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-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--00-opening-remarks-autogen.sbv603
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--02-an-emacs-developer-story-from-user-to-package-maintainer--leo-vivier.sbv1968
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--04-music-in-plain-text--jonathan-gregory.sbv606
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--06-trivial-emacs-kits--corwin-brust.sbv1002
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--07-beyond-vim-and-emacs-a-scalable-ui-paradigm--questions--sid-kasivajhula-autogen.sbv360
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--07-beyond-vim-and-emacs-a-scalable-ui-paradigm--sid-kasivajhula-autogen.sbv1335
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--09-orgmode-your-life-in-plain-text--rainer-koenig-autogen.sbv453
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--10-lead-your-future-with-org--andrea.sbv348
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--11-the-org-gtd-package-opinions-about-getting-things-done--aldric-autogen.sbv1194
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--12-one-big-ass-org-file-or-multiple-tiny-ones-finally-the-end-of-the-debate--leo-vivier-autogen.sbv1446
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--13-experience-report-steps-to-emacs-hyper-notebooks--joseph-corneli-raymond-puzio-cameron-ray-smith-autogen.sbv1080
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--14-readme-driven-design--adam-ard-autogen.sbv1425
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--15-moving-from-jekyll-to-orgmode-an-experience-report--adolfo-villafiorita-autogen.sbv1182
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--16-org-roam-presentation-demonstration-and-whats-on-the-horizon--leo-vivier-autogen.sbv1800
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--17-org-mode-and-org-roam-for-scholars-and-researchers--noorah-alhasan-autogen.sbv1794
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--18-org-roam-technical-presentation--leo-vivier-autogen.sbv1803
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--19-sharing-blogs-and-more-with-org-webring--brett-gilio-autogen.sbv708
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--20-omg-macros--corwin-brust-autogen.sbv1605
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--21-on-why-most-of-the-best-features-in-eev-look-like-5-minute-hacks--eduardo-ochs-autogen.sbv3300
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--22-powering-up-special-blocks--musa-al-hassy-autogen.sbv2385
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--23-incremental-parsing-with-emacs-tree-sitter--questions--tuan-anh-nguyen-autogen.sbv1086
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--23-incremental-parsing-with-emacs-tree-sitter--tuan-anh-nguyen-autogen.sbv1521
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--25-traverse-complex-json-structures-with-live-feedback-counsel-jq--zen-monk-alain-m-lafon-autogen.sbv756
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--26-emacs-as-a-highschooler-how-it-changed-my-life--pierce-wang-autogen.sbv768
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--26-emacs-as-a-highschooler-how-it-changed-my-life--questions--pierce-wang-autogen.sbv768
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--27-state-of-retro-gaming-in-emacs-chip8--vasilij-wasamasa-schneidermann-autogen.sbv912
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--28-welcome-to-the-dungeon--erik-elmshauser-corwin-brust-autogen.sbv4992
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--30-a-tour-of-vterm--gabriele-bozzola-sbozzolo-autogen.sbv633
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--30-a-tour-of-vterm--questions--gabriele-bozzola-sbozzolo-autogen.sbv384
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--31-lakota-language-and-emacs--grant-shangreaux-autogen.sbv858
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--31-lakota-language-and-emacs--questions--grant-shangreaux-autogen.sbv411
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--32-object-oriented-code-in-the-gnus-newsreader--eric-abrahamsen-autogen.sbv2214
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--33-maxima-a-computer-algebra-system-in-emacs--fermin.sbv1707
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--34-extend-emacs-to-modern-gui-applications-with-eaf--matthew-zeng-autogen.sbv1713
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--35-waveing-at-repetitive-repetitive-repetitive-music-zmusic--questions--zachary-kanfer-autogen.sbv507
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--38-emacs-development-update--john-wiegley-autogen.sbv459
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--39-nongnu-elpa--questions--richard-stallman-autogen.sbv2832
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--40-closing-remarks-part-1-autogen.sbv205
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--40-closing-remarks-part-2-autogen.sbv999
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--41-opening-remarks-autogen.sbv1035
-rw-r--r--2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--42-closing-remarks-autogen.sbv2904
41 files changed, 0 insertions, 54061 deletions
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--00-opening-remarks-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--00-opening-remarks-autogen.sbv
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@@ -1,603 +0,0 @@
-0:00:03.919,0:00:08.400
-all right
-
-0:00:05.279,0:00:11.920
-hello and uh welcome to EmacsConf
-
-0:00:08.400,0:00:14.920
-2020. um I'm Amin Bandali
-
-0:00:11.920,0:00:16.560
-and I have with me my fellow
-
-0:00:14.920,0:00:20.720
-co-organizers uh
-
-0:00:16.560,0:00:24.160
-Leo Vivier and Sacha Chua
-
-0:00:20.720,0:00:25.439
-and we're very excited to be doing this
-
-0:00:24.160,0:00:28.240
-conference again this year
-
-0:00:25.439,0:00:28.560
-it's already been a year since the last
-
-0:00:28.240,0:00:32.079
-one
-
-0:00:28.560,0:00:35.680
-gosh the time flies by but
-
-0:00:32.079,0:00:38.960
-um yeah so I guess
-
-0:00:35.680,0:00:41.520
-without further ado let's get into
-
-0:00:38.960,0:00:43.520
-the conference so hello again and
-
-0:00:41.520,0:00:47.039
-welcome to EmacsConf 2020.
-
-0:00:43.520,0:00:49.360
-we're very happy to have you here um
-
-0:00:47.039,0:00:50.239
-so we're gonna start right off the bat
-
-0:00:49.360,0:00:53.600
-with
-
-0:00:50.239,0:00:56.000
-um a huge series of thank yous to um
-
-0:00:53.600,0:00:57.120
-free software foundation especially the
-
-0:00:56.000,0:00:59.760
-tech team
-
-0:00:57.120,0:01:01.600
-for um you know their continued support
-
-0:00:59.760,0:01:04.559
-and for letting us use
-
-0:01:01.600,0:01:05.360
-um their big blue button instance uh for
-
-0:01:04.559,0:01:07.840
-this very
-
-0:01:05.360,0:01:09.680
-um presentation that you're watching um
-
-0:01:07.840,0:01:10.720
-to for us to be able to deliver it using
-
-0:01:09.680,0:01:14.320
-only free software
-
-0:01:10.720,0:01:14.320
-um that's very generous of them
-
-0:01:14.640,0:01:19.920
-thank you so much next up I want to
-
-0:01:18.240,0:01:21.600
-thank all my co-organizers and
-
-0:01:19.920,0:01:24.640
-volunteers um
-
-0:01:21.600,0:01:26.880
-so this list is in alphabetical or order
-
-0:01:24.640,0:01:28.479
-but um yeah so there's myself there's
-
-0:01:26.880,0:01:31.360
-bobbin 192.
-
-0:01:28.479,0:01:32.159
-there's david bremner um david o'toole
-
-0:01:31.360,0:01:35.360
-um
-
-0:01:32.159,0:01:38.560
-mpls corbin or corbin bruce public
-
-0:01:35.360,0:01:41.759
-voigt which is carl boyd um
-
-0:01:38.560,0:01:44.799
-sasha chu of course and zeph which is
-
-0:01:41.759,0:01:45.520
-uh who is leo vva um thank you all so
-
-0:01:44.799,0:01:48.399
-much
-
-0:01:45.520,0:01:48.880
-so now I'll pass it on to sasha chua for
-
-0:01:48.399,0:01:52.000
-a
-
-0:01:48.880,0:01:54.640
-quick um overview of the schedule
-
-0:01:52.000,0:01:56.640
-we have a lot of fun fun talks scheduled
-
-0:01:54.640,0:01:59.280
-for today and tomorrow
-
-0:01:56.640,0:02:01.520
-you can find it at the Emacs con
-
-0:01:59.280,0:02:03.600
-schedule which I will open up in the tab
-
-0:02:01.520,0:02:04.880
-and here we go so I'll give you a quick
-
-0:02:03.600,0:02:06.960
-overview of the schedule
-
-0:02:04.880,0:02:09.039
-you can drop in of course all the times
-
-0:02:06.960,0:02:11.280
-are approximate despite the misleading
-
-0:02:09.039,0:02:13.760
-these specific time stamps so please
-
-0:02:11.280,0:02:14.800
-check back in on the Emacs comp channel
-
-0:02:13.760,0:02:16.160
-or
-
-0:02:14.800,0:02:18.400
-or keep checking the schedule throughout
-
-0:02:16.160,0:02:20.400
-the day as things things get updated
-
-0:02:18.400,0:02:22.000
-we'll start off with some user stories
-
-0:02:20.400,0:02:24.400
-and uh and then we'll dive
-
-0:02:22.000,0:02:26.080
-right into how Emacs can be used for
-
-0:02:24.400,0:02:28.000
-lots of different things
-
-0:02:26.080,0:02:29.840
-uh emax configuration of course is a
-
-0:02:28.000,0:02:31.120
-huge part of using Emacs like a tinker
-
-0:02:29.840,0:02:31.760
-with it and so we've got a couple of
-
-0:02:31.120,0:02:35.040
-talks
-
-0:02:31.760,0:02:36.160
-about that in the afternoon it's a lot
-
-0:02:35.040,0:02:39.280
-of org talks
-
-0:02:36.160,0:02:40.879
-so if if you're into org
-
-0:02:39.280,0:02:43.040
-the whole afternoon you've got these
-
-0:02:40.879,0:02:44.800
-things to play with next day
-
-0:02:43.040,0:02:46.239
-so sunday we have a lot of development
-
-0:02:44.800,0:02:48.400
-oriented talks we have
-
-0:02:46.239,0:02:50.480
-a development update from john weekly
-
-0:02:48.400,0:02:52.640
-and a number of talks about Emacs list
-
-0:02:50.480,0:02:54.160
-or packages that that help you with
-
-0:02:52.640,0:02:56.239
-working with code
-
-0:02:54.160,0:02:57.920
-you also have some talks that need to be
-
-0:02:56.239,0:03:00.000
-moved to the second day for
-
-0:02:57.920,0:03:01.680
-uh for scheduling reasons but overall
-
-0:03:00.000,0:03:03.040
-the second day is mostly about
-
-0:03:01.680,0:03:05.599
-development
-
-0:03:03.040,0:03:06.879
-no matter what uh what uh you're
-
-0:03:05.599,0:03:07.360
-interested in I hope you'll find
-
-0:03:06.879,0:03:10.640
-something
-
-0:03:07.360,0:03:10.640
-in the schedule for you
-
-0:03:11.760,0:03:15.200
-and then how do you actually participate
-
-0:03:13.760,0:03:16.720
-how do you actually watch and
-
-0:03:15.200,0:03:18.319
-ask questions and all of that let's turn
-
-0:03:16.720,0:03:19.920
-it over to leo
-
-0:03:18.319,0:03:21.280
-sure so hi there everyone it's a
-
-0:03:19.920,0:03:23.040
-pleasure to meet you all I'm really
-
-0:03:21.280,0:03:25.280
-happy to be part of the team this year
-
-0:03:23.040,0:03:26.159
-so uh this year we've decided to change
-
-0:03:25.280,0:03:28.799
-things a little
-
-0:03:26.159,0:03:29.440
-uh compared to what we did last year so
-
-0:03:28.799,0:03:31.519
-um
-
-0:03:29.440,0:03:32.480
-everything is on the link that will
-
-0:03:31.519,0:03:34.400
-pre-paste
-
-0:03:32.480,0:03:36.560
-in the chat right now but to participate
-
-0:03:34.400,0:03:38.480
-I suppose if you're hearing us right now
-
-0:03:36.560,0:03:43.120
-you found the link to follow us which is
-
-0:03:38.480,0:03:46.080
-very good so it's live.emacsconf.org
-
-0:03:43.120,0:03:47.200
-for the questions uh we use a pad where
-
-0:03:46.080,0:03:48.959
-you can both
-
-0:03:47.200,0:03:50.480
-add your questions and if you feel like
-
-0:03:48.959,0:03:51.920
-adding notes as well you know you are
-
-0:03:50.480,0:03:54.480
-completely free to do so
-
-0:03:51.920,0:03:56.319
-I believe you already have 42 people
-
-0:03:54.480,0:03:58.239
-which are on there so
-
-0:03:56.319,0:03:59.680
-if someone one of the other organizers
-
-0:03:58.239,0:04:00.799
-could paste the link there that would be
-
-0:03:59.680,0:04:02.959
-splendid
-
-0:04:00.799,0:04:04.640
-uh for chatting with us or with the
-
-0:04:02.959,0:04:07.920
-other people attending the conference
-
-0:04:04.640,0:04:09.599
-we are using isc and there are three
-
-0:04:07.920,0:04:10.959
-channels that you need to pay attention
-
-0:04:09.599,0:04:13.120
-to the first one
-
-0:04:10.959,0:04:14.239
-is #emacsconf where the general
-
-0:04:13.120,0:04:16.560
-discussion will be
-
-0:04:14.239,0:04:18.000
-happening so if you have any reactions
-
-0:04:16.560,0:04:19.199
-to what you're hearing if you are
-
-0:04:18.000,0:04:20.400
-excited about
-
-0:04:19.199,0:04:22.400
-the new things you've discovered you
-
-0:04:20.400,0:04:25.440
-know that's the channel to be using
-
-0:04:22.400,0:04:27.520
-we also have #emacsconf-accessible
-
-0:04:25.440,0:04:28.960
-which is community-run and it's for
-
-0:04:27.520,0:04:30.320
-people who
-
-0:04:28.960,0:04:32.400
-you know if you want to volunteer and
-
-0:04:30.320,0:04:33.680
-describe to uh
-
-0:04:32.400,0:04:34.960
-people what is going on during the
-
-0:04:33.680,0:04:36.479
-conference either because they can't
-
-0:04:34.960,0:04:38.240
-hear because they can't see you know
-
-0:04:36.479,0:04:40.720
-feel free to do so that would be a nice
-
-0:04:38.240,0:04:42.960
-help to us and for the speakers more
-
-0:04:40.720,0:04:44.800
-specifically if you have
-
-0:04:42.960,0:04:46.320
-any problem whatsoever or if you need to
-
-0:04:44.800,0:04:49.680
-check something with us
-
-0:04:46.320,0:04:51.759
-we will be in iEmacsConff.org and
-
-0:04:49.680,0:04:54.000
-feel free to message us there and we'll
-
-0:04:51.759,0:04:55.360
-try to take care of your problem as soon
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-0:04:54.000,0:04:58.160
-as possible
-
-0:04:55.360,0:04:59.120
-we also have another thing this year so
-
-0:04:58.160,0:05:02.160
-as we will be
-
-0:04:59.120,0:05:03.520
-having talks one after the other if you
-
-0:05:02.160,0:05:05.120
-happen to be
-
-0:05:03.520,0:05:07.840
-if you want to continue the discussion
-
-0:05:05.120,0:05:09.360
-basically we invite you to use
-
-0:05:07.840,0:05:11.280
-jitsi to be able to continue the
-
-0:05:09.360,0:05:12.720
-discussion either with the speaker if
-
-0:05:11.280,0:05:14.400
-the speaker is willing to do so
-
-0:05:12.720,0:05:15.759
-or just with the community of users and
-
-0:05:14.400,0:05:18.880
-for that will leave you
-
-0:05:15.759,0:05:19.520
-organize yourself on isc okay I believe
-
-0:05:18.880,0:05:23.360
-that's me
-
-0:05:19.520,0:05:25.759
-uh should I hand you back the
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-0:05:23.360,0:05:26.960
-uh speech I can't find a way to say this
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-0:05:25.759,0:05:30.000
-in english so
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-0:05:26.960,0:05:33.120
-just say yeah I mean go go take it away
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-0:05:30.000,0:05:36.240
-sure thank you okay sure
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-0:05:33.120,0:05:37.039
-thank you um so first off let me address
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-0:05:36.240,0:05:39.600
-this um
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-0:05:37.039,0:05:40.400
-the webcam placement on this laptop is
-
-0:05:39.600,0:05:43.039
-very weird
-
-0:05:40.400,0:05:44.800
-it's right at the bottom and if you see
-
-0:05:43.039,0:05:45.600
-me looking up like this I'm actually
-
-0:05:44.800,0:05:47.759
-looking at the
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-0:05:45.600,0:05:48.720
-um my second monitor which has the
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-0:05:47.759,0:05:52.800
-stream
-
-0:05:48.720,0:05:55.600
-um so yeah sorry about that um
-
-0:05:52.800,0:05:56.720
-but yeah so we have a mailing list um
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-0:05:55.600,0:05:58.400
-which of course
-
-0:05:56.720,0:06:00.639
-isn't going to be super active at this
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-0:05:58.400,0:06:03.280
-very moment because everyone's watching
-
-0:06:00.639,0:06:03.680
-but before and after the conference um
-
-0:06:03.280,0:06:05.600
-you know
-
-0:06:03.680,0:06:07.520
-please feel free to subscribe to uh
-
-0:06:05.600,0:06:10.240
-emacsconf-discuss
-
-0:06:07.520,0:06:11.199
-um for various updates and posts about
-
-0:06:10.240,0:06:14.240
-the conference
-
-0:06:11.199,0:06:15.280
-um follow-ups um like announcements for
-
-0:06:14.240,0:06:16.800
-example when we
-
-0:06:15.280,0:06:18.160
-put out the videos after the conference
-
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-we will make an announcement on that
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-list
-
-0:06:20.240,0:06:28.240
-and next up we have conduct guidelines
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-0:06:24.560,0:06:30.240
-which are a series of
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-0:06:28.240,0:06:32.479
-basically guidelines that we would very
-
-0:06:30.240,0:06:34.720
-much appreciate everyone
-
-0:06:32.479,0:06:36.240
-participating in the conference abide by
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-and um
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-to to help make you know the event a
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-0:06:38.240,0:06:43.120
-great experience for everyone
-
-0:06:40.000,0:06:48.000
-um yeah I think that's about it
-
-0:06:43.120,0:06:51.440
-do you guys have anything else to add
-
-0:06:48.000,0:06:54.479
-gonna get so good alrighty um
-
-0:06:51.440,0:06:57.840
-so if you're just joining us once again
-
-0:06:54.479,0:07:00.960
-hello and welcome to EmacsConf 2020.
