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author | Sacha Chua <sacha@sachachua.com> | 2021-10-27 12:34:36 -0400 |
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committer | Sacha Chua <sacha@sachachua.com> | 2021-10-27 12:34:36 -0400 |
commit | ec8903e18916d1ab775f1c33268e4ad9dd8b35bf (patch) | |
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diff --git a/2021/emacsconf.ics b/2021/emacsconf.ics index 01174dcf..af818e8e 100644 --- a/2021/emacsconf.ics +++ b/2021/emacsconf.ics @@ -1,1576 +1,1576 @@ -BEGIN:VCALENDAR -VERSION:2.0 -PRODID:EmacsConf -X-WR-CALNAME:EmacsConf 2021 -X-WR-TIMEZONE:America/Toronto -X-WR-CALNAME:EmacsConf -CALSCALE:GREGORIAN -METHOD:PUBLISH -BEGIN:VTIMEZONE -TZID:America/Toronto -BEGIN:DAYLIGHT -TZOFFSETFROM:-0500 -TZOFFSETTO:-0400 -TZNAME:EDT -DTSTART:20210314T070000 -END:DAYLIGHT -BEGIN:STANDARD -TZOFFSETFROM:-0400 -TZOFFSETTO:-0500 -TZNAME:EST -DTSTART:20211107T060000 -END:STANDARD -BEGIN:DAYLIGHT -TZOFFSETFROM:-0500 -TZOFFSETTO:-0400 -TZNAME:EDT -DTSTART:20220313T070000 -END:DAYLIGHT -BEGIN:STANDARD -TZOFFSETFROM:-0400 -TZOFFSETTO:-0500 -TZNAME:EST -DTSTART:20221106T060000 -END:STANDARD -END:VTIMEZONE -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Opening remarks -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-day1-open -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/day1-open -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T090000 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T090500 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/day1-open\n# Opening remarks -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Emacs News Highlights -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-news -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/news -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T090500 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T091000 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/news\n# Emacs News Highlights\nSacha Chua <mailto:sach
- a@sachachua.com> - pronouns: she/her\n\nQuick overview of Emacs community
- highlights since the last conference\n\n<https://github.com/sachac/emacsco
- nf-2021-emacs-news-highlights> -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:The True Frownies are the Friends We Made Along the Way: An Anecdot
- e of Emacs's Malleability -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-frownies -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/frownies -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T091100 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T093100 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/frownies\n# The True Frownies are the Friends We Made
- Along the Way: An Anecdote of Emacs's Malleability\nCase Duckworth\n\nEmac
- s is well-known for being extremely flexible\, programmable\, and\nextensi
- ble\; in fact\, that's probably the biggest reason it's still\nbeing used
- after 40+ years of existence\, and even has enough clout to\ngenerate an e
- ntire conference in its name. In this medium-length\npresentation\, I wil
- l add another point to the data set proving Emacs's\nabilities\, by narrat
- ing the latest package I made\, \\`frowny.el\\`\, from\nits conception to
- its current\, nearly-completed state.\n\nI wrote frowny.el to scratch some
- one else's itch as a joke on IRC\, but\nit has been called "pretty useful\
- , for a joke package." I feel like\nthat encapsulates the spirit of Emacs
- and that's why I want to present\non this topic.\n\nAlong the way\, I'll
- discuss just a little of my own history of Emacs\,\nand why I feel it's a
- great tool for non-technical users to sink their\nteeth into. -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Choose Your Own (Technology-Enhanced Learning) Adventure -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-adventure -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/adventure -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T093400 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T095400 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/adventure\n# Choose Your Own (Technology-Enhanced Lear
- ning) Adventure\nGreta Goetz\n\nThis presentation will move through Emacs
- artifacts: first illustrating possible paths for beginners and then mappin
- g out the significance of the enhanced learning potential of Emacs (Caille
- t in Andler & Guerry\, Engelbart\, Markauskaite & Goodyear). The technolog
- y-enhanced learning (TEL) that Emacs affords includes a systems view of 'm
- any\, many features' (Stallman) which surpass the confines of a pre-fabric
- ated environment (Stiegler). This affords diverse possibilities for indivi
- duals to interact creatively and autonomously to satisfy their own needs (
- Ill\nich). Its adaptability will be shown to be an asset in supporting the
- learning trends identified by the latest pedagogical research (Guo).\n\n#
- Intro\n\nThe 'many\, many features' (Stallman 2002: 4) of Emacs do not li
- mit imaginable types of interactivity\, supporting both formal and informa
- l learning (cf. Caillet in Andler & Guerry 2008). Emacs can function as a
- scaffold for development (cf. Vygotsky 1979: 86)\, promoting the creative
- and autonomous ability of individuals to interact with their digital envir
- onment and others who share the use of this tool (Illich 1973). Individual
- s can use Emacs as often or seldom as they want to express their needs and
- meaning in action\, with no obligation to use it (cf. Illich 1973).\n\nTh
- e formal learning involved pertains to Emacs programs and documentation (t
- he 'temple') while related discussion and smaller task-based problem solvi
- ng represents examples of informal learning (the 'forum') (cf. Caillet in
- Andler & Guerry 2008). As a context-rich environment (Trocmé-Fabre 1999)\,
- Emacs fulfills the promise of general computing: not boxing users into pe
- rsonas (cf. Stiegler 2018) but allowing users at all levels to organize an
- d assemble multiple knowledge domains (Markauskaite & Goodyear 2017) and p
- rograms so that they are 'just right'. People wanting to create tailored l
- earning environments who feel alienated or unsupported by pre-fabricated t
- ext and programming environments will find their way with Emacs.\n\n1. Wh
- at if we are beginners overwhelmed by formal Emacs documentation? Two pote
- ntial learning paths:\n\n - a. Build on a needs-basis. Make your own ar
- tifacts: no use-case is too small\; leave your trace.\n - b. Study othe
- rs' inits and use-cases\; Read Planet EmacsLife\; Consult programmer or po
- wer user use-cases\; Map out workflows.\n\n2. Emacs as personal\, creative
- \, autonomous:\n\n - a. Emacs allows for organic ongoing changes to the
- organization of knowledge\, imagination\, and experience (cf. Guerry & Ga
- ume 2009) . This is important as not all learners have the same spatial/vi
- sual needs and because these needs and knowledge can change over time (Vyg
- otsky 1979\; Gardner 1983\; Wang 2020).\n - b. Emacs allows us to contr
- ol our tools and tasks (Illich 1973). By contrast\, care-less use of pre-f
- abricated apps can lead to loss of know-how in life (Stiegler 2018).\n -
- c. The art of collecting traces (digital or not) is timeless - and import
- ant to survival.\n\n3. Emacs as systems design for technology-enhanced le
- arning (TEL):\n\n - a. Good TEL design performance should also educate
- the designer (Goodyear & Retalis 2010). Further\, good design focuses on '
- frameworks'\, which are systems 'that can be customized\, specialized\, or
- extended to provide more specific\, more appropriate\, or slightly differ
- ent capabilities' (Alexander 1993 in Gabriel 1996)\, assembling epistemic
- domains (Markauskaite & Goodyear 2017). This pedagogical approach is suppo
- rted by Emacs artifacts (packages\, documentation\, forums\, etc.).\n -
- b. The 'wise' use of programming (Crichton 1983) actively manages and or
- ganizes workflow. This permits iterative development. Elementary use-case:
- a workflow that relies on PPT and Zoom vs. already having a more modular
- viewpoint supported by diverse Emacs packages. The latter adaptability is
- supported by the latest educational research (Guo). Further: Emacs allows
- movement from user to contributor (Stiegler 2018\; Stavrou).\n - c. Wis
- e programming can include fun programming - 'there are people who want to
- put a stop to that' (Crichton 1983\; Gaffney 2019).\n - d. Extending th
- is systems/design view\, Emacs is developed and maintained by a community
- dedicated to supporting this freedom of use in these multiple contexts (cf
- . Illich 1973).\n - e. One perspective is less likely to override other
- s in such a heterogeneous environment (Morin 2004).\n\n# Conclusion\n\nEma
- cs does not limit any imaginable type of interactivity and promotes a dive
- rsity of related content\, further supporting the pursuit of more advanced
- TEL (viz. Guo). This was illustrated through an elementary use-case that
- compared being limited to PPT as opposed to having basic familiarity with
- Emacs\, which permits manageable\, continuous exploration of knowledge\, w
- orkflows\, and tools (cf. Alexander in Gabriel\; Goodyear & Retalis) and m
- ovement from consumer to creator (Stiegler\; Stavrou). Using Emacs means b
- eing able to use a sophisticated digital tool\, thanks to the contribution
- s of heterogeneous maintainers\, developers\, and community members whose
- artifacts comprise a meta picture. It is possible\, through using Emacs\,
- to learn about the design of digital learning and learning in general as a
- ccess to knowledge is not walled off by prefabricated design(cf. Illich\;
- Stiegler). We can choose our own adventure.\n\n\n# References\n\n## Genera
- l workflow and fun:\n- Bin\, C. (2020). Mastering Emacs in one year. <ht
- tps://github.com/redguardtoo/mastering-emacs-in-one-year-guide/blob/master
- /guide-en.org#on-the-shoulders-of-giants>. Accessed 25 October 2021.\n-
- Gaffney\, N. (2019). Oblique strategies. <https://github.com/zzkt/oblique
- -strategies>. Accessed 25 October 2021.\n- Goetz\, G. (2021). Additional
- references: A back-to-school/GTD Emacs journey. <https://gretzuni.com/art
- icles/a-back-to-school-gtd-emacs-journey>. Accessed 25 October 2021.\n-
- Guerry\, B. (2020). Org-mode features you may not know. <https://bzg.fr/en
- /some-emacs-org-mode-features-you-may-not-know/>. Accessed 25 October 2021
- .\n- Kaiser\, K. (2017). Writing a technical book in Emacs and Org-mode.
- <https://www.kpkaiser.com/programming/writing-a-technical-book-in-emacs-a
- nd-org-mode/>. Accessed 25 October 2021.\n- Planet Emacs Life. <https://
- planet.emacslife.com/>. Accessed 25 October 2021.\n- Stavrou\, P. My pac
- kages for GNU Emacs. <https://protesilaos.com/emacs/>. Accessed 25 October
- 2021.\n- Wellons\, C. Emacs articles. <https://nullprogram.com/tags/ema
- cs/>. Accessed 25 October 2021.\n\n## On TEL design:\n- Caillet\, E. (2
- 008). L’exposition\, le musée: L’éducation informelle comme école de l’édu
- cation formelle. In Andler\, D. & Guerry\, B. (Eds.). *Apprendre demain: S
- ciences cognitives et éducation à l’ère numérique*\, 137-154. Paris: Hatie
- r.\n- Crichton\, M. (1983). *Electronic life*. New York: Knopf.\n- De
- Bono\, E. (2009). *Think! Before it's too late*. London: Random House.\n-
- Engelbart\, D. (1962). *Augmenting human intellect: A conceptual framewo
- rk*. Menlo Park: Stanford Research Institute.\n- Drosos\, I. & Guo\, P.
- (2021). Streamers teaching programming\, art\, and gaming: Cognitive appre
- nticeship\, serendipitous teachable moments\, and tacit expert knowledge.
- IEEE Symposium on Visual Languages and Human-Centric Computing (VL/HCC)\,
- short paper\, 2021. <https://pg.ucsd.edu/pubs.htm>. Accessed 25 October 20
- 21.\n- Gabriel\, R. (1996). *Patterns of software*. New York\, Oxford: O
- xford University Press.\n- Goodyear\, P. & Retalis\, S. (2010). Learning
- \, technology and design. In Goodyear\, P. & Retalis\, S. (Eds.). *Technol
- ogy-enhanced learning: Design patterns and pattern languages*\, 1-27. Rott
- erdam\, Boston: Sense Publishers.\n- Guerry\, B. & Gaume\, N. (2008). Ce
- que les jeux vidéo nous apprennent. In Andler\, D. & Guerry\, B. (Eds.).
- *Apprendre Demain: Sciences cognitives et éducation à l’ère numérique*\, 1
- 55-159. Paris: Hatier.\n- Guo\, P. (2018). Students\, systems\, and inte
- ractions: Synthesizing the first\nfour years of Learning@Scale and chartin
- g the future. L@S 2018\, June 26–28\, 2018\, London\, United Kingdom. DOI:
- https://doi.org/10.1145/3231644.3231662. <https://pg.ucsd.edu/pubs.htm>.
- Accessed 25 October 2021.\n- Guo\, P.\, Kim\, J. & Rubin\, R. (2014). Ho
- w video production affects student engagement: An empirical study of MOOC
- videos. ACM Conference on Learning at Scale. <https://pg.ucsd.edu/pubs.htm
- >. Accessed 25 October 2021.\n- Illich\, I. (1973). *Tools of conviviali
- ty*. New York: Harper & Row.\n- Kim\, J.\, Guo\, P.\, Seaton\, D.\, Mitr
- os\, P.\, Gajos\, K. & Miller\, R. (2014). Understanding in-video dropouts
- and interaction peaks in online lecture videos. ACM Conference on Learnin
- g at Scale. <https://pg.ucsd.edu/pubs.htm>. Accessed 25 October 2021.\n-
- Markauskaite\, L. & Goodyear\, P. (2017). *Epistemic fluency and professi
- onal education: innovation\, knowledgeable action and actionable knowledge
- *. Dordrecht: Springer.\n- Markel\, J. & Guo\, P. (2020). Designing the
- future of experiential learning environments for a post-COVID world: A pre
- liminary case study. NFW ’20 (Symposium on the New Future of Work)\, Augus
- t 3–5\, 2020\, Virtual Event. <https://pg.ucsd.edu/pubs.htm>. Accessed 25
- October 2021.\n- Morin\, E. ([2004] 2008). *La Méthode - tome 6: Éthique
- *. Éditions du Seuil: Paris.\n- Stallman\, R. (2002). *Free software\, f
- ree society*. GNU Press\, Free Software Foundation.\n- Stiegler\, B. (20
- 18). *The neganthropocene*. Open Humanities Press.\n- Trocmé-Fabre\, H.
