin: Let's see. I don't see it yet, unfortunately.) +Leo: Is it loading up? (Amin: yeah, it's coming up. Yep, I can see +it.) Leo: Awesome. All right. Okay, we're back on track. I've got +still eight minutes left to do, so I might have to have a couple of +minutes to my talk, if you don't mind and shave off some questions. +(Amin: Okay, do you want to share your screen?) Leo: Okay, yeah, I'm +on my way to. All right. So please forget whatever, whichever +technical difficulties we might have had for the last three, four +minutes, but we're back on track now. + +So org-roam: what is it and how does it work? I was telling you all +about atoms and I was telling you about links, but how does it work +concretely? Right now what you're seeing on your screens is a slip +box, which is what we... the fancy word that we use to designate your +folder where all your notes are going to be living. So you have here +(and I hope you can see my cursor; yes you can)... So we have a file +which is called index.org and the good thing is, as you might have +garnered by the fact that it finishes by .org is that it is just an +Org Mode file. I can create a heading. I can create another heading. +everything works as you would expect it to. It is completely... It's +just an Org Mode file at the end of the day. Now, what can we do with +this? I've told you about links. You do know that Org Mode has links. +What we're going to do is that we're going to create a new file. We're +going to go back to our directory. What I'm going to do is that we +have a special command... Actually, let me just show you my command. +It might help you a little bit see what I'm doing. Wait, which is the +buffer... Uh... log mode? Yes. exlog. So now on the right side of the +monitor, you'll be able to see the command that I'm using. If you +don't mind, in order to have as much realistic as possible, I'm going +to make it a little bit shorter. Smaller, I should say. Is it not too +small? Yeah, I believe it's good. + +So what I'm going to do is I'm going to run a command in org-roam +which allows me to create a new note. I'm going to use my keybinding, +which is not this one, definitely, and I'm going to create a new file +which is, in a great tradition of examples in programming, I'm going +to call "foo." Right. So at the bottom--in the bottom buffer, I +should say, you are seeing the file "foo," which is, as you can see +here, a capture buffer just like you would have in Org Mode. Now what +I'm going to do is that I'm going to validate this file and now you +see that we are in the file "foo." The good thing is that I can start +writing without having to worry about anything else. I was going to +say that I'm showing off about my typing skills, but I did make +mistakes, so well, nobody's perfect, right? So now we do have this +"foo" file. We're going to go back to the index. Let's go back to the directory. +We're going to refresh the file. As you can see, we have a file which +is called "foo," and we have the index. So now what I'm going to do is +that I'm going to insert a link to this file. So we're going to run +another org-roam command which you can see here, org-roam-insert, and +I'm going to insert a link to the file "foo." As you can see, it has +now appeared. Now what I'm going to do, I'm going to save the file, +and now I'm going to show you the little thing I told you about-- +backlinks--before. I'm afraid I'm going to have to hide the commands +for now, but don't worry they'll be back. I'm going to show you the +side buffer. It is the buffer that you see on the right side of your +screen. Right now, it's telling you that index does not have any +backlinks, which is normal. But if we follow the link "foo," now you +see something different on the right side. As you can see on the left +side, we're back inside the file "foo," but on the right side, we have +something showing up: one backlink in the file "index." And under the +heading, you have the file-- sorry, the link "foo." You can just open +the link, and you will be brought exactly where it is. So that was one +thing. + +Now just to make sure that you've understood properly, I'm going to go +back to the index. I'm going to create a second file. Now I'm going to +use a command that is slightly different. Let me just show you the +commands on the right. I'm going to run the command org-roam-insert +and I'm going to enter a file which is called "bar." Again, at the +bottom, you can see that I have a new file "bar." I'm going to +validate this file. I'm going to save index.org. Now, if we go in bar, +and if I show you the links on the side, you can see that exactly the +same, we have a link. Now just to make the pictures complete, inside +the file "bar," I'm going to insert a link to "foo." I'm going to +save. I'm going to go to the file "foo." Now on the right side, you +can see that we have two backlinks. Now you're gonna tell me, yeah, +thank you, Leo, but what's the point? Well the thing is it might +sound... it might seem very simple, what I've just shown you, but +programmatically, it's a little hard to do. We have to look into your +files to make sure that every time you link your file somewhere else, +we need to track everything down. + +Now as simple as org-roam might be looking to you, thee thing is what +we try to do with org-roam is to make sure that your collection of +notes remains consistent whatever we do. An example, for instance, +right now I've told you about a file named "foo" and the file named +"bar." Let's say that for whatever reason, you decide to rename your +file "foo" to something very original. Let's just say "bar." So we +actually have a way in Emacs--in org-roam, I should say--when you +modify the title at the top of the file... So we get "foo..." I've +modified it with "baz." You can see at the bottom that right now we +haven't saved and we are still in the file "foo.org." I'm going to +save. Now what you see is a new name for the file. But you may ask, +"Wait a second, in the other file, we had a link to this file. Does it +mean that it's broken? Does it mean that we cannot access the file +anymore?" But when we go there, beginning to go in the index, so +obviously the actual description of the link hasn't been updated, but +if I show you what goes on under the hood by showing you what is +fontified, what is behind the content of the link... Actually, it +didn't work! that's why you never present live, folks, because +otherwise you're just going to show problems with the software and +that's not good. Something must have gone on, obviously. But generally +speaking, the file should have been updated. Damn. I'm showing you +bugging my software. That's not very professional, now is it? +Basically, to come back to the main idea, what we try to do with +org-roam is to make sure that everything remains consistent. We really +much love the system of organization that is behind the Zettelkasten +method. + +Now I was going, at this point of the presentation, basically, I +wanted to go back to Firefox and show you more stuff, but it's likely +that it's going to crash again. I'm not going to tempt the devil. I'm +just going to continue talking to you like that. So the Zettelkasten +method is a very organic way to write notes. If you think... I believe +as Org Mode users, we share quite a lot of features. I'm out of time. +I'm just going to take one more minute to answer this question that +I'm asking myself anyway. But if you're anything like me, you've been +through many iterations of your workflow inside Org Mode. Do I keep +all my professional stuff under one heading, or do I create a separate +file for this? You know, those types of questions on which you could +ponder for many, many hours at night, generally when you have a tight +deadline to be following. But what I've discovered by using org-roam +for taking notes about my academic projects or by taking notes on +anything worth writing about is that not having to worry about the +structure of you files, just having to worry about atoms and links, it +does wonders for the way you think about problems. It does wonders +about your creativity. And it does wonders about your ability to take +your thoughts, put them on a paper, and generally, during this process +you realize, "Oh, maybe I do not know this concept as well as I +should." But I've never had a system which brought me as much +serendipity as this system. And for those who don't know, serendipity +the ability to come up with novel ideas on the spot, contextually. So +this was just a little primer on what org-roam and the Zettelkasten is +about. + +In about 20 minutes, I'll be giving you a talk about the technical +aspects of org-roam, which I'm certain some of you will be very +interested in. Otherwise, I do have a YouTube channel where I try to +record videos where I explain to you what org-roam is about, what the +method is about. I'll just finish on this. I'm