-
-0:06:57.840,0:07:01.599
-um I guess we'll go ahead and uh start
-
-0:07:00.960,0:07:05.840
-with
-
-0:07:01.599,0:07:05.840
-queueing up the talks
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--02-an-emacs-developer-story-from-user-to-package-maintainer--leo-vivier.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--02-an-emacs-developer-story-from-user-to-package-maintainer--leo-vivier.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 2971cc83..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--02-an-emacs-developer-story-from-user-to-package-maintainer--leo-vivier.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1968 +0,0 @@
-0:00:00.000,0:00:05.839
-(Amin: Alrighty, Leo Vivier, take it away.)
-
-0:00:03.760,0:00:06.879
-Okay, well, thank you. I'm in. So you've
-
-0:00:05.839,0:00:08.880
-just had a
-
-0:00:06.879,0:00:10.320
-little roundup of the news, and we're
-
-0:00:08.880,0:00:11.120
-going to get started now with some
-
-0:00:10.320,0:00:13.840
-presentations.
-
-0:00:11.120,0:00:15.920
-We're starting with user
-
-0:00:13.840,0:00:18.000
-developer stories.
-
-0:00:15.920,0:00:19.199
-I was extremely interested in this
-
-0:00:18.000,0:00:21.600
-section because I
-
-0:00:19.199,0:00:24.160
-wanted to get a chance, basically, to tell
-
-0:00:21.600,0:00:27.039
-you a little more about who I am and
-
-0:00:24.160,0:00:28.160
-how I got from basically being a user of
-
-0:00:27.039,0:00:30.640
-Emacs
-
-0:00:28.160,0:00:31.279
-to being nowadays a package
-
-0:00:30.640,0:00:33.280
-maintainer,
-
-0:00:31.279,0:00:34.559
-and maybe more in the future. I don't
-
-0:00:33.280,0:00:36.160
-know. So,
-
-0:00:34.559,0:00:37.760
-just for the organizers, I'm planning to
-
-0:00:36.160,0:00:39.680
-speak for 15 minutes, and I'll have five
-
-0:00:37.760,0:00:41.360
-more minutes of questions at the end.
-
-0:00:39.680,0:00:43.440
-As I told you before, if you want to have
-
-0:00:41.360,0:00:44.879
-questions, you know you can use the pad,
-
-0:00:43.440,0:00:47.360
-and I'll be reading the questions from
-
-0:00:44.879,0:00:49.600
-there. Okay. So
-
-0:00:47.360,0:00:51.280
-hi there, as Amin introduced me before,
-
-0:00:49.600,0:00:53.280
-my name is Leo Vivier.
-
-0:00:51.280,0:00:54.800
-I'm a freelance software engineer
-
-0:00:54.800,0:00:59.359
-in France, and I have been using Emacs
-
-0:00:58.079,0:01:01.280
-now for
-
-0:00:59.359,0:01:03.039
-i believe close to eight years. I can't
-
-0:01:01.280,0:01:07.680
-believe it's been so long.
-
-0:01:03.039,0:01:12.000
-But yes, it's been a journey because,
-
-0:01:07.680,0:01:14.560
-in a way, nothing
-
-0:01:12.000,0:01:15.119
-made me go for Emacs. You know I'm an--
-
-0:01:15.119,0:01:19.200
-sorry, I was about to say Emacs major, but
-
-0:01:17.280,0:01:21.280
-no, I'm an English major. I went to
-
-0:01:19.200,0:01:24.320
-university to study English literature
-
-0:01:21.280,0:01:26.159
-and linguistics, and
-
-0:01:24.320,0:01:28.240
-I just got started in emacs
-
-0:01:26.159,0:01:31.340
-because I was looking for ways to take
-
-0:01:28.240,0:01:32.640
-better notes. I was looking for ways to
-
-0:01:31.340,0:01:34.640
-[Applause]
-
-0:01:32.640,0:01:36.720
-structure the way I was learning,
-
-0:01:34.640,0:01:40.079
-structure the way I was
-
-0:01:36.720,0:01:42.320
-taking notes. I stumbled one day
-
-0:01:40.079,0:01:43.759
-upon this weird piece of software which
-
-0:01:42.320,0:01:46.479
-was called Emacs,
-
-0:01:43.759,0:01:47.920
-and I've been trapped forever since,
-
-0:01:46.479,0:01:49.280
-basically, because
-
-0:01:47.920,0:01:51.119
-eight years ago, when I discovered
-
-0:01:49.280,0:01:52.720
-Emacs I just couldn't let go. There was
-
-0:01:51.119,0:01:55.439
-just something very
-
-0:01:52.720,0:01:56.320
-interesting about the way you configured
-
-0:01:55.439,0:01:58.799
-your setup,
-
-0:01:56.320,0:01:59.759
-and I just wanted to dive deeper and
-
-0:01:58.799,0:02:04.320
-deeper.
-
-0:01:59.759,0:02:06.640
-So the title is of this talk exactly is
-
-0:02:04.320,0:02:08.000
-how I went from user to package
-
-0:02:06.640,0:02:09.840
-maintainer, and
-
-0:02:08.000,0:02:11.599
-the package now that I'm maintaining is
-
-0:02:09.840,0:02:12.080
-called org-roam. I'm not the only one
-
-0:02:11.599,0:02:14.879
-doing this.
-
-0:02:12.080,0:02:15.440
-I'm helped with many lovely people
-
-0:02:15.440,0:02:21.360
-working on org-roam.
-
-0:02:18.720,0:02:23.360
-I got started as a maintainer
-
-0:02:21.360,0:02:24.720
-only this year, so that means that for
-
-0:02:23.360,0:02:27.360
-the eight years I've been
-
-0:02:24.720,0:02:29.200
-an Emacs user, seven of those years were
-
-0:02:27.360,0:02:31.040
-spent merely being a user
-
-0:02:29.200,0:02:33.920
-trying to be a sponge for knowledge,
-
-0:02:31.040,0:02:36.800
-trying to learn as much as I could.
-
-0:02:33.920,0:02:39.040
-I believe it would be
-
-0:02:36.800,0:02:40.959
-interesting for me to share my story
-
-0:02:39.040,0:02:42.160
-because I believe that I'm far from
-
-0:02:40.959,0:02:43.599
-being the only user
-
-0:02:42.160,0:02:45.519
-who can make the jump to being a
-
-0:02:43.599,0:02:46.879
-maintainer. A lot of you have
-
-0:02:45.519,0:02:48.959
-a lot of knowledge when it comes to
-
-0:02:46.879,0:02:51.040
-Emacs. Some of you
-
-0:02:48.959,0:02:52.720
-are at different steps in your journey.
-
-0:02:51.040,0:02:55.680
-Some of you, for instance, are just
-
-0:02:52.720,0:02:57.040
-starting to copy stuff out of
-
-0:02:55.680,0:02:59.519
-StackExchange
-
-0:02:57.040,0:03:00.720
-into your Emacs configuration. let's
-
-0:02:59.519,0:03:01.599
-say you want to do something very
-
-0:03:00.720,0:03:04.480
-particular
-
-0:03:01.599,0:03:05.920
-and you haven't found a way to do so.
-
-0:03:04.480,0:03:06.640
-You go on StackExchange. You find
-
-0:03:05.920,0:03:09.040
-something
-
-0:03:06.640,0:03:10.239
-that's interesting. You add it to your
-
-0:03:09.040,0:03:11.680
-Emacs configuration. You
-
-0:03:10.239,0:03:13.519
-barely understand anything that's going
-
-0:03:11.680,0:03:14.800
-on. You know that it's supposed to be
-
-0:03:13.519,0:03:17.200
-Emacs Lisp.
-
-0:03:14.800,0:03:19.440
-"I hardly know Emacs and I
-
-0:03:17.200,0:03:21.440
-know even less what is Lisp supposed to be."
-
-0:03:19.440,0:03:22.800
-But you paste it in and it does what you
-
-0:03:21.440,0:03:26.959
-want it to do, and you say
-
-0:03:22.800,0:03:29.280
-"Great, I'll move on to my work now." So
-
-0:03:26.959,0:03:30.879
-that's how I got started. I had
-
-0:03:29.280,0:03:33.440
-a very spartan
-
-0:03:30.879,0:03:35.200
-setup for Emacs, which a lot of you must
-
-0:03:33.440,0:03:36.000
-know... The first time you launch Emacs,
-
-0:03:36.000,0:03:39.599
-you have this feeling that you're jumping 20
-
-0:03:37.840,0:03:43.680
-years back in time, as far as the
-
-0:03:39.599,0:03:45.920
-user interface is concerned. But
-
-0:03:43.680,0:03:46.959
-as you get to spend more time with Emacs...
-
-0:03:46.959,0:03:50.959
-Some would call it Stockholm syndrome
-
-0:03:49.120,0:03:53.360
-insofar as you can't see
-
-0:03:50.959,0:03:54.640
-how spartan the entire thing is, but it
-
-0:03:53.360,0:03:58.400
-actually is
-
-0:03:54.640,0:04:00.400
-a lovely prison so to speak.
-
-0:03:58.400,0:04:01.680
-That's how I got started eight years
-
-0:04:00.400,0:04:04.319
-ago. I just wanted
-
-0:04:01.680,0:04:05.519
-to find a way to do my research properly.
-
-0:04:04.319,0:04:07.280
-I wanted to have a
-
-0:04:05.519,0:04:08.959
-tool that I could use to write my notes
-
-0:04:07.280,0:04:11.680
-in plain text, because I was already
-
-0:04:08.959,0:04:14.560
-fairly averse to
-
-0:04:11.680,0:04:16.320
-Microsoft solutions when it
-
-0:04:14.560,0:04:19.359
-came to taking notes.
-
-0:04:16.320,0:04:20.880
-So yeah, I got started in emacs. I
-
-0:04:19.359,0:04:23.040
-read a little bit about what plain text
-
-0:04:20.880,0:04:26.000
-was about. Just to be clear,
-
-0:04:23.040,0:04:27.120
-at the time, yes, I was very good with
-
-0:04:26.000,0:04:30.160
-computers,
-
-0:04:27.120,0:04:32.479
-but I was not a computer science student.
-
-0:04:30.160,0:04:33.520
-I had barely any experience with
-
-0:04:32.479,0:04:36.080
-programming
-
-0:04:33.520,0:04:36.800
-and coding, and I was even less of a
-
-0:04:36.080,0:04:39.919
-hacker
-
-0:04:36.800,0:04:42.560
-back then.
-
-0:04:39.919,0:04:44.479
-It just goes to show you that at the
-
-0:04:42.560,0:04:45.840
-beginning, I had close to no knowledge,
-
-0:04:44.479,0:04:47.840
-whether it be about
-
-0:04:45.840,0:04:48.880
-the free software world, whether it be
-
-0:04:47.840,0:04:50.800
-about...
-
-0:04:48.880,0:04:52.479
-Sacha, do you want to say something? (Sacha: just
-
-0:04:50.800,0:04:54.080
-confirming, you're not sharing anything
-
-0:04:52.479,0:04:55.360
-on the screen at the moment, right?)
-
-0:04:54.080,0:04:55.759
-No, I'm not sharing anything, I'm
-
-0:04:55.360,0:04:59.040
-just
-
-0:04:55.759,0:05:02.240
-presenting.
-
-0:04:59.040,0:05:03.680
-So when I started, I had no
-
-0:05:02.240,0:05:07.199
-experience whatsoever.
-
-0:05:03.680,0:05:10.080
-I was just a literature major
-
-0:05:07.199,0:05:11.039
-trying to get better at taking notes.
-
-0:05:11.039,0:05:15.280
-I stumbled upon LaTeX. As many people
-
-0:05:13.440,0:05:17.039
-who stumble upon LaTeX know,
-
-0:05:15.280,0:05:19.759
-you don't just stumble upon
-
-0:05:17.039,0:05:21.199
-LaTeX, you embroil yourself in the
-
-0:05:19.759,0:05:24.560
-turmoil of
-
-0:05:21.199,0:05:27.440
-suffering, of late nights tweaking,
-
-0:05:24.560,0:05:30.000
-so that your document is exactly in the
-
-0:05:27.440,0:05:33.440
-perfect shape you want it to be.
-
-0:05:33.440,0:05:36.639
-Soon after, when I got started with Emacs
-
-0:05:35.520,0:05:38.400
-and LaTeX,
-
-0:05:36.639,0:05:40.560
-I discovered something that truly
-
-0:05:38.400,0:05:44.479
-changed my life, and it was Org Mode.
-
-0:05:40.560,0:05:46.960
-As you'll get a lot of presentations
-
-0:05:44.479,0:05:49.360
-this afternoon about Org Mode,
-
-0:05:46.960,0:05:50.479
-I won't be spending too much time on it.
-
-0:05:49.360,0:05:53.680
-But Org Mode,
-
-0:05:50.479,0:05:56.880
-for me, was a revelation. It's...
-
-0:05:53.680,0:05:59.039
-There was something that, upon reading
-
-0:05:56.880,0:06:02.080
-articles on how to use Org Mode,
-
-0:05:59.039,0:06:04.160
-especially one of the key
-
-0:06:02.080,0:06:06.000
-article that I'd read which really made
-
-0:06:04.160,0:06:09.199
-a huge impact on me
-
-0:06:06.000,0:06:10.720
-was the "Organize Your Life in Plain Text" one
-
-0:06:09.199,0:06:12.240
-which i'm sure many of you must have
-
-0:06:10.720,0:06:15.919
-stumbled upon
-
-0:06:12.240,0:06:18.720
-in your Emacs journey...
-
-0:06:15.919,0:06:19.680
-For me, when I stumbled upon
-
-0:06:18.720,0:06:21.840
-this
-
-0:06:19.680,0:06:23.440
-document, I was starting to get
-
-0:06:21.840,0:06:24.240
-interested in Getting Things
-
-0:06:23.440,0:06:26.560
-Done and
-
-0:06:24.240,0:06:29.199
-all the nitty-gritty stuff about
-
-0:06:26.560,0:06:31.919
-organization and self-organization.
-
-0:06:29.199,0:06:32.960
-It just felt like everything was under
-
-0:06:31.919,0:06:36.960
-my fingertips
-
-0:06:32.960,0:06:40.880
-to make the perfect workflow.