- (1999). *Réinventer le métier d’apprendre*. Paris: Éditions d’organisation
- .\n- Vygotsky\, L. (1979). *Mind in society: The development of higher p
- sychological processes*. Cambridge and London: Harvard University Press.\n
- - Wang\, S. (2020). Open knowledge. Hope in Source. <https://hopeinsourc
- e.com/open-knowledge/#open-source-knowledge-proof-of-work>. Accessed 25 Oc
- tober 2021.\n\n\n# Availability and preferred Q&A approach\n\nDue to the p
- andemic situation\, my teaching schedule fluctuates so I\nwill not know my
- availability until much closer to the\ndate. Therefore\, I can only guara
- ntee delayed answer response\n(whatever you request)\, but if available\,
- will join live.\nMay I please note that I will be pre-recording my video i
- f this submission is accepted.\n\n\n# Speaker release\n\nBy submitting thi
- s proposal\, I agree that my presentation at\nEmacsConf 2021 is subject to
- the following terms and conditions:\n\nThe EmacsConf organizers may captu
- re audio and video (a "Recording")\nof my presentation and any associated
- materials\, which may include\nslides\, notes\, transcripts\, and prerecor
- ding(s) of my presentation\nthat I provide to the EmacsConf organizers.\n\
- nI authorize the EmacsConf organizers to distribute\, reproduce\,\npublicl
- y display\, and prepare derivative works of the Recording and\nany derivat
- ive works of the Recording (the "Licensed Materials")\nunder the terms of
- the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0\nInternational (CC BY-SA 4
- .0) license.\n\nI grant to the EmacsConf organizers permission to use my n
- ame\,\nlikeness\, and biographic information in association with their use
- \nof the Licensed Materials under the above license.\n\nI represent that I
- have the authority to grant the above license to\nthe EmacsConf organizer
- s. If my presentation incorporates any\nmaterial owned by third parties\,
- I represent that the material is\nsublicensable to the EmacsConf organizer
- s or that my use of them is\nfair use. -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:"GNU's Not UNIX: Why Emacs Demonstrates The UNIX Philosophy Isn't A
- lways The Only Answer" -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-unix -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/unix -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T095600 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T100600 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/unix\n# GNU's Not UNIX: Why Emacs Demonstrates The UNI
- X Philosophy Isn't Always The Only Answer\nDaniel Rose\n\nThe talk targets
- users who are curious about computational philosophies\,\nor those who mi
- ght not know how to best utilise Emacs conceptually. The\ntalk will cover
- what the UNIX philosophy is\, the GNU Free Software\nprinciples\, a typica
- l (Neo)Vi(m) user's approach\, and then how one might\naccomplish this in
- Emacs combining the aformentioned ideals. The\nlisteners will learn how th
- ey can approach Emacs ideologically\, and how\nblocking themselves into on
- e philosophy or the other will limit their\nefficiency. Although you may b
- e a veteran GNU/Linux and Emacs user\,\nunderstanding how to use both phil
- osophies together will still allow you\nto be more performant than without
- .\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes:\n Cut out the portions of expla
- ining the whole UNIX and GNU philosophies\n and instead talk about conc
- rete examples:\n - How can one limit their usage of CLI tools while s
- till maintaining\n the ideals of both.\n - How using CLI tools
- can still perfectly flow into Emacs.\n - How having all programs in
- Emacs and unified keybindings is akin\n to a terminal user. -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Emacs manuals translation and OmegaT -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-omegat -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/omegat -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T100900 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T101900 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/omegat\n# Emacs manuals translation and OmegaT\nJean-C
- hristophe Helary\n\nEven if it is generally agreed that software localizat
- ion is a good thing\, Emacs is lacking in that respect for a number of tec
- hnical reasons. Nonetheless\, the free software using public could greatly
- benefit from Emacs manuals translations\, even if the interface were to r
- emain in English.\n\nOmegaT is a multiplatform GPL3+ "computer aided trans
- lation" (CAT) tool running on OpenJDK 8. CATs are roughly equivalent for t
- ranslators to what IDEs are for code writers. Casual translators can benef
- it from their features but professionals or commited amateurs are the most
- likely to make the most use of such tools.\n\nWhen OmegaT\, free software
- based forges and Emacs meet\, we have a free multi-user translation envir
- onment that can easily sustain the (close to) 2 million words load that co
- mprise the manuals distributed with Emacs\, along with powerful features l
- ike arbitrary string protection for easy typing and QA (quality assurance)
- \, automatic legacy translation handling\, glossary management\, history b
- ased or predictive autocompletion\, etc.\n\nThe current trial project for
- French is hosted on 2 different forges:\n\n1. sr.ht hosts the source file
- s\n <https://sr.ht/~brandelune/documentation_emacs/>\n2. chapril hosts
- the OmegaT team project architecture\n <https://sr.ht/~brandelune/docu
- mentation_emacs/>\n\nThe sources are regularly updated with a po4a based s
- hell script.\n\n# Outline\n\n- Duration: 10 minutes\n- Software used durin
- g the presentation\n - [po4a](https://po4a.org) a tool to convert documen
- tation formats to and from the commonly used `gettext` **PO** format.\n
- po4a supports the `texinfo` format along with many others.\n - [OmegaT](
- https://omegat.org) a "computer aided translation" tool used by translator
- s to efficiently combine translation ressources (legacy translations\, glo
- ssaries\, etc.) so as to produce more consistent translations.\n\nDuring t
- he presentation\, I will show:\n\n- How to use po4a to convert the texi fi
- les to the PO format (the org.org file is also converted)\n- What are the
- specificities of the Emacs manuals and what difficulties they present to t
- he tanslator\n- How to address those specificities in OmegaT\, with regula
- r expressions\n- How to use OmegaT features such as arbitrary string prote
- ction\, legacy translation handling\, glossaries\, autocompletion\, QA\, e
- tc.\n- How to use OmegaT with a team of 2 (or more) translators working at
- the same time\n- How to solve translation conflicts\n\nI will *not* show:
- \n\n- How to create an OmegaT project\n- How to setup an OmegaT team proje
- ct\n- How to use OmegaT from the command line to work in localization pipe
- lines\n- How to use machine translation and MT "post-edit"\n- How to conve
- rt back the translated files to texi format\n- How to install translated t
- exi files for use in Emacs -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:NonGNU ELPA Update -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-nongnu -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/nongnu -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T102200 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T103200 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/nongnu\n# NonGNU ELPA Update\nKaluđerčić\, Philip\n\nN
- onGNU ELPA was announced last year\, as a package repository\nthat will be
- enabled by default in Emacs\, but doesn't require\nany copyright assignme
- nt. This means that a lot of popular\npackages can now be installed easier
- \, without any additional\nconfiguration.\n\nIn this talk I would like the
- give a reminder of what NonGNU\nELPA is and how it works\, update the par
- ticipants on what has\nhappened since last year and what maintainers have
- to do if they\nwant their packages to be added to the repository. -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Manual Package Management in The Era of Repositories - Why and How -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-borg -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/borg -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T103500 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T104500 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/borg\n# Manual Package Management in The Era of Reposi
- tories - Why and How\nDhavan (codingquark)\n\nEmacs now has many package r
- epositories - enought to have conflicts\nand arguments about. The packages
- are becoming big\, they depend on many\nother packages and it is not easy
- to keep track of what all is being\ninstalled in our Emacsen. An aggressi
- ve way out of this is to use Yet\nAnother Package and install all elisp co
- de manually - with borg[1].\n\n[1]: <https://github.com/emacscollective/bo
- rg>\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes: (brief description/outline)\n
- 1. What are we trying to solve?\n 2. What is borg?\n 3. How to u
- se it?\n 4. Assimilate a package for demo -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:telega.el and the Emacs community on Telegram -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-telega -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/telega -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T104800 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T105800 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/telega\n# telega.el and the Emacs community on Telegra
- m\nGabriele Bozzola and Evgeny Zajcev\n\nTelegram is a cross-platform inst
- ant messaging system. The large number of\nfeatures and the widespread ado
- ption make it a good choice for both private\nconversations with friends a
- nd for large online communities. In this talk\, I\nam going to present the
- Emacs community on Telegram and its initiatives. I\nam also going to disc
- uss telega.el\, the Emacs client for Telegram. telega.el\nis a high-qualit
- y package that perfectly integrates in Emacs. It supports\nthe vast majori
- ty of the features supported by the official clients\, while\nadding sever
- al unique ones. In the talk\, I will present the package and\nhighlight so
- me of the most important features. -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Introducing N-Angulator -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-nangulator -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/nangulator -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T110100 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T111100 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/nangulator\n# Introducing N-Angulator\nKevin Haddock\n
- \nThe Unix file system is essentially an N-dimentional sparse array that\n
- currently lacks a decent editor and browser which\ncan effectively leverag
- e the logical tri-angulation (or\, more properly\n"n-angulation") of atoms
- /blobs within it.\n\nN-Angulator is the genesis\, to wit\, the "Model-T\,"
- of such a program.\n\n(see google drive link below for a very old uncircu
- lated prototype\nvideo demo. Be sure and turn the volume UP!)\n\nna.intr
- o.flv\n<https://drive.google.com/file/d/1EZN0Xs8eGlEbSIYFml2lp3GCNnmLQa98/
- view?usp=drive_web>\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes: (brief descripti
- on/outline)\n\nThe reconceptualization of the Unix file system as the N-Di
- mensional\nsparse array will be discussed.\n\nA simple pre-existing databa
- se will be queried.\n\nIf time\, questions will be entertained by video/au
- dio and/or IRC. -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:A day in the life of a janitor -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-janitor -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/janitor -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T111400 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T113400 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/janitor\n# A day in the life of a janitor\nStefan Monn
- ier\n\nBecause of a reckless former Emacs maintainer that shall\n better
- stay unnamed\, ELisp has seen a fair bit of churn in the last 10\n years\
- , making it necessary to clean up "old" code [in order to open up\n the r
- oad for yet more recklessness? ].\n In this documentary we will follow a
- famous janitor in his every day job\n dealing with the aftermath of the c
- l-lib / lexical-binding party.\n\n- ~20 minutes\n Here really\, I'm n
- ot sure how much time this will take. I put 20\n minutes because I thi
- nk I might be able to fill that and I think more\n than that could turn
- too boring. I intend to make it a "live coding"\n kind of thing\, wit
- hout anything like an outline: it's basically "make"\n followed by fixi
- ng the warnings. -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:How to help Emacs maintainers? -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-maintainers -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/maintainers -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T113900 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T114900 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/maintainers\n# How to help Emacs maintainers?\nBastien
- Guerry\n\nAfter 11 years of helping as the Org maintainer\, I would\nlike
- to share a few lessons learned. My goal is help everyone take\ncare of E
- macs maintainance by taking care of Emacs maintainers.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\
- n- 5-10 minutes -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Typesetting Gregorian Chant with Emacs -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-gregorian -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/gregorian -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T115200 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T120200 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/gregorian\n# Typesetting Gregorian Chant with Emacs\nS
- pencer King\n\nThere are a variety of methods for typesetting gregorian\nc
- hant scores and outputting high-quality sheet music. One of these is\na to
- ol called Gregorio\, which integrates with LaTeX allowing scores to\nbe cl
- eanly inserted into other documents. All Gregorio files are plain\ntext\,
- allowing them to easily be shared with other users and managed\nwith a ver
- sion control system. In this talk\, I will give a brief\noverview of the G
- regorio tool and then show how it can be used in\nEmacs by typesetting a s
- imple score. All code and examples will be\nmade available to help new use
- rs get started with typesetting their\nown scores.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n-
- 5-10 minutes: (brief description/outline)\n 1. Introduction to chant
- music\n 2. Introduction to Gregorio\n 3. Example of typesetting a
- score in Emacs\n 4. Code and example availability -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Emacs and Montessori Philosophy -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-montessori -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/montessori -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T123000 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T124000 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/montessori\n# Emacs and Montessori Philosophy\n\n\nAs
- a former Montessori guide and now parent\, I often think about the\nrelati
- onship of this particular educational philosophy and how it manifests\nin
- my work with software\, Emacs in particular. This talk introduces the\ncon
- cept of Emacs as an educational environment and how it expresses elements
- of\nMontessori psychology regarding "Human Tendencies". Human tendencies a
- re innate\ndrives present in everybody that allow us to explore and make s
- ense of our world.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes: (brief descriptio
- n/outline)\n Quick overview of a Montessori classroom environment:\n\n
- - the adults or guides primarily observe and present material\n -
- the children are free to explore materials as they choose (within limits
- )\n - the environment itself is prepared specifically to foster engag
- ement\n\n Enumerate the "Human Tendencies":\n\n - Abstraction\n
- - Activity\n - Communication\n - Exactness\n - Explorati
- on\n - Manipulation (of the environment)\n - Order\n - Orie
- ntation\n - Repetition\n - Self-Perfection\n - Work (also d
- escribed as "purposeful activity")\n\n How does Emacs express these thi
- ngs?\n\n - in the short version\, pose the question\, and perhaps giv
- e one example.\n - Emacs is an environment that provides facilities f
- or individuals to\n find their way to proficiency through their Hum
- an Tendencies.\n - We are all both learners and guides\, Emacs is our
- classroom -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Emacs Research Group\, Season Zero: What we did together with Emacs
- in 2 hours a week for a year -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-erg -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/erg -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T124300 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T125800 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/erg\n# Emacs Research Group\, Season Zero: What we did
- together with Emacs in 2 hours a week for a year\nNoorah Alhasan\, Joe Co
- rneli\, Raymond Puzio\, Leo Vivier\n\nThe four of us met at EmacsConf 2020
- \, and joined together around a\ncommon interest in Emacs and research. S
- ince then\, we have convened as\nthe Emacs Research Group for weekly meeti
- ngs. During these meetings\, we\ntook notes collaboratively\, using a ‘co
- nflict-free replicated data type’\npackage (crdt.el)\; at the end of each
- session\, we debriefed using a\ntemplate that we call a Project Action Rev
- iew (PAR). As as a\nmeta-review of our sessions\, every six weeks we prep
- ared a Causal\nLayered Analysis (CLA)\, which gave us a different perspect
- ive on what we\nhad done. We reflected further on our experiences and met
- hods\, linking\nour CLA to plans and design patterns. As a formal researc
- h output\, we\ncontributed a write-up of these matters to a joint paper wh
- ich we\npresented at the Pattern Languages of Programs Conference (PLoP 20
- 21).\nThe paper included an interactive workshop\, in which we explored ro
- les\nin real-time problem solving and collaboration.\n\nIn our short talk
- we share information about these methods\, making a\ncase for other people
- getting together and creating their own small\nresearch communities simil
- ar to ours. -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:One effective CS grad student workflow -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-cs -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/cs -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T130100 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T131100 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/cs\n# One effective CS grad student workflow\nGreg Col
- adonato\n\nWhen I was an undergrad\, I learned many things\, most of\nwhic
- h I forgot. In the time since then\, I've discovered Org Mode\, Org\nRoam\
- , Org Noter\, Org Ref. PDF Tools\, and Anki. I would like to share\nmy app
- roach for capturing all the information that comes my way as a\nMS CS stud
- ent at Georgia Tech\, in the hopes that I can both get\nfeedback on ways t
- o improve the system I use\, as well as hopefully\ninspire others to build
- workflows that make them more productive.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 mi
- nutes: Go through some typical workflows associated with being a grad stud
- ent\, using the packages mentioned in the abstract. -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Using Org-Mode For Recording Continuous Professional Development -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-professional -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/professional -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T131400 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T132400 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/professional\n# Using Org-Mode For Recording Continuou
- s Professional Development\nPhilip Beadling\n\nI recently had the pleasure
- of being audited for my CPD record with one\nof the large engineering pro
- fessional bodies. I decided to harness\norg-mode's TODO lists to record C
- PD items and my progress against them\ncompletely within Emacs. I also wa
- nted the ability to export the data\nin a well presented\, compact format
- for auditing submission.\n\nThe project was a success (I passed the audit)
- and the resulting system\nintegrates really well into my wider daily Emac
- s workflow\, making future\nCPD recording seamless.\n\nThe talk will expla
- in how I tweaked and extended org-mode to get it to\nrecord the data I wan
- ted\, followed by a demo.\n\nA basic demo org file with embedded elisp can
- be seen here:\n<https://raw.githubusercontent.com/falloutphil/Misc/master
- /cpd.org>\n\nA basic generated PDF from the basic demo is here:\n![img](ht
- tps://preview.redd.it/nvdpmityhuw51.png?width=1169&format=png&auto=webp&s=
- e0c5080560c877aa02933a40c224e52b8a1fed3b)\n\nI have a much more involved e
- xample I could also use for the demo.\n\nThe template contains a few examp
- les. Examples are Goals that are split\nup into Activities. All Activitie
- s must have a Goal\, and within a Goal\nall activities must be complete fo
- r the Goal to be automatically set to\ncomplete.\n\nIt's basically leverag
- ing Org Capture Templates to create custom Goals\nand Activities.\n\nOn sa
- ve or update these are then rendered into a table using Column View.\n\nAc
- tivities are sorted by date they were completed on.\n\nThe Column View is
- pre-configured to be exported to PDF in a condensed\nbut readable format f
- or submission. It stays fairly readable even when\nthe pages get busy.\n\n
- The elisp required is all under the "Config" bullet and Emacs will ask\nto
- execute it on opening the Org file. The elisp concerns itself with\nnice
- custom org capture functions and a few functions to ensure nice\nformattin
- g on export\, etc.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes:\n\nA quick walkth
- rough of the setup and functions\, followed by a demo of how\nto add CPD i
- tems\, and update them. Finally show generation of a PDF\ncontaining all
- the items tabulated and ready for audit review. I\nestimate this at appro
- x 10 minutes. -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Creating technical API documentation and presentations using org-ba
- bel\, restclient\, and org-treeslide -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-tech -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/tech -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T132700 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T133700 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/tech\n# Creating technical API documentation and prese
- ntations using org-babel\, restclient\, and org-treeslide\nJan Ypma\n\nThe
- emacs org-babel package is often mentioned in conjunction with\nliterate
- programming. The ability to mix code segments with prose\nindeed offers an
- intuitive way to augment semantic code pieces with\ntextual descriptions.
- \n\nIn recent projects\, I've started to turn to org-mode as the primary\n
- format to maintain technical documentation\, as well as slides for a\ntech
- nical language course. By using org-babel to pull in "live" code\nfor REST
- requests\, language examples\, and shell scripts\, one can be\nsure that
- the documentation and slides are never out of date.\n\nThe session will sh
- ow how leverage org-babel\, restclient and\norg-treeslide to write and pre
- sent technical documentation with style.\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- Introduction\
- n- Demo: Developer guide\n- Demo: REST API guide\n- Demo: Presentations\n-
- Used packages and configuration -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Org as an executable format -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-exec -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/exec -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T134100 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T135100 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/exec\n# Org as an executable format\nTom Gillespie\n\n
- Org mode is known for its flexibility\, power\, and staggeringly diverse\n
- number of workflows\, users\, and use cases.\n\nThis talk explores just ho
- w far we can push the boundaries of the sane\nand sensible with regard to
- Org workflows.\n\nIn particular it will discuss shebang blocks\, and elvs:
- two parts of a\ncomplete system for creating executable Org files.\n\nOrg
- syntax does not support shebang lines. However\, it turns out that\nOrg s
- yntax enables something even better —\; shebang blocks.\n\nOrg is al
- so (supposedly) not an executable file format. However\, by\ncombining a
- shebang block with a Org babel source block\, and eval\nlocal variables (e
- lvs) Org becomes a multi-language executable format.\n\nIn this talk we in
- troduce shebang blocks and elvs as a two part system\nthat transforms Org
- files into executable documents that can run on any\nrecent version of Ema
- cs.\n\nThese ideas are implemented in\n<https://github.com/tgbugs/orgstrap
- /blob/master/README.org> and\n<https://github.com/tgbugs/orgstrap/blob/mas
- ter/shebang.org>\, and\norgstrap.el is available as a package on MELPA and
- can be installed\nvia M-x install-package orgstrap.\n\nThe talk will open
- with a demo of how to create an executable Org file\nusing the orgstrap m
- achinery.\n\nWe then discuss security considerations\, and show example us
- e cases.\n\nFinally the talk will cover the details and development of the
- \nportable shebang block for Org mode that works on a wide variety of\nsys
- tems and shells\, and on the development of a formal specification\nand a
- reference implementation for using Org source blocks to\ntransform Org fil
- es from plain text documents with a bit of markup\ninto self describing co
- mputational documents\, or interactive\napplications.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n
- - 5-10 minutes:\n\nA demo of adding the orgstrap block and elvs\,\naddin
- g a shebang block\, and then running an org file. -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:The use of Org mode syntax outside of GNU/Emacs -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-org-outside -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/org-outside -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T135400 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T140400 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/org-outside\n# The use of Org mode syntax outside of G
- NU/Emacs\nKarl Voit\n\nWith the rising interest in Org mode\, the GNU/Emac
- s community gained\nmuch momentum in the last decade. Being a nicely desig
- ned lightweight\nmarkup language\, Org mode does not only benefit users of
- GNU/Emacs.\nThere are many tools and services supporting Org mode syntax
- documents\nthat do have no direct connection to GNU/Emacs. I would like to
- \nelaborate on the advantages on using Org mode syntax for arbitrary\ntext
- outside of GNU/Emacs for better typing usability and\ncollaboration tasks
- .\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes: (brief description/outline)\n\nThi