two minutes extra time, +sorry. We do know that a lot of people are interested into org-roam. I +mentioned at the very beginning of the presentation that a lot of +people discovered Emacs and org-roam and Org Mode even through +org-roam. We feel that we have a duty to introduce those people, this +new pool of people, most of whom are academic,s into the world of +Emacs and into the world of free software. Right now the thing is +we're not doing a particularly good job at writing manuals. I'm just +going to try to stop sharing my screen, because I'm nearly to the end, +and just try sharing my Firefox windows if it allows me. No, it +doesn't allow me, which is very good. That's why I won't have to to +screw things up. We know that our manual is not fully up to date, but +believe me, one of the key focus right now is making sure that within +two to three months, we have a good tutorial for people to join, and +we have good videos for people to get introduced to the topics we're +covering. And that's me done. So, thank you so much for listening and +now I'll be taking some questions. (Amin: Thank you very much, Leo. +Cheers! We have, I think, about two minutes four questions, I see a +lot of them on the pad. Would you take them?) Leo: Sure. So... Yep I'm +scrolling, I'm scrolling... Getting Things Done, that's Aldric. Still +scrolling. Okay. org-roam. Oh, wow. Okay. So we do have quite a lot of +questions. Please excuse me if I'm answering your questions really +fast, but I just want to make sure that I cover as much ground as +possible. + +"What is the functionality of org-roam-unlinked-references?" +So basically when you have a file that is not linked anywhere, this +function allows you to see... Let's say we have a file "Emacs" and +we've talked about "Emacs" in another note, but we haven't created a +link. What this command do is that it looks into your folder for every +mention of "Emacs" that is not linked to the note "Emacs," and it +prints all the results in the buffer so that you know, "okay, I've +talked about Emacs here, but I didn't create a link. Do I want to +create a link?" That's it. + +"Is it possible to use the backlinks features in regular Org buffers?" +Right now, no. It is not possible. We are having a very controlled +environment which is... I told you about this slip box folder before. +This is where we keep all the notes. The reason why we do this will be +more evident when I go through the technical presentation, but it's +because of optimization. I'll get back to you on that afterwards. + +"Do you make org-roam database accessible across computers?" No, I do +not, because I'm only using my laptop, but plenty of people have had a +lot of success doing so either by sharing the files via syncthing or +by any other method. We have a section in a manual specifying how to +do this. "How do you discover tags' links to add to your new org-roam +note?" There is something that I didn't tell you about which is called +org-roam server, which is a magnificent way to access visually the +notes that you have in your in your system. You'll have to go to the +orgroam.com website. Please go on our Github page. We show everything. +I hope what I've told you has excited you, so please go. Maybe one +more question, two more questions, just to make sure? + +"Is it possible to seamlessly link to other notes with syntax instead +of a keybinding?" Yes, we are working on this. This is a huge project +that we're doing with org-roam which is called link-ux. We're trying +to do something which is very close to Roam Research, which is the +software we're using for inspiration for org-roam. Yes, there are +going to be ways to do this in the future. I'm going to give you a +window of maybe three to four months. One last question. Uh, good on +you, thank you, well, thank you for this. + +"Is there an easy way to export several selected nodes to, say, a +LaTeX file?" LaTeX. Yes. I mean, it's Org Mode. At the very core, it +is Org Mode, so you know you don't... If you want to export to a LaTeX +file, you can... you just use the ox-latex library, which you can +access by pressing C-c C-e for export. + +All right. Is it... I believe I'm... It's all the time I had. Amin, +can you confirm this? Okay. So if you have more questions, don't +worry, I'll be in chat. I'll be answering them. I'm also on on all the +platforms we advertise on org-roam. If you want to reach me, I'm +really easy to reach. Our Github page is always open. So thank you all +for all your questions and all your energy about org-roam. It is very +exciting for me to see all this. but right now, I'll be handing off +the microphone, I should say, to Noorah, who is going to talk to you +about the academic way to use org-roam. I'll be back afterwards with +the technical talk. Thank you. (Amin: Thank you very much, Leo) Leo: +See you later, guys. + +<!-- /transcript --> diff --git a/2020/organizers-notebook.org b/2020/organizers-notebook.org index f12e111a..9ccf000a 100644 --- a/2020/organizers-notebook.org +++ b/2020/organizers-notebook.org @@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ I modified the =subed= package to work with VTT files. The modified version is a - [X] sachac [[./subtitles/emacsconf-2020--13-experience-report-steps-to-emacs-hyper-notebooks--joseph-corneli-raymond-puzio-cameron-ray-smith-autogen.vtt]] - [X] sachac [[./subtitles/emacsconf-2020--14-readme-driven-design--adam-ard-autogen.vtt]] - [X] sachac [[./subtitles/emacsconf-2020--15-moving-from-jekyll-to-orgmode-an-experience-report--adolfo-villafiorita-autogen.vtt]] -- [ ] sachac [[./subtitles/emacsconf-2020--16-org-roam-presentation-demonstration-and-whats-on-the-horizon--leo-vivier-autogen.vtt]] +- [X] sachac [[./info/16.md]] [[./subtitles/emacsconf-2020--16-org-roam-presentation-demonstration-and-whats-on-the-horizon--leo-vivier.vtt]] - [ ] sachac [[./subtitles/emacsconf-2020--17-org-mode-and-org-roam-for-scholars-and-researchers--noorah-alhasan-autogen.vtt]] - [ ] sachac [[./subtitles/emacsconf-2020--18-org-roam-technical-presentation--leo-vivier-autogen.vtt]] - [ ] [[./subtitles/emacsconf-2020--19-sharing-blogs-and-more-with-org-webring--brett-gilio-autogen.vtt]] diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--02-an-emacs-developer-story-from-user-to-package-maintainer--leo-vivier.vtt b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--02-an-emacs-developer-story-from-user-to-package-maintainer--leo-vivier.vtt index 2f1b1ad1..facb16b8 100644 --- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--02-an-emacs-developer-story-from-user-to-package-maintainer--leo-vivier.vtt +++ b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--02-an-emacs-developer-story-from-user-to-package-maintainer--leo-vivier.vtt @@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ section because I wanted to get a chance, basically, to tell 00:00:21.600 --> 00:00:24.160 -you a little more about who I am and +you a little more about who I am and 00:00:24.160 --> 00:00:27.039 how I got from basically being a user of @@ -100,7 +100,7 @@ believe it's been so long. But yes, it's been a journey because, 00:01:07.680 --> 00:01:12.000 -in a way, nothing +in a way, nothing 00:01:12.000 --> 00:01:15.119 made me go for Emacs. You know I'm an-- @@ -118,7 +118,7 @@ university to study English literature and linguistics, and 00:01:24.320 --> 00:01:26.159 -I just got started in emacs +I just got started in Emacs 00:01:26.159 --> 00:01:28.240 because I was looking for ways to take @@ -267,29 +267,27 @@ and you haven't found a way to do so. 00:03:04.480 --> 00:03:05.920 You go on StackExchange. You find -00:03:05.920 --> 00:03:06.640 -something - -00:03:06.640 --> 00:03:09.040 -that's interesting. You add it to your +00:03:05.920 --> 00:03:09.040 +something that's interesting. You add it +to your 00:03:09.040 --> 00:03:10.239 Emacs configuration. You 00:03:10.239 --> 00:03:11.680 -barely understand anything that's going +barely understand anything that's going on. 00:03:11.680 --> 00:03:13.519 -on. You know that it's supposed to be +You know that it's supposed to be 00:03:13.519 --> 00:03:14.800 Emacs Lisp. 00:03:14.800 --> 00:03:17.200 -"I hardly know Emacs and I +"I hardly know Emacs and 00:03:17.200 --> 00:03:19.440 -know even less what is Lisp supposed to be." +I know even less what is Lisp supposed to be." 00:03:19.440 --> 00:03:21.440 But you paste it in and it does what you @@ -337,13 +335,13 @@ how spartan the entire thing is, but it actually is 00:03:54.640 --> 00:03:58.400 -a lovely prison so to speak. +a lovely prison, so to speak. 00:03:58.400 --> 00:04:00.400 -That's how I got started eight years +That's how I got started eight years ago. 00:04:00.400 --> 00:04:01.680 -ago. I just wanted +I just wanted 00:04:01.680 --> 00:04:04.319 to find a way to do my research properly. @@ -367,7 +365,7 @@ Microsoft solutions when it came to taking notes. 