-
-0:06:36.960,0:06:44.080
-There was something incredibly
-
-0:06:40.880,0:06:46.319
-satisfying about
-
-0:06:44.080,0:06:48.319
-having a system that gave you so many
-
-0:06:46.319,0:06:50.160
-options to configure your experience
-
-0:06:48.319,0:06:54.479
-exactly how you wanted.
-
-0:06:50.160,0:06:57.199
-You had this feeling that
-
-0:06:54.479,0:06:57.599
-the people behind Org Mode had thought
-
-0:06:57.199,0:07:00.479
-of everything,
-
-0:06:57.599,0:07:02.000
-whichever small adjustment
-
-0:07:00.479,0:07:04.800
-that you needed in workflow
-
-0:07:02.000,0:07:05.440
-whether it be more states for your
-
-0:07:04.800,0:07:07.520
-TODOs,
-
-0:07:05.440,0:07:09.360
-whether it be, oh, I want my weeks to
-
-0:07:07.520,0:07:13.039
-start on Monday and not on Saturday,
-
-0:07:09.360,0:07:13.520
-oh, it's half past one and I need
-
-0:07:13.039,0:07:15.280
-to...
-
-0:07:13.520,0:07:17.039
-in the morning, I mean, and I need to make
-
-0:07:15.280,0:07:17.680
-sure that the item that i'm marking as done
-
-0:07:17.680,0:07:21.199
-is done for the day before and not for
-
-0:07:19.199,0:07:21.919
-the current day. You see what I'm talking about.
-
-0:07:21.919,0:07:28.800
-So many details that were already
-
-0:07:25.280,0:07:31.039
-present in Org Mode. At first you're
-
-0:07:28.800,0:07:34.080
-really impressed, because you think,
-
-0:07:31.039,0:07:35.599
-wow, they thought of everything, but then
-
-0:07:34.080,0:07:38.080
-you realize that it's just a matter of
-
-0:07:35.599,0:07:40.800
-experience, just a matter of people
-
-0:07:38.080,0:07:42.400
-contributing code, because the
-
-0:07:40.800,0:07:43.520
-development of Org Mode, Emacs, and
-
-0:07:42.400,0:07:45.440
-everything is just
-
-0:07:43.520,0:07:46.879
-open to the public. You know, it's like
-
-0:07:45.440,0:07:48.560
-everything is being done with the garage
-
-0:07:46.879,0:07:50.960
-door opened. You can just
-
-0:07:48.560,0:07:51.680
-go on Org Mode on Savannah and see
-
-0:07:50.960,0:07:54.800
-everything that is being developed.
-
-0:07:54.800,0:08:02.639
-For me, the shift that occurred
-
-0:07:58.639,0:08:04.240
-in my mind was when
-
-0:08:02.639,0:08:06.240
-I was reading all the options, I
-
-0:08:04.240,0:08:08.160
-was looking at all the variables that i
-
-0:08:06.240,0:08:11.440
-could modify for Org Mode,
-
-0:08:08.160,0:08:12.560
-and there came a time, maybe two to three
-
-0:08:11.440,0:08:15.599
-years ago,
-
-0:08:12.560,0:08:17.759
-where I thought, oh wow,
-
-0:08:15.599,0:08:19.599
-maybe for the first time in a while,
-
-0:08:17.759,0:08:21.440
-there is no option for me to do what I
-
-0:08:19.599,0:08:24.479
-want to be doing with Org Mode.
-
-0:08:21.440,0:08:26.400
-I believe at the time the the key
-
-0:08:24.479,0:08:29.199
-issue that triggered this reflex for me was
-
-0:08:29.199,0:08:33.599
-I wanted to do something with the agenda.
-
-0:08:31.039,0:08:34.159
-I wanted to have a super category so, you
-
-0:08:33.599,0:08:36.320
-know, in the...
-
-0:08:34.159,0:08:38.000
-for those of you who know, in your
-
-0:08:36.320,0:08:39.440
-agenda, you have the ability to have many
-
-0:08:38.000,0:08:41.200
-files, and you have the ability to have
-
-0:08:39.440,0:08:44.560
-categories.
-
-0:08:41.200,0:08:47.920
-I wanted somehow to group my
-
-0:08:47.920,0:08:52.560
-TODOs in smaller groups, or bigger
-
-0:08:51.680,0:08:53.920
-groups, I should say,
-
-0:08:52.560,0:08:55.440
-so that, for instance, I could have one
-
-0:08:53.920,0:08:56.000
-group for my professional life, I could
-
-0:08:55.440,0:08:59.120
-have a group
-
-0:08:56.000,0:08:59.600
-for one work, the second
-
-0:08:59.120,0:09:00.800
-work...
-
-0:08:59.600,0:09:02.800
-I could have something for
-
-0:09:00.800,0:09:06.000
-university and all this.
-
-0:09:02.800,0:09:08.240
-I thought, yeah,
-
-0:09:06.000,0:09:09.600
-I think I'd like this.
-
-0:09:09.600,0:09:15.519
-After having spent so long working
-
-0:09:12.959,0:09:17.200
-with Emacs and working with Org Mode,
-
-0:09:15.519,0:09:18.800
-I had some ideas about what was
-
-0:09:17.200,0:09:21.120
-within the realm of possibility and what
-
-0:09:18.800,0:09:23.040
-wasn't. Here I thought to myself,
-
-0:09:21.120,0:09:24.320
-this is definitely something that I can do.
-
-0:09:24.320,0:09:31.360
-And so thus started my journey
-
-0:09:27.839,0:09:33.040
-into the Org Mode libraries.
-
-0:09:31.360,0:09:34.959
-I won't go too much into details right
-
-0:09:33.040,0:09:37.040
-now, because right now, the main objective
-
-0:09:34.959,0:09:40.240
-that I have is just to show you
-
-0:09:37.040,0:09:41.600
-how simple it is to become a maintainer,
-
-0:09:40.240,0:09:42.800
-how to become more involved with the
-
-0:09:41.600,0:09:46.320
-development.
-
-0:09:42.800,0:09:48.839
-The libraries in Org Mode,
-
-0:09:46.320,0:09:50.320
-they're written in Elisp, which is a very...
-
-0:09:50.320,0:09:54.080
-It might seem like an obscure language,
-
-0:09:52.080,0:09:56.399
-and it certainly is,
-
-0:09:54.080,0:09:57.279
-but as soon as you get the logic of the
-
-0:09:56.399,0:09:59.360
-language--and
-
-0:09:57.279,0:10:00.560
-what i'm telling you
-
-0:09:59.360,0:10:01.760
-is coming from someone who's never
-
-0:10:00.560,0:10:04.399
-studied programming--
-
-0:10:01.760,0:10:06.079
-it made sense.
-
-0:10:04.399,0:10:07.279
-Everything is so verbose when you get
-
-0:10:06.079,0:10:10.399
-into the code.
-
-0:10:07.279,0:10:13.360
-When you learn the rudiments
-
-0:10:10.399,0:10:14.079
-of Elisp, you start getting to the code,
-
-0:10:13.360,0:10:17.120
-and you start
-
-0:10:14.079,0:10:19.519
-thinking, wow, okay that makes sense,
-
-0:10:17.120,0:10:21.360
-and you start developing a logic
-
-0:10:19.519,0:10:24.720
-for all this.
-
-0:10:21.360,0:10:26.959
-So, equipped as I was with this
-
-0:10:24.720,0:10:27.760
-new knowledge, I went on my project,
-
-0:10:27.760,0:10:30.880
-i went into the Org agenda code,
-
-0:10:30.000,0:10:33.440
-and I thought, okay,
-
-0:10:30.880,0:10:34.640
-is there anything that I can use to do
-
-0:10:33.440,0:10:37.760
-my bidding?
-
-0:10:34.640,0:10:38.560
-Fast forward maybe two to three weeks of
-
-0:10:38.560,0:10:42.720
-intense turmoil and many nights which
-
-0:10:41.600,0:10:45.279
-were spent
-
-0:10:42.720,0:10:46.079
-single-mindedly working on this project,
-
-0:10:46.079,0:10:51.680
-two weeks after, I had something that was
-
-0:10:48.079,0:10:54.640
-working, and I was pretty happy about it.
-
-0:10:51.680,0:10:56.800
-That was a key landmark for
-
-0:10:54.640,0:11:00.320
-me, because when that happened,
-
-0:10:56.800,0:11:02.160
-it just felt like, okay, I can contribute
-
-0:11:00.320,0:11:03.120
-something to Org Mode, and I can do
-
-0:11:02.160,0:11:06.000
-something that would benefit as many people
-
-0:11:06.000,0:11:09.519
-as possible.
-
-0:11:07.600,0:11:11.440
-And to me, that was the click. That's when
-
-0:11:09.519,0:11:13.680
-it occurred. That's when I
-
-0:11:11.440,0:11:14.640
-went on my first project and I did something
-
-0:11:14.640,0:11:18.079
-that felt useful to the community.
-
-0:11:18.079,0:11:21.760
-And nowadays, as I told you, I
-
-0:11:20.079,0:11:22.640
-maintain packages, but really, nothing
-
-0:11:21.760,0:11:24.399
-has changed.
-
-0:11:22.640,0:11:26.880
-The only thing, maybe, that has changed
-
-0:11:24.399,0:11:28.320
-that I've turned my mind onto other problems.
-
-0:11:28.320,0:11:35.279
-Maybe I've got three more minutes
-
-0:11:32.000,0:11:38.399
-and I'd like to finish by
-
-0:11:35.279,0:11:39.600
-maybe something a little different.
-
-0:11:38.399,0:11:42.079
-I've told you my Emacs story and
-
-0:11:39.600,0:11:43.600
-I hope I've stressed how little effort
-
-0:11:42.079,0:11:46.560
-it took me to
-
-0:11:43.600,0:11:48.399
-move from steps to steps on the ladder.
-
-0:11:46.560,0:11:48.959
-The ladder implies a sense of hierarchy,
-
-0:11:48.399,0:11:52.240
-but it really isn't.
-
-0:11:48.959,0:11:53.920
-Whatever your step on the
-
-0:11:52.240,0:11:55.600
-journey of Emacs is...
-
-0:11:53.920,0:11:57.440
-Some of you might be at the
-
-0:11:55.600,0:11:59.360
-step where you're really worried
-
-0:11:57.440,0:12:01.440
-about learning Elisp because it feels
-
-0:11:59.360,0:12:02.399
-like such a monumental task to be
-
-0:12:01.440,0:12:04.720
-undertaking
-
-0:12:02.399,0:12:06.079
-and you have no experience whatsoever,
-
-0:12:04.720,0:12:07.839
-but the thing is,
-
-0:12:06.079,0:12:09.600
-maybe you could try climbing this first
-
-0:12:07.839,0:12:11.200
-step on the ladder. Maybe you could try,
-
-0:12:09.600,0:12:13.120
-if you have any project,
-
-0:12:11.200,0:12:14.880
-if you've been using Org Mode,
-
-0:12:13.120,0:12:15.600
-maybe one day you thought, "oh, yes,
-
-0:12:15.600,0:12:19.920
-I wish I could do this but I can't,"
-
-0:12:18.160,0:12:21.680
-or maybe do try to do this,
-
-0:12:19.920,0:12:23.279
-maybe do try to change something in a
-
-0:12:21.680,0:12:26.560
-major mode that you're using
-
-0:12:23.279,0:12:29.760
-and which you feel might be better.
-
-0:12:26.560,0:12:31.040
-I think Emacs, Org Mode, and all free
-
-0:12:29.760,0:12:34.240
-software in general
-
-0:12:31.040,0:12:34.720
-has this tendency to give you this idea
-
-0:12:34.720,0:12:41.360
-that I can be a hacker
-
-0:12:38.720,0:12:43.200
-in the sense of the term
-
-0:12:41.360,0:12:46.320
-that you're modifying things
-
-0:12:43.200,0:12:48.399
-to do your bidding.
-
-0:12:46.320,0:12:50.320
-For me, I believe this to be a very
-
-0:12:48.399,0:12:52.959
-healthy attitude towards software.
-
-0:12:50.320,0:12:54.079
-As Amin said in the very beginning,
-
-0:12:54.079,0:12:59.360
-we are doing this entire presentation--
-
-0:12:57.279,0:13:00.800
-sorry, this entire conference with free software.
-
-0:13:00.800,0:13:03.920
-Just see all the things we've been able
-
-0:13:02.240,0:13:07.360
-to do in free software.
-
-0:13:03.920,0:13:10.399
-For me, Emacs
-
-0:13:07.360,0:13:14.399
-was my gateway, so to speak,
-
-0:13:10.399,0:13:17.200
-into how to contribute to free software,
-
-0:13:14.399,0:13:18.639
-about the philosophy that surrounds it.
-
-0:13:18.639,0:13:22.000
-What I would like to do... I'll finish
-
-0:13:20.560,0:13:23.360
-on this note and then I'll be taking
-
-0:13:22.000,0:13:26.480
-your questions.
-
-0:13:23.360,0:13:29.360
-Just try.
-
-0:13:26.480,0:13:31.279
-You've read on Reddit that you
-
-0:13:29.360,0:13:33.040
-need to go through the Elisp manual
-
-0:13:31.279,0:13:35.920
-in Emacs. You might be scared,
-
-0:13:33.040,0:13:38.560
-but just do it. Just give it a shot.
-
-0:13:35.920,0:13:39.199
-Just give it maybe one afternoon.
-
-0:13:38.560,0:13:42.160
-Try to read it.
-
-0:13:39.199,0:13:43.120
-Try to see if this appeals to your mind.
-
-0:13:43.120,0:13:45.680
-If you've been interested enough in my
-
-0:13:44.399,0:13:47.199
-presentation right now, and if you're
-
-0:13:45.680,0:13:48.560
-interested enough in any of the talks
-
-0:13:47.199,0:13:49.519
-you're going to have during the entire
-
-0:13:48.560,0:13:51.839
-conference,
-
-0:13:49.519,0:13:52.959
-do give it a shot. I'm pretty sure
-
-0:13:51.839,0:13:55.760
-you will like the journey
-
-0:13:52.959,0:13:57.120
-on which you will be embarking upon. So i
-
-0:13:55.760,0:13:57.680
-believe i'm finishing one minute early
-
-0:13:57.120,0:14:00.000
-but I see quite a bit of questions already.
-
-0:14:01.040,0:14:06.000
-I'm not sure. Sacha, should I
-
-0:14:04.320,0:14:07.120
-just be reading the questions, or
-
-0:14:06.000,0:14:08.639
-do you want to be feeding me the
-
-0:14:07.120,0:14:11.120
-questions?
-
-0:14:08.639,0:14:12.320
-(Amin: It's really up to you. it's
-
-0:14:11.120,0:14:13.600
-completely up to you.
-
-0:14:12.320,0:14:15.839
-If you've got the questions
-
-0:14:13.600,0:14:18.320
-open and can take them or read them,
-
-0:14:15.839,0:14:19.680
-by all means please.)
-
-0:14:18.320,0:14:20.880
-Okay, well, I'm going to read them because
-
-0:14:19.680,0:14:22.800
-I've got them on the side. I'm going
-
-0:14:20.880,0:14:24.959
-to start with the one at the bottom.
-
-0:14:22.800,0:14:26.959
-"Do you feel that being a white male
-
-0:14:24.959,0:14:29.680
-contributed to your experience?"
-
-0:14:26.959,0:14:31.360
-Yeah. I mean, I do believe... There's
-
-0:14:29.680,0:14:34.639
-an idea of privilege. I mean, I'm
-
-0:14:31.360,0:14:35.279
-french. I live in... I'm lucky enough to
-
-0:14:34.639,0:14:38.560
-be here
-
-0:14:35.279,0:14:39.120
-at university, okay, and I'm fairly aware
-
-0:14:38.560,0:14:41.600
-of the
-
-0:14:39.120,0:14:42.880
-discrepancies that happen, even in France,
-
-0:14:41.600,0:14:46.320
-according to this...
-
-0:14:42.880,0:14:51.040
-So, yes, I believe my journey
-
-0:14:46.320,0:14:51.040
-was heavily influenced by this.
-
-0:14:51.199,0:14:54.320
-If you would like to specify the
-
-0:14:52.639,0:14:56.560
-question, please do, but I don't have
-
-0:14:54.320,0:14:59.199
-really all that much to ask on this.