- s can only be a short teaser for the use of Org mode syntax without\nmuch
- comparison to other lightweight markup languages. For this\naudience\, I d
- o think that this would be too short because most\nattendees might already
- have heard the rumors that Org mode is great\nor they have adapted Org mo
- de in their workflows already. -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Using Org-mode to teach programming -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-teach -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/teach -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T140700 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T142700 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/teach\n# Using Org-mode to teach programming\nDaniel G
- erman\n\nIn this presentation I will explain how to use org-mode effective
- ly to\nprepare teaching materials\, and how to present them.\n\nFor the la
- st 5 years I have been using org-mode to teach programming\nin different l
- anguages: C++\, SQL\, Ruby\, Python\, SML\nand Scheme. Org-mode has three
- key advantages:\n\n1. it supports most programming languages with a commo
- n interface\,\n2. it is an interactive medium for delivering teaching mat
- erials\; and\n3. it is an always-up-to-date format that does not need to
- be exported in order to be published.\n\nI explain how I use org-mode in m
- y courses and how I combine org-mode\nnotes other tools such as github org
- -mode to get\nalways up-to-date teaching materials that one can use for bo
- th\nteaching and studying (see\n<https://github.com/dmgerman/csc116ModernC
- plusplus/blob/master/lectures/l-01-1-intro/01_1_intro.org>\nfor an example
- ).\n\nFinally\, I will discuss some important aspects to consider when usi
- ng\norg-mode for this purpose.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n20 minutes:\n\n- Intr
- oduction\n- Quick demonstration\n- Workflow\n- Emacs configuration\n
- - Important considerations\n- How to get started\n\nOh\, I made a smal
- l mistake. I meant to propose a 40 minutes presentation.\nBut I can give a
- quicker 20 minutes too. -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Managing a research workflow (bibliographies\, note-taking\, and ar
- Xiv) -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-research -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/research -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T143200 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T143700 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/research\n# Managing a research workflow (bibliographi
- es\, note-taking\, and arXiv)\nAhmed Khaled\n\nResearchers and knowledge w
- orkers have to read and discover new papers\,\nask questions about what th
- ey read\, write notes and scratchwork\, and store\nmuch of this informatio
- n for use in writing papers and/or code. Emacs allows\nus to do all of thi
- s (and more) using simple text interfaces that integrate\nwell together. I
- n this talk I will talk about the following:\n\na. Using elfeed and elfeed
- -score to read new papers from arXiv.\nb. Using org-ref to import arXiv pa
- pers of interest into a local\nbibliography.\nc. Using Emacs hooks with bi
- ber and rebiber in order to keep the local\n bibliography clean and up-t
- o-date with conference versions of papers.\nd. Using org-roam and org-roam
- -bibtex to take linked\, searchable notes in\norg on research papers.\n\nT
- his text-based workflow allows for keeping everything accessible under\nve
- rsion\ncontrol and avoids the platform lock-in of binary formats (e.g. Men
- deley). I\nwill share my Doom Emacs configuration for this workflow\, but
- it is not\nlimited\nto Doom.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes: I will
- demo the packages I use in 5 minutes. -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Babel for academics -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-babel -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/babel -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T144100 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T145100 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/babel\n# Babel for academics\nAsilata Bapat\n\nPlain o
- rg-mode is already an extremely powerful and\ncustomisable tool for task a
- nd time management\, note-taking\, calendar\nand agenda management\, and m
- uch more. Babel takes org a step further\nby letting you write\, evaluate\
- , and export code in different languages\nfrom within a single file. In th
- is talk\, I will highlight some\nfeatures of babel that I find exciting an
- d extremely useful\,\nparticularly for an academic workflow.\n\nGetting st
- arted with babel can be intimidating\, but it's hard to stop\nusing it onc
- e you start. As an academic\, I typically don't manage\nlarge coding proje
- cts. My primary purpose is writing lecture notes\,\nassignments\, and pape
- rs\, and managing related admin. Typically\, I want\nto try and automate t
- he boring portions of my workflow without extra\noverhead. I also tend to
- find various tasks easier in some programming\nlanguages and harder in oth
- ers\, and prefer to mix and match languages\nas the task dictates. Babel m
- akes this process seamless.\n\nA basic use case is writing a document in o
- rg-mode and exporting it to\nLaTeX or HTML. Org-mode even lets you write m
- ultiple documents in a\nsingle org file\, which can be convenient. Babel l
- ets you add all sorts\nof enhancements to the same file. For example\, sup
- pose we have a\nsingle org document with all the problem sets for a course
- . Within\nthis single file\, we could now:\n\n- draw pictures in ditaa\,
- graphviz\, or python instead of LaTeX\,\n- use python to do complex cal
- culations and then output the result as LaTeX\,\n- define skeletons to q
- uickly draw up assignment templates\,\n- toggle exporting of assignments
- with or without solutions based on tags\,\n- locally change export sett
- ings or run a post-export hook\,\n- automatically export to LaTeX after
- saving\,\n- tangle code blocks from some or all of the languages to exte
- rnal files.\n\nI will try to showcase features of babel that academics cou
- ld find\nhelpful\, by presenting some ways in which I have tried to use ba
- bel. I\nwould also like to be inspired by other people's babel workflows!\
- n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes: (brief description/outline)\n\nFor a
- 5-10 minute presentation I will give a brief intro and present one or two
- example files that heavily use babel. I will use these\nexamples to highl
- ight some of the features mentioned in the abstract. -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Reproducible molecular graphics with Org-mode -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-molecular -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/molecular -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T145300 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T150300 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/molecular\n# Reproducible molecular graphics with Org-
- mode\nBlaine Mooers\n\nResearch papers in structural biology should includ
- e the code used to make\nthe images of molecules in the article in the sup
- plemental materials.\nSome structural bioinformaticists have started to in
- clude\ntheir computer code in the supplemental materials to allow readers\
- nto reproduce their analyses. However\, authors of papers reporting new\nm
- olecular structures often overlook the inclusion of the code that makes\nt
- he images of the molecules reported in their articles. Nonetheless\,\nthis
- aspect of reproducible research needs to become the standard practice\nto
- improve the rigor of the science.\n\nIn a literate programming document\,
- the author interleaves between blocks\nof prose the code that makes the i
- mages of molecules. The document allows\nthe reader to reproduce the image
- s in the manuscript by running the code.\nThe reader can also explore the
- effect of altering the parameters in the\ncode. Org files are one alternat
- ive for making such literate programming\ndocuments.\n\nWe developed a yas
- nippet snippet library called orgpymolpysnips for\nstructural biologists (
- <https://github.com/MooersLab/orgpymolpysnips>).\nThis library facilitates
- the assembly of literate programming documents\nwith molecular images mad
- e by PyMOL. PyMOL is the most popular\nmolecular graphics program for crea
- ting images for publication\; it has\nover 100\,000 users\, which is a lot
- of users in molecular biology. PyMOL\nhas been used to make many of the i
- mages of biological molecules found\non the covers of many Cell\, Nature\,
- and Science issues.\n\nWe used the `jupyter' language in org-babel to sen
- d commands from\ncode blocks in Org files to PyMOL's Python API. PyMOL ret
- urns the\nmolecular image to the output block below the code block. An Ema
- cs\nuser can convert the Org file into a PDF\, `tangle' the code blocks\ni
- nto a script file\, and submit these for non-Emacs users. We describe\nthe
- content of the library and provide examples of the running PyMOL\nfrom Or
- g-mode documents.\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes: (brief description/o
- utline)\n - Title slide\n - Structural Biolog Workflow in the Mo
- oers Lab\n - Cover images made with PyMOL\n\n - Why develop a sn
- ippet library for your field?\n - PyMOL in Org: kernel specification\
- n - Creating a conda env and installing PyMOL\n - Example code b
- lock in Org to make DSSR block model of tRNA\n - Resulting image\n
- - Summary\n - Acknowledgements -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Budgeting\, Project Monitoring and Invoicing with Org Mode -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-project -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/project -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T150600 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T151600 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/project\n# Budgeting\, Project Monitoring and Invoicin
- g with Org Mode\nAdolfo Villafiorita\n\nIn this talk I will present how we
- use Org Mode at Shair.Tech for\nbudgeting\, project monitoring\, and invo
- icing.\n\nWe are a small company and we are still tuning and improving the
- \nprocess\, but with a bit of Emacs Lisp\, the functions Org Mode\nprovide
- s\, and reading here and there what other users do\, we\nimplemented an ef
- fective workflow we have been using for nearly a\nyear\, now\, and with wh
- ich we are very happy. Talk duration:\n\n–\;> 20 minutes seems to be
- right (15 talk + questions)\n–\;> I can also make in 10 minutes\, b
- y focusing the talk on\n budgeting (or monitoring) -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Find Your (In)voice: Emacs for Invoicing -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-invoice -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/invoice -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T151900 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T152900 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/invoice\n# Find Your (In)voice: Emacs for Invoicing\nB
- ala Ramadurai\n\nYe Freelance warriors\, please lend me your I/O devices f
- or 5 minutes.\n\nYour time is your money! Do you find it a pain to generat
- e an invoice\,\nrecord the details into your accounting software and keep
- track of\ntaxes and payments? You are not alone\, I found the whole invoic
- e\nthingy to be extremely painful.\n\nBut worry not\, Emacs comes to our r
- escue.\n\nMy talk will give you a basic intro on how to use org mode\, som
- e embedded python code and file jugglery to generate stylistic and profess
- ional invoices.\n\nWhat you will learn during the session:\n\n- How to t
- rack your freelance time using orgmode\n- How to create the basic infras
- tructure for invoice generation\n- How to generate the invoice\n- How
- to manage multiple clients\n- How to enter the finance details into your
- accounting software\n- How to track invoice payments\n\nWe will use the
- following packages:\n\n- Emacs+orgmode (duh?)\n- yasnippet\n- pytho
- n layer (I use spacemacs\, so whatever is the equivalent in your config)\n
- - Some unnecessary Shakespearean references -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Productivity Dashboards with Emacs and Kindle -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-dashboard -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/dashboard -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T153200 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T154200 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/dashboard\n# Productivity Dashboards with Emacs and Ki
- ndle\nMehmet Tekman\n\nSince 2008\, Amazon have released a new Kindle devi
- ce every year\,\nsupplanting each generation with a newer model that boast
- s highly\npromoted incremental features which greatly devalues the price o
- f\ntheir older models. These forgotten models are sold on Ebay and\nother
- secondhand websites at highly discount prices by owners who\ndo not see th
- e true potential of these devices: Kindles are\nexcellent high contrast lo
- w-refresh display rate E-Ink devices\,\nwith Wifi capability\, that run em
- bedded Linux in the\nbackground. Depending on the model\, an idle Kindle c
- an last weeks\nbefore needing a recharge. This makes them ideal as passive
- image\ndevices that can be configured easily using a few shell\nscripts.
- Indeed\, efforts have been made in dedicated hacker forums\nto expose the
- Linux filesystem and to enable features such as\ncustom screensavers\, SSH
- networking\, and more. By exploiting these\nfeatures\, and by carefully d
- isabling the software/bloatware that\ncomes with the device\, these Kindle
- s have found new life as online\ndashboard devices which can fetch and dis
- play information from the\ninternet at timely intervals.\n\nHere we descri
- be a tool to control multiple Kindle devices with a\nsingle org-mode/shell
- -based tool\, built initially to periodically\nserve updated Emacs Org-Age
- nda views\, but later expanded to produce\nonline local weather reports an
- d work calendar\, Emacs calendars\n(calfw\, org-gcal)\, daily dietary info
- rmation (org-calories)\,\nOrg-Mode sparse TODO trees\, miscellaneous image
- and text content\n(via imagemagick)\, small messages\, and much more.\n\n
- In this talk\, we show how to configure multiple Kindles with any\ndesired
- custom content\, following any daily/weekly schedule\, all\neasily manage
- d from Emacs within a single Org-Mode file.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 m
- inutes:\n\n 1-3 mins\n Talk about repurposing Kindles:\n\n
- - Cheap second-hand wifi device\, hackable\n - Low-powered\, long b
- attery life\, low refresh rate –\; perfect\n for a dashboard\
- n - Timely updated Org-Mode Agendas anyone?\n - Reference to
- inspired projects (kindle-dashboard)\n\n 2-3 mins\n Generate
- content\n\n - A static text+picture image easily generated with image
- magick\n wrapper\n - An image of a sparse tree of org-mode TOD
- O file\n - An image of another emacs view (e.g. Calfw\, or org-calori
- es)\n - Show post-processing for optimizing image for Kindles\n\n
- 1-2 mins\n Configuration in a single org-mode file\n\n - Def
- ining Machines\n - Defining Commands to generate content\n - Def
- ining Schedules to run Commands on multiple Machines at\n specific
- points in the day\n\n 1-2 mins\n Export and Run:\n\n - Sh
- ow exported shell configs and generated cronjobs\n - Witness multiple
- Kindles producing desired content with wakeup\n timers -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Emacs with Nyxt: extend your editor with the power of a Lisp browse
- r -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-nyxt -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/nyxt -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T154500 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T155500 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/nyxt\n# Emacs with Nyxt: extend your editor with the p
- ower of a Lisp browser\nAndrea\n\nIn 2021 browsers are essential if you us
- e a computer. Even if Emacs\nusers love text as a format\, they may need t
- o shop and video call from\ntime to time (even more so in a pandemic!). So
- me of us modified their\nbrowsers to at least have the same keybindings as
- our editor of\nchoice. What if I told you there is an Emacsy browser in t
- he making?\nWhat if you could "ace-jump" within a web page? What if you co
- uld run\na REPL to extend your browser while browsing? What if you could r
- ecord\nmacros?! The browser exists: its name is Nyxt!\n\nIn this talk I wi
- ll share why it has great potential\, how you can\nintegrate it with Emacs
- \, and how you can migrate your Emacs mastery to\nthe web!\n\nIf you were
- wishing for a Lispy and Emacsy browser\, you should not\nmiss this talk!\n
- \nYou can learn more about this at: <https://github.com/ag91/emacs-with-ny
- xt>\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes: quick demo of running Nyxt from
- Emacs and a little explanation of the code necessary for integration -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:On the design of text editors -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-design -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/design -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T155800 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T160800 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/design\n# On the design of text editors\nNicolas P. Ro
- ugier\n\nText editors are written by and for developers. They come\nwith
- a large set of default and implicit choices in terms of layout\,\ntypograp
- hy\, colorization and interaction that hardly change from one\neditor to t
- he other. It is not clear if these implicit choices derive\nfrom the ignor
- ance of alternatives or if they derive from developers'\nhabits\, reproduc
- ing what they are used to. Durint this talk\, I will\ncharacterize these i
- mplicit choices and illustrate what are some\nalternatives using GNU Emacs
- .\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n\n- 10 minutes alternative\n\nMostly a live demo o
- f my environment with pointers to the different\npackages -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:How Emacs made me appreciate software freedom -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-freedom -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/freedom -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T161200 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T165200 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/freedom\n# How Emacs made me appreciate software freed
- om\nProtesilaos Stavrou\n\nThe theme will be "how Emacs empowered my softw
- are freedom".\nI will outline the key moments in my transition to a GNU/Li
- nux operating\nsystem and mark those which eventually contributed towards
- me becoming\nan Emacs user\, maintainer of a—\;dare I say—\;po
- pular package\, and\ncontributor to upstream Emacs (among others). By all
- uding to personal\nexperiences\, I will draw generalisable insights and co
- nnect them to what\nI believe are irreducible qualities of Emacs qua softw
- are and Emacs as a\ncommunity of like-minded people. The talk will be the
- oretical in\nnature: there won't be any code-related demonstration nor tec
- hnical\nreferences that only people with a background in computer science
- would\nlikely recognise. Personal anecdotes shall be tangential to the po
- int\nand considered as ancillary to the thesis of what Emacs represents fr
- om\nthe standpoint of software freedom and user empowerment. The\npresent
- ation is intended for a general audience that is interested in\nGNU softwa
- re in general and Emacs in particular. My formal educational\nbackground
- as a social scientist (i.e. not a programmer) and later as a\nphilosopher
- informs my approach to this topic.\n\nThe presentation shall be 40 minutes
- long. Its text will be in essay\nform and shall be supplied as complemen
- tary material to the video. The\nnotation will be in Org mode. I cannot
- provide an outline in advance\,\nas it will most likely not be consistent
- with the actual presentation.\nIf\, however\, this is absolutely required
- for administrative purposes I\nshall furnish one regardless with the provi
- so that I am in no way bound\nby it and thus reserve the right to modify i
- t ahead of the main event. -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Closing remarks day 1 -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-day1-close -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/day1-close -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T165200 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T165700 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/day1-close\n# Closing remarks day 1 -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Opening remarks day 2 -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-day2-open -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/day2-open -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T090000 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T090500 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/day2-open\n# Opening remarks day 2 -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:How to write faster Emacs Lisp -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-faster -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/faster -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T090500 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T092500 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/faster\n# How to write faster Emacs Lisp\nDmitry Gutov
- \n\n- Before optimizing\, benchmark first.\n- Different benchmarking a
- pproaches.\n- Live evaluation\, step-debugging\, measuring from a debugg
- er breakpoint.\n- How to determine if a function is expensive. How to pi
- ck one from\n competing alternatives (cl-lib\, seq\, dash\, lean core).
- \n- Print-benchmarking.\n- Byte-compiled code can give a very differen
- t picture\, changing where\n the bottleneck is. How to quickly load a b
- yte-compiled version.\n- Steps taken to speed up the Xref package recent
- ly. -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Tree-edit: Structural editing for Java\, Python\, C\, and beyond! -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-structural -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/structural -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T093000 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T094000 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/structural\n# Tree-edit: Structural editing for Java\,
- Python\, C\, and beyond!\nEthan Leba\n\nIn this talk\, I'll discuss a vis
- ion for how writing code could be\, where the\nediting operations map dire
- ctly to the primitives of the language itself -- and\nmy humble attempt of
- implementing this vision. _tree-edit_ seeks to provides a\nstructural edi
- ting plugin supporting conceivably any language with a tree-sitter\nparser
- .\n\n**Structural editing does not have to be relegated to lisps or niche
- DSLs.**\n\nI liken the state of code editing today to writing assembly. Th
- e reason why\npeople like Python more than assembly is that for most purpo
- ses\, the building\nblocks of the language are mismatched with our thought
- process. We don't think\nin terms of registers and addresses\, we think i
- n terms of variables\, functions\,\netc. So when we write and edit code\,
- why do we edit in terms of deleting\,\ninserting\, replacing characters &#
- x2013\; not wrapping\, inserting\, raising\,\ndeleting expressions and sta
- tements?\n\nI'll also discuss the implementation of tree-edit\, which uses
- a novel\ncombination of the fantastic\n[tree-sitter](https://github.com/e
- macs-tree-sitter/elisp-tree-sitter) parser\nwith an embedded logic program
- ming DSL ([miniKanren](http://minikanren.org/)\,\nusing elisp port [reazon
- ](https://github.com/nickdrozd/reazon)) to power it's\nsyntax tree generat
- ion.\n\nCheck out the GitHub repo [here](https://github.com/ethan-leba/tre
- e-edit)!\n\n# Outline\n\n- Discuss motivation (
- Why should I care?)\n- Demonstrate tree-edit (Live
- -coding with tree-edit)\n- Demonstrate tree-edit syntax tree generator (
- Elevator pitch on miniKanren) -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Self-Describing Smart DSL's: The Next Magits -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-dsl -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/dsl -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T094300 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T100300 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/dsl\n# Self-Describing Smart DSL's: The Next Magits\nP
- sionic\n\nWhen we begin programming\, the promise is to automate away repe
- titive\ntasks in life. As those program's capability grows\, we begin to
- need\nconfiguration UI's. We can start with a CLI\, but as any CLI grows\
- , we\nrun into the following issues:\n\n- As options pile up\, the intui
- tion of simplicity is lost in helps and\nmanpages\n\n- Stateless operati
- on has no idea what to do next and loses terseness\n- Frequent dispatch of
- commands to interrogate state required for the\noperator to decide what a
- ction to perform\n\n- Composition compounds with all of these issues\n\n
- Magit has the UI trifecta of being terse\, intuitive\, and intelligent.\nM
- agit's UI input library\, Transient\, is a standalone package for\ndevelop
- ing more killer UI's\, and not just for CLI applications\, but\nalso for s
- erver applications\, Emacs applications\, and Emacs itself.\n\nWhile Trans
- ient's potential is to create the most highly productive\nUI's short of th
- ought control\, going beyond simple command dispatchers\nrequires a deeper
- dive. When we think like constructing a DSL for the\ntask and using tran
- sient to input that DSL\, we get an intelligent\,\nself-describing modal p
- rogramming system.\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- Updates to Transient documentation
- and demos of API examples\n- Wrapping a custom CLI tool in Transient -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:"Yak-shaving to a UI framework" (/"Help! I accidentally yak-shaved
- my way to writing a UI framework because overlays were slow") -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-ui -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/ui -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T100600 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T101600 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/ui\n# "Yak-shaving to a UI framework" (/"Help! I accid
- entally yak-shaved my way to writing a UI framework because overlays were
- slow")\nErik Anderson\n\nTui.el is a textual User Interface (UI) framework
- for Emacs Lisp\nmodeled after the popular JavaScript 'React' framework.
- This package\nimplements React Component API's with the goal of simplifyin
- g\ndevelopment of interactive UI's for all Emacs users- regardless of\nthe
- ir prior experience with React or web programming. Components\nprovide a
- useful functional unit for constructing complex interfaces\ndeclaratively
- and also eliminate much of the burden associated with\nupdating textual co
- ntent as application state changes. This talk will\ncover use of the tui.