00:04:16.320 --> 00:04:19.359 -So yeah, I got started in emacs. I +So yeah, I got started in Emacs. I 00:04:19.359 --> 00:04:20.880 read a little bit about what plain text @@ -384,19 +382,15 @@ computers, 00:04:27.120 --> 00:04:30.160 but I was not a computer science student. -00:04:30.160 --> 00:04:32.479 +00:04:30.160 --> 00:04:33.520 I had barely any experience with - -00:04:32.479 --> 00:04:33.520 programming 00:04:33.520 --> 00:04:36.080 and coding, and I was even less of a -00:04:36.080 --> 00:04:36.800 +00:04:36.080 --> 00:04:39.919 hacker - -00:04:36.800 --> 00:04:39.919 back then. 00:04:39.919 --> 00:04:42.560 @@ -408,10 +402,8 @@ beginning, I had close to no knowledge, 00:04:44.479 --> 00:04:45.840 whether it be about -00:04:45.840 --> 00:04:47.840 +00:04:45.840 --> 00:04:48.880 the free software world, whether it be - -00:04:47.840 --> 00:04:48.880 about... 00:04:48.880 --> 00:04:50.800 @@ -426,11 +418,8 @@ on the screen at the moment, right?) 00:04:54.080 --> 00:04:55.360 No, I'm not sharing anything, I'm -00:04:55.360 --> 00:04:55.759 -just - -00:04:55.759 --> 00:04:59.040 -presenting. +00:04:55.360 --> 00:04:59.040 +just presenting. 00:04:59.040 --> 00:05:02.240 So when I started, I had no @@ -456,11 +445,9 @@ you don't just stumble upon 00:05:17.039 --> 00:05:19.759 LaTeX, you embroil yourself in the -00:05:19.759 --> 00:05:21.199 -turmoil of - -00:05:21.199 --> 00:05:24.560 -suffering, of late nights tweaking, +00:05:19.759 --> 00:05:24.560 +turmoil of suffering, of late +nights tweaking, 00:05:24.560 --> 00:05:27.440 so that your document is exactly in the @@ -468,11 +455,9 @@ so that your document is exactly in the 00:05:27.440 --> 00:05:33.440 perfect shape you want it to be. -00:05:33.440 --> 00:05:35.520 -Soon after, when I got started with Emacs - -00:05:35.520 --> 00:05:36.639 -and LaTeX, +00:05:33.440 --> 00:05:36.639 +Soon after, when I got started with +Emacs and LaTeX, 00:05:36.639 --> 00:05:38.400 I discovered something that truly @@ -489,11 +474,9 @@ this afternoon about Org Mode, 00:05:46.960 --> 00:05:49.360 I won't be spending too much time on it. -00:05:49.360 --> 00:05:50.479 -But Org Mode, - -00:05:50.479 --> 00:05:53.680 -for me, was a revelation. It's... +00:05:49.360 --> 00:05:53.680 +But Org Mode, for me, was a +revelation. It's... 00:05:53.680 --> 00:05:56.880 There was something that, upon reading @@ -522,20 +505,14 @@ stumbled upon 00:06:12.240 --> 00:06:15.919 in your Emacs journey... -00:06:15.919 --> 00:06:18.720 -For me, when I stumbled upon - -00:06:18.720 --> 00:06:19.680 -this +00:06:15.919 --> 00:06:19.680 +For me, when I stumbled upon this 00:06:19.680 --> 00:06:21.840 document, I was starting to get -00:06:21.840 --> 00:06:23.440 -interested in Getting Things - -00:06:23.440 --> 00:06:24.240 -Done and +00:06:21.840 --> 00:06:24.240 +interested in Getting Things Done and 00:06:24.240 --> 00:06:26.560 all the nitty-gritty stuff about @@ -582,10 +559,8 @@ whichever small adjustment 00:07:00.479 --> 00:07:02.000 that you needed in workflow -00:07:02.000 --> 00:07:04.800 +00:07:02.000 --> 00:07:05.440 whether it be more states for your - -00:07:04.800 --> 00:07:05.440 TODOs, 00:07:05.440 --> 00:07:07.520 @@ -594,11 +569,8 @@ whether it be, oh, I want my weeks to 00:07:07.520 --> 00:07:09.360 start on Monday and not on Saturday, -00:07:09.360 --> 00:07:13.039 -oh, it's half past one and I need - -00:07:13.039 --> 00:07:13.520 -to... +00:07:09.360 --> 00:07:13.520 +oh, it's half past one and I need to... 00:07:13.520 --> 00:07:15.280 in the morning, I mean, and I need to make @@ -691,7 +663,7 @@ want to be doing with Org Mode. I believe at the time the the key 00:08:24.479 --> 00:08:29.199 -issue that triggered this reflex for me was +issue that triggered this reflex for me was 00:08:29.199 --> 00:08:31.039 I wanted to do something with the agenda. @@ -708,10 +680,8 @@ for those of you who know, in your 00:08:36.320 --> 00:08:38.000 agenda, you have the ability to have many -00:08:38.000 --> 00:08:39.440 +00:08:38.000 --> 00:08:41.200 files, and you have the ability to have - -00:08:39.440 --> 00:08:41.200 categories. 00:08:41.200 --> 00:08:47.920 @@ -732,10 +702,8 @@ group for my professional life, I could 00:08:55.440 --> 00:08:56.000 have a group -00:08:56.000 --> 00:08:59.120 +00:08:56.000 --> 00:08:59.600 for one work, the second - -00:08:59.120 --> 00:08:59.600 work... 00:08:59.600 --> 00:09:00.800 @@ -786,10 +754,8 @@ that I have is just to show you 00:09:37.040 --> 00:09:40.240 how simple it is to become a maintainer, -00:09:40.240 --> 00:09:41.600 +00:09:40.240 --> 00:09:42.800 how to become more involved with the - -00:09:41.600 --> 00:09:42.800 development. 00:09:42.800 --> 00:09:46.320 @@ -820,7 +786,7 @@ is coming from someone who's never studied programming-- 00:10:01.760 --> 00:10:04.399 -it made sense. +it made sense. 00:10:04.399 --> 00:10:06.079 Everything is so verbose when you get @@ -870,11 +836,9 @@ Fast forward maybe two to three weeks of 00:10:38.560 --> 00:10:41.600 intense turmoil and many nights which -00:10:41.600 --> 00:10:42.720 -were spent - -00:10:42.720 --> 00:10:46.079 -single-mindedly working on this project, +00:10:41.600 --> 00:10:46.079 +were spent single-mindedly working on +this project, 00:10:46.079 --> 00:10:48.079 two weeks after, I had something that was @@ -894,11 +858,9 @@ it just felt like, okay, I can contribute 00:11:00.320 --> 00:11:02.160 something to Org Mode, and I can do -00:11:02.160 --> 00:11:06.000 -something that would benefit as many people - -00:11:06.000 --> 00:11:07.600 -as possible. +00:11:02.160 --> 00:11:07.600 +something that would benefit as many +people as possible. 00:11:07.600 --> 00:11:09.519 And to me, that was the click. That's when @@ -915,10 +877,8 @@ that felt useful to the community. 00:11:18.079 --> 00:11:20.079 And nowadays, as I told you, I -00:11:20.079 --> 00:11:21.760 +00:11:20.079 --> 00:11:22.640 maintain packages, but really, nothing - -00:11:21.760 --> 00:11:22.640 has changed. 00:11:22.640 --> 00:11:24.399 @@ -969,10 +929,8 @@ step where you're really worried 00:11:57.440 --> 00:11:59.360 about learning Elisp because it feels -00:11:59.360 --> 00:12:01.440 +00:11:59.360 --> 00:12:02.399 like such a monumental task to be - -00:12:01.440 --> 00:12:02.399 undertaking 00:12:02.399 --> 00:12:04.720 @@ -997,7 +955,7 @@ if you've been using Org Mode, maybe one day you thought, "oh, yes, 00:12:15.600 --> 00:12:18.160 -I wish I could do this but I can't," +I wish I could do this but I can't," 00:12:18.160 --> 00:12:19.920 or maybe do try to do this, @@ -1048,7 +1006,7 @@ we are doing this entire presentation-- sorry, this entire conference with free software. 00:13:00.800 --> 00:13:02.240 -Just see all the things we've been able +Just see all the things we've been able 00:13:02.240 --> 00:13:03.920 to do in free software. @@ -1090,7 +1048,7 @@ in Emacs. You might be scared, but just do it. Just give it a shot. 00:13:35.920 --> 00:13:38.560 -Just give it maybe one afternoon. +Just give it maybe one afternoon. 00:13:38.560 --> 00:13:39.199 Try to read it. @@ -1107,10 +1065,8 @@ presentation right now, and if you're 00:13:45.680 --> 00:13:47.199 interested enough in any of the talks -00:13:47.199 --> 00:13:48.560 +00:13:47.199 --> 00:13:49.519 you're going to have during the entire - -00:13:48.560 --> 00:13:49.519 conference, 00:13:49.519 --> 00:13:51.839 @@ -1120,10 +1076,10 @@ do give it a shot. I'm pretty sure you will like the journey 00:13:52.959 --> 00:13:55.760 -on which you will be embarking upon. So i +on which you will be embarking upon. So I 00:13:55.760 --> 00:13:57.120 -believe i'm finishing one minute early +believe I'm finishing one minute early, 00:13:57.120 --> 00:14:01.040 but I see quite a bit of questions already. @@ -1132,7 +1088,7 @@ but I see quite a bit of questions already. I'm not sure. Sacha, should I 00:14:04.320 --> 00:14:06.000 -just be reading the questions, or +just be reading the questions, or 00:14:06.000 --> 00:14:07.120 do you want to be feeding me the @@ -1144,7 +1100,7 @@ questions? (Amin: It's really up to you. it's 00:14:11.120 --> 00:14:12.320 -completely up to you. +completely up to you. 00:14:12.320 --> 00:14:13.600 If you've got the questions @@ -1176,17 +1132,13 @@ Yeah. I mean, I do believe... There's 00:14:29.680 --> 00:14:31.360 an idea of privilege. I mean, I'm -00:14:31.360 --> 00:14:34.639 -french. I live in... I'm lucky enough to - -00:14:34.639 --> 00:14:35.279 +00:14:31.360 --> 00:14:35.279 +French. I live in... I'm lucky enough to be here -00:14:35.279 --> 00:14:38.560 -at university, okay, and I'm fairly aware - -00:14:38.560 --> 00:14:39.120 -of the +00:14:35.279 --> 00:14:39.120 +at university, okay, and I'm fairly +aware of the 00:14:39.120 --> 00:14:41.600 discrepancies that happen, even in France, @@ -1230,11 +1182,9 @@ Emacs. What I might do... I'm going to share my 00:15:13.519 --> 00:15:15.120 screen just to show you -00:15:15.120 --> 00:15:19.519 +00:15:15.120 --> 00:15:22.880 how this works. I will be sharing - -00:15:19.519 --> 00:15:22.880 -this window. +this window. 