-
-0:14:56.560,0:14:59.839
-"What is your advice to start learning
-
-0:14:59.839,0:15:04.160
-Elisp language? Any particularly good
-
-0:15:01.279,0:15:06.880
-resource or any other tips?" I finished
-
-0:15:04.160,0:15:07.760
-um my presentation by telling you about
-
-0:15:07.760,0:15:11.519
-the Elisp introduction which is built into
-
-0:15:10.560,0:15:13.519
-Emacs. What I might do... I'm going to share my
-
-0:15:13.519,0:15:19.519
-screen just to show you
-
-0:15:15.120,0:15:22.880
-how this works. I will be sharing
-
-0:15:19.519,0:15:24.399
-this window.
-
-0:15:22.880,0:15:27.199
-I believe it's frozen on my end, so I
-
-0:15:24.399,0:15:28.959
-can't see anything.
-
-0:15:27.199,0:15:31.680
-i'm not sure if you can see me or if my
-
-0:15:28.959,0:15:31.680
-camera is moving.
-
-0:15:32.560,0:15:36.000
-Okay, so my Firefox is frozen. So i'll
-
-0:15:34.800,0:15:36.800
-answer the question, but I won't be able
-
-0:15:36.000,0:15:40.000
-to show you
-
-0:15:36.800,0:15:42.639
-what I wanted to show you.
-
-0:15:40.000,0:15:44.320
-There's a built-in guide inside Emacs to
-
-0:15:42.639,0:15:46.880
-learn Elisp.
-
-0:15:44.320,0:15:49.040
-Maybe the best chance that you have
-
-0:15:46.880,0:15:50.959
-is just to go open these info pages.
-
-0:15:49.040,0:15:53.839
-I'm sure someone will be kind enough to
-
-0:15:50.959,0:15:54.880
-mention this to you in the #emacsconf channel
-
-0:15:53.839,0:15:56.880
-on IRC
-
-0:15:54.880,0:15:59.040
-but it's probably the best way
-
-0:15:56.880,0:16:01.279
-to get started with Elisp.
-
-0:15:59.040,0:16:03.360
-You know, we tend to get obsessed, with
-
-0:16:01.279,0:16:04.880
-software and with programming, about
-
-0:16:03.360,0:16:06.959
-what's the best way to get started.
-
-0:16:04.880,0:16:08.399
-You see so many people who are
-
-0:16:06.959,0:16:10.639
-heavily interested
-
-0:16:08.399,0:16:12.320
-in getting started with programming but
-
-0:16:10.639,0:16:14.320
-they never managed to get started
-
-0:16:12.320,0:16:16.320
-because there's so much choice.
-
-0:16:14.320,0:16:17.920
-My advice would be to just get started.
-
-0:16:16.320,0:16:18.800
-Don't get so worried about the first step.
-
-0:16:18.800,0:16:23.920
-Well, if I may still recommend the
-
-0:16:21.839,0:16:26.480
-first step, even after saying this,
-
-0:16:23.920,0:16:28.000
-do try to start with the
-
-0:16:26.480,0:16:29.600
-built-in guides. I believe they're pretty
-
-0:16:28.000,0:16:32.079
-pretty good.
-
-0:16:29.600,0:16:33.199
-There was another question. It's
-
-0:16:32.079,0:16:34.800
-the last question that I can read and
-
-0:16:33.199,0:16:36.000
-after that, you will have to read
-
-0:16:34.800,0:16:37.920
-the questions for me because everything
-
-0:16:36.000,0:16:41.600
-is frozen on my end.
-
-0:16:37.920,0:16:44.240
-I hope I'm not frozen
-
-0:16:41.600,0:16:45.680
-in a very bad position so
-
-0:16:44.240,0:16:48.240
-please excuse me if
-
-0:16:45.680,0:16:49.759
-my mouth is open or anything. (Amin: no, we
-
-0:16:48.240,0:16:51.120
-just completely lost the video feed, so
-
-0:16:49.759,0:16:52.720
-no worries.)
-
-0:16:51.120,0:16:54.800
-Oh, splendid, so I won't have to make a
-
-0:16:52.720,0:16:56.800
-fool out of myself.
-
-0:16:54.800,0:16:58.320
-So the last question I wanted to answer was
-
-0:16:56.800,0:16:59.199
-"Have you read Dirk Gently's Holistic
-
-0:16:58.320,0:17:02.079
-Detective Agency?"
-
-0:16:59.199,0:17:03.519
-No, I haven't. I hope it's not
-
-0:17:03.519,0:17:06.559
-a jab at the way i'm dressing for the
-
-0:17:05.199,0:17:08.559
-conference, but yeah,
-
-0:17:06.559,0:17:10.559
-I haven't read it. Was there any
-
-0:17:08.559,0:17:13.919
-other question?
-
-0:17:10.559,0:17:15.919
-(Amin: I see one other question.
-
-0:17:15.919,0:17:19.679
-"Any recommendation for good packaging
-
-0:17:17.919,0:17:23.199
-guides or places to start?
-
-0:17:19.679,0:17:24.959
-i get a bit overwhelmed by some things.
-
-0:17:23.199,0:17:26.799
-For example, the choice of different test
-
-0:17:24.959,0:17:28.240
-frameworks.")
-
-0:17:26.799,0:17:30.400
-Right. Okay. So that's a very good
-
-0:17:28.240,0:17:33.840
-question. I believe
-
-0:17:30.400,0:17:35.840
-alphapapa is in the chat right now.
-
-0:17:33.840,0:17:37.760
-As myself a new lisp developer for
-
-0:17:35.840,0:17:38.320
-org-roam, i'd really recommend you to look into
-
-0:17:38.320,0:17:42.799
-his package developers' guide because you
-
-0:17:40.640,0:17:44.559
-have a list of all the softwares that
-
-0:17:42.799,0:17:45.760
-are extremely useful to be using when
-
-0:17:44.559,0:17:48.000
-you're getting started.
-
-0:17:45.760,0:17:50.000
-If you're looking into a first
-
-0:17:48.000,0:17:52.640
-step for how to develop
-
-0:17:50.000,0:17:53.520
-elast package, i'd really advise you to
-
-0:17:52.640,0:17:56.559
-look into edebug.
-
-0:17:53.520,0:17:58.000
-It's one word, edebug,
-
-0:17:56.559,0:17:58.400
-and you have a section in the manual for this,
-
-0:17:58.400,0:18:01.919
-because for me, it was the key step to
-
-0:18:00.799,0:18:04.320
-getting to
-
-0:18:01.919,0:18:05.679
-develop good packages. It was
-
-0:18:04.320,0:18:06.160
-understanding basically what the code did
-
-0:18:06.160,0:18:09.919
-and having us something like a
-
-0:18:08.960,0:18:11.760
-REPL (read-evaluate-print-loop)
-
-0:18:09.919,0:18:13.360
-that allows you to step through the code
-
-0:18:11.760,0:18:13.919
-and see exactly which states the
-
-0:18:13.360,0:18:16.000
-variables are at which at this point in the
-
-0:18:16.000,0:18:20.080
-program. That's really my biggest advice
-
-0:18:18.400,0:18:21.200
-to you
-
-0:18:20.080,0:18:24.400
-[Music]
-
-0:18:21.200,0:18:26.160
-Any other question? Thanks. Yeah, I see one
-
-0:18:24.400,0:18:28.240
-or two more.
-
-0:18:26.160,0:18:30.080
-So there's one. They ask, "How did the
-
-0:18:28.240,0:18:33.120
-freedom of Emacs help you on
-
-0:18:30.080,0:18:36.480
-your way?"
-
-0:18:33.120,0:18:38.080
-So the freedom of Emacs... I mentioned
-
-0:18:36.480,0:18:40.320
-that Emacs, for me, was my gateway
-
-0:18:38.080,0:18:41.360
-into free software and the freedom of
-
-0:18:40.320,0:18:43.840
-Emacs was that
-
-0:18:41.360,0:18:44.960
-you could maybe... First and foremost,
-
-0:18:43.840,0:18:47.840
-compared to
-
-0:18:44.960,0:18:48.400
-other software, was that you had
-
-0:18:47.840,0:18:51.039
-behind Emacs,
-
-0:18:48.400,0:18:52.400
-Elisp, which allows you to read the code,
-
-0:18:51.039,0:18:53.039
-read whatever is going on in the
-
-0:18:52.400,0:18:54.640
-background.
-
-0:18:53.039,0:18:56.160
-Surely, if you go deep enough, you'll
-
-0:18:54.640,0:18:58.000
-end up on
-
-0:18:56.160,0:18:59.679
-C functions that you might not be able to
-
-0:18:58.000,0:19:02.000
-read if you do not have the experience.
-
-0:18:59.679,0:19:03.520
-But for Org Mode, which was my gateway
-
-0:19:02.000,0:19:06.400
-into Emacs,
-
-0:19:03.520,0:19:08.240
-most of it is written in Elisp, and all
-
-0:19:06.400,0:19:10.080
-the commands have a very verbose
-
-0:19:08.240,0:19:13.440
-name, like something simple as
-
-0:19:10.080,0:19:15.840
-org go to next subtree or
-
-0:19:13.440,0:19:16.880
-org go to a parent subtree. You know, things
-
-0:19:15.840,0:19:20.240
-like this.
-
-0:19:16.880,0:19:22.799
-It's so elegant. It's verbose.
-
-0:19:20.240,0:19:24.320
-That's a sense of freedom
-
-0:19:22.799,0:19:26.160
-insofar as you can go into the code and
-
-0:19:24.320,0:19:28.640
-see, oh, okay, that's how it's implemented.
-
-0:19:26.160,0:19:30.400
-I believe in a way that's the freedom
-
-0:19:28.640,0:19:31.600
-and the liberty that is given to you to
-
-0:19:30.400,0:19:33.039
-look into the code
-
-0:19:31.600,0:19:34.640
-is something that invites you to do the
-
-0:19:33.039,0:19:35.200
-same with your life. As
-
-0:19:34.640,0:19:36.559
-someone who
-
-0:19:35.200,0:19:38.080
-does a little bit of philosophy on the
-
-0:19:36.559,0:19:38.799
-side, I believe it's a very healthy
-
-0:19:38.080,0:19:42.320
-message
-
-0:19:38.799,0:19:45.440
-to be gathering from a piece of software.
-
-0:19:42.320,0:19:50.720
-(Amin: Awesome, thank you.
-
-0:19:45.440,0:19:50.720
-Let's see... So we have...
-
-0:19:50.960,0:19:55.200
-I think I saw another question pop up.)
-
-0:19:57.200,0:19:59.760
-I'm not sure how we're doing as far
-
-0:19:58.559,0:20:02.080
-as time is concerned... I believe we
-
-0:19:59.760,0:20:04.240
-have like one or two minutes more.
-
-0:20:02.080,0:20:05.679
-(Amin: Yeah, actually, we're quite a bit
-
-0:20:04.240,0:20:07.840
-ahead of the schedule, so if we take a
-
-0:20:05.679,0:20:09.440
-little bit longer, we're fine.
-
-0:20:07.840,0:20:11.280
-If you do have more
-
-0:20:09.440,0:20:12.880
-questions, please do.) I'm just sorry that
-
-0:20:11.280,0:20:16.000
-my video is not working anymore.
-
-0:20:12.880,0:20:17.120
-(Amin: No problem. Someone was
-
-0:20:16.000,0:20:21.120
-actually saying...
-
-0:20:17.120,0:20:24.159
-What's the most recent...
-
-0:20:21.120,0:20:25.919
-Actually, yeah well before that.
-
-0:20:24.159,0:20:27.440
-"Please show off your three-piece suit
-
-0:20:25.919,0:20:30.080
-before you end your talk,
-
-0:20:27.440,0:20:31.919
-which requires fixing your frozen camera.
-
-0:20:30.080,0:20:34.000
-if this is not possible, please post
-
-0:20:31.919,0:20:36.240
-suit selfies in an easily accessible
-
-0:20:34.000,0:20:38.720
-location."
-
-0:20:36.240,0:20:40.559
-Okay, I'll make sure to do this. But yes, I
-
-0:20:38.720,0:20:41.200
-wanted to hype things up for the
-
-0:20:40.559,0:20:43.039
-conference,
-
-0:20:41.200,0:20:44.400
-so yes I did get the three-piece suit out.
-
-0:20:43.039,0:20:45.919
-I'm very glad
-
-0:20:44.400,0:20:47.760
-you like it. By the way when you get
-
-0:20:45.919,0:20:50.080
-a chance to see me live again,
-
-0:20:47.760,0:20:51.280
-do appreciate that my tie has both the
-
-0:20:50.080,0:20:53.679
-colors of Emacs purple
-
-0:20:51.280,0:20:54.960
-and also Org Mode green.
-
-0:20:53.679,0:20:55.760
-It took me a while to find this one, so I
-
-0:20:55.760,0:20:58.880
-hope you will appreciate this.
-
-0:21:00.840,0:21:06.880
-(Amin: Awesome. Let's see. We have
-
-0:21:03.679,0:21:08.960
-one other question. "What's the
-
-0:21:06.880,0:21:10.159
-most recent Emacs package or tool that
-
-0:21:08.960,0:21:14.480
-you've discovered
-
-0:21:10.159,0:21:17.600
-that you've added to your repertoire?")
-
-0:21:14.480,0:21:20.320
-Very interesting question.
-
-0:21:17.600,0:21:20.799
-The thing is,
-
-0:21:20.799,0:21:23.919
-when you've spent as long as I have on
-
-0:21:22.320,0:21:25.120
-Emacs--and I know that I've only spent
-
-0:21:23.919,0:21:28.799
-eight years and some of you
-
-0:21:25.120,0:21:30.000
-might have spent maybe 10, 20, maybe even
-
-0:21:28.799,0:21:32.799
-more years on Emacs--
-
-0:21:30.000,0:21:35.120
-but for me, I believe the the coolest
-
-0:21:32.799,0:21:38.200
-neat trick that I found in Emacs was
-
-0:21:35.120,0:21:40.080
-a mode which is called beacon-mode.
-
-0:21:40.080,0:21:43.679
-It's something that allows
-
-0:21:42.559,0:21:45.120
-you to show
-
-0:21:43.679,0:21:46.960
-when you're jumping between buffers or
-
-0:21:45.120,0:21:49.760
-when you're dropping between windows,
-
-0:21:46.960,0:21:51.520
-it shows exactly where your point is in
-
-0:21:49.760,0:21:53.840
-that buffer by making
-
-0:21:51.520,0:21:55.440
-a slight ray of light which looks like a
-
-0:21:53.840,0:21:57.760
-beacon, hence the name.
-
-0:21:55.440,0:21:59.520
-It really helps you navigate buffers
-
-0:21:57.760,0:22:01.760
-because it always shows in a very
-
-0:21:59.520,0:22:03.520
-visual way where your point is.
-
-0:22:01.760,0:22:04.640
-I'll get a chance to show this to
-
-0:22:03.520,0:22:08.720
-you later today
-
-0:22:04.640,0:22:08.720
-when i'll be presenting my other talks.
-
-0:22:10.159,0:22:16.880
-(Amin: AWesome.
-
-0:22:13.840,0:22:20.159
-We have one question
-
-0:22:16.880,0:22:20.880
-from Jonas, the maintainer
-
-0:22:20.159,0:22:24.720
-from Magit.
-
-0:22:20.880,0:22:26.880
-He asks, "When you touched your
-
-0:22:24.720,0:22:29.600
-webcam, that blew a fuse at my place.
-
-0:22:26.880,0:22:29.600
-How did you do that?")
-
-0:22:29.760,0:22:32.960
-Well, I'm very sorry, Jonas, that it
-
-0:22:31.600,0:22:36.000
-happened to you, but i'll make sure not
-
-0:22:32.960,0:22:36.000
-to touch my webcam again.
-
-0:22:36.960,0:22:43.919
-(Amin: Do we have any other questions?)
-
-0:22:41.600,0:22:45.840
-I have to trust you on this one.
-
-0:22:43.919,0:22:46.960
-I'm really sorry. Everything is frozen
-
-0:22:45.840,0:22:48.720
-on my end.
-
-0:22:46.960,0:22:49.940
-(Amin: No problem. Yeah i'm more talking to the
-
-0:22:48.720,0:22:51.520
-audience, I guess.)