- el API and its operation in a textual environment\nby implementing some ba
- sic UI's.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes:\n - Problem space: UI
- implementation complexity.\n - API introduction: Displaying content\
- , Components.\n - Visual taste of dashboards and applications built w
- ith tui. -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Extending Emacs in Rust with Dynamic Modules -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-rust -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/rust -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T101900 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T103900 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/rust\n# Extending Emacs in Rust with Dynamic Modules\n
- Tuấn-Anh Nguyễn\n\nDynamic module support has been available since Emacs 2
- 5. It can be\nused to extend Emacs with native libraries\, for performance
- \,\nOS-specific features\, or other functionalities that would take a lot\
- nof time to re-implement in Lisp. The officially supported language is\nC\
- , which is tedious and error-prone to use. This talk discusses a\n**safe**
- alternative that is also a lot **more convenient**: writing these\ndynami
- c modules in Rust.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- Walking through creating **a sim
- ple dynamic module** in\n Rust\, including setting up CI.\n- Going thr
- ough and explaining the **available APIs**. -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Emacs Application Framework: A 2021 Update -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-eaf -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/eaf -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T104400 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T105400 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/eaf\n# Emacs Application Framework: A 2021 Update\nMat
- thew Zeng\n\nEmacs Application Framework (EAF) is a customizable and exten
- sible GUI\napplication framework that extends Emacs graphical capabilities
- using\nPyQt5. There are many new but important updates since EmacsConf202
- 0\nlast year\, this talk will briefly go over them.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n-
- 5-10 minutes: (brief description/outline) -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Extending the "model" of Emacs to other applications -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-model -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/model -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T105800 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T110800 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/model\n# Extending the "model" of Emacs to other appli
- cations\nLaszlo Krajnikovszkij\n\nEmacs is a great operating environment i
- n a sense that it provides consistency\nacross different tools and applica
- tions within the Emacs ecosystem\, as well as\nexternal apps that can be i
- ntegrated into it. It is also the most truly\nmalleable environment\, each
- element of which can be adjusted or extended\,\ntherefore providing the u
- ser with more power and freedom in personal computing.\nEmacs definitely c
- an be considered one of greatest software products in\nexistence.\n\nAs a
- non-programmer\, having had the chance to stumble upon Emacs a couple of\n
- years ago\, the only regret to have is that it didn't happen earlier. The
- definite\nkiller feature of Emacs - Org-mode\, is what draws many of the l
- ess technical\nfolks to join the party and gradually start to use Emacs fo
- r writing documents\,\nwhether personal or work related\, manage tasks\, e
- mails and potentially everything\nelse. The learning curve and difference
- in approach\, however\, leaves some\npotential users too scared of the arc
- ane interface even with all it's quirks and\nfeatures because it requires
- at least some technical skills to understand and\nuse properly\, and does
- not have an easy way to connect with external tools that\nmost people are
- forced to use for work.\n\nThis talk proposes some ideas about how the mod
- el of Emacs\, it's focus on\nconsistency\, extensibility\, as well as it's
- powerful interaction model can be\ncarried over to make modern interfaces
- \, whether desktop or web applications\,\nthat would be designed with a go
- al of reflecting the spirit of Emacs in terms of\nthe aforementioned featu
- res it possesses\, and therefore enhance the capabilities\nof the Emacs\,
- while at the same time utilizing it as a backend for\ntext-processing and
- editing to a large extent. It would be really great to have\na personal we
- b-interface for using modern task management tools\, chats\, emails\nand s
- uch\, but from a UI defined by the user. The goal is to use it on a deskto
- p\nor mobile\, locally or self-hosted on a server\, with support for touch
- and\ngesture-based workflows\, while preserving the Emacs philosophy and
- allowing to\nseamlessly switch between Emacs and its web extension\n\nThe
- proposed solution is to integrate more of the modern tools with Emacs\,\nu
- tilize Org-mode as a way to define application-specific parameters for the
- se\ntools through Org properties\, and then utilize these parameters for m
- aking a\nmodern local frontend that would enhance Emacs UI while allowing
- to use external\ntools in a more personal and freedom respecting way (maki
- ng the originals\nobsolete over time). The talk serves the purpose of invi
- ting community members to\na discussion about how Emacs can become more mo
- dern\, more approachable by people\nwho don't possess the neccessarry tech
- nical skills to adjust it themselves\, but\nare keen to learn it\, and pot
- entially how to attract more users to greater\nproductivity\, computer lit
- eracy and the ideas of free software.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes
- \n - Introduction\n - Issues with most modern tools for work\n
- - Issues with Emacs as a tool for work\n - In search for a hybrid
- approach\n - User controlled web-apps\n - Opinions encouraged\n
- - Contacts -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Don't write that package! or: How I learned to stop worrying and lo
- ve emacs-devel -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-devel -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/devel -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T111100 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T113100 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/devel\n# Don't write that package! or: How I learned t
- o stop worrying and love emacs-devel\nStefan Kangas\n\nEmacs' greatest str
- ength is also its greatest weakness: it is **too** hackable.\n\nWe have a
- great community that experiment with new features that are still\nlacking
- in Emacs core. They write up a package and develop the living daylights\n
- out of it\, until it is basically amazing. (I'm looking at you Magit.)\n\
- nThere are other examples such as helpful.el - great package\, but why are
- those\nfeatures not in core? What about projectile? And so on.\n\nCore
- demands copyright assignments (CLA). This is a fact of life. While I\nmo
- stly agree with the people saying it is not helful\, they are there to pro
- tect\nEmacs from copyright issues in the future. So my suggestion here is
- simple:\njust **sign the papers**. It is just a formality\, and you shou
- ld only need to do\nit once.\n\nI suggest that any ambitious feature that
- we **might** want to see shipped in the\ndefault Emacs distribution should
- by default go to GNU ELPA. You don't need to\ndo this\, of course\, and
- I respect your decision\, but I urge you to do it.\n\nGNU ELPA does not ha
- ve an exceptionally high standard\, but we do try to give any\nnew package
- a proper code review.\n\nMELPA is excellent. We love MELPA. They don't
- have a criterion for their\npackages that is important to the FSF\, which
- is to not recommend non-free\nsoftware. Therefore\, we could not recommen
- d it by default\, and had to build\nNonGNU ELPA.\n\nNonGNU ELPA will be us
- ed for packages that we don't have an assignment for but\nwould still like
- to distribute. It should ideally only be for old packages\nwhere getting
- a CLA is impractical.\n\nIt is sometimes perceived as hard to contribute
- to Emacs core. This impression\nis largely wrong. If I can do it\, you c
- an too.\n\nWe do have a problem in that our tools and methods (mailing lis
- ts\, the bug\ntracker) are out-dated. This is largely correct. We want t
- o migrate to\nsomething else\, and the best candidate is probably Sourcehu
- t. Please volunteer\nto help!\n\nWe sometimes see people adding stuff to
- their Init file to fix this or that\nannoyance\, or even bug. The more am
- bitious would go on to package up such fixes\nin what I call "patch packag
- es". "Hey\, foo-mode doesn't have support for\n'bookmark-set'\, let's writ
- e a package!" I am here to suggest that you submit a\npatch to Emacs inst
- ead.\n\nFixing an issue for one person is good\, and fixing it for more pe
- ople is even\nbetter. Fixing it for everyone? Priceless.\n\nemacs-devel
- is not that scary\, nor is email. We are really quite friendly and\neasy
- going\, but the communication we prefer (for reasons of efficiency - the\n
- volume is very high) is often very brief and to the point. We are trying
- our\nbest at communicating\, but sometimes fail.\n\nAnd we need more contr
- ibutors. We need a successful Emacs on this planet.\n\nSo should you real
- ly write a package\, or should YOU become a core contributor?\n\n\n\n# Out
- line\n\n- I will urge people to consider contributing to Emacs instead of\
- n writing small packages\, and explain GNU ELPA\, MELPA\, CLA.\n- I will
- go into greater detail about emacs-devel\, how it "works"\n (e.g. is Emac
- s conservative without reason?)\, how to get things\n done and the necess
- ary mindset. -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Turbo Bindat -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-bindat -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/bindat -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T113600 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T115600 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/bindat\n# Turbo Bindat\nStefan Monnier\n\n\n# Table of
- Contents\n\n\n\nBindat is an ELisp library to help manipulate binary data
- . This is a\nniche library that is used by packages such as Websocket\, EM
- MS\, and\ncpio-mode. Its implementation was repeatedly caught harassing ha
- pless\nkitten while at the same time providing poor service slowly. For\nE
- macs-28\, Bindat was rewritten so as to make it more efficient and\nflexib
- le while respecting the kitten. In this presentation I intent to\nshow how
- we saved those. Not recommended for birds.\n\n- ~20 minutes:\n 5 min
- : Intro and presentation of Bindat\n 5 min: Showcase some of its proble
- ms\n 5 min: Present the new design\n 5 min: Examples of what can be
- done with it -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Emacs Lisp native compiler\, current status and future developments -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-native -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/native -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T130000 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T132000 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/native\n# Emacs Lisp native compiler\, current status
- and future developments\nAndrea Corallo\n\nEmacs Lisp (Elisp) is the Lisp
- dialect used by the Emacs text editor\nfamily. GNU Emacs is traditionally
- capable of executing Elisp code\neither interpreted or byte-interpreted a
- fter it has been compiled to\nbyte-code.\n\nIn this talk I'll discuss the
- Emacs Lisp native compiler. This feature\nrecently merged into the main E
- macs development line allow for\nautomatically compiling and executing Eli
- sp as native code.\n\nDuring the presentation I'll touch on:\n\n- design
- goals\n- compiler and runtime design and implementation\n- performanc
- e implications\n- upstream process\n- area of improvements and future
- developments\n\nFormat: 40 minutes -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Old McCarthy Had a Form -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-form -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/form -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T132700 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T133700 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/form\n# Old McCarthy Had a Form\nIan Eure\n\nMost prac
- tical languages are multi-paradigm\, offering several\nabstractions for th
- e programmer. But did you know that Emacs Lisp\ncomes with a powerful sys
- tem for object-oriented programming? Join me\nfor a discussion of EIEIO\,
- and learn how it can help you write more\nmodular\, flexible Emacs Lisp.\n
- \n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes: (brief description/outline)\n -
- What is CLOS/EIEIO?\n - Why would I want OOP in Emacs Lisp?\n -
- How is the CLOS object model different from C++/Java/.NET?\n - Furthe
- r reading -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Test blocks -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-test -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/test -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T134100 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T134600 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/test\n# Test blocks\nEduardo Ochs\n\nIn this presentat
- ion I will show an idea that feels completely obvious\nonce we see it\, bu
- t that only occured to me after after using Emacs\nand eev as my main inte
- rface to the computer for more than 20 years.\nTake any interpreted langua
- ge that supports multi-line comments\, and\nwhose interpreter can be run i
- n an Emacs buffer - for example Lua\,\nHaskell\, Python\, or Julia\; let's
- say just "Lua" from here on for\nsimplicity. So: suppose that we have a L
- ua script that we wrote\, that\nis called "foo.lua" and that defines lots
- of functions and defines the\nclasses Bar and Bletch. We can put after the
- definition of the class\nBar a multi-line comment that contains an eepitc
- h block that when\nexecuted starts a Lua interpreter\, loads the script fo
- o.lua (by\nrunning 'dofile "foo.lua"')\, and then has several tests for th
- at class\nand its methods\; and we can put another block with tests like t
- hat\nafter the class Bletch\, and other blocks after some functions. Eepit
- ch\nallows sending these tests line by line to the Lua interpreter by\ntyp
- ing <f8\\> on each line that we want to send\, and this lets us create\nte
- sts that are very easy to understand even without writing comments\;\nthis
- gives us a very quick way to document code by executable tests\,\nthat is
- super-great for experimental code that is still going to\nchange a lot be
- fore running the risk of being read by other people.\n\nThese multi-line c
- omments with eepitch blocks that run an interpreter\nand make it load the
- current file are called "test blocks". The\ncommand \\`M-x eeit' inserts a
- test block at point\, using the major mode\nto decide the right syntax to
- use for the multi-line comments and for\nthe "dofile". We can configure t
- he syntax of the test blocks for the\ncurrent major mode by running \\`M-x
- find-eeit-links'\; this can also be\nused to add support for test blocks
- to more languages (or\, more\nprecisely: to more major modes).\n\nEduardo
- Ochs <http://angg.twu.net/emacsconf2021.html> -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Let's talk about bug trackers -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-bug -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/bug -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T134900 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T140900 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/bug\n# Let's talk about bug trackers\nBastien Guerry\n
- \nFor 17 years\, the Org developers didn't use a bug tracker\,\nshamelessl
- y failing the Joel Spolsky test. Why was it "good enough"?\nWhy was it wr
- ong? Why did we move to Woof!? Why Woof! is not a bug\ntracker?\n\n- 2
- 0 minutes -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Perso-Arabic Input Methods And Making More Emacs Apps BIDI Aware -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-bidi -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/bidi -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T141600 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T143600 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/bidi\n# Perso-Arabic Input Methods And Making More Ema
- cs Apps BIDI Aware\nMohsen BANAN\n\n\n# Table of Contents\n\n\n\nStarting
- with Emacs 24\, full native bidi\n(bidirectional) support became available
- . For\nmany years prior to that Unicode support was\navailable and by aro
- und year 2000\, reasonable\nopen-source shaping libraries were also availa
- ble.\n\nWith these in place at around 2012\, I developed\ntwo Persian inpu
- t methods for emacs. These input\nmethods or variations of them can also b
- e used\nArabic and other persoarabic scripts.\n\nWith all of these in plac
- e\, Emacs has now become\nthe ne plus ultra Halaal/Convivial usage\nenviro
- nment for persoarabic users.\n\nSince emacs comes loaded with everything (
- Gnus\nfor email\, Bbdb for address books\, XeLaTeX modes\nfor typesetting\
- , org-mode for organization\, spell\ncheckers\, completions\, calendar\, e
- tc.)\, all basic\ncomputing and communication needs of persoarabic\nusers
- can be addressed in one place and\ncohesively.\n\nIn this talk I will demo
- nstrate what a wonderful\nenvironment that can be.\n\n- 40 minutes: (bri
- ef description/outline)\n\n My talk will be in two parts.\n\n In Par
- t 1\, I cover persian input methods. With an\n emphasis on &lsquo \;Ban
- an Multi-Character (Reverse)\n Transliteration Persian Input Method&rsq
- uo\;. The\n software is part of base emacs distribution.\n Full docu
- mentation is available at:\n Persian Input Methods\n F
- or Emacs And More Broadly Speaking\n شیوههایِ درج به فارسی\n
- <http://mohsen.1.banan.byname.net/PLPC/120036>\n\n In Part 2\,
- I will cover the ramifications of bidi\n on existing emacs application
- s\, including:\n\n - Gnus:\n - Persoarabic rich email sendin
- g in HTML.\n - Ramifications of bidi on from\, to and\n
- subject lines.\n\n - Bbdb: Ramifications of bidi on display and\n
- completion.\n\n - Calendar:\n - Ramifications of bidi
- on display.\n - Use of persian text for Persian (solar) calendar.
- \n - Use of arabic text for Muslem (lunar) calendar.\n\n -
- AUCTeX: Persian typesetting with XeLaTeX -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Moldable Emacs\, a step towards sustainable software -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-mold -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/mold -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T144100 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T145100 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/mold\n# Moldable Emacs\, a step towards sustainable so
- ftware\nAndrea\n\nWe could learn about things better. Mountains of knowled
- ge hide in\nplaces we cannot access or use. The more we write down\, the m
- ore it\ntakes to find and understand things we find useful.\n\nKnowledge (
- web\, software\, books) keeps growing faster and faster! This\nis not sust
- ainable: we cannot keep up with it! What if we repeat the\nerror of somebo
- dy else\, only because it would take too much reading to\nknow? What if th
- at knowledge is in some code we work with everyday?\n\nMoldable developmen
- t is a paradigm shift that attempts to solve this\nproblem. In a gist\, th
- e tool you use should let you create special tools\nto learn smartly from
- what you have already.\n\nSince we use Emacs\, let's make our great editor
- moldable!\n\nThis talk shows my progress in making Emacs closer to such a
- tool. We\nare going to see how we can mold structured (and maybe even nat
- ural)\ntext to learn better\, how we can inject notes in our projects and
- how\nself documenting this tool is!\n\nI aim to inspire you to find a quic
- ker way to learn from our digital\nworld!\n\nYou can learn more about this
- at: <https://github.com/ag91/moldable-emacs>\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10
- minutes: quick demo of moldable-emacs -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:CLEDE the Common Lisp Emacs Development Environment. -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-clede -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/clede -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T145500 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T151500 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/clede\n# CLEDE the Common Lisp Emacs Development Envir
- onment.\nFermin MF\n\nI've been developing a package that helps with the d
- evelopment of\nCommon Lisp's software\,\nit's uses the internal semantic f
- ramework\, it has a custom reader\nand integration for\ncommon Emacs packa
- ges (like Sly and the internal inferior-lisp-mode).\n\nThe idea is to supp
- ly features that other language with and static\nanalyzer have\,\nlike ref
- actoring and code generation.\n\nFor more details: <https://gitlab.com/sas
- anidas/clede>\n\n- 20 minutes:\n It seems like not too much people kn
- ows about semantic\, so I can\n summarize some of it in 10 minutes\n
- and then An explanation on how to use the package\, how to extend it\n
- and the future of it. -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Imaginary Programming -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-imaginary -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/imaginary -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T152200 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T153200 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/imaginary\n# Imaginary Programming\nShane Mulligan\n\n
- Imaginary Programming (IP) is both methodology and paradigm. It is an\next
- ension of literate programming and a way of creating software without\nthe
- use of imperative\, functional or even declarative code. Yet IP employs\n
- all disciplines to achieve the miraculous. The only contingency is on one\
- nor more language models\, known as foundation models. The real value of I
- P\nis not found by abandoning sound logic altogether\, but in weaving the
- real\nwith the imaginary. The future of imaginary programming is one in wh
- ich\nalmost all of computing is inferred. I have built a suite of tools ba
- sed on\nemacs for interfacing real programming languages with imaginary on
- es\; all\nof this in order to demonstrate what I mean\; a ‘complex’ termin
- al that lets\nyou imagine what happens no matter how nested you are within
- interpreters\,\nan example-oriented language\, a file format that encodes
- the provenance of\ntext and a library for imaginary functional programmin
- g primitives called\niLambda. It is important to recognise IP because\, fo
- r lack of a better\nterm\, it has far-reaching implications for intellectu
- al property and the\nGPL. Please keep an open mind.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n-
- 5-10 minutes:\n- a 5 minute introduction to imaginary programming\, fo
- llowed by\n - a demonstration of iLambda.\n - iλ\, a family
- of imaginary programming libraries\n <https://mullikine.github.io/p
- osts/designing-an-imaginary-programming-ip-library-for-emacs/>\n\n\n\nIRC
- libertyprime at #emacs on libera\n\nShane Mulligan -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:How to build an Emacs -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-build -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/build -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T153600 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T155600 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/build\n# How to build an Emacs\nFermin MF\n\nThis is a
- deep dive in the Emacs philosophical and technical\naspect on what makes
- our beloved GNU Emacs\nwhat it it. It's also a talk about the early LISP m
- achines and\nfascinating were those days of experimentation and engineerin
- g.\n\nIt will continue with the Emacs benefits/trade-offs from an\nuser/de
- veloper stand points\, what things can be improved and\nwhat can be an hyp
- othetical path on how to build a software that\ncan also be called Emacs.\
- n\nAs a last part\, I'll talk about CEDAR\, an Emacs that I've been\ndevel
- oping in Common Lisp\, the project goals\nand the challenges.\n\nFor more
- details about CEDAR: <https://gitlab.com/sasanidas/cedar>\n\n- 40 minute
- s:\n A dive into the Emacs/Lisp machines history\, what makes GNU Emacs
- \n an Emacs and how you can build an Emacs. -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:M-x Forever: Why Emacs will outlast text editor trends -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-forever -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/forever -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T160300 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T164300 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/forever\n# M-x Forever: Why Emacs will outlast text ed
- itor trends\nDavid Wilson\n\nThe computer software industry has seen many
- "popular" text editors come\nand go\, often due to the mercurial fashions
- of software development. In\nthis talk\, we'll take a look at why popular
- editors fade and the\nspecific aspects of Emacs that will ensure it remai
- ns relevant\nregardless of mainstream popularity.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- Di
- scuss the core thesis\, the features that make Emacs\n desirable for long
- -term use (extensibility\, day-to-day 'life' features)\n\n- Include more b
- ackground on the text editor landscape and\n how the scope of various edi
- tors is more narrow and doesn't compare to Emacs.\n\n- Talk about specific
- instances where editors were popular\, fell out\n of popularity\, and wh
- y (due to changing fashions\, not usually\n better features). -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Closing remarks day 2 -LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/ -UID:emacsconf-2021-day2-close -URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/day2-close -DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T165000 -DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T170000 -DTSTAMP:20211027T122813 -DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
- conf.org/2021/talks/day2-close\n# Closing remarks day 2 -END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VCALENDAR
+VERSION:2.0
+PRODID:EmacsConf
+X-WR-CALNAME:EmacsConf 2021
+X-WR-TIMEZONE:America/Toronto
+X-WR-CALNAME:EmacsConf
+CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
+METHOD:PUBLISH
+BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
+TZID:America/Toronto
+BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
+TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
+TZOFFSETTO:-0400
+TZNAME:EDT
+DTSTART:20210314T070000
+END:DAYLIGHT
+BEGIN:STANDARD
+TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
+TZOFFSETTO:-0500
+TZNAME:EST
+DTSTART:20211107T060000
+END:STANDARD
+BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
+TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
+TZOFFSETTO:-0400
+TZNAME:EDT
+DTSTART:20220313T070000
+END:DAYLIGHT
+BEGIN:STANDARD
+TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
+TZOFFSETTO:-0500
+TZNAME:EST
+DTSTART:20221106T060000
+END:STANDARD
+END:VTIMEZONE
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Opening remarks
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-day1-open
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/day1-open
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T090000
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T090500
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/day1-open\n# Opening remarks
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Emacs News Highlights
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-news
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/news
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T090500
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T091000
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/news\n# Emacs News Highlights\nSacha Chua <mailto:sach
+ a@sachachua.com> - pronouns: she/her\n\nQuick overview of Emacs community
+ highlights since the last conference\n\n<https://github.com/sachac/emacsco
+ nf-2021-emacs-news-highlights>
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:The True Frownies are the Friends We Made Along the Way: An Anecdot
+ e of Emacs's Malleability
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-frownies
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/frownies
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T091100
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T093100
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/frownies\n# The True Frownies are the Friends We Made
+ Along the Way: An Anecdote of Emacs's Malleability\nCase Duckworth\n\nEmac
+ s is well-known for being extremely flexible\, programmable\, and\nextensi
+ ble\; in fact\, that's probably the biggest reason it's still\nbeing used
+ after 40+ years of existence\, and even has enough clout to\ngenerate an e
+ ntire conference in its name. In this medium-length\npresentation\, I wil
+ l add another point to the data set proving Emacs's\nabilities\, by narrat
+ ing the latest package I made\, \\`frowny.el\\`\, from\nits conception to
+ its current\, nearly-completed state.\n\nI wrote frowny.el to scratch some
+ one else's itch as a joke on IRC\, but\nit has been called "pretty useful\
+ , for a joke package." I feel like\nthat encapsulates the spirit of Emacs
+ and that's why I want to present\non this topic.\n\nAlong the way\, I'll
+ discuss just a little of my own history of Emacs\,\nand why I feel it's a
+ great tool for non-technical users to sink their\nteeth into.