00:15:22.880 --> 00:15:24.399 I believe it's frozen on my end, so I @@ -1270,7 +1220,7 @@ learn Elisp. Maybe the best chance that you have 00:15:46.880 --> 00:15:49.040 -is just to go open these info pages. +is just to go open these info pages. 00:15:49.040 --> 00:15:50.959 I'm sure someone will be kind enough to @@ -1285,7 +1235,7 @@ on IRC but it's probably the best way 00:15:56.880 --> 00:15:59.040 -to get started with Elisp. +to get started with Elisp. 00:15:59.040 --> 00:16:01.279 You know, we tend to get obsessed, with @@ -1369,7 +1319,7 @@ no worries.) Oh, splendid, so I won't have to make a 00:16:52.720 --> 00:16:54.800 -fool out of myself. +fool out of myself. 00:16:54.800 --> 00:16:56.800 So the last question I wanted to answer was @@ -1407,10 +1357,8 @@ guides or places to start? 00:17:19.679 --> 00:17:23.199 i get a bit overwhelmed by some things. -00:17:23.199 --> 00:17:24.959 +00:17:23.199 --> 00:17:26.799 For example, the choice of different test - -00:17:24.959 --> 00:17:26.799 frameworks.") 00:17:26.799 --> 00:17:28.240 @@ -1461,17 +1409,14 @@ and you have a section in the manual for this, 00:17:58.400 --> 00:18:00.799 because for me, it was the key step to -00:18:00.799 --> 00:18:01.919 -getting to - -00:18:01.919 --> 00:18:04.320 -develop good packages. It was +00:18:00.799 --> 00:18:04.320 +getting to develop good packages. It was 00:18:04.320 --> 00:18:06.160 understanding basically what the code did 00:18:06.160 --> 00:18:08.960 -and having us something like a +and having us something like a 00:18:08.960 --> 00:18:09.919 REPL (read-evaluate-print-loop) @@ -1485,14 +1430,9 @@ and see exactly which states the 00:18:13.360 --> 00:18:16.000 variables are at which at this point in the -00:18:16.000 --> 00:18:18.400 +00:18:16.000 --> 00:18:20.080 program. That's really my biggest advice - -00:18:18.400 --> 00:18:20.080 -to you - -00:18:20.080 --> 00:18:21.200 -[Music] +to you. 00:18:21.200 --> 00:18:24.400 Any other question? Thanks. Yeah, I see one @@ -1507,7 +1447,7 @@ So there's one. They ask, "How did the freedom of Emacs help you on 00:18:30.080 --> 00:18:33.120 -your way?" +your way?" 00:18:33.120 --> 00:18:36.480 So the freedom of Emacs... I mentioned @@ -1518,23 +1458,17 @@ that Emacs, for me, was my gateway 00:18:38.080 --> 00:18:40.320 into free software and the freedom of -00:18:40.320 --> 00:18:41.360 -Emacs was that +00:18:40.320 --> 00:18:43.840 +Emacs was that you could maybe... First +and foremost, -00:18:41.360 --> 00:18:43.840 -you could maybe... First and foremost, +00:18:43.840 --> 00:18:47.840 +compared to other software, was that +you had -00:18:43.840 --> 00:18:44.960 -compared to - -00:18:44.960 --> 00:18:47.840 -other software, was that you had - -00:18:47.840 --> 00:18:48.400 -behind Emacs, - -00:18:48.400 --> 00:18:51.039 -Elisp, which allows you to read the code, +00:18:47.840 --> 00:18:51.039 +behind Emacs, Elisp, which allows you to +read the code, 00:18:51.039 --> 00:18:52.400 read whatever is going on in the @@ -1545,11 +1479,9 @@ background. 00:18:53.039 --> 00:18:54.640 Surely, if you go deep enough, you'll -00:18:54.640 --> 00:18:56.160 -end up on - -00:18:56.160 --> 00:18:58.000 -C functions that you might not be able to +00:18:54.640 --> 00:18:58.000 +end up in C functions that you might not +be able to 00:18:58.000 --> 00:18:59.679 read if you do not have the experience. @@ -1570,7 +1502,7 @@ the commands have a very verbose name, like something simple as 00:19:10.080 --> 00:19:13.440 -org go to next subtree or +org go to next subtree or 00:19:13.440 --> 00:19:15.840 org go to a parent subtree. You know, things @@ -1680,29 +1612,23 @@ which requires fixing your frozen camera. 00:20:30.080 --> 00:20:31.919 if this is not possible, please post -00:20:31.919 --> 00:20:34.000 +00:20:31.919 --> 00:20:36.240 suit selfies in an easily accessible - -00:20:34.000 --> 00:20:36.240 location." 00:20:36.240 --> 00:20:38.720 Okay, I'll make sure to do this. But yes, I -00:20:38.720 --> 00:20:40.559 +00:20:38.720 --> 00:20:41.200 wanted to hype things up for the - -00:20:40.559 --> 00:20:41.200 conference, 00:20:41.200 --> 00:20:43.039 -so yes I did get the three-piece suit out. +so yes, I did get the three-piece suit out. -00:20:43.039 --> 00:20:44.400 -I'm very glad - -00:20:44.400 --> 00:20:45.919 -you like it. By the way when you get +00:20:43.039 --> 00:20:45.919 +I'm very glad you like it. By the way, +when you get 00:20:45.919 --> 00:20:47.760 a chance to see me live again, @@ -1741,7 +1667,7 @@ that you've added to your repertoire?") Very interesting question. 00:21:17.600 --> 00:21:20.799 -The thing is, +The thing is, 00:21:20.799 --> 00:21:22.320 when you've spent as long as I have on @@ -1810,7 +1736,7 @@ you later today when i'll be presenting my other talks. 00:22:10.159 --> 00:22:13.840 -(Amin: AWesome. +(Amin: Aeesome. 00:22:13.840 --> 00:22:16.880 We have one question @@ -1819,7 +1745,7 @@ We have one question from Jonas, the maintainer 00:22:20.159 --> 00:22:20.880 -from Magit. +from Magit. 00:22:20.880 --> 00:22:24.720 He asks, "When you touched your @@ -1852,13 +1778,11 @@ I'm really sorry. Everything is frozen on my end. 00:22:46.960 --> 00:22:48.720 -(Amin: No problem. Yeah i'm more talking to the +(Amin: No problem.) Yeah I'm more talking +to the 00:22:48.720 --> 00:22:49.940 -audience, I guess.) - -00:22:49.940 --> 00:22:51.520 -[Music] +audience, I guess. 00:22:51.520 --> 00:22:55.120 I hope my lack of @@ -1936,7 +1860,7 @@ and to help give some face-to-face time with the audience. Unfortunately 00:23:51.840 --> 00:23:53.520 -your webcam cut out, but I mean +your webcam cut out, but I mean 00:23:53.520 --> 00:23:55.200 before that.) diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--16-org-roam-presentation-demonstration-and-whats-on-the-horizon--leo-vivier-autogen.vtt b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--16-org-roam-presentation-demonstration-and-whats-on-the-horizon--leo-vivier-autogen.vtt deleted file mode 100644 index 3aec7a89..00000000 --- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--16-org-roam-presentation-demonstration-and-whats-on-the-horizon--leo-vivier-autogen.vtt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1801 +0,0 @@ -WEBVTT - -00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:02.480 -I'm hoping to keep this talk in the 15 - -00:00:02.480 --> 00:00:03.919 -minutes and I'll take five minutes of - -00:00:03.919 --> 00:00:05.279 -question at the end - -00:00:05.279 --> 00:00:07.520 -so hello again I suppose you're starting - -00:00:07.520 --> 00:00:09.200 -to get pretty familiar with me and my - -00:00:09.200 --> 00:00:10.719 -start right now so - -00:00:10.719 --> 00:00:12.480 -right now we're getting into the nitty - -00:00:12.480 --> 00:00:14.719 -gritty we started today - -00:00:14.719 --> 00:00:17.039 -I told you about how I'd ventured from - -00:00:17.039 --> 00:00:18.480 -being a user - -00:00:18.480 --> 00:00:20.800 -to being a maintainer and right now I'm - -00:00:20.800 --> 00:00:22.080 -going to get the chance to - -00:00:22.080 --> 00:00:24.240 -actually tell you more about the project - -00:00:24.240 --> 00:00:25.279 -that I'm maintaining - -00:00:25.279 --> 00:00:28.480 -which is called org rome - -00:00:28.480 --> 00:00:30.560 -so even if I it would have had a better - -00:00:30.560 --> 00:00:32.320 -impact if I'd - -00:00:32.320 --> 00:00:33.840 -didn't scroll the page but you know - -00:00:33.840 --> 00:00:35.520 -sadly I'm out of tea - -00:00:35.520 --> 00:00:37.120 -it's getting late in europe and I'm - -00:00:37.120 --> 00:00:39.600 -starting to get tired - -00:00:39.600 --> 00:00:43.360 -so what I'm gonna do during this talk - -00:00:43.360 --> 00:00:46.160 -is just to do real survey for people who - -00:00:46.160 --> 00:00:48.079 -do not know what orgrom is about - -00:00:48.079 --> 00:00:50.480 -some of you might might have you know - -00:00:50.480 --> 00:00:52.320 -whilst browsing reddit - -00:00:52.320 --> 00:00:54.879 -found a topic about orgrom and thought - -00:00:54.879 --> 00:00:56.480 -to yourself oh that looks interesting - -00:00:56.480 --> 00:00:57.199 -but - -00:00:57.199 --> 00:00:59.680 -you know I have my own workflow and I - -00:00:59.680 --> 00:01:01.039 -get it don't need to change anything - -00:01:01.039 --> 00:01:03.199 -about it you know I'm completely fine - -00:01:03.199 --> 00:01:05.680 -using my very very large file or I'm - -00:01:05.680 --> 00:01:07.520 -completely fine having my - -00:01:07.520 --> 00:01:10.960 -database of notes which is I've been - -00:01:10.960 --> 00:01:14.560 -accruing for like 10 20 30 years or so - -00:01:14.560 --> 00:01:17.759 -so what I want to do during this talk - -00:01:17.759 --> 00:01:20.080 -is both to present to you what orgrom is - -00:01:20.080 --> 00:01:20.960 -about - -00:01:20.960 --> 00:01:23.439 -if you are in this group of people who - -00:01:23.439 --> 00:01:24.000 -do not - -00:01:24.000 --> 00:01:25.600 -know what algorithm is about but would - -00:01:25.600 --> 00:01:27.520 -like to know more but - -00:01:27.520 --> 00:01:30.560 -also for people who have close to no - -00:01:30.560 --> 00:01:33.360 -experience with Emacs and org mode and - -00:01:33.360 --> 00:01:35.040 -was just found their way you know they - -00:01:35.040 --> 00:01:36.880 -wanted to find the system to - -00:01:36.880 --> 00:01:39.840 -write their notes basically and you know - -00:01:39.840 --> 00:01:41.439 -they discovered this little tool which - -00:01:41.439 --> 00:01:42.960 -is called orgrome - -00:01:42.960 --> 00:01:44.479 -and they'd like to know more about this - -00:01:44.479 --> 00:01:46.240 -so I've got 13 - -00:01:46.240 --> 00:01:49.360 -minutes to convince you to use hologram - -00:01:49.360 --> 00:01:53.360 -so if we go in a very broad strokes - -00:01:53.360 --> 00:01:56.799 -what is orgram orgrom - -00:01:56.799 --> 00:01:59.759 -is a way for you to manage backlinks - -00:01:59.759 --> 00:02:00.320 -inside - -00:02:00.320 --> 00:02:03.439 -old mode and the keyword - -00:02:03.439 --> 00:02:07.040 -in what I've just said is links now - -00:02:07.040 --> 00:02:10.080 -there is a principle behind orgrom - -00:02:10.080 --> 00:02:12.879 -which is called the zettelgasten method - -00:02:12.879 --> 00:02:14.239 -which you can see written right there - -00:02:14.239 --> 00:02:15.440 -it's a german word - -00:02:15.440 --> 00:02:18.000 -which means a slit box if you remember - -00:02:18.000 --> 00:02:19.280 -in old libraries - -00:02:19.280 --> 00:02:22.080 -you had actually I believe if I scroll I - -00:02:22.080 --> 00:02:23.440 -should have an example of this - -00:02:23.440 --> 00:02:26.640 -yes so this is a slip box basically in - -00:02:26.640 --> 00:02:28.879 -all libraries you used to have all the - -00:02:28.879 --> 00:02:30.560 -references to the books that the library - -00:02:30.560 --> 00:02:31.599 -used to have - -00:02:31.599 --> 00:02:34.720 -inside those boxes and they're called - -00:02:34.720 --> 00:02:36.080 -slim boxes because you can - -00:02:36.080 --> 00:02:38.480 -insert stuff into the boxes and you can - -00:02:38.480 --> 00:02:41.200 -remove stuff out of the boxes - -00:02:41.200 --> 00:02:44.720 -now basically if I try - -00:02:44.720 --> 00:02:48.000 -to summarize as simply as I may what the - -00:02:48.000 --> 00:02:49.360 -zettel cast method - -00:02:49.360 --> 00:02:52.800 -is about it's about having a way - -00:02:52.800 --> 00:02:56.560 -to work with your notes which considers - -00:02:56.560 --> 00:02:59.920 -elements of knowledge as atoms - -00:02:59.920 --> 00:03:02.000 -so as something that is individual like - -00:03:02.000 --> 00:03:04.159 -a single file - -00:03:04.159 --> 00:03:06.640 -and you consider that in order to build - -00:03:06.640 --> 00:03:07.440 -knowledge - -00:03:07.440 --> 00:03:10.560 -you have to combine atoms together so - -00:03:10.560 --> 00:03:11.120 -that - -00:03:11.120 --> 00:03:14.720 -when you have one atom another atom - -00:03:14.720 --> 00:03:17.519 -if you link them together you have a - -00:03:17.519 --> 00:03:18.879 -complex - -00:03:18.879 --> 00:03:22.000 -thought or a complex molecule - -00:03:22.000 --> 00:03:24.000 -okay don't quote me on the chemistry by - -00:03:24.000 --> 00:03:25.360 -the way I shall remind you I'm an - -00:03:25.360 --> 00:03:26.879 -english major I have no idea what I'm - -00:03:26.879 --> 00:03:28.239 -talking about - -00:03:28.239 --> 00:03:31.360 -so how does it work as far as a - -00:03:31.360 --> 00:03:32.000 -note-taking - -00:03:32.000 --> 00:03:35.280 -system is concerned and to do so - -00:03:35.280 --> 00:03:37.599 -I'm just going to switch really quickly - -00:03:37.599 --> 00:03:39.760 -to my Emacs if I - -00:03:39.760 --> 00:03:43.040 -may so I'm just going to screenshot - -00:03:43.040 --> 00:03:44.959 -onto my mac just give me a second to get - -00:03:44.959 --> 00:03:47.840 -the windows all right - -00:03:47.840 --> 00:03:52.080 -okay it's loading up oh no - -00:03:52.080 --> 00:03:54.720 -I think firefox has crashed again okay - -00:03:54.720 --> 00:03:56.000 -so you're gonna have to give me a second - -00:03:56.000 --> 00:03:58.840 -I need to figure this out - -00:03:58.840 --> 00:04:01.680 -okay so everything is frozen right now - -00:04:01.680 --> 00:04:03.120 -just to tell you so you're gonna have to - -00:04:03.120 --> 00:04:04.720 -deal with my lovely voice - -00:04:04.720 --> 00:04:06.159 -uh I mean can you confirm that if I - -00:04:06.159 --> 00:04:07.920 -switch to a new ttr you can still hear - -00:04:07.920 --> 00:04:09.840 -me - -00:04:09.840 --> 00:04:12.959 -so can you still hear me now - -00:04:12.959 --> 00:04:14.879 -okay so I'm gonna have probably to kill - -00:04:14.879 --> 00:04:16.479 -firefox and log in again - -00:04:16.479 --> 00:04:18.000 -so I'm sorry it's gonna cost us two - -00:04:18.000 --> 00:04:19.600 -minutes but I'm gonna try to be as fast - -00:04:19.600 --> 00:04:20.560 -as I can okay - -00:04:20.560 --> 00:04:28.560 -okay no problem thanks - -00:04:28.560 --> 00:04:35.199 -all right - -00:04:35.199 --> 00:04:37.520 -I guess no event is a good one without - -00:04:37.520 --> 00:04:39.280 -one or two technical difficulties - -00:04:39.280 --> 00:04:42.800 -so I guess this is our share of - -00:04:42.800 --> 00:04:45.360 -technical difficulties this year - -00:04:45.360 --> 00:05:04.800 -no problem - -00:05:04.800 --> 00:05:06.320 -all right guess who's back it's not - -00:05:06.320 --> 00:05:08.160 -britney it's just me sadly so you're - -00:05:08.160 --> 00:05:10.800 -gonna have to make do with me - -00:05:10.800 --> 00:05:12.880 -welcome back well thank you I'm just - -00:05:12.880 --> 00:05:15.520 -gonna turn back on the camera if I may - -00:05:15.520 --> 00:05:19.919 -all righty - -00:05:19.919 --> 00:05:22.400 -and I'm going to make myself a presenter - -00:05:22.400 --> 00:05:23.520 -and I'm going to - -00:05:23.520 --> 00:05:26.160 -share my screen with you sleep box - -00:05:26.160 --> 00:05:26.880 -testing - -00:05:26.880 --> 00:05:29.919 -hello - -00:05:29.919 --> 00:05:32.720 -so if my calculations are correct you - -00:05:32.720 --> 00:05:34.160 -should be able to see my monitor right - -00:05:34.160 --> 00:05:34.800 -now - -00:05:34.800 --> 00:05:38.160 -um yep but not your webcam feed - -00:05:38.160 --> 00:05:39.919 -not my webcam feed okay so I'm going to - -00:05:39.919 --> 00:05:42.800 -stop it - -00:05:42.800 --> 00:05:44.720 -sorry for the little delay folks you - -00:05:44.720 --> 00:05:46.000 -know it's uh - -00:05:46.000 --> 00:05:49.039 -the show must go on can you see it now - -00:05:49.039 --> 00:05:52.320 -um not yet still not - -00:05:52.320 --> 00:06:00.080 -damn it can I stop it okay so I'm gonna - -00:06:00.080 --> 00:06:04.840 -yeah maybe try like sharing a webcam - -00:06:04.840 --> 00:06:32.960 -first - -00:06:32.960 --> 00:06:36.319 -all right I'm back now so I'm going to - -00:06:36.319 --> 00:06:37.759 -share my webcam first - -00:06:37.759 --> 00:06:39.550 -okay - -00:06:39.550 --> 00:06:43.440 -[Music] - -00:06:43.440 --> 00:06:46.560 -all righty so can you confirm whenever - -00:06:46.560 --> 00:06:49.360 -you've got my webcam working - -00:06:49.360 --> 00:06:52.880 -let's see I don't see it yet - -00:06:52.880 --> 00:06:55.919 -unfortunately oh it's loading up yeah - -00:06:55.919 --> 00:06:57.120 -it's coming up - -00:06:57.120 --> 00:06:59.680 -yep I can see it awesome all right okay - -00:06:59.680 --> 00:07:01.199 -we're back on track I've got still eight - -00:07:01.199 --> 00:07:02.880 -minutes left to do so I might have to - -00:07:02.880 --> 00:07:04.160 -have a couple of minutes to my talk if - -00:07:04.160 --> 00:07:06.000 -you don't mind and shave off some - -00:07:06.000 --> 00:07:07.599 -questions - -00:07:07.599 --> 00:07:10.800 -okay do you want to share okay yeah - -00:07:10.800 --> 00:07:13.759 -I'm on my way too all right all right so - -00:07:13.759 --> 00:07:14.639 -please forget - -00:07:14.639 --> 00:07:16.240 -whatever whichever technical - -00:07:16.240 --> 00:07:18.000 -difficulties we might have have had for - -00:07:18.000 --> 00:07:18.479 -the last - -00:07:18.479 --> 00:07:20.240 -three four minutes but we're back on - -00:07:20.240 --> 00:07:22.080 -track now so - -00:07:22.080 --> 00:07:24.960 -uh orgrom what is it and how does it - -00:07:24.960 --> 00:07:26.639 -work so I was telling you all about - -00:07:26.639 --> 00:07:28.720 -atoms and I was telling you about links - -00:07:28.720 --> 00:07:30.720 -but how does it work concretely - -00:07:30.720 --> 00:07:32.800 -so right now what you're seeing on your - -00:07:32.800 --> 00:07:33.840 -screens - -00:07:33.840 --> 00:07:37.199 -is a slip box which is what we the fancy - -00:07:37.199 --> 00:07:38.800 -word that we use to designate