-
-0:22:49.940,0:22:55.120
-[Music]
-
-0:22:51.520,0:22:56.960
-I hope my lack of
-
-0:22:55.120,0:22:58.159
-slides didn't bother you. I really
-
-0:22:56.960,0:23:01.039
-wanted to have this
-
-0:22:58.159,0:23:01.600
-verbose time with people, to be
-
-0:23:01.039,0:23:04.880
-able to...
-
-0:23:01.600,0:23:05.280
-it's a message that i've been trying
-
-0:23:04.880,0:23:06.960
-to share with as many people as possible.
-
-0:23:08.640,0:23:14.159
-In france we do have an Emacs workshop
-
-0:23:11.760,0:23:16.000
-that we have on a monthly basis.
-
-0:23:14.159,0:23:18.960
-I've been learning a lot
-
-0:23:16.000,0:23:20.400
-with those people and I felt like
-
-0:23:18.960,0:23:22.480
-doing the same with Emacs conference
-
-0:23:20.400,0:23:24.000
-would be good. That's why i'm really
-
-0:23:22.480,0:23:25.120
-happy, and I'm really lucky to have had
-
-0:23:24.000,0:23:27.919
-the chance to
-
-0:23:25.120,0:23:29.200
-do this today. I hope some of you
-
-0:23:27.919,0:23:31.679
-I've convinced you
-
-0:23:29.200,0:23:34.480
-of climbing up a step on a ladder or
-
-0:23:31.679,0:23:37.280
-making a step in a journey.
-
-0:23:34.480,0:23:38.080
-(Amin: Absolutely. Thank you so much, Leo.
-
-0:23:38.080,0:23:41.279
-I happen to completely agree
-
-0:23:41.279,0:23:45.600
-with your not necessarily using a slide
-
-0:23:43.600,0:23:48.480
-when it's not really needed
-
-0:23:45.600,0:23:49.200
-and to help give some face-to-face time
-
-0:23:49.200,0:23:53.520
-with the audience. Unfortunately
-
-0:23:51.840,0:23:55.200
-your webcam cut out, but I mean
-
-0:23:53.520,0:23:57.279
-before that.)
-
-0:23:55.200,0:23:59.679
-Yes, I'll make sure to fix the problems
-
-0:23:57.279,0:24:02.240
-later on, so don't worry about it.
-
-0:23:59.679,0:24:03.200
-(Amin: Awesome. Alrighty. I guess we're
-
-0:24:02.240,0:24:06.400
-wrapping up
-
-0:24:03.200,0:24:08.000
-for your talk and getting ready for the
-
-0:24:06.400,0:24:10.000
-next talk.)
-
-0:24:08.000,0:24:11.760
-Sure. Well, thank you so much. I'll see
-
-0:24:10.000,0:24:16.799
-you all later, I suppose!
-
-0:24:11.760,0:24:16.799
-(Amin: Sounds good. Thank you again, Leo. Bye-bye)
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--04-music-in-plain-text--jonathan-gregory.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--04-music-in-plain-text--jonathan-gregory.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 239cf0e3..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--04-music-in-plain-text--jonathan-gregory.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,606 +0,0 @@
-0:00:02.000,0:00:04.799
-Hello, everyone, and welcome to the EmacsConf.
-
-0:00:04.799,0:00:09.599
-I am Jonathan. In this talk I'm going
-
-0:00:07.200,0:00:10.880
-to demonstrate ways of producing sheet
-
-0:00:09.599,0:00:14.320
-music in Emacs
-
-0:00:10.880,0:00:18.400
-using Lilypond, and maybe also convince
-
-0:00:14.320,0:00:18.400
-you to use Emacs for writing your scores.
-
-0:00:18.640,0:00:22.240
-I'll start with an overview of the
-
-0:00:20.400,0:00:24.400
-syntax for those who are new to using
-
-0:00:22.240,0:00:26.800
-text-based notation
-
-0:00:24.400,0:00:28.800
-as a shallow dive into the deep pond of
-
-0:00:26.800,0:00:30.800
-lilies and Lilypond,
-
-0:00:28.800,0:00:32.960
-and move on to showcase some of its
-
-0:00:30.800,0:00:36.320
-functionalities using Org Mode
-
-0:00:32.960,0:00:40.480
-and lilypond-mode. One disclaimer,
-
-0:00:36.320,0:00:44.079
-however: I am not a Lilypond developer.
-
-0:00:40.480,0:00:46.800
-So what is Lilypond? Lilypond is
-
-0:00:44.079,0:00:50.000
-a file format and music engraving system
-
-0:00:46.800,0:00:52.640
-for producing high-quality sheet music.
-
-0:00:50.000,0:00:55.120
-It translates textual representations of
-
-0:00:52.640,0:00:57.760
-music to graphical objects.
-
-0:00:55.120,0:01:00.000
-It's similar to LaTeX in that its
-
-0:00:57.760,0:01:01.600
-input format describes the visual
-
-0:01:00.000,0:01:03.520
-layouts of the score,
-
-0:01:01.600,0:01:05.119
-using commands to define musical
-
-0:01:03.520,0:01:07.760
-expressions.
-
-0:01:05.119,0:01:08.640
-Commands begin with a backslash.
-
-0:01:07.760,0:01:10.479
-For example,
-
-0:01:08.640,0:01:13.040
-the formatter command, as shown on the
-
-0:01:10.479,0:01:13.920
-left, yields its graphical equivalents on
-
-0:01:13.040,0:01:16.640
-the right,
-
-0:01:13.920,0:01:19.119
-the fermata symbol over the low B and
-
-0:01:16.640,0:01:21.600
-so on and so forth.
-
-0:01:19.119,0:01:23.119
-It's also fully extensible, like Emacs,
-
-0:01:21.600,0:01:25.600
-allowing users to extend
-
-0:01:23.119,0:01:26.640
-and override Lilypond's functionalities
-
-0:01:25.600,0:01:29.840
-using the Scheme
-
-0:01:26.640,0:01:31.600
-scripting language. It can be used for
-
-0:01:29.840,0:01:34.479
-early and contemporary music
-
-0:01:31.600,0:01:35.200
-tablature, vocal music lead sheets,
-
-0:01:34.479,0:01:38.000
-and so on.
-
-0:01:35.200,0:01:38.479
-Above all, it works with Emacs.
-
-0:01:38.000,0:01:41.040
-In fact,
-
-0:01:38.479,0:01:43.119
-Lilypond ships with Emacs Lisp libraries,
-
-0:01:41.040,0:01:45.920
-including a major mode for editing
-
-0:01:43.119,0:01:45.920
-Lilypond files.
-
-0:01:47.360,0:01:50.560
-So the input files are similar to
-
-0:01:50.000,0:01:52.560
-source files.
-
-0:01:50.560,0:01:54.079
-They contain expressions formed with
-
-0:01:52.560,0:01:55.840
-curly braces,
-
-0:01:54.079,0:02:00.159
-comments that start with the percent
-
-0:01:55.840,0:02:00.159
-sign, and the code is indented.
-
-0:02:00.240,0:02:05.600
-Notes are entered using lowercase
-
-0:02:02.159,0:02:08.800
-letters, and rests with the letter r.
-
-0:02:05.600,0:02:11.039
-In this case, the lowercase r or r4
-
-0:02:08.800,0:02:14.000
-is the equivalence of a crotchet or
-
-0:02:11.039,0:02:16.160
-quarter note rest.
-
-0:02:14.000,0:02:18.480
-Durations are entered using numbers and
-
-0:02:16.160,0:02:20.959
-dots after the note name.
-
-0:02:18.480,0:02:22.640
-If you do not specify one, the previous
-
-0:02:20.959,0:02:24.560
-duration is used.
-
-0:02:22.640,0:02:27.360
-You can also tie notes together using
-
-0:02:24.560,0:02:30.000
-the tilde symbol (~).
-
-0:02:27.360,0:02:32.080
-In fact, you can input chords, lyrics,
-
-0:02:30.000,0:02:33.920
-embellishments, and a lot more.
-
-0:02:32.080,0:02:36.160
-I encourage you to read the manual for
-
-0:02:33.920,0:02:39.680
-more information.
-
-0:02:36.160,0:02:42.000
-Now let's switch to a terminal window.
-
-0:02:39.680,0:02:43.840
-with Lilypond installed, let's create
-
-0:02:42.000,0:02:50.560
-a test file with the extension
-
-0:02:43.840,0:02:52.400
-.ly and open it in Emacs.
-
-0:02:50.560,0:02:54.800
-At the top of the file is the version
-
-0:02:52.400,0:02:57.440
-statement, which tells Lilypond which
-
-0:02:54.800,0:03:00.959
-version to use when compiling the file.
-
-0:02:57.440,0:03:03.680
-Here I'm using version 2.20.0.
-
-0:03:00.959,0:03:04.159
-I've added the clef and time signature.
-
-0:03:04.159,0:03:07.440
-Let's add some notes.
-
-0:03:09.280,0:03:14.560
-I'm going to close this now and
-
-0:03:12.400,0:03:19.760
-compile the file by running
-
-0:03:14.560,0:03:25.040
-lilypond followed by the file name.
-
-0:03:19.760,0:03:25.040
-So now let's view the output.
-
-0:03:27.360,0:03:32.239
-Okay. So here's a more complex example
-
-0:03:29.760,0:03:34.080
-for randomizing note sequences.
-
-0:03:32.239,0:03:36.239
-The idea is to create new reading
-
-0:03:34.080,0:03:37.760
-materials each time the code blocks are
-
-0:03:36.239,0:03:40.640
-evaluated.
-
-0:03:37.760,0:03:41.840
-As usual, we begin with a header.
-
-0:03:40.640,0:03:45.200
-I've added the title
-
-0:03:41.840,0:03:47.920
-and composer. Then we add the note
-
-0:03:45.200,0:03:50.879
-sequences to use in the composition.
-
-0:03:47.920,0:03:51.200
-In this case, sn is a note name just like
-
-0:03:51.200,0:03:54.959
-a b c d and so on, and stands for snare drum,
-
-0:03:54.959,0:03:58.239
-the percussion instruments.
-
-0:03:58.879,0:04:04.080
-Now here's a function that's going to
-
-0:04:00.720,0:04:06.560
-shuffle the notes in the table.
-
-0:04:04.080,0:04:08.799
-Finally, we expand the notes inside
-
-0:04:06.560,0:04:10.799
-the Lilypond source block.
-
-0:04:08.799,0:04:13.680
-So whatever the function returns is
-
-0:04:10.799,0:04:16.479
-expanded inside the drums block.
-
-0:04:13.680,0:04:19.120
-Now let's press C-c C-c to view
-
-0:04:16.479,0:04:19.120
-the results.
-
-0:04:20.079,0:04:26.800
-Okay. And if I run this again, it should
-
-0:04:23.280,0:04:26.800
-create a new composition.
-
-0:04:26.840,0:04:31.360
-Great. You can also audition a piece
-
-0:04:29.680,0:04:34.320
-using the midi command,
-
-0:04:31.360,0:04:36.560
-which creates a midi file of the score.
-
-0:04:34.320,0:04:39.040
-Note also that the ob library--
-
-0:04:36.560,0:04:40.400
-sorry, the ob-lilypond library comes
-
-0:04:39.040,0:04:42.560
-with two modes.
-
-0:04:40.400,0:04:43.440
-The one I'm using now is called
-
-0:04:42.560,0:04:45.440
-arrange mode
-
-0:04:43.440,0:04:47.120
-and is useful for assembling
-
-0:04:45.440,0:04:49.360
-complete scores.
-
-0:04:47.120,0:04:51.199
-The basic mode on the other hand allows
-
-0:04:49.360,0:04:53.360
-you to mix text and music
-
-0:04:51.199,0:04:55.440
-by embedding Lilypond snippets and
-
-0:04:53.360,0:04:57.840
-export them using typical Org Mode
-
-0:04:55.440,0:04:57.840
-commands.
-
-0:05:00.240,0:05:04.320
-Now to demonstrate the basic mode in
-
-0:05:02.320,0:05:05.120
-action. I'm going to export this document
-
-0:05:04.320,0:05:08.240
-to a PDF file.
-
-0:05:05.120,0:05:10.639
-In this case, the
-
-0:05:08.240,0:05:11.919
-:file header argument is required, so you
-
-0:05:10.639,0:05:15.280
-have to provide one
-
-0:05:11.919,0:05:15.280
-and include the file name.
-
-0:05:15.600,0:05:20.479
-Again, you can run the code and view
-
-0:05:17.919,0:05:20.479
-the results.
-
-0:05:22.160,0:05:30.080
-Here it is. So now let's
-
-0:05:25.840,0:05:30.080
-export this to a PDF file.
-
-0:05:33.680,0:05:41.440
-And here it is, what it generates.
-
-0:05:39.680,0:05:44.000
-Now I'm going to show you the workflow I
-
-0:05:41.440,0:05:46.160
-used to produce music books in Emacs,
-
-0:05:44.000,0:05:48.000
-combining Lilypond and LaTeX for a
-
-0:05:46.160,0:05:50.160
-perfect marriage.
-
-0:05:48.000,0:05:53.039
-I begin by sketching the first draft of the
-
-0:05:50.160,0:05:55.039
-manuscript using pencil and paper.
-
-0:05:53.039,0:05:57.440
-Then I move to Emacs to input the notes
-
-0:05:55.039,0:06:00.080
-in a git repository.
-
-0:05:57.440,0:06:01.360
-This is a typical source file. It begins
-
-0:06:00.080,0:06:03.199
-with a stylesheet
-
-0:06:01.360,0:06:05.440
-where I set variables and layout
-
-0:06:03.199,0:06:07.039
-settings, although in general, there's no
-
-0:06:05.440,0:06:09.280
-need for tweaking the layout
-
-0:06:07.039,0:06:11.199
-unless you have specific requirements to
-
-0:06:09.280,0:06:13.360
-do so.
-
-0:06:11.199,0:06:15.520
-The easiest way to compile the file from
-
-0:06:13.360,0:06:19.280
-Emacs is by pressing C-c C-l,
-
-0:06:15.520,0:06:21.199
-so let's do this now,
-
-0:06:19.280,0:06:23.759
-and the compilation buffer will tell you
-
-0:06:21.199,0:06:26.000
-if there were any errors in the file.
-
-0:06:23.759,0:06:28.560
-Now to automate the process of compiling
-
-0:06:26.000,0:06:31.280
-several files and building the PDF,
-
-0:06:28.560,0:06:32.560
-I use GNU Make, so all I have to do is
-
-0:06:31.280,0:06:36.000
-open the shell
-
-0:06:32.560,0:06:37.840
-and run the make command. Don't worry,
-
-0:06:36.000,0:06:40.720
-I'll provide a link to the source code
-
-0:06:37.840,0:06:40.720
-on the last slide.
-
-0:06:41.600,0:06:46.000
-As I moved forward with the project, I
-
-0:06:43.600,0:06:48.720
-found at least two things missing.
-
-0:06:46.000,0:06:50.479
-One, I had no access to a metronome,
-
-0:06:48.720,0:06:52.960
-at least not from the editor,
-
-0:06:50.479,0:06:55.919
-so I built one for casual use and made
-
-0:06:52.960,0:06:58.000
-it available in the MELPA repository.
-
-0:06:55.919,0:06:59.039
-I also missed bar numbers in the source file.
-
-0:06:59.039,0:07:03.199
-This is useful when going back and forth
-
-0:07:00.880,0:07:04.479
-between input and output files without
-
-0:07:03.199,0:07:06.720
-getting lost.
-
-0:07:04.479,0:07:08.479
-So I wrote a command for toggling bar
-
-0:07:06.720,0:07:10.000
-numbers, which I hope you can see on the left.
-
-0:07:10.000,0:07:14.160
-Also, some expressions are difficult or
-
-0:07:12.080,0:07:17.039
-slow to write on the keyboard--
-
-0:07:14.160,0:07:19.199
-accents and tuplets, for example--so I use
-
-0:07:17.039,0:07:20.160
-template expansion extensively for this purpose,
-
-0:07:20.160,0:07:23.280
-mainly ya-snippet.