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Choose Your Own (Technology-Enhanced Learning) Adventure
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-adventure
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/adventure
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T093400
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T095400
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/adventure\n# Choose Your Own (Technology-Enhanced Lear
+ ning) Adventure\nGreta Goetz\n\nThis presentation will move through Emacs
+ artifacts: first illustrating possible paths for beginners and then mappin
+ g out the significance of the enhanced learning potential of Emacs (Caille
+ t in Andler & Guerry\, Engelbart\, Markauskaite & Goodyear). The technolog
+ y-enhanced learning (TEL) that Emacs affords includes a systems view of 'm
+ any\, many features' (Stallman) which surpass the confines of a pre-fabric
+ ated environment (Stiegler). This affords diverse possibilities for indivi
+ duals to interact creatively and autonomously to satisfy their own needs (
+ Ill\nich). Its adaptability will be shown to be an asset in supporting the
+ learning trends identified by the latest pedagogical research (Guo).\n\n#
+ Intro\n\nThe 'many\, many features' (Stallman 2002: 4) of Emacs do not li
+ mit imaginable types of interactivity\, supporting both formal and informa
+ l learning (cf. Caillet in Andler & Guerry 2008). Emacs can function as a
+ scaffold for development (cf. Vygotsky 1979: 86)\, promoting the creative
+ and autonomous ability of individuals to interact with their digital envir
+ onment and others who share the use of this tool (Illich 1973). Individual
+ s can use Emacs as often or seldom as they want to express their needs and
+ meaning in action\, with no obligation to use it (cf. Illich 1973).\n\nTh
+ e formal learning involved pertains to Emacs programs and documentation (t
+ he 'temple') while related discussion and smaller task-based problem solvi
+ ng represents examples of informal learning (the 'forum') (cf. Caillet in
+ Andler & Guerry 2008). As a context-rich environment (Trocmé-Fabre 1999)\,
+ Emacs fulfills the promise of general computing: not boxing users into pe
+ rsonas (cf. Stiegler 2018) but allowing users at all levels to organize an
+ d assemble multiple knowledge domains (Markauskaite & Goodyear 2017) and p
+ rograms so that they are 'just right'. People wanting to create tailored l
+ earning environments who feel alienated or unsupported by pre-fabricated t
+ ext and programming environments will find their way with Emacs.\n\n1. Wh
+ at if we are beginners overwhelmed by formal Emacs documentation? Two pote
+ ntial learning paths:\n\n - a. Build on a needs-basis. Make your own ar
+ tifacts: no use-case is too small\; leave your trace.\n - b. Study othe
+ rs' inits and use-cases\; Read Planet EmacsLife\; Consult programmer or po
+ wer user use-cases\; Map out workflows.\n\n2. Emacs as personal\, creative
+ \, autonomous:\n\n - a. Emacs allows for organic ongoing changes to the
+ organization of knowledge\, imagination\, and experience (cf. Guerry & Ga
+ ume 2009) . This is important as not all learners have the same spatial/vi
+ sual needs and because these needs and knowledge can change over time (Vyg
+ otsky 1979\; Gardner 1983\; Wang 2020).\n - b. Emacs allows us to contr
+ ol our tools and tasks (Illich 1973). By contrast\, care-less use of pre-f
+ abricated apps can lead to loss of know-how in life (Stiegler 2018).\n -
+ c. The art of collecting traces (digital or not) is timeless - and import
+ ant to survival.\n\n3. Emacs as systems design for technology-enhanced le
+ arning (TEL):\n\n - a. Good TEL design performance should also educate
+ the designer (Goodyear & Retalis 2010). Further\, good design focuses on '
+ frameworks'\, which are systems 'that can be customized\, specialized\, or
+ extended to provide more specific\, more appropriate\, or slightly differ
+ ent capabilities' (Alexander 1993 in Gabriel 1996)\, assembling epistemic
+ domains (Markauskaite & Goodyear 2017). This pedagogical approach is suppo
+ rted by Emacs artifacts (packages\, documentation\, forums\, etc.).\n -
+ b. The 'wise' use of programming (Crichton 1983) actively manages and or
+ ganizes workflow. This permits iterative development. Elementary use-case:
+ a workflow that relies on PPT and Zoom vs. already having a more modular
+ viewpoint supported by diverse Emacs packages. The latter adaptability is
+ supported by the latest educational research (Guo). Further: Emacs allows
+ movement from user to contributor (Stiegler 2018\; Stavrou).\n - c. Wis
+ e programming can include fun programming - 'there are people who want to
+ put a stop to that' (Crichton 1983\; Gaffney 2019).\n - d. Extending th
+ is systems/design view\, Emacs is developed and maintained by a community
+ dedicated to supporting this freedom of use in these multiple contexts (cf
+ . Illich 1973).\n - e. One perspective is less likely to override other
+ s in such a heterogeneous environment (Morin 2004).\n\n# Conclusion\n\nEma
+ cs does not limit any imaginable type of interactivity and promotes a dive
+ rsity of related content\, further supporting the pursuit of more advanced
+ TEL (viz. Guo). This was illustrated through an elementary use-case that
+ compared being limited to PPT as opposed to having basic familiarity with
+ Emacs\, which permits manageable\, continuous exploration of knowledge\, w
+ orkflows\, and tools (cf. Alexander in Gabriel\; Goodyear & Retalis) and m
+ ovement from consumer to creator (Stiegler\; Stavrou). Using Emacs means b
+ eing able to use a sophisticated digital tool\, thanks to the contribution
+ s of heterogeneous maintainers\, developers\, and community members whose
+ artifacts comprise a meta picture. It is possible\, through using Emacs\,
+ to learn about the design of digital learning and learning in general as a
+ ccess to knowledge is not walled off by prefabricated design(cf. Illich\;
+ Stiegler). We can choose our own adventure.\n\n\n# References\n\n## Genera
+ l workflow and fun:\n- Bin\, C. (2020). Mastering Emacs in one year. <ht
+ tps://github.com/redguardtoo/mastering-emacs-in-one-year-guide/blob/master
+ /guide-en.org#on-the-shoulders-of-giants>. Accessed 25 October 2021.\n-
+ Gaffney\, N. (2019). Oblique strategies. <https://github.com/zzkt/oblique
+ -strategies>. Accessed 25 October 2021.\n- Goetz\, G. (2021). Additional
+ references: A back-to-school/GTD Emacs journey. <https://gretzuni.com/art
+ icles/a-back-to-school-gtd-emacs-journey>. Accessed 25 October 2021.\n-
+ Guerry\, B. (2020). Org-mode features you may not know. <https://bzg.fr/en
+ /some-emacs-org-mode-features-you-may-not-know/>. Accessed 25 October 2021
+ .\n- Kaiser\, K. (2017). Writing a technical book in Emacs and Org-mode.
+ <https://www.kpkaiser.com/programming/writing-a-technical-book-in-emacs-a
+ nd-org-mode/>. Accessed 25 October 2021.\n- Planet Emacs Life. <https://
+ planet.emacslife.com/>. Accessed 25 October 2021.\n- Stavrou\, P. My pac
+ kages for GNU Emacs. <https://protesilaos.com/emacs/>. Accessed 25 October
+ 2021.\n- Wellons\, C. Emacs articles. <https://nullprogram.com/tags/ema
+ cs/>. Accessed 25 October 2021.\n\n## On TEL design:\n- Caillet\, E. (2
+ 008). L’exposition\, le musée: L’éducation informelle comme école de l’édu
+ cation formelle. In Andler\, D. & Guerry\, B. (Eds.). *Apprendre demain: S
+ ciences cognitives et éducation à l’ère numérique*\, 137-154. Paris: Hatie
+ r.\n- Crichton\, M. (1983). *Electronic life*. New York: Knopf.\n- De
+ Bono\, E. (2009). *Think! Before it's too late*. London: Random House.\n-
+ Engelbart\, D. (1962). *Augmenting human intellect: A conceptual framewo
+ rk*. Menlo Park: Stanford Research Institute.\n- Drosos\, I. & Guo\, P.
+ (2021). Streamers teaching programming\, art\, and gaming: Cognitive appre
+ nticeship\, serendipitous teachable moments\, and tacit expert knowledge.
+ IEEE Symposium on Visual Languages and Human-Centric Computing (VL/HCC)\,
+ short paper\, 2021. <https://pg.ucsd.edu/pubs.htm>. Accessed 25 October 20
+ 21.\n- Gabriel\, R. (1996). *Patterns of software*. New York\, Oxford: O
+ xford University Press.\n- Goodyear\, P. & Retalis\, S. (2010). Learning
+ \, technology and design. In Goodyear\, P. & Retalis\, S. (Eds.). *Technol
+ ogy-enhanced learning: Design patterns and pattern languages*\, 1-27. Rott
+ erdam\, Boston: Sense Publishers.\n- Guerry\, B. & Gaume\, N. (2008). Ce
+ que les jeux vidéo nous apprennent. In Andler\, D. & Guerry\, B. (Eds.).
+ *Apprendre Demain: Sciences cognitives et éducation à l’ère numérique*\, 1
+ 55-159. Paris: Hatier.\n- Guo\, P. (2018). Students\, systems\, and inte
+ ractions: Synthesizing the first\nfour years of Learning@Scale and chartin
+ g the future. L@S 2018\, June 26–28\, 2018\, London\, United Kingdom. DOI:
+ https://doi.org/10.1145/3231644.3231662. <https://pg.ucsd.edu/pubs.htm>.
+ Accessed 25 October 2021.\n- Guo\, P.\, Kim\, J. & Rubin\, R. (2014). Ho
+ w video production affects student engagement: An empirical study of MOOC
+ videos. ACM Conference on Learning at Scale. <https://pg.ucsd.edu/pubs.htm
+ >. Accessed 25 October 2021.\n- Illich\, I. (1973). *Tools of conviviali
+ ty*. New York: Harper & Row.\n- Kim\, J.\, Guo\, P.\, Seaton\, D.\, Mitr
+ os\, P.\, Gajos\, K. & Miller\, R. (2014). Understanding in-video dropouts
+ and interaction peaks in online lecture videos. ACM Conference on Learnin
+ g at Scale. <https://pg.ucsd.edu/pubs.htm>. Accessed 25 October 2021.\n-
+ Markauskaite\, L. & Goodyear\, P. (2017). *Epistemic fluency and professi
+ onal education: innovation\, knowledgeable action and actionable knowledge
+ *. Dordrecht: Springer.\n- Markel\, J. & Guo\, P. (2020). Designing the
+ future of experiential learning environments for a post-COVID world: A pre
+ liminary case study. NFW ’20 (Symposium on the New Future of Work)\, Augus
+ t 3–5\, 2020\, Virtual Event. <https://pg.ucsd.edu/pubs.htm>. Accessed 25
+ October 2021.\n- Morin\, E. ([2004] 2008). *La Méthode - tome 6: Éthique
+ *. Éditions du Seuil: Paris.\n- Stallman\, R. (2002). *Free software\, f
+ ree society*. GNU Press\, Free Software Foundation.\n- Stiegler\, B. (20
+ 18). *The neganthropocene*. Open Humanities Press.\n- Trocmé-Fabre\, H.
+ (1999). *Réinventer le métier d’apprendre*. Paris: Éditions d’organisation
+ .\n- Vygotsky\, L. (1979). *Mind in society: The development of higher p
+ sychological processes*. Cambridge and London: Harvard University Press.\n
+ - Wang\, S. (2020). Open knowledge. Hope in Source. <https://hopeinsourc
+ e.com/open-knowledge/#open-source-knowledge-proof-of-work>. Accessed 25 Oc
+ tober 2021.\n\n\n# Availability and preferred Q&A approach\n\nDue to the p
+ andemic situation\, my teaching schedule fluctuates so I\nwill not know my
+ availability until much closer to the\ndate. Therefore\, I can only guara
+ ntee delayed answer response\n(whatever you request)\, but if available\,
+ will join live.\nMay I please note that I will be pre-recording my video i
+ f this submission is accepted.\n\n\n# Speaker release\n\nBy submitting thi
+ s proposal\, I agree that my presentation at\nEmacsConf 2021 is subject to
+ the following terms and conditions:\n\nThe EmacsConf organizers may captu
+ re audio and video (a "Recording")\nof my presentation and any associated
+ materials\, which may include\nslides\, notes\, transcripts\, and prerecor
+ ding(s) of my presentation\nthat I provide to the EmacsConf organizers.\n\
+ nI authorize the EmacsConf organizers to distribute\, reproduce\,\npublicl
+ y display\, and prepare derivative works of the Recording and\nany derivat
+ ive works of the Recording (the "Licensed Materials")\nunder the terms of
+ the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0\nInternational (CC BY-SA 4
+ .0) license.\n\nI grant to the EmacsConf organizers permission to use my n
+ ame\,\nlikeness\, and biographic information in association with their use
+ \nof the Licensed Materials under the above license.\n\nI represent that I
+ have the authority to grant the above license to\nthe EmacsConf organizer
+ s. If my presentation incorporates any\nmaterial owned by third parties\,
+ I represent that the material is\nsublicensable to the EmacsConf organizer
+ s or that my use of them is\nfair use.
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:"GNU's Not UNIX: Why Emacs Demonstrates The UNIX Philosophy Isn't A
+ lways The Only Answer"
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-unix
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/unix
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T095600
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T100600
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/unix\n# GNU's Not UNIX: Why Emacs Demonstrates The UNI
+ X Philosophy Isn't Always The Only Answer\nDaniel Rose\n\nThe talk targets
+ users who are curious about computational philosophies\,\nor those who mi
+ ght not know how to best utilise Emacs conceptually. The\ntalk will cover
+ what the UNIX philosophy is\, the GNU Free Software\nprinciples\, a typica
+ l (Neo)Vi(m) user's approach\, and then how one might\naccomplish this in
+ Emacs combining the aformentioned ideals. The\nlisteners will learn how th
+ ey can approach Emacs ideologically\, and how\nblocking themselves into on
+ e philosophy or the other will limit their\nefficiency. Although you may b
+ e a veteran GNU/Linux and Emacs user\,\nunderstanding how to use both phil
+ osophies together will still allow you\nto be more performant than without
+ .\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes:\n Cut out the portions of expla
+ ining the whole UNIX and GNU philosophies\n and instead talk about conc
+ rete examples:\n - How can one limit their usage of CLI tools while s
+ till maintaining\n the ideals of both.\n - How using CLI tools
+ can still perfectly flow into Emacs.\n - How having all programs in
+ Emacs and unified keybindings is akin\n to a terminal user.
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Emacs manuals translation and OmegaT
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-omegat
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/omegat
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T100900
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T101900
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/omegat\n# Emacs manuals translation and OmegaT\nJean-C
+ hristophe Helary\n\nEven if it is generally agreed that software localizat
+ ion is a good thing\, Emacs is lacking in that respect for a number of tec
+ hnical reasons. Nonetheless\, the free software using public could greatly
+ benefit from Emacs manuals translations\, even if the interface were to r
+ emain in English.\n\nOmegaT is a multiplatform GPL3+ "computer aided trans
+ lation" (CAT) tool running on OpenJDK 8. CATs are roughly equivalent for t
+ ranslators to what IDEs are for code writers. Casual translators can benef
+ it from their features but professionals or commited amateurs are the most
+ likely to make the most use of such tools.\n\nWhen OmegaT\, free software
+ based forges and Emacs meet\, we have a free multi-user translation envir
+ onment that can easily sustain the (close to) 2 million words load that co
+ mprise the manuals distributed with Emacs\, along with powerful features l
+ ike arbitrary string protection for easy typing and QA (quality assurance)
+ \, automatic legacy translation handling\, glossary management\, history b
+ ased or predictive autocompletion\, etc.\n\nThe current trial project for
+ French is hosted on 2 different forges:\n\n1. sr.ht hosts the source file
+ s\n <https://sr.ht/~brandelune/documentation_emacs/>\n2. chapril hosts
+ the OmegaT team project architecture\n <https://sr.ht/~brandelune/docu
+ mentation_emacs/>\n\nThe sources are regularly updated with a po4a based s
+ hell script.\n\n# Outline\n\n- Duration: 10 minutes\n- Software used durin
+ g the presentation\n - [po4a](https://po4a.org) a tool to convert documen
+ tation formats to and from the commonly used `gettext` **PO** format.\n
+ po4a supports the `texinfo` format along with many others.\n - [OmegaT](
+ https://omegat.org) a "computer aided translation" tool used by translator
+ s to efficiently combine translation ressources (legacy translations\, glo
+ ssaries\, etc.) so as to produce more consistent translations.\n\nDuring t
+ he presentation\, I will show:\n\n- How to use po4a to convert the texi fi
+ les to the PO format (the org.org file is also converted)\n- What are the
+ specificities of the Emacs manuals and what difficulties they present to t
+ he tanslator\n- How to address those specificities in OmegaT\, with regula
+ r expressions\n- How to use OmegaT features such as arbitrary string prote
+ ction\, legacy translation handling\, glossaries\, autocompletion\, QA\, e
+ tc.\n- How to use OmegaT with a team of 2 (or more) translators working at
+ the same time\n- How to solve translation conflicts\n\nI will *not* show:
+ \n\n- How to create an OmegaT project\n- How to setup an OmegaT team proje
+ ct\n- How to use OmegaT from the command line to work in localization pipe
+ lines\n- How to use machine translation and MT "post-edit"\n- How to conve
+ rt back the translated files to texi format\n- How to install translated t
+ exi files for use in Emacs
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:NonGNU ELPA Update
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-nongnu
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/nongnu
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T102200
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T103200
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/nongnu\n# NonGNU ELPA Update\nKaluđerčić\, Philip\n\nN
+ onGNU ELPA was announced last year\, as a package repository\nthat will be
+ enabled by default in Emacs\, but doesn't require\nany copyright assignme
+ nt. This means that a lot of popular\npackages can now be installed easier
+ \, without any additional\nconfiguration.\n\nIn this talk I would like the
+ give a reminder of what NonGNU\nELPA is and how it works\, update the par
+ ticipants on what has\nhappened since last year and what maintainers have
+ to do if they\nwant their packages to be added to the repository.