your - -00:07:38.800 --> 00:07:39.520 -folder - -00:07:39.520 --> 00:07:41.039 -where all your notes are going to be - -00:07:41.039 --> 00:07:43.280 -living so you have here and I hope you - -00:07:43.280 --> 00:07:44.000 -can see my - -00:07:44.000 --> 00:07:47.039 -uh cursor yes you can so we have a file - -00:07:47.039 --> 00:07:48.199 -which is called - -00:07:48.199 --> 00:07:51.120 -index.org and the good thing is - -00:07:51.120 --> 00:07:52.960 -as you might have garnered by the fact - -00:07:52.960 --> 00:07:54.240 -that it finishes by - -00:07:54.240 --> 00:07:57.039 -that org is that it is just an old mod - -00:07:57.039 --> 00:07:57.599 -file - -00:07:57.599 --> 00:08:00.800 -so I can create a heading - -00:08:00.800 --> 00:08:03.520 -I can create another heading and - -00:08:03.520 --> 00:08:05.280 -everything works as you would expect it - -00:08:05.280 --> 00:08:05.599 -to - -00:08:05.599 --> 00:08:08.879 -it is completely it's just an awkward - -00:08:08.879 --> 00:08:10.400 -file at the end of the day - -00:08:10.400 --> 00:08:13.759 -so now what can we do with this - -00:08:13.759 --> 00:08:15.840 -now I've told you about links and you do - -00:08:15.840 --> 00:08:16.800 -know that - -00:08:16.800 --> 00:08:19.520 -org mode has links so what we're going - -00:08:19.520 --> 00:08:20.080 -to do - -00:08:20.080 --> 00:08:22.479 -is that we're going to create a new file - -00:08:22.479 --> 00:08:23.440 -so we're going to go back - -00:08:23.440 --> 00:08:26.240 -to our directory and what I'm going to - -00:08:26.240 --> 00:08:28.000 -do is that we have a special commands - -00:08:28.000 --> 00:08:28.879 -actually let me just - -00:08:28.879 --> 00:08:31.199 -show you my command I might help you a - -00:08:31.199 --> 00:08:32.240 -little bit - -00:08:32.240 --> 00:08:35.360 -see what I'm doing uh wait which is the - -00:08:35.360 --> 00:08:36.479 -buffer - -00:08:36.479 --> 00:08:39.680 -uh log mode yes exlog so now on the - -00:08:39.680 --> 00:08:41.039 -right side of the monitor you'll be able - -00:08:41.039 --> 00:08:43.120 -to see the command that I'm using - -00:08:43.120 --> 00:08:45.040 -if you don't mind in order to have as - -00:08:45.040 --> 00:08:46.640 -much realistic as possible I'm going to - -00:08:46.640 --> 00:08:48.480 -make it a little bit shorter - -00:08:48.480 --> 00:08:50.720 -smaller I should say is it not too small - -00:08:50.720 --> 00:08:52.320 -yeah I believe it's good - -00:08:52.320 --> 00:08:54.720 -so what I'm going to do is I'm going to - -00:08:54.720 --> 00:08:55.760 -run a command - -00:08:55.760 --> 00:08:57.920 -in orgrome which allows me to create a - -00:08:57.920 --> 00:08:59.200 -new note - -00:08:59.200 --> 00:09:02.320 -so I'm going to use my keybinding which - -00:09:02.320 --> 00:09:04.720 -is not this one definitely - -00:09:04.720 --> 00:09:06.800 -and I'm going to create a new file which - -00:09:06.800 --> 00:09:08.000 -is in a - -00:09:08.000 --> 00:09:09.839 -great tradition of examples in - -00:09:09.839 --> 00:09:11.680 -programming I'm going to call - -00:09:11.680 --> 00:09:15.519 -foo right so at the bottom - -00:09:15.519 --> 00:09:17.600 -in the bottom buffer I should say you - -00:09:17.600 --> 00:09:18.720 -are seeing the file - -00:09:18.720 --> 00:09:21.760 -foo which is as you can see here a - -00:09:21.760 --> 00:09:22.720 -capture buffer - -00:09:22.720 --> 00:09:24.640 -just like you would have in blog mode - -00:09:24.640 --> 00:09:25.839 -now what I'm going to do - -00:09:25.839 --> 00:09:28.560 -is that I'm going to validate this file - -00:09:28.560 --> 00:09:29.200 -and now - -00:09:29.200 --> 00:09:32.560 -you see that we are in the file foo - -00:09:32.560 --> 00:09:36.240 -and the good thing is that I can start - -00:09:36.240 --> 00:09:39.440 -writing without having to worry - -00:09:39.440 --> 00:09:42.160 -about anything else and I was thinking I - -00:09:42.160 --> 00:09:43.760 -was going to say to say that I'm - -00:09:43.760 --> 00:09:46.160 -showing off about my typing skills but I - -00:09:46.160 --> 00:09:47.680 -did make mistakes so - -00:09:47.680 --> 00:09:50.959 -well nobody's perfect right so now we do - -00:09:50.959 --> 00:09:53.760 -have this view file and we're going to - -00:09:53.760 --> 00:09:55.519 -go back to the index so let's go back to - -00:09:55.519 --> 00:09:56.800 -the directory - -00:09:56.800 --> 00:09:58.560 -we're going to refresh the file as you - -00:09:58.560 --> 00:10:00.000 -can see we have a file which is called - -00:10:00.000 --> 00:10:00.560 -foo - -00:10:00.560 --> 00:10:03.360 -and we have the index so now what I'm - -00:10:03.360 --> 00:10:04.399 -going to do - -00:10:04.399 --> 00:10:06.480 -is that I'm going to insert a link to - -00:10:06.480 --> 00:10:07.760 -this file - -00:10:07.760 --> 00:10:09.920 -so we're going to run another orgrim - -00:10:09.920 --> 00:10:11.360 -command which you can see here - -00:10:11.360 --> 00:10:14.160 -orgrim inset and I'm going to insert a - -00:10:14.160 --> 00:10:15.279 -link to the file - -00:10:15.279 --> 00:10:17.279 -foo and as you can see it has now - -00:10:17.279 --> 00:10:18.959 -appeared now what I'm going to do - -00:10:18.959 --> 00:10:21.920 -I'm going to save the file and now I'm - -00:10:21.920 --> 00:10:23.040 -going to show you - -00:10:23.040 --> 00:10:24.480 -the little thing I told you about - -00:10:24.480 --> 00:10:26.720 -backlinks before so I'm afraid I'm going - -00:10:26.720 --> 00:10:27.680 -to have to hide - -00:10:27.680 --> 00:10:29.680 -the commands for now but don't worry - -00:10:29.680 --> 00:10:30.880 -I'll be back - -00:10:30.880 --> 00:10:33.760 -and I'm going to show you the side - -00:10:33.760 --> 00:10:34.320 -buffer - -00:10:34.320 --> 00:10:35.839 -so it is the buffer that you see on the - -00:10:35.839 --> 00:10:38.079 -right side of your screen - -00:10:38.079 --> 00:10:40.000 -and right now it's telling you that - -00:10:40.000 --> 00:10:42.560 -index does not have any backlink - -00:10:42.560 --> 00:10:45.440 -which is normal but if we follow the - -00:10:45.440 --> 00:10:46.320 -link - -00:10:46.320 --> 00:10:49.200 -fu now you see something different on - -00:10:49.200 --> 00:10:50.560 -the right side so as you can see on the - -00:10:50.560 --> 00:10:52.160 -left side we're back insta inside the - -00:10:52.160 --> 00:10:53.360 -file foo - -00:10:53.360 --> 00:10:55.600 -but on the right side we have something - -00:10:55.600 --> 00:10:56.560 -showing up - -00:10:56.560 --> 00:11:00.160 -one backlink in the file index - -00:11:00.160 --> 00:11:03.519 -in under the heading heading you have - -00:11:03.519 --> 00:11:04.399 -the file - -00:11:04.399 --> 00:11:07.680 -sorry the link foo and you can just open - -00:11:07.680 --> 00:11:08.720 -the link - -00:11:08.720 --> 00:11:10.720 -and you will be brought exactly where it - -00:11:10.720 --> 00:11:12.640 -is so - -00:11:12.640 --> 00:11:16.240 -okay so that was one thing now just - -00:11:16.240 --> 00:11:17.600 -to make sure that you've understood - -00:11:17.600 --> 00:11:19.360 -properly I'm going to go back to the - -00:11:19.360 --> 00:11:20.320 -index - -00:11:20.320 --> 00:11:23.920 -I'm going to create a second file - -00:11:23.920 --> 00:11:25.440 -so now I'm going to use a command that - -00:11:25.440 --> 00:11:27.680 -is slightly different so let me just uh - -00:11:27.680 --> 00:11:30.800 -show you the commands on the right - -00:11:30.800 --> 00:11:32.480 -I'm going to run the command orgrim - -00:11:32.480 --> 00:11:33.839 -insert and I'm going to - -00:11:33.839 --> 00:11:37.519 -end to enter a file which is called bar - -00:11:37.519 --> 00:11:39.600 -so again at the bottom you can see that - -00:11:39.600 --> 00:11:41.440 -I have a new file bar - -00:11:41.440 --> 00:11:45.920 -I'm going to validate this file - -00:11:45.920 --> 00:11:49.760 -okay I'm going to save index.org - -00:11:49.760 --> 00:11:52.959 -and now if we go in bar and if I show - -00:11:52.959 --> 00:11:54.320 -you - -00:11:54.320 --> 00:11:55.920 -the links on the side you can see that - -00:11:55.920 --> 00:11:58.240 -exactly the same we have a link - -00:11:58.240 --> 00:12:00.480 -now just to make the pictures complete - -00:12:00.480 --> 00:12:02.639 -inside the file bar I'm going to insert - -00:12:02.639 --> 00:12:05.200 -a link to foo I'm going to save I'm - -00:12:05.200 --> 00:12:06.959 -going to go to the file foo and now on - -00:12:06.959 --> 00:12:07.920 -the right side - -00:12:07.920 --> 00:12:11.120 -you can see that we have two backlinks - -00:12:11.120 --> 00:12:13.839 -now you're gonna tell me yeah thank you - -00:12:13.839 --> 00:12:14.720 -leo but - -00:12:14.720 --> 00:12:17.760 -what's the point well the thing is - -00:12:17.760 --> 00:12:20.320 -it might sound it might seem very simple - -00:12:20.320 --> 00:12:22.160 -but I've just shown you - -00:12:22.160 --> 00:12:24.160 -but programmatically it's a little hard - -00:12:24.160 --> 00:12:26.160 -to do like we have to - -00:12:26.160 --> 00:12:28.000 -look into your files to make sure that - -00:12:28.000 --> 00:12:30.079 -every time you link your file - -00:12:30.079 --> 00:12:32.240 -somewhere else we need to track - -00:12:32.240 --> 00:12:34.079 -everything down - -00:12:34.079 --> 00:12:37.920 -and now as simple as orgrum might be - -00:12:37.920 --> 00:12:39.519 -looking to you - -00:12:39.519 --> 00:12:42.240 -the thing is what we try to do with - -00:12:42.240 --> 00:12:43.279 -orgrum - -00:12:43.279 --> 00:12:45.920 -is to make sure that your collection of - -00:12:45.920 --> 00:12:46.399 -notes - -00:12:46.399 --> 00:12:50.320 -remains consistent whatever we do - -00:12:50.320 --> 00:12:54.079 -an example for instance like right now - -00:12:54.079 --> 00:12:56.880 -I've told you about a file named foo and - -00:12:56.880 --> 00:12:58.000 -the file name - -00:12:58.000 --> 00:13:01.120 -bar let's say that for whatever reason - -00:13:01.120 --> 00:13:03.920 -you decide to rename your file foo to - -00:13:03.920 --> 00:13:04.720 -something - -00:13:04.720 --> 00:13:08.079 -very original let's just say bar - -00:13:08.079 --> 00:13:11.040 -so we actually have a way in Emacs in - -00:13:11.040 --> 00:13:12.320 -orgrim I should say - -00:13:12.320 --> 00:13:14.560 -when you modify the title at the top of - -00:13:14.560 --> 00:13:15.680 -the file - -00:13:15.680 --> 00:13:18.880 -so we get foo I've modified it with baz - -00:13:18.880 --> 00:13:20.320 -you can see at the bottom that right now - -00:13:20.320 --> 00:13:22.000 -we haven't saved and we are still in the - -00:13:22.000 --> 00:13:22.519 -file - -00:13:22.519 --> 00:13:26.079 -fu.org I'm going to save - -00:13:26.079 --> 00:13:29.360 -and now what you see is - -00:13:29.360 --> 00:13:32.560 -a new name for the file but you may ask - -00:13:32.560 --> 00:13:35.360 -wait a second in the other file we had a - -00:13:35.360 --> 00:13:36.880 -link to this file - -00:13:36.880 --> 00:13:38.880 -does it mean that it's broken does it - -00:13:38.880 --> 00:13:40.560 -means does it mean sorry - -00:13:40.560 --> 00:13:43.440 -that we cannot access the file anymore - -00:13:43.440 --> 00:13:43.920 -but - -00:13:43.920 --> 00:13:46.959 -when we go there beginning to go in the - -00:13:46.959 --> 00:13:48.000 -index - -00:13:48.000 --> 00:13:50.399 -so obviously the actual description of - -00:13:50.399 --> 00:13:52.079 -the link hasn't been updated - -00:13:52.079 --> 00:13:54.320 -but if I show you what goes on under the - -00:13:54.320 --> 00:13:55.680 -hood by showing you - -00:13:55.680 --> 00:13:57.440 -what is fontify what is behind the - -00:13:57.440 --> 00:14:00.000 -content of the link - -00:14:00.000 --> 00:14:02.320 -actually it didn't work and that's why - -00:14:02.320 --> 00:14:04.079 -you never present live folks because - -00:14:04.079 --> 00:14:04.639 -otherwise you're - -00:14:04.639 --> 00:14:05.920 -just going to show problems with the - -00:14:05.920 --> 00:14:08.880 -software and that's not good - -00:14:08.880 --> 00:14:12.079 -so something must have gone on obviously - -00:14:12.079 --> 00:14:15.120 -but generally speaking the file should - -00:14:15.120 --> 00:14:17.120 -have been updated - -00:14:17.120 --> 00:14:18.959 -damn I'm showing you bugging my software - -00:14:18.959 --> 00:14:21.279 -that's not very professional now is it - -00:14:21.279 --> 00:14:25.040 -basically to come back to the main id - -00:14:25.040 --> 00:14:28.079 -what we try to do with orgrom is to make - -00:14:28.079 --> 00:14:28.880 -sure that - -00:14:28.880 --> 00:14:32.639 -everything remains consistent we - -00:14:32.639 --> 00:14:35.279 -really much love the system of - -00:14:35.279 --> 00:14:37.360 -organization that is behind this little - -00:14:37.360 --> 00:14:38.720 -castle method - -00:14:38.720 --> 00:14:40.240 -now I was going at this point of the - -00:14:40.240 --> 00:14:41.600 -presentation basically I wanted to go - -00:14:41.600 --> 00:14:42.639 -back to firefox - -00:14:42.639 --> 00:14:45.199 -and show you more stuff but it's likely - -00:14:45.199 --> 00:14:46.880 -that it's going to crash again - -00:14:46.880 --> 00:14:48.959 -so I'm not going to tempt the devil and - -00:14:48.959 --> 00:14:50.240 -I'm just going to continue talking to - -00:14:50.240 --> 00:14:51.680 -you like that - -00:14:51.680 --> 00:14:54.800 -so the zettelkasten method - -00:14:54.800 --> 00:14:58.160 -is a very organic way - -00:14:58.160 --> 00:15:01.839 -to write notes and if you think - -00:15:01.839 --> 00:15:04.959 -I I believe as all mode users - -00:15:04.959 --> 00:15:06.639 -we share quite a lot of features and I'm - -00:15:06.639 --> 00:15:08.000 -out of time I'm just going to take one - -00:15:08.000 --> 00:15:09.600 -more minute to answer this question - -00:15:09.600 --> 00:15:12.320 -that I'm asking myself anyway but if - -00:15:12.320 --> 00:15:14.560 -you're anything like me - -00:15:14.560 --> 00:15:16.079 -you've you've been through many - -00:15:16.079 --> 00:15:18.240 -iterations of your workflow inside of - -00:15:18.240 --> 00:15:18.959 -mode - -00:15:18.959 --> 00:15:20.959 -do I keep all my professional stuff - -00:15:20.959 --> 00:15:22.959 -under one heading or do I create a - -00:15:22.959 --> 00:15:24.399 -separate file for this - -00:15:24.399 --> 00:15:25.920 -you know those types of questions on - -00:15:25.920 --> 00:15:28.000 -which you could ponder for - -00:15:28.000 --> 00:15:30.639 -many many hours at night generally when - -00:15:30.639 --> 00:15:31.360 -you have a - -00:15:31.360 --> 00:15:34.560 -tight deadline to be following but - -00:15:34.560 --> 00:15:36.959 -what I've discovered by using orgrim for - -00:15:36.959 --> 00:15:38.240 -taking notes about - -00:15:38.240 --> 00:15:40.720 -my academic projects or by taking notes - -00:15:40.720 --> 00:15:41.360 -on - -00:15:41.360 --> 00:15:44.880 -you know anything worth writing about - -00:15:44.880 --> 00:15:47.440 -is that not having to worry about the - -00:15:47.440 --> 00:15:49.199 -structure if you files - -00:15:49.199 --> 00:15:52.399 -just having to worry about atoms - -00:15:52.399 --> 00:15:56.079 -and links it does wonder - -00:15:56.079 --> 00:15:58.480 -for the way you think about problems it - -00:15:58.480 --> 00:16:00.639 -does wonder about your creativity - -00:16:00.639 --> 00:16:04.800 -and it does wonder about your ability to - -00:16:04.800 --> 00:16:07.519 -take your thoughts put them on a paper - -00:16:07.519 --> 00:16:08.800 -and generally you know during this - -00:16:08.800 --> 00:16:10.399 -process you realize oh maybe I do not - -00:16:10.399 --> 00:16:13.120 -know this concept as well as I should - -00:16:13.120 --> 00:16:16.079 -but I've never had a system which - -00:16:16.079 --> 00:16:16.800 -brought me - -00:16:16.800 --> 00:16:19.839 -as much serendipity as this system - -00:16:19.839 --> 00:16:21.440 -and for those who don't know serendipity - -00:16:21.440 --> 00:16:24.880 -the ability to come up with novel ideas - -00:16:24.880 --> 00:16:28.800 -on the spot contextually so - -00:16:28.800 --> 00:16:32.240 -this was just a little primer on what - -00:16:32.240 --> 00:16:34.959 -orgrom and the zettelkasten is about in - -00:16:34.959 --> 00:16:36.000 -about - -00:16:36.000 --> 00:16:38.000 -20 minutes I'll be giving you a talk - -00:16:38.000 --> 00:16:39.680 -about the technical aspects of orgrim - -00:16:39.680 --> 00:16:40.800 -which I'm certain - -00:16:40.800 --> 00:16:43.040 -some of you will be very interested in - -00:16:43.040 --> 00:16:44.160 -and - -00:16:44.160 --> 00:16:46.160 -otherwise I do have a youtube channel - -00:16:46.160 --> 00:16:48.560 -where I try to - -00:16:48.560 --> 00:16:50.720 -record videos where I explain to you - -00:16:50.720 --> 00:16:52.079 -what the org - -00:16:52.079 --> 00:16:53.839 -what organ is about what the method is - -00:16:53.839 --> 00:16:55.600 -about and - -00:16:55.600 --> 00:16:57.040 -and I'll just finish on this I'm two - -00:16:57.040 --> 00:16:58.720 -minutes extra time sorry - -00:16:58.720 --> 00:17:02.399 -but um we do know that a lot of people - -00:17:02.399 --> 00:17:04.079 -are interested into orgrim I mentioned - -00:17:04.079 --> 00:17:04.959 -at the very beginning of the - -00:17:04.959 --> 00:17:06.160 -presentation - -00:17:06.160 --> 00:17:09.360 -that a lot of people discovered Emacs - -00:17:09.360 --> 00:17:10.640 -and orgrom - -00:17:10.640 --> 00:17:14.640 -and old mode even through orgrom - -00:17:14.640 --> 00:17:18.400 -and we feel that we have a duty to - -00:17:18.400 --> 00:17:20.959 -introduce those people this new pool of - -00:17:20.959 --> 00:17:22.720 -people most of whom are - -00:17:22.720 --> 00:17:25.439 -academics into the world of Emacs and - -00:17:25.439 --> 00:17:27.600 -into the water free software - -00:17:27.600 --> 00:17:30.240 -and right now the thing is we're not - -00:17:30.240 --> 00:17:32.240 -doing a particularly good job at writing - -00:17:32.240 --> 00:17:34.080 -manuals I'm just going to try - -00:17:34.080 --> 00:17:36.160 -to stop sharing my screen because I'm - -00:17:36.160 --> 00:17:37.360 -nearly to the end - -00:17:37.360 --> 00:17:40.240 -and just try sharing my firefox windows - -00:17:40.240 --> 00:17:41.919 -if it allows me no it doesn't allow me - -00:17:41.919 --> 00:17:43.120 -which is very good that's why I won't - -00:17:43.120 --> 00:17:44.160 -have to - -00:17:44.160 --> 00:17:47.200 -to screw things up but - -00:17:47.200 --> 00:17:50.080 -uh we know that our manual is not fully - -00:17:50.080 --> 00:17:50.880 -up to date - -00:17:50.880 --> 00:17:53.760 -but believe me one of the key focus - -00:17:53.760 --> 00:17:54.480 -right now - -00:17:54.480 --> 00:17:56.960 -is making sure that within two to three - -00:17:56.960 --> 00:17:57.840 -months - -00:17:57.840 --> 00:17:59.679 -we have a good tutorial for people to - -00:17:59.679 --> 00:18:02.559 -join and we have good videos for people - -00:18:02.559 --> 00:18:03.840 -to get introduced to the topics we're - -00:18:03.840 --> 00:18:04.640 -covering - -00:18:04.640 --> 00:18:06.320 -and that's me done so thank you so much - -00:18:06.320 --> 00:18:07.679 -for listening and now I'll be taking - -00:18:07.679 --> 00:18:09.840 -some questions - -00:18:09.840 --> 00:18:12.880 -thank you very much leo oh thank you - -00:18:12.880 --> 00:18:17.679 -cheers we have I think about two minutes - -00:18:17.679 --> 00:18:19.440 -four questions and I see a lot of them - -00:18:19.440 --> 00:18:20.880 -on the pad - -00:18:20.880 --> 00:18:23.120 -would you take them sure so yep I'm - -00:18:23.120 --> 00:18:24.320 -scrolling I'm scrolling - -00:18:24.320 --> 00:18:27.600 -uh getting things done that's aldrich uh - -00:18:27.600 --> 00:18:30.000 -still scrolling okay olgram oh wow okay - -00:18:30.000 --> 00:18:31.679 -so we do have quite a lot of questions - -00:18:31.679 --> 00:18:33.600 -so please excuse me if I'm answering - -00:18:33.600 --> 00:18:34.799 -your questions really fast but I just - -00:18:34.799 --> 00:18:35.760 -want to make sure that I cover - -00:18:35.760 --> 00:18:38.080 -as much ground as possible so what is - -00:18:38.080 --> 00:18:40.240 -the functionality of all chrome unlinked - -00:18:40.240 --> 00:18:41.039 -references - -00:18:41.039 --> 00:18:43.200 -so basically when you have a file that - -00:18:43.200 --> 00:18:45.200 -is not linked anywhere - -00:18:45.200 --> 00:18:48.000 -this function allows you to see uh let's - -00:18:48.000 --> 00:18:49.520 -say we have a file Emacs - -00:18:49.520 --> 00:18:51.200 -and we've talked about Emacs in another - -00:18:51.200 --> 00:18:53.200 -note but we haven't created a link - -00:18:53.200 --> 00:18:57.440 -what this command do is that it - -00:18:57.440 --> 00:18:59.520 -looks into your folder for every mention - -00:18:59.520 --> 00:19:00.720 -of Emacs that is not - -00:19:00.720 --> 00:19:03.840 -linked to the note Emacs and it prints - -00:19:03.840 --> 00:19:05.039 -all the results in the buffer so that - -00:19:05.039 --> 00:19:06.480 -you know okay I've talked about Emacs - -00:19:06.480 --> 00:19:07.840 -here but I didn't create a link - -00:19:07.840 --> 00:19:10.480 -do I want to create a link that's it so - -00:19:10.480 --> 00:19:11.840 -is it possible to use the backlinks - -00:19:11.840 --> 00:19:12.480 -features - -00:19:12.480 --> 00:19:15.039 -in regular old buffers right now no it - -00:19:15.039 --> 00:19:16.400 -is not possible we are - -00:19:16.400 --> 00:19:18.080 -having a very controlled environment - -00:19:18.080 --> 00:19:20.240 -which is I told you about this clipbox - -00:19:20.240 --> 00:19:21.280 -folder before - -00:19:21.280 --> 00:19:22.799 -this is where we keep all the nodes and - -00:19:22.799 --> 00:19:24.400 -the reason why we do this will be more - -00:19:24.400 --> 00:19:26.080 -evident when I go through the technical - -00:19:26.080 --> 00:19:27.360 -presentation - -00:19:27.360 --> 00:19:30.720 -but uh it's because of optimization - -00:19:30.720 --> 00:19:32.080 -so I'll get back to you on that - -00:19:32.080 --> 00:19:33.760 -afterwards um - -00:19:33.760 --> 00:19:35.440 -do you make all group database - -00:19:35.440 --> 00:19:37.039 -accessible across computers - -00:19:37.039 --> 00:19:39.760 -uh no I do not because I'm only using my - -00:19:39.760 --> 00:19:41.760 -laptop but plenty of people have had - -00:19:41.760 --> 00:19:44.559 -a lot of success doing so either by - -00:19:44.559 --> 00:19:47.039 -sharing the files via a sync thing or by - -00:19:47.039 --> 00:19:47.679 -any other - -00:19:47.679 --> 00:19:49.760 -method we have a section in a manual - -00:19:49.760 --> 00:19:52.400 -specifying how to do this uh how do you - -00:19:52.400 --> 00:19:53.760 -discover the tags links to add to your - -00:19:53.760 --> 00:19:54.880 -new algorithm note - -00:19:54.880 --> 00:19:56.160 -there is something that I didn't tell - -00:19:56.160 --> 00:19:57.679 -you about which is called orgrim server - -00:19:57.679 --> 00:19:58.240 -which is a - -00:19:58.240 --> 00:20:01.679 -magnificent way to uh access - -00:20:01.679 --> 00:20:04.320 -visually the nodes that you have in your - -00:20:04.320 --> 00:20:05.360 -in your system - -00:20:05.360 --> 00:20:07.840 -you'll have to go to the orgrom.com - -00:20:07.840 --> 00:20:08.799 -website - -00:20:08.799 --> 00:20:10.640 -and please go on our github page and we - -00:20:10.640 --> 00:20:12.080 -show everything and - -00:20:12.080 --> 00:20:14.640 -um I hope what I've told you has excited - -00:20:14.640 --> 00:20:16.000 -you so please go - -00:20:16.000 --> 00:20:18.000 -uh maybe one more question two more - -00:20:18.000 --> 00:20:20.080 -questions just to make sure uh is it - -00:20:20.080 --> 00:20:21.679 -possible to seamlessly link to other - -00:20:21.679 --> 00:20:23.039 -notes with syntax instead of a - -00:20:23.039 --> 00:20:23.919 -keybinding - -00:20:23.919 --> 00:20:25.840 -yes we are working on this this is a - -00:20:25.840 --> 00:20:27.120 -huge project that we're doing with - -00:20:27.120 --> 00:20:28.880 -orgrim which is called uh - -00:20:28.880 --> 00:20:30.960 -link ux and we're trying to do something - -00:20:30.960 --> 00:20:32.880 -which is very close to rome research - -00:20:32.880 --> 00:20:34.559 -which is the software we're using for - -00:20:34.559 --> 00:20:36.880 -inspiration for orgrom - -00:20:36.880 --> 00:20:39.200 -and uh yes there's there are going to be - -00:20:39.200 --> 00:20:41.280 -ways to do this in the future I'm going - -00:20:41.280 --> 00:20:42.640 -to give you a window of - -00:20:42.640 --> 00:20:45.280 -maybe three to four months and one last - -00:20:45.280 --> 00:20:46.320 -question - -00:20:46.320 --> 00:20:48.480 -uh good on you thank you well thank you - -00:20:48.480 --> 00:20:49.440 -for for this - -00:20:49.440 --> 00:20:51.039 -is there an easy way to export several - -00:20:51.039 --> 00:20:53.200 -selected nodes to say a lattice file - -00:20:53.200 --> 00:20:56.960 -latex yes uh I mean it's old mode - -00:20:56.960 --> 00:20:59.840 -at the very core it is org mode so you - -00:20:59.840 --> 00:21:00.480 -know you don't - -00:21:00.480 --> 00:21:02.559 -if you want to export to latex file you - -00:21:02.559 --> 00:21:04.000 -can you just use the - -00:21:04.000 --> 00:21:06.320 -aux latex library which you can access - -00:21:06.320 --> 00:21:08.320 -by pressing ctrl c ctrl - -00:21:08.320 --> 00:21:11.760 -e for export all right is it uh I - -00:21:11.760 --> 00:21:12.480 -believe I'm - -00:21:12.480 --> 00:21:13.919 -it's all the time I had I mean can you - -00:21:13.919 --> 00:21:16.880 -confirm this - -00:21:16.880 --> 00:21:19.039 -okay so if you have more questions don't - -00:21:19.039 --> 00:21:20.240 -worry I'll be in chat - -00:21:20.240 --> 00:21:23.679 -I'll be answering them uh I'm also on on - -00:21:23.679 --> 00:21:26.799 -all the platforms we advertise on on - -00:21:26.799 --> 00:21:28.159 -orgram if you want to reach me I'm - -00:21:28.159 --> 00:21:29.280 -really easy to reach - -00:21:29.280 --> 00:21:31.919 -our gita page is always open so thank - -00:21:31.919 --> 00:21:32.559 -you all for - -00:21:32.559 --> 00:21:35.520 -all your questions and all your energy - -00:21:35.520 --> 00:21:37.440 -about orgrim it is very exciting for me - -00:21:37.440 --> 00:21:38.640 -to to see all this - -00:21:38.640 --> 00:21:42.000 -but right now I'll be ending off the - -00:21:42.000 --> 00:21:44.080 -microphone I should say to nura who is - -00:21:44.080 --> 00:21:45.840 -going to talk to you about the - -00:21:45.840 --> 00:21:48.480 -academic way to use orgrom and I'll be - -00:21:48.480 --> 00:21:50.080 -back afterwards with the technical talk - -00:21:50.080 --> 00:21:53.760 -okay thank you thank you very much leo - -00:21:53.760 --> 00:21:57.760 -see you later guys |