-
-0:07:23.440,0:07:28.080
-So what do I think? Well, I think
-
-0:07:25.680,0:07:31.039
-Lilypond can be a sharp paradigm shift
-
-0:07:28.080,0:07:32.720
-for people used to GUI alternatives, but
-
-0:07:31.039,0:07:34.639
-the results are impressive.
-
-0:07:32.720,0:07:36.960
-You don't have to dive too deeply to
-
-0:07:34.639,0:07:38.880
-start using Lilypond.
-
-0:07:36.960,0:07:40.720
-Likewise, the ability to extend the
-
-0:07:38.880,0:07:42.400
-software, I think, is especially appealing
-
-0:07:40.720,0:07:45.199
-for music professionals,
-
-0:07:42.400,0:07:46.560
-enthusiasts, composers, and the academic
-
-0:07:45.199,0:07:48.400
-community:
-
-0:07:46.560,0:07:50.800
-for example, allowing users to create
-
-0:07:48.400,0:07:53.120
-alternative notation systems required in
-
-0:07:50.800,0:07:56.160
-non-Western music traditions
-
-0:07:53.120,0:07:58.400
-and other non-conventional requirements.
-
-0:07:56.160,0:08:00.720
-Also, Lilypond and Emacs both have
-
-0:07:58.400,0:08:04.639
-extensive and well-written manuals
-
-0:08:00.720,0:08:06.400
-and active communities of users.
-
-0:08:04.639,0:08:08.800
-But if you're still not sure where to
-
-0:08:06.400,0:08:09.599
-start and when to wedge your feet in the deep
-
-0:08:09.599,0:08:13.680
-but warm pond of lilies, Lilypond, and
-
-0:08:12.160,0:08:15.680
-Lilypond users,
-
-0:08:13.680,0:08:16.960
-I invite you to contribute to my
-
-0:08:15.680,0:08:18.800
-Lilypond projects,
-
-0:08:16.960,0:08:20.720
-which you can do so from the links on
-
-0:08:18.800,0:08:22.800
-the screen.
-
-0:08:20.720,0:08:24.639
-So, thank you all. I look forward to your
-
-0:08:22.800,0:08:27.840
-comments, and I hope you enjoy the rest
-
-0:08:24.639,0:08:27.840
-of the conference.
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--06-trivial-emacs-kits--corwin-brust.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--06-trivial-emacs-kits--corwin-brust.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 23b9faa0..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--06-trivial-emacs-kits--corwin-brust.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1002 +0,0 @@
-0:00:00.399,0:00:03.280
-My name is Corwin Brust and I
-
-0:00:03.280,0:00:06.240
-will be talking about getting started
-
-0:00:06.240,0:00:11.200
-with Emacs today.
-
-0:00:08.960,0:00:13.040
-I have been an Emacs user for a long
-
-0:00:11.200,0:00:15.360
-time. First of all, thanks and a huge
-
-0:00:13.040,0:00:18.400
-welcome to the conference
-
-0:00:15.360,0:00:22.400
-from me and
-
-0:00:18.400,0:00:24.720
-and on behalf
-
-0:00:22.400,0:00:26.080
-and back to the other people that
-
-0:00:24.720,0:00:29.920
-have been helping to organize.
-
-0:00:26.080,0:00:30.480
-It's been amazing just to be involved
-
-0:00:30.480,0:00:35.120
-with that and just, kind of, see
-
-0:00:32.480,0:00:35.120
-backstage.
-
-0:00:36.399,0:00:42.960
-So I've used a lot of different editors
-
-0:00:39.680,0:00:45.440
-in my time. That's
-
-0:00:42.960,0:00:48.399
-about 25 years as a professional
-
-0:00:45.440,0:00:48.399
-software engineer.
-
-0:00:52.399,0:00:56.160
-And most of that time I've been using
-
-0:00:53.920,0:01:00.960
-Emacs. I'll talk a little bit in a minute
-
-0:00:56.160,0:01:04.479
-(if I can ever find my slides)
-
-0:01:00.960,0:01:07.200
-about how I got into Emacs
-
-0:01:04.479,0:01:10.240
-but I think if you've used Emacs and a
-
-0:01:07.200,0:01:12.640
-lot of other editors for a long time,
-
-0:01:10.240,0:01:14.960
-something that you notice right away is that
-
-0:01:15.200,0:01:18.560
-you get good with it in a way that stays
-
-0:01:17.520,0:01:20.799
-meaningful.
-
-0:01:18.560,0:01:24.840
-You learn new things. Those things
-
-0:01:20.799,0:01:27.600
-stick with you. You learn how to
-
-0:01:27.600,0:01:30.720
-make it do new tricks and then
-
-0:01:30.720,0:01:36.799
-keep doing those tricks.
-
-0:01:33.759,0:01:39.439
-I want to mention that this
-
-0:01:36.799,0:01:41.439
-conference--oops,
-
-0:01:39.439,0:01:45.600
-this talk isn't about
-
-0:01:41.439,0:01:47.520
-how to adjust your
-
-0:01:45.600,0:01:50.000
-configuration specifically. I don't have
-
-0:01:47.520,0:01:51.520
-a bunch of good code samples in here.
-
-0:01:50.000,0:01:54.399
-There are other great talks at the
-
-0:01:51.520,0:01:57.600
-conference, particularly Andrew's,
-
-0:01:54.399,0:01:59.920
-that I looked at, that looked
-
-0:01:57.600,0:02:01.600
-like they might be more aimed at that
-
-0:01:59.920,0:02:02.240
-"hey, I'm just getting started with Emacs,
-
-0:02:02.240,0:02:07.200
-what are some things to try to make
-
-0:02:05.280,0:02:08.879
-it more comfortable for me starting?" This
-
-0:02:07.200,0:02:09.759
-is about how to think about the problem
-
-0:02:08.879,0:02:12.959
-space.
-
-0:02:09.759,0:02:14.080
-Hopefully, a good warm up as we
-
-0:02:12.959,0:02:17.200
-start thinking about some of the
-
-0:02:14.080,0:02:20.000
-lightning talks a little later on.
-
-0:02:17.200,0:02:22.400
-I'm just gonna quickly make sure I
-
-0:02:20.000,0:02:24.080
-can see my IRC buffer in case I run into
-
-0:02:22.400,0:02:25.680
-time. I didn't get my stopwatch started
-
-0:02:24.080,0:02:29.680
-for this one.
-
-0:02:25.680,0:02:32.879
-So all right, let's dive in.
-
-0:02:29.680,0:02:33.840
-We assume that we want to install
-
-0:02:32.879,0:02:36.560
-packages
-
-0:02:33.840,0:02:38.319
-and maybe configure some features. This
-
-0:02:36.560,0:02:39.120
-is particularly from the perspective of
-
-0:02:38.319,0:02:40.800
-where we're working
-
-0:02:39.120,0:02:42.160
-with a bunch of people on a team and we
-
-0:02:40.800,0:02:44.800
-want to get something done.
-
-0:02:42.160,0:02:46.560
-Some of us probably already have mature
-
-0:02:44.800,0:02:49.280
-Emacs workflows.
-
-0:02:46.560,0:02:50.319
-Others are installing it for the first
-
-0:02:49.280,0:02:53.519
-time.
-
-0:02:53.519,0:02:59.280
-So the first question is, you know,
-
-0:02:56.879,0:03:00.879
-in that context: what's the value
-
-0:02:59.280,0:03:02.840
-proposition? Why should I mess with my
-
-0:03:00.879,0:03:05.599
-machine, my mature Emacs
-
-0:03:02.840,0:03:07.440
-configuration, and impose my
-
-0:03:05.599,0:03:10.239
-ideas over the way somebody else is
-
-0:03:07.440,0:03:12.800
-learning Emacs? Well,
-
-0:03:10.239,0:03:13.840
-it can be.. I'm off my slides here a
-
-0:03:12.800,0:03:16.400
-little bit.
-
-0:03:13.840,0:03:16.959
-It can be a little bit
-
-0:03:16.400,0:03:20.400
-tricky
-
-0:03:16.959,0:03:21.440
-to learn Emacs. One thing that
-
-0:03:20.400,0:03:24.720
-helps us a lot
-
-0:03:21.440,0:03:26.239
-is if people that we're working with
-
-0:03:24.720,0:03:28.080
-can tell us, kinda, keystroke for
-
-0:03:26.239,0:03:30.480
-keystroke at times, what to do and
-
-0:03:28.080,0:03:32.400
-explain what everything is doing.
-
-0:03:30.480,0:03:35.840
-Using the same packages can really
-
-0:03:32.400,0:03:39.840
-help us working together on a project.
-
-0:03:35.840,0:03:40.720
-Speaking from my personal
-
-0:03:39.840,0:03:42.959
-experience,
-
-0:03:40.720,0:03:45.040
-it took me decades to get to the point
-
-0:03:42.959,0:03:46.720
-where I was excited to program in Emacs
-
-0:03:45.040,0:03:47.840
-Lisp. I've programmed in a lot of programming
-
-0:03:46.720,0:03:51.200
-languages,
-
-0:03:47.840,0:03:53.680
-but Lisp wasn't on my list. I looked at
-
-0:03:51.200,0:03:56.319
-my config that I was copy-pasting around
-
-0:03:53.680,0:03:57.519
-from generation after generation of
-
-0:03:56.319,0:03:59.519
-.Emacs file or
-
-0:03:57.519,0:04:00.799
-recrafting it from hand and from Internet
-
-0:03:59.519,0:04:03.519
-searches,
-
-0:04:00.799,0:04:05.680
-to get the things that I needed when
-
-0:04:03.519,0:04:07.680
-I would quickly go install Emacs at some
-
-0:04:05.680,0:04:10.959
-new job or contract,
-
-0:04:07.680,0:04:13.680
-and
-
-0:04:10.959,0:04:15.280
-be able to to quickly get through that
-
-0:04:13.680,0:04:17.440
-workflow that caused me to install the
-
-0:04:15.280,0:04:20.560
-program.
-
-0:04:17.440,0:04:23.440
-You know, just
-
-0:04:20.560,0:04:25.199
-little simple one-liners that that
-
-0:04:23.440,0:04:27.120
-got committed to memory over decades
-
-0:04:25.199,0:04:28.880
-eventually just led me to a sort of "hey what's going on
-
-0:04:27.120,0:04:31.680
-here." And I credit
-
-0:04:28.880,0:04:33.520
-Jeff Goff, my good friend who died
-
-0:04:31.680,0:04:37.759
-earlier in 2020,
-
-0:04:33.520,0:04:39.280
-for my lifelong love of Emacs.
-
-0:04:37.759,0:04:40.800
-Perhaps EriK and I will talk about that
-
-0:04:39.280,0:04:41.360
-a little bit more in another talk we
-
-0:04:40.800,0:04:43.280
-have
-
-0:04:41.360,0:04:44.400
-scheduled, but Jeff was a huge
-
-0:04:43.280,0:04:47.280
-influenceo on us
-
-0:04:44.400,0:04:48.720
-in a number of ways and a huge
-
-0:04:47.280,0:04:50.720
-contributor to the Raku programming
-
-0:04:48.720,0:04:54.000
-language
-
-0:04:50.720,0:04:54.000
-which is very cool.
-
-0:04:54.840,0:05:01.039
-So, understanding how
-
-0:04:58.880,0:05:03.120
-to make a good decision about splitting
-
-0:05:01.039,0:05:03.680
-up configuration in a way to share it
-
-0:05:03.120,0:05:05.600
-across
-
-0:05:03.680,0:05:07.600
-people with really different uses of
-
-0:05:05.600,0:05:09.360
-Emacs... That's actually a
-
-0:05:07.600,0:05:11.039
-complicated topic and I want to
-
-0:05:09.360,0:05:12.639
-sort of back off and stare at it for a
-
-0:05:11.039,0:05:15.840
-second.
-
-0:05:12.639,0:05:18.720
-I think Emacs is about people, so that
-
-0:05:15.840,0:05:22.000
-means it's about community.
-
-0:05:18.720,0:05:24.960
-And community means we're going to
-
-0:05:22.000,0:05:29.120
-invite disagreement.
-
-0:05:24.960,0:05:32.160
-In fact, that disagreement
-
-0:05:29.120,0:05:33.280
-isn't necessarily a road-block to our
-
-0:05:32.160,0:05:35.680
-project. In fact,
-
-0:05:33.280,0:05:37.759
-some of the work that a community
-
-0:05:35.680,0:05:39.680
-project can invite us to do
-
-0:05:37.759,0:05:40.960
-is to get closer to each other by
-
-0:05:39.680,0:05:42.080
-inviting those disagreements, by
-
-0:05:40.960,0:05:43.280
-learning from them--learning from
-
-0:05:42.080,0:05:46.880
-different people's
-
-0:05:43.280,0:05:49.120
-styles and from how they argue,
-
-0:05:46.880,0:05:50.400
-and thinking about why they have that
-
-0:05:49.120,0:05:53.680
-perspective and
-
-0:05:50.400,0:05:55.360
-what technical benefits that
-
-0:05:53.680,0:05:56.720
-perhaps radical point of view might
-
-0:05:55.360,0:05:59.039
-carry away. Some people are really
-
-0:05:56.720,0:06:01.919
-aggressive arguers, and others
-
-0:05:59.039,0:06:03.120
-are very passive and really
-
-0:06:01.919,0:06:06.240
-couch their ideas
-
-0:06:03.120,0:06:08.080
-in distancing terms, to say, "well
-
-0:06:06.240,0:06:12.479
-probably, this is a good idea" or
-
-0:06:08.080,0:06:15.520
-"please double check me."
-
-0:06:12.479,0:06:17.120
-Those don't always necessarily indicate
-
-0:06:15.520,0:06:18.479
-how certain a person is, because we're
-
-0:06:17.120,0:06:19.520
-different. We have different ways of
-
-0:06:18.479,0:06:23.380
-communicating
-
-0:06:19.520,0:06:24.560
-ideas like certainty or excitement.
-
-0:06:23.380,0:06:26.560
-[Music]
-
-0:06:24.560,0:06:30.000
-When we think about a bunch of really
-
-0:06:26.560,0:06:33.280
-diverse programmers approaching Emacs,
-
-0:06:30.000,0:06:36.479
-probably one of our our first really big
-
-0:06:33.280,0:06:39.759
-challenges is just
-
-0:06:36.479,0:06:41.120
-to pick what we're going to go
-
-0:06:39.759,0:06:44.000
-after. There are a lot of
-
-0:06:41.120,0:06:45.759
-existing kit
-
-0:06:44.000,0:06:49.599
-installs and things like this.
-
-0:06:49.599,0:06:54.400
-My argument is that you could actually
-
-0:06:52.880,0:06:56.560
-get pretty far
-
-0:06:54.400,0:06:58.319
-just trading files around. Maybe the
-
-0:06:56.560,0:07:02.240
-more valuable
-
-0:07:02.240,0:07:06.080
-conversation to have is making the
-
-0:07:04.720,0:07:08.000
-hard decisions about, well,
-
-0:07:06.080,0:07:10.080
-"should we have vertical completion,"
-
-0:07:08.000,0:07:11.759
-should that be the out of the box,
-
-0:07:10.080,0:07:15.680
-and the people that want
-
-0:07:11.759,0:07:17.440
-the traditional splayed out over a
-
-0:07:15.680,0:07:19.840
-single line completion
-
-0:07:17.440,0:07:20.800
-for example in the mode line, those
-
-0:07:19.840,0:07:22.800
-people are going to
-
-0:07:20.800,0:07:24.160
-add a line of config
-
-0:07:24.160,0:07:27.199
-to their own setup?
-
-0:07:29.039,0:07:34.080
-The way to get there? I mean, how do we
-
-0:07:32.479,0:07:35.520
-find out what works? We don't want to
-
-0:07:34.080,0:07:38.800
-slow down the people that
-
-0:07:35.520,0:07:40.479
-are super productive with Emacs by
-
-0:07:38.800,0:07:42.080
-asking them to completely break their
-
-0:07:40.479,0:07:42.560
-workflows and make it easier for new
-
-0:07:42.080,0:07:46.240
-folks.