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Manual Package Management in The Era of Repositories - Why and How
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-borg
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/borg
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T103500
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T104500
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/borg\n# Manual Package Management in The Era of Reposi
+ tories - Why and How\nDhavan (codingquark)\n\nEmacs now has many package r
+ epositories - enought to have conflicts\nand arguments about. The packages
+ are becoming big\, they depend on many\nother packages and it is not easy
+ to keep track of what all is being\ninstalled in our Emacsen. An aggressi
+ ve way out of this is to use Yet\nAnother Package and install all elisp co
+ de manually - with borg[1].\n\n[1]: <https://github.com/emacscollective/bo
+ rg>\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes: (brief description/outline)\n
+ 1. What are we trying to solve?\n 2. What is borg?\n 3. How to u
+ se it?\n 4. Assimilate a package for demo
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:telega.el and the Emacs community on Telegram
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-telega
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/telega
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T104800
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T105800
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/telega\n# telega.el and the Emacs community on Telegra
+ m\nGabriele Bozzola and Evgeny Zajcev\n\nTelegram is a cross-platform inst
+ ant messaging system. The large number of\nfeatures and the widespread ado
+ ption make it a good choice for both private\nconversations with friends a
+ nd for large online communities. In this talk\, I\nam going to present the
+ Emacs community on Telegram and its initiatives. I\nam also going to disc
+ uss telega.el\, the Emacs client for Telegram. telega.el\nis a high-qualit
+ y package that perfectly integrates in Emacs. It supports\nthe vast majori
+ ty of the features supported by the official clients\, while\nadding sever
+ al unique ones. In the talk\, I will present the package and\nhighlight so
+ me of the most important features.
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Introducing N-Angulator
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-nangulator
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/nangulator
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T110100
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T111100
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/nangulator\n# Introducing N-Angulator\nKevin Haddock\n
+ \nThe Unix file system is essentially an N-dimentional sparse array that\n
+ currently lacks a decent editor and browser which\ncan effectively leverag
+ e the logical tri-angulation (or\, more properly\n"n-angulation") of atoms
+ /blobs within it.\n\nN-Angulator is the genesis\, to wit\, the "Model-T\,"
+ of such a program.\n\n(see google drive link below for a very old uncircu
+ lated prototype\nvideo demo. Be sure and turn the volume UP!)\n\nna.intr
+ o.flv\n<https://drive.google.com/file/d/1EZN0Xs8eGlEbSIYFml2lp3GCNnmLQa98/
+ view?usp=drive_web>\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes: (brief descripti
+ on/outline)\n\nThe reconceptualization of the Unix file system as the N-Di
+ mensional\nsparse array will be discussed.\n\nA simple pre-existing databa
+ se will be queried.\n\nIf time\, questions will be entertained by video/au
+ dio and/or IRC.
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:A day in the life of a janitor
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-janitor
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/janitor
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T111400
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T113400
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/janitor\n# A day in the life of a janitor\nStefan Monn
+ ier\n\nBecause of a reckless former Emacs maintainer that shall\n better
+ stay unnamed\, ELisp has seen a fair bit of churn in the last 10\n years\
+ , making it necessary to clean up "old" code [in order to open up\n the r
+ oad for yet more recklessness? ].\n In this documentary we will follow a
+ famous janitor in his every day job\n dealing with the aftermath of the c
+ l-lib / lexical-binding party.\n\n- ~20 minutes\n Here really\, I'm n
+ ot sure how much time this will take. I put 20\n minutes because I thi
+ nk I might be able to fill that and I think more\n than that could turn
+ too boring. I intend to make it a "live coding"\n kind of thing\, wit
+ hout anything like an outline: it's basically "make"\n followed by fixi
+ ng the warnings.
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:How to help Emacs maintainers?
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-maintainers
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/maintainers
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T113900
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T114900
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/maintainers\n# How to help Emacs maintainers?\nBastien
+ Guerry\n\nAfter 11 years of helping as the Org maintainer\, I would\nlike
+ to share a few lessons learned. My goal is help everyone take\ncare of E
+ macs maintainance by taking care of Emacs maintainers.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\
+ n- 5-10 minutes
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Typesetting Gregorian Chant with Emacs
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-gregorian
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/gregorian
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T115200
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T120200
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/gregorian\n# Typesetting Gregorian Chant with Emacs\nS
+ pencer King\n\nThere are a variety of methods for typesetting gregorian\nc
+ hant scores and outputting high-quality sheet music. One of these is\na to
+ ol called Gregorio\, which integrates with LaTeX allowing scores to\nbe cl
+ eanly inserted into other documents. All Gregorio files are plain\ntext\,
+ allowing them to easily be shared with other users and managed\nwith a ver
+ sion control system. In this talk\, I will give a brief\noverview of the G
+ regorio tool and then show how it can be used in\nEmacs by typesetting a s
+ imple score. All code and examples will be\nmade available to help new use
+ rs get started with typesetting their\nown scores.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n-
+ 5-10 minutes: (brief description/outline)\n 1. Introduction to chant
+ music\n 2. Introduction to Gregorio\n 3. Example of typesetting a
+ score in Emacs\n 4. Code and example availability
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Emacs and Montessori Philosophy
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-montessori
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/montessori
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T123000
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T124000
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/montessori\n# Emacs and Montessori Philosophy\n\n\nAs
+ a former Montessori guide and now parent\, I often think about the\nrelati
+ onship of this particular educational philosophy and how it manifests\nin
+ my work with software\, Emacs in particular. This talk introduces the\ncon
+ cept of Emacs as an educational environment and how it expresses elements
+ of\nMontessori psychology regarding "Human Tendencies". Human tendencies a
+ re innate\ndrives present in everybody that allow us to explore and make s
+ ense of our world.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes: (brief descriptio
+ n/outline)\n Quick overview of a Montessori classroom environment:\n\n
+ - the adults or guides primarily observe and present material\n -
+ the children are free to explore materials as they choose (within limits
+ )\n - the environment itself is prepared specifically to foster engag
+ ement\n\n Enumerate the "Human Tendencies":\n\n - Abstraction\n
+ - Activity\n - Communication\n - Exactness\n - Explorati
+ on\n - Manipulation (of the environment)\n - Order\n - Orie
+ ntation\n - Repetition\n - Self-Perfection\n - Work (also d
+ escribed as "purposeful activity")\n\n How does Emacs express these thi
+ ngs?\n\n - in the short version\, pose the question\, and perhaps giv
+ e one example.\n - Emacs is an environment that provides facilities f
+ or individuals to\n find their way to proficiency through their Hum
+ an Tendencies.\n - We are all both learners and guides\, Emacs is our
+ classroom
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Emacs Research Group\, Season Zero: What we did together with Emacs
+ in 2 hours a week for a year
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-erg
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/erg
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T124300
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T125800
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/erg\n# Emacs Research Group\, Season Zero: What we did
+ together with Emacs in 2 hours a week for a year\nNoorah Alhasan\, Joe Co
+ rneli\, Raymond Puzio\, Leo Vivier\n\nThe four of us met at EmacsConf 2020
+ \, and joined together around a\ncommon interest in Emacs and research. S
+ ince then\, we have convened as\nthe Emacs Research Group for weekly meeti
+ ngs. During these meetings\, we\ntook notes collaboratively\, using a ‘co
+ nflict-free replicated data type’\npackage (crdt.el)\; at the end of each
+ session\, we debriefed using a\ntemplate that we call a Project Action Rev
+ iew (PAR). As as a\nmeta-review of our sessions\, every six weeks we prep
+ ared a Causal\nLayered Analysis (CLA)\, which gave us a different perspect
+ ive on what we\nhad done. We reflected further on our experiences and met
+ hods\, linking\nour CLA to plans and design patterns. As a formal researc
+ h output\, we\ncontributed a write-up of these matters to a joint paper wh
+ ich we\npresented at the Pattern Languages of Programs Conference (PLoP 20
+ 21).\nThe paper included an interactive workshop\, in which we explored ro
+ les\nin real-time problem solving and collaboration.\n\nIn our short talk
+ we share information about these methods\, making a\ncase for other people
+ getting together and creating their own small\nresearch communities simil
+ ar to ours.
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:One effective CS grad student workflow
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-cs
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/cs
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T130100
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T131100
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/cs\n# One effective CS grad student workflow\nGreg Col
+ adonato\n\nWhen I was an undergrad\, I learned many things\, most of\nwhic
+ h I forgot. In the time since then\, I've discovered Org Mode\, Org\nRoam\
+ , Org Noter\, Org Ref. PDF Tools\, and Anki. I would like to share\nmy app
+ roach for capturing all the information that comes my way as a\nMS CS stud
+ ent at Georgia Tech\, in the hopes that I can both get\nfeedback on ways t
+ o improve the system I use\, as well as hopefully\ninspire others to build
+ workflows that make them more productive.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 mi
+ nutes: Go through some typical workflows associated with being a grad stud
+ ent\, using the packages mentioned in the abstract.
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Using Org-Mode For Recording Continuous Professional Development
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-professional
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/professional
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T131400
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T132400
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/professional\n# Using Org-Mode For Recording Continuou
+ s Professional Development\nPhilip Beadling\n\nI recently had the pleasure
+ of being audited for my CPD record with one\nof the large engineering pro
+ fessional bodies. I decided to harness\norg-mode's TODO lists to record C
+ PD items and my progress against them\ncompletely within Emacs. I also wa
+ nted the ability to export the data\nin a well presented\, compact format
+ for auditing submission.\n\nThe project was a success (I passed the audit)
+ and the resulting system\nintegrates really well into my wider daily Emac
+ s workflow\, making future\nCPD recording seamless.\n\nThe talk will expla
+ in how I tweaked and extended org-mode to get it to\nrecord the data I wan
+ ted\, followed by a demo.\n\nA basic demo org file with embedded elisp can
+ be seen here:\n<https://raw.githubusercontent.com/falloutphil/Misc/master
+ /cpd.org>\n\nA basic generated PDF from the basic demo is here:\n![img](ht
+ tps://preview.redd.it/nvdpmityhuw51.png?width=1169&format=png&auto=webp&s=
+ e0c5080560c877aa02933a40c224e52b8a1fed3b)\n\nI have a much more involved e
+ xample I could also use for the demo.\n\nThe template contains a few examp
+ les. Examples are Goals that are split\nup into Activities. All Activitie
+ s must have a Goal\, and within a Goal\nall activities must be complete fo
+ r the Goal to be automatically set to\ncomplete.\n\nIt's basically leverag
+ ing Org Capture Templates to create custom Goals\nand Activities.\n\nOn sa
+ ve or update these are then rendered into a table using Column View.\n\nAc
+ tivities are sorted by date they were completed on.\n\nThe Column View is
+ pre-configured to be exported to PDF in a condensed\nbut readable format f
+ or submission. It stays fairly readable even when\nthe pages get busy.\n\n
+ The elisp required is all under the "Config" bullet and Emacs will ask\nto
+ execute it on opening the Org file. The elisp concerns itself with\nnice
+ custom org capture functions and a few functions to ensure nice\nformattin
+ g on export\, etc.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes:\n\nA quick walkth
+ rough of the setup and functions\, followed by a demo of how\nto add CPD i
+ tems\, and update them. Finally show generation of a PDF\ncontaining all
+ the items tabulated and ready for audit review. I\nestimate this at appro
+ x 10 minutes.
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Creating technical API documentation and presentations using org-ba
+ bel\, restclient\, and org-treeslide
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-tech
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/tech
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T132700
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T133700
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/tech\n# Creating technical API documentation and prese
+ ntations using org-babel\, restclient\, and org-treeslide\nJan Ypma\n\nThe
+ emacs org-babel package is often mentioned in conjunction with\nliterate
+ programming. The ability to mix code segments with prose\nindeed offers an
+ intuitive way to augment semantic code pieces with\ntextual descriptions.
+ \n\nIn recent projects\, I've started to turn to org-mode as the primary\n
+ format to maintain technical documentation\, as well as slides for a\ntech
+ nical language course. By using org-babel to pull in "live" code\nfor REST
+ requests\, language examples\, and shell scripts\, one can be\nsure that
+ the documentation and slides are never out of date.\n\nThe session will sh
+ ow how leverage org-babel\, restclient and\norg-treeslide to write and pre
+ sent technical documentation with style.\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- Introduction\
+ n- Demo: Developer guide\n- Demo: REST API guide\n- Demo: Presentations\n-
+ Used packages and configuration
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Org as an executable format
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-exec
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/exec
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T134100
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T135100
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/exec\n# Org as an executable format\nTom Gillespie\n\n
+ Org mode is known for its flexibility\, power\, and staggeringly diverse\n
+ number of workflows\, users\, and use cases.\n\nThis talk explores just ho
+ w far we can push the boundaries of the sane\nand sensible with regard to
+ Org workflows.\n\nIn particular it will discuss shebang blocks\, and elvs:
+ two parts of a\ncomplete system for creating executable Org files.\n\nOrg
+ syntax does not support shebang lines. However\, it turns out that\nOrg s
+ yntax enables something even better —\; shebang blocks.\n\nOrg is al
+ so (supposedly) not an executable file format. However\, by\ncombining a
+ shebang block with a Org babel source block\, and eval\nlocal variables (e
+ lvs) Org becomes a multi-language executable format.\n\nIn this talk we in
+ troduce shebang blocks and elvs as a two part system\nthat transforms Org
+ files into executable documents that can run on any\nrecent version of Ema
+ cs.\n\nThese ideas are implemented in\n<https://github.com/tgbugs/orgstrap
+ /blob/master/README.org> and\n<https://github.com/tgbugs/orgstrap/blob/mas
+ ter/shebang.org>\, and\norgstrap.el is available as a package on MELPA and
+ can be installed\nvia M-x install-package orgstrap.\n\nThe talk will open
+ with a demo of how to create an executable Org file\nusing the orgstrap m
+ achinery.\n\nWe then discuss security considerations\, and show example us
+ e cases.\n\nFinally the talk will cover the details and development of the
+ \nportable shebang block for Org mode that works on a wide variety of\nsys
+ tems and shells\, and on the development of a formal specification\nand a
+ reference implementation for using Org source blocks to\ntransform Org fil
+ es from plain text documents with a bit of markup\ninto self describing co
+ mputational documents\, or interactive\napplications.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n
+ - 5-10 minutes:\n\nA demo of adding the orgstrap block and elvs\,\naddin
+ g a shebang block\, and then running an org file.
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:The use of Org mode syntax outside of GNU/Emacs
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-org-outside
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/org-outside
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T135400
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T140400
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/org-outside\n# The use of Org mode syntax outside of G
+ NU/Emacs\nKarl Voit\n\nWith the rising interest in Org mode\, the GNU/Emac
+ s community gained\nmuch momentum in the last decade. Being a nicely desig
+ ned lightweight\nmarkup language\, Org mode does not only benefit users of
+ GNU/Emacs.\nThere are many tools and services supporting Org mode syntax
+ documents\nthat do have no direct connection to GNU/Emacs. I would like to
+ \nelaborate on the advantages on using Org mode syntax for arbitrary\ntext
+ outside of GNU/Emacs for better typing usability and\ncollaboration tasks
+ .\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes: (brief description/outline)\n\nThi
+ s can only be a short teaser for the use of Org mode syntax without\nmuch
+ comparison to other lightweight markup languages. For this\naudience\, I d
+ o think that this would be too short because most\nattendees might already
+ have heard the rumors that Org mode is great\nor they have adapted Org mo
+ de in their workflows already.
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Using Org-mode to teach programming
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-teach
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/teach
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T140700
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T142700
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/teach\n# Using Org-mode to teach programming\nDaniel G
+ erman\n\nIn this presentation I will explain how to use org-mode effective
+ ly to\nprepare teaching materials\, and how to present them.\n\nFor the la
+ st 5 years I have been using org-mode to teach programming\nin different l
+ anguages: C++\, SQL\, Ruby\, Python\, SML\nand Scheme. Org-mode has three
+ key advantages:\n\n1. it supports most programming languages with a commo
+ n interface\,\n2. it is an interactive medium for delivering teaching mat
+ erials\; and\n3. it is an always-up-to-date format that does not need to
+ be exported in order to be published.\n\nI explain how I use org-mode in m
+ y courses and how I combine org-mode\nnotes other tools such as github org
+ -mode to get\nalways up-to-date teaching materials that one can use for bo
+ th\nteaching and studying (see\n<https://github.com/dmgerman/csc116ModernC
+ plusplus/blob/master/lectures/l-01-1-intro/01_1_intro.org>\nfor an example
+ ).\n\nFinally\, I will discuss some important aspects to consider when usi
+ ng\norg-mode for this purpose.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n20 minutes:\n\n- Intr
+ oduction\n- Quick demonstration\n- Workflow\n- Emacs configuration\n
+ - Important considerations\n- How to get started\n\nOh\, I made a smal
+ l mistake. I meant to propose a 40 minutes presentation.\nBut I can give a
+ quicker 20 minutes too.
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Managing a research workflow (bibliographies\, note-taking\, and ar
+ Xiv)
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-research
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/research
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T143200
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T143700
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/research\n# Managing a research workflow (bibliographi
+ es\, note-taking\, and arXiv)\nAhmed Khaled\n\nResearchers and knowledge w
+ orkers have to read and discover new papers\,\nask questions about what th
+ ey read\, write notes and scratchwork\, and store\nmuch of this informatio
+ n for use in writing papers and/or code. Emacs allows\nus to do all of thi
+ s (and more) using simple text interfaces that integrate\nwell together. I
+ n this talk I will talk about the following:\n\na. Using elfeed and elfeed
+ -score to read new papers from arXiv.\nb. Using org-ref to import arXiv pa
+ pers of interest into a local\nbibliography.\nc. Using Emacs hooks with bi
+ ber and rebiber in order to keep the local\n bibliography clean and up-t
+ o-date with conference versions of papers.\nd. Using org-roam and org-roam
+ -bibtex to take linked\, searchable notes in\norg on research papers.\n\nT
+ his text-based workflow allows for keeping everything accessible under\nve
+ rsion\ncontrol and avoids the platform lock-in of binary formats (e.g. Men
+ deley). I\nwill share my Doom Emacs configuration for this workflow\, but
+ it is not\nlimited\nto Doom.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes: I will
+ demo the packages I use in 5 minutes.
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Babel for academics
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-babel
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/babel
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T144100
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T145100
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/babel\n# Babel for academics\nAsilata Bapat\n\nPlain o
+ rg-mode is already an extremely powerful and\ncustomisable tool for task a
+ nd time management\, note-taking\, calendar\nand agenda management\, and m
+ uch more. Babel takes org a step further\nby letting you write\, evaluate\
+ , and export code in different languages\nfrom within a single file. In th
+ is talk\, I will highlight some\nfeatures of babel that I find exciting an
+ d extremely useful\,\nparticularly for an academic workflow.\n\nGetting st
+ arted with babel can be intimidating\, but it's hard to stop\nusing it onc
+ e you start. As an academic\, I typically don't manage\nlarge coding proje
+ cts. My primary purpose is writing lecture notes\,\nassignments\, and pape
+ rs\, and managing related admin. Typically\, I want\nto try and automate t
+ he boring portions of my workflow without extra\noverhead. I also tend to
+ find various tasks easier in some programming\nlanguages and harder in oth
+ ers\, and prefer to mix and match languages\nas the task dictates. Babel m
+ akes this process seamless.\n\nA basic use case is writing a document in o
+ rg-mode and exporting it to\nLaTeX or HTML. Org-mode even lets you write m
+ ultiple documents in a\nsingle org file\, which can be convenient. Babel l
+ ets you add all sorts\nof enhancements to the same file. For example\, sup
+ pose we have a\nsingle org document with all the problem sets for a course
+ . Within\nthis single file\, we could now:\n\n- draw pictures in ditaa\,
+ graphviz\, or python instead of LaTeX\,\n- use python to do complex cal
+ culations and then output the result as LaTeX\,\n- define skeletons to q
+ uickly draw up assignment templates\,\n- toggle exporting of assignments
+ with or without solutions based on tags\,\n- locally change export sett
+ ings or run a post-export hook\,\n- automatically export to LaTeX after
+ saving\,\n- tangle code blocks from some or all of the languages to exte
+ rnal files.\n\nI will try to showcase features of babel that academics cou
+ ld find\nhelpful\, by presenting some ways in which I have tried to use ba
+ bel. I\nwould also like to be inspired by other people's babel workflows!\
+ n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes: (brief description/outline)\n\nFor a
+ 5-10 minute presentation I will give a brief intro and present one or two
+ example files that heavily use babel. I will use these\nexamples to highl
+ ight some of the features mentioned in the abstract.
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Reproducible molecular graphics with Org-mode
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-molecular
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/molecular
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T145300
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T150300
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/molecular\n# Reproducible molecular graphics with Org-
+ mode\nBlaine Mooers\n\nResearch papers in structural biology should includ
+ e the code used to make\nthe images of molecules in the article in the sup
+ plemental materials.\nSome structural bioinformaticists have started to in
+ clude\ntheir computer code in the supplemental materials to allow readers\
+ nto reproduce their analyses. However\, authors of papers reporting new\nm
+ olecular structures often overlook the inclusion of the code that makes\nt
+ he images of the molecules reported in their articles. Nonetheless\,\nthis
+ aspect of reproducible research needs to become the standard practice\nto
+ improve the rigor of the science.\n\nIn a literate programming document\,
+ the author interleaves between blocks\nof prose the code that makes the i
+ mages of molecules. The document allows\nthe reader to reproduce the image
+ s in the manuscript by running the code.\nThe reader can also explore the
+ effect of altering the parameters in the\ncode. Org files are one alternat
+ ive for making such literate programming\ndocuments.\n\nWe developed a yas
+ nippet snippet library called orgpymolpysnips for\nstructural biologists (
+ <https://github.com/MooersLab/orgpymolpysnips>).\nThis library facilitates
+ the assembly of literate programming documents\nwith molecular images mad
+ e by PyMOL. PyMOL is the most popular\nmolecular graphics program for crea
+ ting images for publication\; it has\nover 100\,000 users\, which is a lot
+ of users in molecular biology. PyMOL\nhas been used to make many of the i
+ mages of biological molecules found\non the covers of many Cell\, Nature\,
+ and Science issues.\n\nWe used the `jupyter' language in org-babel to sen
+ d commands from\ncode blocks in Org files to PyMOL's Python API. PyMOL ret
+ urns the\nmolecular image to the output block below the code block. An Ema
+ cs\nuser can convert the Org file into a PDF\, `tangle' the code blocks\ni
+ nto a script file\, and submit these for non-Emacs users. We describe\nthe
+ content of the library and provide examples of the running PyMOL\nfrom Or
+ g-mode documents.\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes: (brief description/o
+ utline)\n - Title slide\n - Structural Biolog Workflow in the Mo
+ oers Lab\n - Cover images made with PyMOL\n\n - Why develop a sn
+ ippet library for your field?\n - PyMOL in Org: kernel specification\
+ n - Creating a conda env and installing PyMOL\n - Example code b
+ lock in Org to make DSSR block model of tRNA\n - Resulting image\n
+ - Summary\n - Acknowledgements
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Budgeting\, Project Monitoring and Invoicing with Org Mode
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-project
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/project
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T150600
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T151600
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/project\n# Budgeting\, Project Monitoring and Invoicin
+ g with Org Mode\nAdolfo Villafiorita\n\nIn this talk I will present how we
+ use Org Mode at Shair.Tech for\nbudgeting\, project monitoring\, and invo
+ icing.\n\nWe are a small company and we are still tuning and improving the
+ \nprocess\, but with a bit of Emacs Lisp\, the functions Org Mode\nprovide
+ s\, and reading here and there what other users do\, we\nimplemented an ef
+ fective workflow we have been using for nearly a\nyear\, now\, and with wh
+ ich we are very happy. Talk duration:\n\n–\;> 20 minutes seems to be
+ right (15 talk + questions)\n–\;> I can also make in 10 minutes\, b
+ y focusing the talk on\n budgeting (or monitoring)
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Find Your (In)voice: Emacs for Invoicing
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-invoice
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/invoice
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T151900
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T152900
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/invoice\n# Find Your (In)voice: Emacs for Invoicing\nB
+ ala Ramadurai\n\nYe Freelance warriors\, please lend me your I/O devices f
+ or 5 minutes.\n\nYour time is your money! Do you find it a pain to generat
+ e an invoice\,\nrecord the details into your accounting software and keep
+ track of\ntaxes and payments? You are not alone\, I found the whole invoic
+ e\nthingy to be extremely painful.\n\nBut worry not\, Emacs comes to our r
+ escue.\n\nMy talk will give you a basic intro on how to use org mode\, som
+ e embedded python code and file jugglery to generate stylistic and profess
+ ional invoices.\n\nWhat you will learn during the session:\n\n- How to t
+ rack your freelance time using orgmode\n- How to create the basic infras
+ tructure for invoice generation\n- How to generate the invoice\n- How
+ to manage multiple clients\n- How to enter the finance details into your
+ accounting software\n- How to track invoice payments\n\nWe will use the
+ following packages:\n\n- Emacs+orgmode (duh?)\n- yasnippet\n- pytho
+ n layer (I use spacemacs\, so whatever is the equivalent in your config)\n
+ - Some unnecessary Shakespearean references
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Productivity Dashboards with Emacs and Kindle
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-dashboard
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/dashboard
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T153200
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T154200
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/dashboard\n# Productivity Dashboards with Emacs and Ki
+ ndle\nMehmet Tekman\n\nSince 2008\, Amazon have released a new Kindle devi
+ ce every year\,\nsupplanting each generation with a newer model that boast
+ s highly\npromoted incremental features which greatly devalues the price o
+ f\ntheir older models. These forgotten models are sold on Ebay and\nother
+ secondhand websites at highly discount prices by owners who\ndo not see th
+ e true potential of these devices: Kindles are\nexcellent high contrast lo
+ w-refresh display rate E-Ink devices\,\nwith Wifi capability\, that run em
+ bedded Linux in the\nbackground. Depending on the model\, an idle Kindle c
+ an last weeks\nbefore needing a recharge. This makes them ideal as passive
+ image\ndevices that can be configured easily using a few shell\nscripts.
+ Indeed\, efforts have been made in dedicated hacker forums\nto expose the
+ Linux filesystem and to enable features such as\ncustom screensavers\, SSH
+ networking\, and more. By exploiting these\nfeatures\, and by carefully d
+ isabling the software/bloatware that\ncomes with the device\, these Kindle
+ s have found new life as online\ndashboard devices which can fetch and dis
+ play information from the\ninternet at timely intervals.\n\nHere we descri
+ be a tool to control multiple Kindle devices with a\nsingle org-mode/shell
+ -based tool\, built initially to periodically\nserve updated Emacs Org-Age
+ nda views\, but later expanded to produce\nonline local weather reports an
+ d work calendar\, Emacs calendars\n(calfw\, org-gcal)\, daily dietary info
+ rmation (org-calories)\,\nOrg-Mode sparse TODO trees\, miscellaneous image
+ and text content\n(via imagemagick)\, small messages\, and much more.\n\n
+ In this talk\, we show how to configure multiple Kindles with any\ndesired
+ custom content\, following any daily/weekly schedule\, all\neasily manage
+ d from Emacs within a single Org-Mode file.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 m
+ inutes:\n\n 1-3 mins\n Talk about repurposing Kindles:\n\n
+ - Cheap second-hand wifi device\, hackable\n - Low-powered\, long b
+ attery life\, low refresh rate –\; perfect\n for a dashboard\
+ n - Timely updated Org-Mode Agendas anyone?\n - Reference to
+ inspired projects (kindle-dashboard)\n\n 2-3 mins\n Generate
+ content\n\n - A static text+picture image easily generated with image
+ magick\n wrapper\n - An image of a sparse tree of org-mode TOD
+ O file\n - An image of another emacs view (e.g. Calfw\, or org-calori
+ es)\n - Show post-processing for optimizing image for Kindles\n\n
+ 1-2 mins\n Configuration in a single org-mode file\n\n - Def
+ ining Machines\n - Defining Commands to generate content\n - Def
+ ining Schedules to run Commands on multiple Machines at\n specific
+ points in the day\n\n 1-2 mins\n Export and Run:\n\n - Sh
+ ow exported shell configs and generated cronjobs\n - Witness multiple
+ Kindles producing desired content with wakeup\n timers
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Emacs with Nyxt: extend your editor with the power of a Lisp browse
+ r
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-nyxt
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/nyxt
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T154500
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T155500
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/nyxt\n# Emacs with Nyxt: extend your editor with the p
+ ower of a Lisp browser\nAndrea\n\nIn 2021 browsers are essential if you us
+ e a computer. Even if Emacs\nusers love text as a format\, they may need t
+ o shop and video call from\ntime to time (even more so in a pandemic!). So
+ me of us modified their\nbrowsers to at least have the same keybindings as
+ our editor of\nchoice. What if I told you there is an Emacsy browser in t
+ he making?\nWhat if you could "ace-jump" within a web page? What if you co
+ uld run\na REPL to extend your browser while browsing? What if you could r
+ ecord\nmacros?! The browser exists: its name is Nyxt!\n\nIn this talk I wi
+ ll share why it has great potential\, how you can\nintegrate it with Emacs
+ \, and how you can migrate your Emacs mastery to\nthe web!\n\nIf you were
+ wishing for a Lispy and Emacsy browser\, you should not\nmiss this talk!\n
+ \nYou can learn more about this at: <https://github.com/ag91/emacs-with-ny
+ xt>\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes: quick demo of running Nyxt from
+ Emacs and a little explanation of the code necessary for integration
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:On the design of text editors
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-design
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/design
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T155800
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T160800
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/design\n# On the design of text editors\nNicolas P. Ro
+ ugier\n\nText editors are written by and for developers. They come\nwith
+ a large set of default and implicit choices in terms of layout\,\ntypograp
+ hy\, colorization and interaction that hardly change from one\neditor to t
+ he other. It is not clear if these implicit choices derive\nfrom the ignor
+ ance of alternatives or if they derive from developers'\nhabits\, reproduc
+ ing what they are used to. Durint this talk\, I will\ncharacterize these i
+ mplicit choices and illustrate what are some\nalternatives using GNU Emacs
+ .\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n\n- 10 minutes alternative\n\nMostly a live demo o
+ f my environment with pointers to the different\npackages
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:How Emacs made me appreciate software freedom
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-freedom
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/freedom
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T161200
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T165200
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/freedom\n# How Emacs made me appreciate software freed
+ om\nProtesilaos Stavrou\n\nThe theme will be "how Emacs empowered my softw
+ are freedom".\nI will outline the key moments in my transition to a GNU/Li
+ nux operating\nsystem and mark those which eventually contributed towards
+ me becoming\nan Emacs user\, maintainer of a—\;dare I say—\;po
+ pular package\, and\ncontributor to upstream Emacs (among others). By all
+ uding to personal\nexperiences\, I will draw generalisable insights and co
+ nnect them to what\nI believe are irreducible qualities of Emacs qua softw
+ are and Emacs as a\ncommunity of like-minded people. The talk will be the
+ oretical in\nnature: there won't be any code-related demonstration nor tec
+ hnical\nreferences that only people with a background in computer science
+ would\nlikely recognise. Personal anecdotes shall be tangential to the po
+ int\nand considered as ancillary to the thesis of what Emacs represents fr
+ om\nthe standpoint of software freedom and user empowerment. The\npresent
+ ation is intended for a general audience that is interested in\nGNU softwa
+ re in general and Emacs in particular. My formal educational\nbackground
+ as a social scientist (i.e. not a programmer) and later as a\nphilosopher
+ informs my approach to this topic.\n\nThe presentation shall be 40 minutes
+ long. Its text will be in essay\nform and shall be supplied as complemen
+ tary material to the video. The\nnotation will be in Org mode. I cannot
+ provide an outline in advance\,\nas it will most likely not be consistent
+ with the actual presentation.\nIf\, however\, this is absolutely required
+ for administrative purposes I\nshall furnish one regardless with the provi
+ so that I am in no way bound\nby it and thus reserve the right to modify i
+ t ahead of the main event.
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Closing remarks day 1
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-day1-close
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/day1-close
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T165200
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211127T165700
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/day1-close\n# Closing remarks day 1
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Opening remarks day 2
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-day2-open
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/day2-open
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T090000
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T090500
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/day2-open\n# Opening remarks day 2
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:How to write faster Emacs Lisp
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-faster
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/faster
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T090500
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T092500
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/faster\n# How to write faster Emacs Lisp\nDmitry Gutov
+ \n\n- Before optimizing\, benchmark first.\n- Different benchmarking a
+ pproaches.\n- Live evaluation\, step-debugging\, measuring from a debugg
+ er breakpoint.\n- How to determine if a function is expensive. How to pi
+ ck one from\n competing alternatives (cl-lib\, seq\, dash\, lean core).
+ \n- Print-benchmarking.\n- Byte-compiled code can give a very differen
+ t picture\, changing where\n the bottleneck is. How to quickly load a b
+ yte-compiled version.\n- Steps taken to speed up the Xref package recent
+ ly.
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Tree-edit: Structural editing for Java\, Python\, C\, and beyond!
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-structural
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/structural
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T093000
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T094000
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/structural\n# Tree-edit: Structural editing for Java\,
+ Python\, C\, and beyond!\nEthan Leba\n\nIn this talk\, I'll discuss a vis
+ ion for how writing code could be\, where the\nediting operations map dire
+ ctly to the primitives of the language itself -- and\nmy humble attempt of
+ implementing this vision. _tree-edit_ seeks to provides a\nstructural edi
+ ting plugin supporting conceivably any language with a tree-sitter\nparser
+ .\n\n**Structural editing does not have to be relegated to lisps or niche
+ DSLs.**\n\nI liken the state of code editing today to writing assembly. Th
+ e reason why\npeople like Python more than assembly is that for most purpo
+ ses\, the building\nblocks of the language are mismatched with our thought
+ process. We don't think\nin terms of registers and addresses\, we think i
+ n terms of variables\, functions\,\netc. So when we write and edit code\,
+ why do we edit in terms of deleting\,\ninserting\, replacing characters &#
+ x2013\; not wrapping\, inserting\, raising\,\ndeleting expressions and sta
+ tements?\n\nI'll also discuss the implementation of tree-edit\, which uses
+ a novel\ncombination of the fantastic\n[tree-sitter](https://github.com/e
+ macs-tree-sitter/elisp-tree-sitter) parser\nwith an embedded logic program
+ ming DSL ([miniKanren](http://minikanren.org/)\,\nusing elisp port [reazon
+ ](https://github.com/nickdrozd/reazon)) to power it's\nsyntax tree generat
+ ion.\n\nCheck out the GitHub repo [here](https://github.com/ethan-leba/tre
+ e-edit)!\n\n# Outline\n\n- Discuss motivation (
+ Why should I care?)\n- Demonstrate tree-edit (Live
+ -coding with tree-edit)\n- Demonstrate tree-edit syntax tree generator (
+ Elevator pitch on miniKanren)
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Self-Describing Smart DSL's: The Next Magits
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-dsl
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/dsl
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T094300
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T100300
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/dsl\n# Self-Describing Smart DSL's: The Next Magits\nP
+ sionic\n\nWhen we begin programming\, the promise is to automate away repe
+ titive\ntasks in life. As those program's capability grows\, we begin to
+ need\nconfiguration UI's. We can start with a CLI\, but as any CLI grows\
+ , we\nrun into the following issues:\n\n- As options pile up\, the intui
+ tion of simplicity is lost in helps and\nmanpages\n\n- Stateless operati
+ on has no idea what to do next and loses terseness\n- Frequent dispatch of
+ commands to interrogate state required for the\noperator to decide what a
+ ction to perform\n\n- Composition compounds with all of these issues\n\n
+ Magit has the UI trifecta of being terse\, intuitive\, and intelligent.\nM
+ agit's UI input library\, Transient\, is a standalone package for\ndevelop
+ ing more killer UI's\, and not just for CLI applications\, but\nalso for s
+ erver applications\, Emacs applications\, and Emacs itself.\n\nWhile Trans
+ ient's potential is to create the most highly productive\nUI's short of th
+ ought control\, going beyond simple command dispatchers\nrequires a deeper
+ dive. When we think like constructing a DSL for the\ntask and using tran
+ sient to input that DSL\, we get an intelligent\,\nself-describing modal p
+ rogramming system.\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- Updates to Transient documentation
+ and demos of API examples\n- Wrapping a custom CLI tool in Transient
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:"Yak-shaving to a UI framework" (/"Help! I accidentally yak-shaved
+ my way to writing a UI framework because overlays were slow")
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-ui
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/ui
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T100600
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T101600
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/ui\n# "Yak-shaving to a UI framework" (/"Help! I accid
+ entally yak-shaved my way to writing a UI framework because overlays were
+ slow")\nErik Anderson\n\nTui.el is a textual User Interface (UI) framework
+ for Emacs Lisp\nmodeled after the popular JavaScript 'React' framework.
+ This package\nimplements React Component API's with the goal of simplifyin
+ g\ndevelopment of interactive UI's for all Emacs users- regardless of\nthe
+ ir prior experience with React or web programming. Components\nprovide a
+ useful functional unit for constructing complex interfaces\ndeclaratively
+ and also eliminate much of the burden associated with\nupdating textual co
+ ntent as application state changes. This talk will\ncover use of the tui.
+ el API and its operation in a textual environment\nby implementing some ba
+ sic UI's.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes:\n - Problem space: UI
+ implementation complexity.\n - API introduction: Displaying content\
+ , Components.\n - Visual taste of dashboards and applications built w
+ ith tui.
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Extending Emacs in Rust with Dynamic Modules
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-rust
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/rust
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T101900
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T103900
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/rust\n# Extending Emacs in Rust with Dynamic Modules\n
+ Tuấn-Anh Nguyễn\n\nDynamic module support has been available since Emacs 2
+ 5. It can be\nused to extend Emacs with native libraries\, for performance
+ \,\nOS-specific features\, or other functionalities that would take a lot\
+ nof time to re-implement in Lisp. The officially supported language is\nC\
+ , which is tedious and error-prone to use. This talk discusses a\n**safe**
+ alternative that is also a lot **more convenient**: writing these\ndynami
+ c modules in Rust.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- Walking through creating **a sim
+ ple dynamic module** in\n Rust\, including setting up CI.\n- Going thr
+ ough and explaining the **available APIs**.