-
-0:07:42.560,0:07:48.960
-At the same time, we do
-
-0:07:46.240,0:07:51.280
-want to make sure those new people are
-
-0:07:48.960,0:07:52.720
-excited by Emacs and not turned off by
-
-0:07:51.280,0:07:56.319
-having to learn
-
-0:07:52.720,0:07:59.840
-the entire jungle of Emacs
-
-0:07:56.319,0:08:03.120
-history in the form of its
-
-0:07:59.840,0:08:06.160
-unique technical stylings for
-
-0:08:03.120,0:08:09.840
-things like frames,
-
-0:08:06.160,0:08:12.960
-buffers, and other unique
-
-0:08:09.840,0:08:16.240
-Emacs viewpoints on important
-
-0:08:12.960,0:08:18.720
-interface concepts, especially.
-
-0:08:16.240,0:08:19.520
-The encouragement here is to keep
-
-0:08:19.520,0:08:23.280
-the initialization for a project team
-
-0:08:21.680,0:08:25.280
-together as a crucible.
-
-0:08:23.280,0:08:27.680
-Rather than necessarily following our
-
-0:08:25.280,0:08:31.440
-defaults of
-
-0:08:31.440,0:08:35.120
-finding the simplest configuration
-
-0:08:33.279,0:08:37.440
-that generally work and letting people
-
-0:08:35.120,0:08:40.479
-customize it,
-
-0:08:37.440,0:08:42.560
-what if we tried to look
-
-0:08:40.479,0:08:44.159
-for fairly specific configurations that
-
-0:08:42.560,0:08:46.320
-we'll expect essentially all of our
-
-0:08:44.159,0:08:50.320
-developers to be using,
-
-0:08:46.320,0:08:50.320
-at least when they submit bug reports.
-
-0:08:52.839,0:08:58.800
-In particular, with this,
-
-0:08:55.920,0:08:59.839
-I think that degree of
-
-0:08:58.800,0:09:01.680
-experimentation
-
-0:08:59.839,0:09:03.360
-can drive back into the Emacs
-
-0:09:01.680,0:09:04.800
-development process. In the development
-
-0:09:03.360,0:09:07.760
-mailing list...
-
-0:09:04.800,0:09:09.680
-I'm hoping I'll get a timing cue
-
-0:09:07.760,0:09:14.000
-here.
-
-0:09:15.120,0:09:18.320
-In the context of Emacs development as a
-
-0:09:17.760,0:09:20.959
-greater
-
-0:09:18.320,0:09:22.399
-entity, we see some of these struggles.
-
-0:09:20.959,0:09:24.000
-Should we change this default?
-
-0:09:22.399,0:09:26.720
-Sometimes we can have the
-
-0:09:24.000,0:09:29.279
-sense that defaults in Emacs will never
-
-0:09:26.720,0:09:30.959
-change. The conversation is too difficult.
-
-0:09:29.279,0:09:32.560
-I think one thing that can help us get
-
-0:09:30.959,0:09:36.160
-there is evidence
-
-0:09:32.560,0:09:38.880
-that says, "hey my 30- to 40-person project
-
-0:09:36.160,0:09:40.399
-is using this set of bindings and
-
-0:09:38.880,0:09:42.240
-here's what we learned about
-
-0:09:40.399,0:09:43.519
-brand new Emacs users trying to come in
-
-0:09:42.240,0:09:46.800
-and get work done with that."
-
-0:09:46.800,0:09:50.720
-(Amin: Yeah you still have
-
-0:09:49.360,0:09:52.640
-a couple more minutes)
-
-0:09:50.720,0:09:54.160
-Oh, beautiful. Okay, great. I will try to
-
-0:09:52.640,0:09:54.720
-get through my last few slides that i
-
-0:09:54.160,0:09:56.320
-cut
-
-0:09:54.720,0:09:58.320
-in my last walkthrough, but I think i'm
-
-0:09:56.320,0:10:00.640
-going quicker today thank you.
-
-0:09:58.320,0:10:00.640
-Thank you.
-
-0:10:02.000,0:10:06.800
-So let's just recap real quick:
-
-0:10:05.120,0:10:10.399
-in theory, Emacs works
-
-0:10:06.800,0:10:10.720
-out of the box. That means we're
-
-0:10:10.720,0:10:17.120
-free to experiment. We can
-
-0:10:14.079,0:10:20.399
-throw it all away and start over.
-
-0:10:17.120,0:10:23.760
-As an organizational principle...
-
-0:10:26.000,0:10:30.079
-I don't know what I was thinking on that
-
-0:10:27.360,0:10:32.240
-slide, excuse me.
-
-0:10:30.079,0:10:33.440
-Bringing it back around
-
-0:10:32.240,0:10:35.680
-to the free
-
-0:10:33.440,0:10:36.480
-and open source software community,
-
-0:10:35.680,0:10:39.519
-our goal
-
-0:10:36.480,0:10:41.440
-is to enable users
-
-0:10:39.519,0:10:43.040
-to unlock their computers, to do as much
-
-0:10:41.440,0:10:45.600
-with them as possible.
-
-0:10:43.040,0:10:47.680
-That's the context to take with project
-
-0:10:45.600,0:10:49.560
-initialization, but sometimes
-
-0:10:47.680,0:10:50.800
-it could make sense to put...
-
-0:10:49.560,0:10:53.040
-[Music]
-
-0:10:50.800,0:10:54.880
-to put some gloves on. I've thrown up on
-
-0:10:53.040,0:10:57.279
-the screen here just a couple of other
-
-0:10:54.880,0:10:57.920
-ideas, ways to maybe think outside of the
-
-0:10:57.279,0:11:00.399
-box.
-
-0:10:57.920,0:11:01.440
-As you're putting together project
-
-0:11:00.399,0:11:04.959
-nets,
-
-0:11:01.440,0:11:05.519
-my words of encouragement are to experiment
-
-0:11:04.959,0:11:09.200
-with it,
-
-0:11:05.519,0:11:10.560
-try different things, and think really
-
-0:11:09.200,0:11:14.320
-specifically about how
-
-0:11:10.560,0:11:17.760
-different the development users
-
-0:11:14.320,0:11:21.680
-might be from each other as you
-
-0:11:17.760,0:11:23.519
-define standards for configuring
-
-0:11:21.680,0:11:25.360
-the user environment of Emacs
-
-0:11:23.519,0:11:29.120
-specifically for developing
-
-0:11:25.360,0:11:30.480
-on a project. That's pretty much my talk.
-
-0:11:29.120,0:11:32.959
-If there's any time, I would take a
-
-0:11:30.480,0:11:35.040
-couple questions.
-
-0:11:32.959,0:11:36.480
-Thank you for your awesome talk,
-
-0:11:35.040,0:11:38.160
-Corwin.
-
-0:11:36.480,0:11:43.839
-I think we have one or two
-
-0:11:38.160,0:11:43.839
-minutes for a few questions.
-
-0:11:49.519,0:11:53.839
-Do you have the pad open or would you
-
-0:11:52.000,0:11:56.959
-like me to read the questions for you?
-
-0:11:53.839,0:11:58.000
-Oh, I managed to close the
-
-0:11:56.959,0:12:00.560
-pad
-
-0:11:58.000,0:12:03.440
-and I am trying to open it again. All
-
-0:12:00.560,0:12:03.440
-right, there it opened.
-
-0:12:03.519,0:12:06.880
-Bringing it onto a screen where I can
-
-0:12:05.040,0:12:08.399
-see it. Will you read me the
-
-0:12:06.880,0:12:09.360
-first question while I drag windows
-
-0:12:08.399,0:12:12.720
-around, please?
-
-0:12:09.360,0:12:15.600
-(Amin: Sure. It says, "do you use Emacs as a
-
-0:12:12.720,0:12:17.680
-community building tool?")
-
-0:12:15.600,0:12:19.760
-Do I use Emacs as a community building
-
-0:12:17.680,0:12:23.519
-tool, or how do I?
-
-0:12:19.760,0:12:26.720
-(Amin: It just says do you.) Yes, absolutely.
-
-0:12:23.519,0:12:29.920
-I think Emacs is an ambassador to
-
-0:12:26.720,0:12:33.279
-the GNU tool chain.
-
-0:12:29.920,0:12:34.560
-I think that in the fullness of time, we
-
-0:12:33.279,0:12:38.240
-will see an Emacs
-
-0:12:34.560,0:12:42.000
-that makes
-
-0:12:38.240,0:12:42.800
-and that makes iOS and Android and other
-
-0:12:42.000,0:12:45.680
-closed-source
-
-0:12:42.800,0:12:46.320
-tools dream. That's why they mock us
-
-0:12:45.680,0:12:49.200
-and call
-
-0:12:46.320,0:12:51.440
-Emacs an operating system. It's because
-
-0:12:49.200,0:12:53.920
-it could be, if we cared for it to be.
-
-0:12:51.440,0:12:55.680
-It's quite a threatening product
-
-0:12:55.680,0:12:59.440
-from the perspective of how many problem
-
-0:12:57.440,0:13:01.519
-spaces it can address, how many types of
-
-0:12:59.440,0:13:04.399
-users it can satisfy,
-
-0:13:01.519,0:13:05.600
-the things that we can do to make
-
-0:13:04.399,0:13:07.839
-it robust in those
-
-0:13:05.600,0:13:09.760
-environments. I mean, we're always
-
-0:13:07.839,0:13:11.839
-thinking about the weak points, but
-
-0:13:09.760,0:13:14.079
-is Emacs a community building tool? Heck
-
-0:13:11.839,0:13:14.079
-yeah.
-
-0:13:14.639,0:13:18.480
-(Amin: There's like one or two more
-
-0:13:17.920,0:13:21.519
-questions.
-
-0:13:18.480,0:13:22.480
-I think they're more long-form so it
-
-0:13:21.519,0:13:24.000
-might be better
-
-0:13:22.480,0:13:26.880
-if you took them off stream so you
-
-0:13:24.000,0:13:28.959
-could keep the schedule on time.)
-
-0:13:26.880,0:13:31.040
-i would love to take those questions
-
-0:13:28.959,0:13:32.399
-offline. I will respond to you in
-
-0:13:31.040,0:13:33.360
-writing if we don't get to it in a
-
-0:13:32.399,0:13:35.519
-breakout room.
-
-0:13:33.360,0:13:36.639
-Thanks so much for joining us. I
-
-0:13:35.519,0:13:38.000
-can't wait to see the rest of the
-
-0:13:36.639,0:13:42.800
-conference. See you there!
-
-0:13:38.000,0:13:42.800
-(Amin: Awesome. Thank you again so much, Corwin.)
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--07-beyond-vim-and-emacs-a-scalable-ui-paradigm--questions--sid-kasivajhula-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--07-beyond-vim-and-emacs-a-scalable-ui-paradigm--questions--sid-kasivajhula-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 016d54f9..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--07-beyond-vim-and-emacs-a-scalable-ui-paradigm--questions--sid-kasivajhula-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,360 +0,0 @@
-0:00:00.080,0:00:03.520
-for the list of questions in whatever
-
-0:00:01.680,0:00:06.160
-order you like
-
-0:00:03.520,0:00:08.000
-okay so I see what package is used um
-
-0:00:06.160,0:00:10.400
-probably cemex mode
-
-0:00:08.000,0:00:11.360
-um right so the main package that was
-
-0:00:10.400,0:00:14.480
-being demoed
-
-0:00:11.360,0:00:16.720
-um that is not yet on melpa in fact I
-
-0:00:14.480,0:00:19.359
-haven't even decided on a name for it
-
-0:00:16.720,0:00:22.080
-um I've alternately alternately called
-
-0:00:19.359,0:00:26.000
-it epistemic mode I've called it
-
-0:00:22.080,0:00:28.560
-um england I called it uh
-
-0:00:26.000,0:00:30.240
-all kinds of things but at the moment
-
-0:00:28.560,0:00:31.439
-you can find it on my github there's a
-
-0:00:30.240,0:00:32.960
-link
-
-0:00:31.439,0:00:35.600
-in the presentation itself if you go to
-
-0:00:32.960,0:00:38.879
-github slash account about
-
-0:00:35.600,0:00:39.840
-um the package there it's currently
-
-0:00:38.879,0:00:42.879
-named indra
-
-0:00:39.840,0:00:46.800
-I'm not sure um
-
-0:00:42.879,0:00:49.920
-packages actually yes the second one is
-
-0:00:46.800,0:00:53.280
-red that was the name that I selected um
-
-0:00:49.920,0:00:53.920
-last night um and that's because it
-
-0:00:53.280,0:00:55.760
-might that
-
-0:00:53.920,0:00:57.520
-there's a concept in tibetan buddhism
-
-0:00:55.760,0:00:58.480
-that seems like it might have something
-
-0:00:57.520,0:00:59.840
-to do with
-
-0:00:58.480,0:01:01.600
-the kinds of concepts we're talking
-
-0:00:59.840,0:01:04.000
-about with this package so I just
-
-0:01:01.600,0:01:05.760
-thought it would be a good name for it
-
-0:01:04.000,0:01:09.920
-so you can look up that concept
-
-0:01:05.760,0:01:13.119
-and get a sense of it on wikipedia
-
-0:01:09.920,0:01:15.759
-next question is how to deal with dwarak
-
-0:01:13.119,0:01:16.960
-dwarjak or however that's pronounced
-
-0:01:15.759,0:01:20.400
-this is always bug me
-
-0:01:16.960,0:01:22.400
-is there an x-mod map mode so the thing
-
-0:01:20.400,0:01:23.360
-with this is it's kind of surprising but
-
-0:01:22.400,0:01:26.000
-although vim
-
-0:01:23.360,0:01:27.200
-was originally developed um you know
-
-0:01:26.000,0:01:29.520
-with the idea of
-
-0:01:27.200,0:01:32.000
-the key bindings being on the home rule
-
-0:01:29.520,0:01:33.119
-it turns out that that is actually not a
-
-0:01:32.000,0:01:36.400
-major aspect
-
-0:01:33.119,0:01:38.560
-of the vim editing experience so
-
-0:01:36.400,0:01:40.720
-people who use the dvorak layout
-
-0:01:38.560,0:01:42.640
-actually end up using the same keys as
-
-0:01:40.720,0:01:44.720
-they do on the normal qwerty layout so
-
-0:01:42.640,0:01:48.159
-they don't remap anything
-
-0:01:44.720,0:01:51.040
-because the uh the the sort of
-
-0:01:48.159,0:01:52.240
-the power that vim or the the
-
-0:01:51.040,0:01:55.600
-flexibility the
-
-0:01:52.240,0:01:56.880
-spiral that bim enables on qwerty layout
-
-0:01:55.600,0:01:58.719
-keyboards is exactly
-
-0:01:56.880,0:01:59.920
-preserved even on a door jack keyboard
-
-0:01:58.719,0:02:01.920
-even though you your
-
-0:01:59.920,0:02:04.399
-fingers are not in the same positions
-
-0:02:01.920,0:02:09.119
-it's not a big deal actually
-
-0:02:04.399,0:02:10.879
-um and then I mostly use default model
-
-0:02:09.119,0:02:12.319
-provided by vanilla Emacs and work and
-
-0:02:10.879,0:02:13.840
-org mode for text editing can you give
-
-0:02:12.319,0:02:15.920
-me some examples
-
-0:02:13.840,0:02:17.280
-of how the user can use the concept of
-
-0:02:15.920,0:02:20.840
-mode mode
-
-0:02:17.280,0:02:24.640
-to do some interesting
-
-0:02:20.840,0:02:25.120
-um so probably the main thing would be
-
-0:02:24.640,0:02:27.920
-the
-
-0:02:25.120,0:02:28.959
-the keystrokes would be less uh
-
-0:02:27.920,0:02:32.080
-contrived
-
-0:02:28.959,0:02:36.560
-so they the the fewer modes you have
-
-0:02:32.080,0:02:39.840
-the more modifiers you need
-
-0:02:36.560,0:02:41.280
-in order to um do whatever it is that
-
-0:02:39.840,0:02:44.800
-you're trying to do because you've got
-
-0:02:41.280,0:02:47.840
-essentially with a max model you've got
-
-0:02:44.800,0:02:47.840
-a completely flat
-
-0:02:48.080,0:02:52.160
-keyboard structure and so all of the
-
-0:02:50.959,0:02:55.680
-different things that you might
-
-0:02:52.160,0:02:58.720
-want to express are all mapped to a flat
-
-0:02:55.680,0:03:02.840
-keyboard uh set of keys
-
-0:02:58.720,0:03:06.400
-so with um with this kind of
-