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Emacs Application Framework: A 2021 Update
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-eaf
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/eaf
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T104400
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T105400
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/eaf\n# Emacs Application Framework: A 2021 Update\nMat
+ thew Zeng\n\nEmacs Application Framework (EAF) is a customizable and exten
+ sible GUI\napplication framework that extends Emacs graphical capabilities
+ using\nPyQt5. There are many new but important updates since EmacsConf202
+ 0\nlast year\, this talk will briefly go over them.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n-
+ 5-10 minutes: (brief description/outline)
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Extending the "model" of Emacs to other applications
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-model
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/model
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T105800
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T110800
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/model\n# Extending the "model" of Emacs to other appli
+ cations\nLaszlo Krajnikovszkij\n\nEmacs is a great operating environment i
+ n a sense that it provides consistency\nacross different tools and applica
+ tions within the Emacs ecosystem\, as well as\nexternal apps that can be i
+ ntegrated into it. It is also the most truly\nmalleable environment\, each
+ element of which can be adjusted or extended\,\ntherefore providing the u
+ ser with more power and freedom in personal computing.\nEmacs definitely c
+ an be considered one of greatest software products in\nexistence.\n\nAs a
+ non-programmer\, having had the chance to stumble upon Emacs a couple of\n
+ years ago\, the only regret to have is that it didn't happen earlier. The
+ definite\nkiller feature of Emacs - Org-mode\, is what draws many of the l
+ ess technical\nfolks to join the party and gradually start to use Emacs fo
+ r writing documents\,\nwhether personal or work related\, manage tasks\, e
+ mails and potentially everything\nelse. The learning curve and difference
+ in approach\, however\, leaves some\npotential users too scared of the arc
+ ane interface even with all it's quirks and\nfeatures because it requires
+ at least some technical skills to understand and\nuse properly\, and does
+ not have an easy way to connect with external tools that\nmost people are
+ forced to use for work.\n\nThis talk proposes some ideas about how the mod
+ el of Emacs\, it's focus on\nconsistency\, extensibility\, as well as it's
+ powerful interaction model can be\ncarried over to make modern interfaces
+ \, whether desktop or web applications\,\nthat would be designed with a go
+ al of reflecting the spirit of Emacs in terms of\nthe aforementioned featu
+ res it possesses\, and therefore enhance the capabilities\nof the Emacs\,
+ while at the same time utilizing it as a backend for\ntext-processing and
+ editing to a large extent. It would be really great to have\na personal we
+ b-interface for using modern task management tools\, chats\, emails\nand s
+ uch\, but from a UI defined by the user. The goal is to use it on a deskto
+ p\nor mobile\, locally or self-hosted on a server\, with support for touch
+ and\ngesture-based workflows\, while preserving the Emacs philosophy and
+ allowing to\nseamlessly switch between Emacs and its web extension\n\nThe
+ proposed solution is to integrate more of the modern tools with Emacs\,\nu
+ tilize Org-mode as a way to define application-specific parameters for the
+ se\ntools through Org properties\, and then utilize these parameters for m
+ aking a\nmodern local frontend that would enhance Emacs UI while allowing
+ to use external\ntools in a more personal and freedom respecting way (maki
+ ng the originals\nobsolete over time). The talk serves the purpose of invi
+ ting community members to\na discussion about how Emacs can become more mo
+ dern\, more approachable by people\nwho don't possess the neccessarry tech
+ nical skills to adjust it themselves\, but\nare keen to learn it\, and pot
+ entially how to attract more users to greater\nproductivity\, computer lit
+ eracy and the ideas of free software.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes
+ \n - Introduction\n - Issues with most modern tools for work\n
+ - Issues with Emacs as a tool for work\n - In search for a hybrid
+ approach\n - User controlled web-apps\n - Opinions encouraged\n
+ - Contacts
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Don't write that package! or: How I learned to stop worrying and lo
+ ve emacs-devel
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-devel
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/devel
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T111100
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T113100
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/devel\n# Don't write that package! or: How I learned t
+ o stop worrying and love emacs-devel\nStefan Kangas\n\nEmacs' greatest str
+ ength is also its greatest weakness: it is **too** hackable.\n\nWe have a
+ great community that experiment with new features that are still\nlacking
+ in Emacs core. They write up a package and develop the living daylights\n
+ out of it\, until it is basically amazing. (I'm looking at you Magit.)\n\
+ nThere are other examples such as helpful.el - great package\, but why are
+ those\nfeatures not in core? What about projectile? And so on.\n\nCore
+ demands copyright assignments (CLA). This is a fact of life. While I\nmo
+ stly agree with the people saying it is not helful\, they are there to pro
+ tect\nEmacs from copyright issues in the future. So my suggestion here is
+ simple:\njust **sign the papers**. It is just a formality\, and you shou
+ ld only need to do\nit once.\n\nI suggest that any ambitious feature that
+ we **might** want to see shipped in the\ndefault Emacs distribution should
+ by default go to GNU ELPA. You don't need to\ndo this\, of course\, and
+ I respect your decision\, but I urge you to do it.\n\nGNU ELPA does not ha
+ ve an exceptionally high standard\, but we do try to give any\nnew package
+ a proper code review.\n\nMELPA is excellent. We love MELPA. They don't
+ have a criterion for their\npackages that is important to the FSF\, which
+ is to not recommend non-free\nsoftware. Therefore\, we could not recommen
+ d it by default\, and had to build\nNonGNU ELPA.\n\nNonGNU ELPA will be us
+ ed for packages that we don't have an assignment for but\nwould still like
+ to distribute. It should ideally only be for old packages\nwhere getting
+ a CLA is impractical.\n\nIt is sometimes perceived as hard to contribute
+ to Emacs core. This impression\nis largely wrong. If I can do it\, you c
+ an too.\n\nWe do have a problem in that our tools and methods (mailing lis
+ ts\, the bug\ntracker) are out-dated. This is largely correct. We want t
+ o migrate to\nsomething else\, and the best candidate is probably Sourcehu
+ t. Please volunteer\nto help!\n\nWe sometimes see people adding stuff to
+ their Init file to fix this or that\nannoyance\, or even bug. The more am
+ bitious would go on to package up such fixes\nin what I call "patch packag
+ es". "Hey\, foo-mode doesn't have support for\n'bookmark-set'\, let's writ
+ e a package!" I am here to suggest that you submit a\npatch to Emacs inst
+ ead.\n\nFixing an issue for one person is good\, and fixing it for more pe
+ ople is even\nbetter. Fixing it for everyone? Priceless.\n\nemacs-devel
+ is not that scary\, nor is email. We are really quite friendly and\neasy
+ going\, but the communication we prefer (for reasons of efficiency - the\n
+ volume is very high) is often very brief and to the point. We are trying
+ our\nbest at communicating\, but sometimes fail.\n\nAnd we need more contr
+ ibutors. We need a successful Emacs on this planet.\n\nSo should you real
+ ly write a package\, or should YOU become a core contributor?\n\n\n\n# Out
+ line\n\n- I will urge people to consider contributing to Emacs instead of\
+ n writing small packages\, and explain GNU ELPA\, MELPA\, CLA.\n- I will
+ go into greater detail about emacs-devel\, how it "works"\n (e.g. is Emac
+ s conservative without reason?)\, how to get things\n done and the necess
+ ary mindset.
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Turbo Bindat
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-bindat
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/bindat
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T113600
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T115600
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/bindat\n# Turbo Bindat\nStefan Monnier\n\n\n# Table of
+ Contents\n\n\n\nBindat is an ELisp library to help manipulate binary data
+ . This is a\nniche library that is used by packages such as Websocket\, EM
+ MS\, and\ncpio-mode. Its implementation was repeatedly caught harassing ha
+ pless\nkitten while at the same time providing poor service slowly. For\nE
+ macs-28\, Bindat was rewritten so as to make it more efficient and\nflexib
+ le while respecting the kitten. In this presentation I intent to\nshow how
+ we saved those. Not recommended for birds.\n\n- ~20 minutes:\n 5 min
+ : Intro and presentation of Bindat\n 5 min: Showcase some of its proble
+ ms\n 5 min: Present the new design\n 5 min: Examples of what can be
+ done with it
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Emacs Lisp native compiler\, current status and future developments
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-native
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/native
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T130000
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T132000
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/native\n# Emacs Lisp native compiler\, current status
+ and future developments\nAndrea Corallo\n\nEmacs Lisp (Elisp) is the Lisp
+ dialect used by the Emacs text editor\nfamily. GNU Emacs is traditionally
+ capable of executing Elisp code\neither interpreted or byte-interpreted a
+ fter it has been compiled to\nbyte-code.\n\nIn this talk I'll discuss the
+ Emacs Lisp native compiler. This feature\nrecently merged into the main E
+ macs development line allow for\nautomatically compiling and executing Eli
+ sp as native code.\n\nDuring the presentation I'll touch on:\n\n- design
+ goals\n- compiler and runtime design and implementation\n- performanc
+ e implications\n- upstream process\n- area of improvements and future
+ developments\n\nFormat: 40 minutes
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Old McCarthy Had a Form
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-form
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/form
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T132700
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T133700
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/form\n# Old McCarthy Had a Form\nIan Eure\n\nMost prac
+ tical languages are multi-paradigm\, offering several\nabstractions for th
+ e programmer. But did you know that Emacs Lisp\ncomes with a powerful sys
+ tem for object-oriented programming? Join me\nfor a discussion of EIEIO\,
+ and learn how it can help you write more\nmodular\, flexible Emacs Lisp.\n
+ \n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10 minutes: (brief description/outline)\n -
+ What is CLOS/EIEIO?\n - Why would I want OOP in Emacs Lisp?\n -
+ How is the CLOS object model different from C++/Java/.NET?\n - Furthe
+ r reading
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Test blocks
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-test
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/test
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T134100
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T134600
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/test\n# Test blocks\nEduardo Ochs\n\nIn this presentat
+ ion I will show an idea that feels completely obvious\nonce we see it\, bu
+ t that only occured to me after after using Emacs\nand eev as my main inte
+ rface to the computer for more than 20 years.\nTake any interpreted langua
+ ge that supports multi-line comments\, and\nwhose interpreter can be run i
+ n an Emacs buffer - for example Lua\,\nHaskell\, Python\, or Julia\; let's
+ say just "Lua" from here on for\nsimplicity. So: suppose that we have a L
+ ua script that we wrote\, that\nis called "foo.lua" and that defines lots
+ of functions and defines the\nclasses Bar and Bletch. We can put after the
+ definition of the class\nBar a multi-line comment that contains an eepitc
+ h block that when\nexecuted starts a Lua interpreter\, loads the script fo
+ o.lua (by\nrunning 'dofile "foo.lua"')\, and then has several tests for th
+ at class\nand its methods\; and we can put another block with tests like t
+ hat\nafter the class Bletch\, and other blocks after some functions. Eepit
+ ch\nallows sending these tests line by line to the Lua interpreter by\ntyp
+ ing <f8\\> on each line that we want to send\, and this lets us create\nte
+ sts that are very easy to understand even without writing comments\;\nthis
+ gives us a very quick way to document code by executable tests\,\nthat is
+ super-great for experimental code that is still going to\nchange a lot be
+ fore running the risk of being read by other people.\n\nThese multi-line c
+ omments with eepitch blocks that run an interpreter\nand make it load the
+ current file are called "test blocks". The\ncommand \\`M-x eeit' inserts a
+ test block at point\, using the major mode\nto decide the right syntax to
+ use for the multi-line comments and for\nthe "dofile". We can configure t
+ he syntax of the test blocks for the\ncurrent major mode by running \\`M-x
+ find-eeit-links'\; this can also be\nused to add support for test blocks
+ to more languages (or\, more\nprecisely: to more major modes).\n\nEduardo
+ Ochs <http://angg.twu.net/emacsconf2021.html>
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Let's talk about bug trackers
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-bug
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/bug
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T134900
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T140900
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/bug\n# Let's talk about bug trackers\nBastien Guerry\n
+ \nFor 17 years\, the Org developers didn't use a bug tracker\,\nshamelessl
+ y failing the Joel Spolsky test. Why was it "good enough"?\nWhy was it wr
+ ong? Why did we move to Woof!? Why Woof! is not a bug\ntracker?\n\n- 2
+ 0 minutes
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Perso-Arabic Input Methods And Making More Emacs Apps BIDI Aware
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-bidi
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/bidi
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T141600
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T143600
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/bidi\n# Perso-Arabic Input Methods And Making More Ema
+ cs Apps BIDI Aware\nMohsen BANAN\n\n\n# Table of Contents\n\n\n\nStarting
+ with Emacs 24\, full native bidi\n(bidirectional) support became available
+ . For\nmany years prior to that Unicode support was\navailable and by aro
+ und year 2000\, reasonable\nopen-source shaping libraries were also availa
+ ble.\n\nWith these in place at around 2012\, I developed\ntwo Persian inpu
+ t methods for emacs. These input\nmethods or variations of them can also b
+ e used\nArabic and other persoarabic scripts.\n\nWith all of these in plac
+ e\, Emacs has now become\nthe ne plus ultra Halaal/Convivial usage\nenviro
+ nment for persoarabic users.\n\nSince emacs comes loaded with everything (
+ Gnus\nfor email\, Bbdb for address books\, XeLaTeX modes\nfor typesetting\
+ , org-mode for organization\, spell\ncheckers\, completions\, calendar\, e
+ tc.)\, all basic\ncomputing and communication needs of persoarabic\nusers
+ can be addressed in one place and\ncohesively.\n\nIn this talk I will demo
+ nstrate what a wonderful\nenvironment that can be.\n\n- 40 minutes: (bri
+ ef description/outline)\n\n My talk will be in two parts.\n\n In Par
+ t 1\, I cover persian input methods. With an\n emphasis on &lsquo \;Ban
+ an Multi-Character (Reverse)\n Transliteration Persian Input Method&rsq
+ uo\;. The\n software is part of base emacs distribution.\n Full docu
+ mentation is available at:\n Persian Input Methods\n F
+ or Emacs And More Broadly Speaking\n شیوههایِ درج به فارسی\n
+ <http://mohsen.1.banan.byname.net/PLPC/120036>\n\n In Part 2\,
+ I will cover the ramifications of bidi\n on existing emacs application
+ s\, including:\n\n - Gnus:\n - Persoarabic rich email sendin
+ g in HTML.\n - Ramifications of bidi on from\, to and\n
+ subject lines.\n\n - Bbdb: Ramifications of bidi on display and\n
+ completion.\n\n - Calendar:\n - Ramifications of bidi
+ on display.\n - Use of persian text for Persian (solar) calendar.
+ \n - Use of arabic text for Muslem (lunar) calendar.\n\n -
+ AUCTeX: Persian typesetting with XeLaTeX
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Moldable Emacs\, a step towards sustainable software
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-mold
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/mold
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T144100
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T145100
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/mold\n# Moldable Emacs\, a step towards sustainable so
+ ftware\nAndrea\n\nWe could learn about things better. Mountains of knowled
+ ge hide in\nplaces we cannot access or use. The more we write down\, the m
+ ore it\ntakes to find and understand things we find useful.\n\nKnowledge (
+ web\, software\, books) keeps growing faster and faster! This\nis not sust
+ ainable: we cannot keep up with it! What if we repeat the\nerror of somebo
+ dy else\, only because it would take too much reading to\nknow? What if th
+ at knowledge is in some code we work with everyday?\n\nMoldable developmen
+ t is a paradigm shift that attempts to solve this\nproblem. In a gist\, th
+ e tool you use should let you create special tools\nto learn smartly from
+ what you have already.\n\nSince we use Emacs\, let's make our great editor
+ moldable!\n\nThis talk shows my progress in making Emacs closer to such a
+ tool. We\nare going to see how we can mold structured (and maybe even nat
+ ural)\ntext to learn better\, how we can inject notes in our projects and
+ how\nself documenting this tool is!\n\nI aim to inspire you to find a quic
+ ker way to learn from our digital\nworld!\n\nYou can learn more about this
+ at: <https://github.com/ag91/moldable-emacs>\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- 5-10
+ minutes: quick demo of moldable-emacs
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:CLEDE the Common Lisp Emacs Development Environment.
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-clede
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/clede
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T145500
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T151500
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/clede\n# CLEDE the Common Lisp Emacs Development Envir
+ onment.\nFermin MF\n\nI've been developing a package that helps with the d
+ evelopment of\nCommon Lisp's software\,\nit's uses the internal semantic f
+ ramework\, it has a custom reader\nand integration for\ncommon Emacs packa
+ ges (like Sly and the internal inferior-lisp-mode).\n\nThe idea is to supp
+ ly features that other language with and static\nanalyzer have\,\nlike ref
+ actoring and code generation.\n\nFor more details: <https://gitlab.com/sas
+ anidas/clede>\n\n- 20 minutes:\n It seems like not too much people kn
+ ows about semantic\, so I can\n summarize some of it in 10 minutes\n
+ and then An explanation on how to use the package\, how to extend it\n
+ and the future of it.
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Imaginary Programming
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-imaginary
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/imaginary
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T152200
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T153200
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/imaginary\n# Imaginary Programming\nShane Mulligan\n\n
+ Imaginary Programming (IP) is both methodology and paradigm. It is an\next
+ ension of literate programming and a way of creating software without\nthe
+ use of imperative\, functional or even declarative code. Yet IP employs\n
+ all disciplines to achieve the miraculous. The only contingency is on one\
+ nor more language models\, known as foundation models. The real value of I
+ P\nis not found by abandoning sound logic altogether\, but in weaving the
+ real\nwith the imaginary. The future of imaginary programming is one in wh
+ ich\nalmost all of computing is inferred. I have built a suite of tools ba
+ sed on\nemacs for interfacing real programming languages with imaginary on
+ es\; all\nof this in order to demonstrate what I mean\; a ‘complex’ termin
+ al that lets\nyou imagine what happens no matter how nested you are within
+ interpreters\,\nan example-oriented language\, a file format that encodes
+ the provenance of\ntext and a library for imaginary functional programmin
+ g primitives called\niLambda. It is important to recognise IP because\, fo
+ r lack of a better\nterm\, it has far-reaching implications for intellectu
+ al property and the\nGPL. Please keep an open mind.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n-
+ 5-10 minutes:\n- a 5 minute introduction to imaginary programming\, fo
+ llowed by\n - a demonstration of iLambda.\n - iλ\, a family
+ of imaginary programming libraries\n <https://mullikine.github.io/p
+ osts/designing-an-imaginary-programming-ip-library-for-emacs/>\n\n\n\nIRC
+ libertyprime at #emacs on libera\n\nShane Mulligan
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:How to build an Emacs
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-build
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/build
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T153600
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T155600
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/build\n# How to build an Emacs\nFermin MF\n\nThis is a
+ deep dive in the Emacs philosophical and technical\naspect on what makes
+ our beloved GNU Emacs\nwhat it it. It's also a talk about the early LISP m
+ achines and\nfascinating were those days of experimentation and engineerin
+ g.\n\nIt will continue with the Emacs benefits/trade-offs from an\nuser/de
+ veloper stand points\, what things can be improved and\nwhat can be an hyp
+ othetical path on how to build a software that\ncan also be called Emacs.\
+ n\nAs a last part\, I'll talk about CEDAR\, an Emacs that I've been\ndevel
+ oping in Common Lisp\, the project goals\nand the challenges.\n\nFor more
+ details about CEDAR: <https://gitlab.com/sasanidas/cedar>\n\n- 40 minute
+ s:\n A dive into the Emacs/Lisp machines history\, what makes GNU Emacs
+ \n an Emacs and how you can build an Emacs.
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:M-x Forever: Why Emacs will outlast text editor trends
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-forever
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/forever
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T160300
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T164300
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/forever\n# M-x Forever: Why Emacs will outlast text ed
+ itor trends\nDavid Wilson\n\nThe computer software industry has seen many
+ "popular" text editors come\nand go\, often due to the mercurial fashions
+ of software development. In\nthis talk\, we'll take a look at why popular
+ editors fade and the\nspecific aspects of Emacs that will ensure it remai
+ ns relevant\nregardless of mainstream popularity.\n\n\n\n# Outline\n\n- Di
+ scuss the core thesis\, the features that make Emacs\n desirable for long
+ -term use (extensibility\, day-to-day 'life' features)\n\n- Include more b
+ ackground on the text editor landscape and\n how the scope of various edi
+ tors is more narrow and doesn't compare to Emacs.\n\n- Talk about specific
+ instances where editors were popular\, fell out\n of popularity\, and wh
+ y (due to changing fashions\, not usually\n better features).
+END:VEVENT
+BEGIN:VEVENT
+SUMMARY:Closing remarks day 2
+LOCATION:https://emacsconf.org/
+UID:emacsconf-2021-day2-close
+URL:https://emacsconf.org/2021/talks/day2-close
+DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T165000
+DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211128T170000
+DTSTAMP:20211027T123427
+DESCRIPTION: Times are approximate and will probably change.\nhttps://emacs
+ conf.org/2021/talks/day2-close\n# Closing remarks day 2
+END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
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