-0:03:02.840,0:03:09.200
-modal structure the more modes you have
-
-0:03:06.400,0:03:10.400
-the more the individual keystrokes
-
-0:03:09.200,0:03:13.200
-become
-
-0:03:10.400,0:03:14.959
-shorter and shorter so that could be one
-
-0:03:13.200,0:03:17.519
-benefit that would be provided
-
-0:03:14.959,0:03:18.000
-with many modes your keystrokes would
-
-0:03:17.519,0:03:20.080
-generally
-
-0:03:18.000,0:03:22.080
-be a single keystroke long for even
-
-0:03:20.080,0:03:24.159
-relatively complex tasks
-
-0:03:22.080,0:03:25.440
-because you're setting the context
-
-0:03:24.159,0:03:27.200
-beforehand
-
-0:03:25.440,0:03:30.840
-so you already say oh I'm going to be
-
-0:03:27.200,0:03:33.440
-talking about this org buffer
-
-0:03:30.840,0:03:36.319
-agenda and then
-
-0:03:33.440,0:03:39.599
-um the all the keystrokes that you do at
-
-0:03:36.319,0:03:42.159
-that point would be in relation to that
-
-0:03:39.599,0:03:44.080
-um okay I think we have time for like
-
-0:03:42.159,0:03:46.879
-one more short question
-
-0:03:44.080,0:03:48.879
-one more short question okay let's see
-
-0:03:46.879,0:03:50.400
-how do new modes come into existence you
-
-0:03:48.879,0:03:53.040
-can make them yourself
-
-0:03:50.400,0:03:53.760
-um and you can specify them in Emacs
-
-0:03:53.040,0:03:56.159
-lisp
-
-0:03:53.760,0:03:59.040
-if you like but there's also simple you
-
-0:03:56.159,0:04:02.720
-can also do it visually as we did
-
-0:03:59.040,0:04:04.799
-um but the yeah defining them
-
-0:04:02.720,0:04:07.519
-is essentially built on top of hydra but
-
-0:04:04.799,0:04:09.120
-it could also be built on top of evil or
-
-0:04:07.519,0:04:12.400
-any other modal interface provider
-
-0:04:09.120,0:04:12.400
-there's an abstraction layer
-
-0:04:12.840,0:04:17.919
-okay thank you so much for your talk and
-
-0:04:15.920,0:04:21.440
-for the live q a
-
-0:04:17.919,0:04:22.880
-sure thank you yes feel free to um take
-
-0:04:21.440,0:04:23.759
-up the rest of the questions either via
-
-0:04:22.880,0:04:25.680
-irc or
-
-0:04:23.759,0:04:26.960
-on the pad on on your own time off the
-
-0:04:25.680,0:04:28.639
-stream
-
-0:04:26.960,0:04:30.000
-perfect yeah I'll go ahead and put in
-
-0:04:28.639,0:04:32.240
-some answers there
-
-0:04:30.000,0:04:33.120
-awesome thank you all right thank you
-
-0:04:32.240,0:04:36.880
-have a good one
-
-0:04:33.120,0:04:36.880
-thanks you too
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--07-beyond-vim-and-emacs-a-scalable-ui-paradigm--sid-kasivajhula-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--07-beyond-vim-and-emacs-a-scalable-ui-paradigm--sid-kasivajhula-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 56aadd05..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--07-beyond-vim-and-emacs-a-scalable-ui-paradigm--sid-kasivajhula-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1335 +0,0 @@
-0:00:02.960,0:00:06.560
-far away in the heavenly abode of the
-
-0:00:04.960,0:00:08.320
-great god indra
-
-0:00:06.560,0:00:10.160
-there is a wonderful net which has been
-
-0:00:08.320,0:00:12.080
-hung by some cunning artificer
-
-0:00:10.160,0:00:14.320
-in such a manner that it stretches out
-
-0:00:12.080,0:00:15.920
-infinitely in all directions
-
-0:00:14.320,0:00:18.240
-in accordance with the extravagant
-
-0:00:15.920,0:00:20.960
-tastes of deities the artificer has hung
-
-0:00:18.240,0:00:22.080
-a single glittering jewel in each eye of
-
-0:00:20.960,0:00:24.000
-the net
-
-0:00:22.080,0:00:26.480
-and since the net itself is infinite the
-
-0:00:24.000,0:00:28.400
-jewels are infinite in number
-
-0:00:26.480,0:00:30.480
-there hang the jewels glittering like
-
-0:00:28.400,0:00:33.440
-stars in the first magnitude
-
-0:00:30.480,0:00:34.800
-a wonderful sight to behold were we to
-
-0:00:33.440,0:00:35.680
-select one of these jewels for
-
-0:00:34.800,0:00:37.760
-inspection
-
-0:00:35.680,0:00:39.520
-we would discover that in its polished
-
-0:00:37.760,0:00:41.920
-surface there are reflected
-
-0:00:39.520,0:00:43.360
-all the other jewels in the net infinite
-
-0:00:41.920,0:00:45.600
-in number
-
-0:00:43.360,0:00:47.840
-if we look still more closely we would
-
-0:00:45.600,0:00:48.960
-see that each of the jewels reflected in
-
-0:00:47.840,0:00:52.239
-this one jewel
-
-0:00:48.960,0:00:54.000
-reflects all the others this is the
-
-0:00:52.239,0:00:56.840
-metaphor of indra's net
-
-0:00:54.000,0:00:59.359
-which is told in some schools of
-
-0:00:56.840,0:01:00.160
-philosophy let's keep this metaphor in
-
-0:00:59.359,0:01:01.920
-mind
-
-0:01:00.160,0:01:03.760
-because it'll help us understand the
-
-0:01:01.920,0:01:06.239
-Emacs extension that we're about to
-
-0:01:03.760,0:01:06.239
-discuss
-
-0:01:06.960,0:01:13.200
-so in editing text there's two
-
-0:01:10.080,0:01:16.880
-main paradigms one
-
-0:01:13.200,0:01:19.439
-is um editing at the ground level
-
-0:01:16.880,0:01:22.159
-where the characters that we type
-
-0:01:19.439,0:01:25.960
-actually appear on the screen
-
-0:01:22.159,0:01:28.479
-the changes we make actually occur
-
-0:01:25.960,0:01:30.720
-[Music]
-
-0:01:28.479,0:01:33.439
-the other editing paradigm is where we
-
-0:01:30.720,0:01:36.000
-escape to a higher level
-
-0:01:33.439,0:01:36.479
-and now the characters that we type are
-
-0:01:36.000,0:01:39.040
-not
-
-0:01:36.479,0:01:41.600
-they don't actually appear on the screen
-
-0:01:39.040,0:01:44.799
-because we're not at the ground level
-
-0:01:41.600,0:01:48.479
-with the text we are at a higher level
-
-0:01:44.799,0:01:51.920
-looking down at the text
-
-0:01:48.479,0:01:54.640
-and regarding the text referring to
-
-0:01:51.920,0:01:56.159
-this world of text in terms of a
-
-0:01:54.640,0:01:57.920
-language
-
-0:01:56.159,0:02:00.640
-for instance we could describe this
-
-0:01:57.920,0:02:02.079
-world as having words and paragraphs and
-
-0:02:00.640,0:02:04.640
-sentences and
-
-0:02:02.079,0:02:05.360
-lines and so on and we could reason
-
-0:02:04.640,0:02:08.800
-about this
-
-0:02:05.360,0:02:11.440
-text in terms of these
-
-0:02:08.800,0:02:13.120
-textual entities and this textual
-
-0:02:11.440,0:02:15.920
-language
-
-0:02:13.120,0:02:18.319
-this is the second paradigm of text
-
-0:02:15.920,0:02:18.319
-editing
-
-0:02:18.640,0:02:24.800
-and when we're in the second paradigm
-
-0:02:22.800,0:02:26.480
-there is a way to go down to ground
-
-0:02:24.800,0:02:28.160
-level you hit enter
-
-0:02:26.480,0:02:30.480
-now or we'll hit enter to go down to the
-
-0:02:28.160,0:02:33.200
-ground level and you can hit escape
-
-0:02:30.480,0:02:35.200
-to go back out to the referential level
-
-0:02:33.200,0:02:37.280
-enter to go down to ground level
-
-0:02:35.200,0:02:39.599
-and escape to go up to the referential
-
-0:02:37.280,0:02:39.599
-level
-
-0:02:40.160,0:02:48.239
-now in vim the nouns
-
-0:02:44.879,0:02:50.959
-in this world of text all
-
-0:02:48.239,0:02:51.519
-share the same referential plane which
-
-0:02:50.959,0:02:54.319
-we call
-
-0:02:51.519,0:02:54.959
-normal mode so in normal mode all of the
-
-0:02:54.319,0:02:57.360
-nouns
-
-0:02:54.959,0:02:58.959
-of the world of text are available
-
-0:02:57.360,0:03:00.959
-whether it's words or sentences or
-
-0:02:58.959,0:03:04.400
-paragraphs
-
-0:03:00.959,0:03:08.319
-and they all share this same
-
-0:03:04.400,0:03:11.120
-referential plane and there's uh
-
-0:03:08.319,0:03:12.720
-they sort of compete for space on the
-
-0:03:11.120,0:03:15.760
-keyboard
-
-0:03:12.720,0:03:17.680
-um so an alternative uh
-
-0:03:15.760,0:03:19.280
-way to structure these modes is instead
-
-0:03:17.680,0:03:21.840
-of having a single mode where all the
-
-0:03:19.280,0:03:24.959
-nouns coexist
-
-0:03:21.840,0:03:30.400
-peacefully or otherwise you instead
-
-0:03:24.959,0:03:33.040
-have a dedicated mode for every noun
-
-0:03:30.400,0:03:35.440
-so in that case what happens is because
-
-0:03:33.040,0:03:37.280
-your modal spaces are now much smaller
-
-0:03:35.440,0:03:38.720
-you're just talking about words or
-
-0:03:37.280,0:03:42.560
-paragraphs or
-
-0:03:38.720,0:03:45.760
-lines or something the keys that you use
-
-0:03:42.560,0:03:48.560
-can be much more targeted
-
-0:03:45.760,0:03:50.400
-and you can use the same keystrokes in
-
-0:03:48.560,0:03:52.000
-in all of your modes and they would have
-
-0:03:50.400,0:03:53.280
-the same ideas behind them but
-
-0:03:52.000,0:03:55.519
-they would have different effects
-
-0:03:53.280,0:03:57.519
-depending on which context you're using
-
-0:03:55.519,0:03:59.120
-so it's the same keystrokes different
-
-0:03:57.519,0:04:01.360
-contexts
-
-0:03:59.120,0:04:02.480
-and the advantage of that is it's often
-
-0:04:01.360,0:04:05.519
-easier
-
-0:04:02.480,0:04:09.040
-to change context than it is to
-
-0:04:05.519,0:04:12.080
-learn new key bindings so let's see
-
-0:04:09.040,0:04:13.680
-an example of how that works we go into
-
-0:04:12.080,0:04:14.000
-character mode and if you look at the
-
-0:04:13.680,0:04:15.439
-mode
-
-0:04:14.000,0:04:18.720
-line at the bottom of the screen there
-
-0:04:15.439,0:04:21.519
-you'll see that we're in character mode
-
-0:04:18.720,0:04:23.919
-and now when we move up down left and
-
-0:04:21.519,0:04:28.479
-right we're moving by character
-
-0:04:23.919,0:04:30.240
-we can also transform the text and
-
-0:04:28.479,0:04:32.400
-the transformations occur in terms of
-
-0:04:30.240,0:04:34.320
-character
-
-0:04:32.400,0:04:35.520
-you can also go into word mode and in
-
-0:04:34.320,0:04:38.560
-word mode
-
-0:04:35.520,0:04:40.000
-the transformations that you do are on
-
-0:04:38.560,0:04:42.320
-words
-
-0:04:40.000,0:04:43.440
-and you try you your movement is also in
-
-0:04:42.320,0:04:45.600
-terms of words
-
-0:04:43.440,0:04:46.560
-so that's the level of granularity that
-
-0:04:45.600,0:04:49.520
-you have
-
-0:04:46.560,0:04:50.720
-you could also go to line mode and when
-
-0:04:49.520,0:04:53.759
-you're in line mode
-
-0:04:50.720,0:04:54.240
-you go up and down by line and you can
-
-0:04:53.759,0:04:57.520
-move
-
-0:04:54.240,0:04:59.120
-lines up and down left and right and so
-
-0:04:57.520,0:05:00.880
-on
-
-0:04:59.120,0:05:02.800
-and the transformations you do are in
-
-0:05:00.880,0:05:07.600
-terms of lines
-
-0:05:02.800,0:05:07.600
-you could also go to window mode where
-
-0:05:08.400,0:05:12.400
-now the objects that you're referring to
-
-0:05:10.639,0:05:15.759
-are windows and you can
-
-0:05:12.400,0:05:17.520
-move spatially amongst the windows or
-
-0:05:15.759,0:05:20.850
-make do transformations on the windows
-
-0:05:17.520,0:05:22.840
-using the same keystrokes
-
-0:05:20.850,0:05:25.360
-[Music]
-
-0:05:22.840,0:05:28.720
-um
-
-0:05:25.360,0:05:32.800
-so let's go to
-
-0:05:28.720,0:05:35.280
-um right and so um the one of the things
-
-0:05:32.800,0:05:36.880
-the the principles that play here is
-
-0:05:35.280,0:05:38.000
-something called the rumpelstiltskin
-
-0:05:36.880,0:05:40.720
-principle which is something
-
-0:05:38.000,0:05:42.320
-that's known in computer science which
-
-0:05:40.720,0:05:43.759
-is that if you can name something then
-
-0:05:42.320,0:05:46.720
-you have that you have power
-
-0:05:43.759,0:05:48.560
-then you have power over it so this is
-
-0:05:46.720,0:05:50.479
-kind of an adaptation of that principle
-
-0:05:48.560,0:05:52.320
-which says that if you can
-
-0:05:50.479,0:05:54.000
-name something and if you can talk about
-
-0:05:52.320,0:05:55.360
-it then it's a noun
-
-0:05:54.000,0:05:56.960
-[Music]
-
-0:05:55.360,0:05:58.960
-in your editing language and if it's a
-
-0:05:56.960,0:06:01.520
-noun then it has
-
-0:05:58.960,0:06:02.319
-it's a mode so if we can talk about it
-
-0:06:01.520,0:06:05.039
-it's a noun
-
-0:06:02.319,0:06:06.479
-if it's a noun then it's a mode and one
-
-0:06:05.039,0:06:07.039
-of the things we've been talking a lot
-
-0:06:06.479,0:06:10.800
-about
-
-0:06:07.039,0:06:14.240
-is modes so in fact
-
-0:06:10.800,0:06:17.280
-uh by this principle modes also
-
-0:06:14.240,0:06:19.039
-should be a mode
-
-0:06:17.280,0:06:21.120
-you should have a mode that can reason
-
-0:06:19.039,0:06:22.080
-in terms of modes as objects just like
-
-0:06:21.120,0:06:23.759
-you have
-
-0:06:22.080,0:06:26.560
-modes where you can reason in terms of
-
-0:06:23.759,0:06:28.800
-words or lines as objects
-
-0:06:26.560,0:06:30.479
-and so let's do that let's go to mode
-
-0:06:28.800,0:06:34.000
-mode
-
-0:06:30.479,0:06:36.080
-when you go to mode mode you see that uh
-
-0:06:34.000,0:06:37.919
-the objects that are depicted here are
-
-0:06:36.080,0:06:40.960
-the modes that are
-
-0:06:37.919,0:06:44.880
-that are present in the buffer
-
-0:06:40.960,0:06:46.400
-which we knew about um because the
-
-0:06:44.880,0:06:48.720
-style of editing that we had in this
-
-0:06:46.400,0:06:50.479
-buffer was the vim style of editing
-
-0:06:48.720,0:06:52.400
-where there's an insert mode at the
-
-0:06:50.479,0:06:53.039
-ground level and a normal mode that you
-
-0:06:52.400,0:06:57.280
-can escape
-
-0:06:53.039,0:07:00.479
-to you insert enter the ground level
-
-0:06:57.280,0:07:02.880
-enter to the insert mode and escape to
-
-0:07:00.479,0:07:03.680
-normal mode and when you look at the
-
-0:07:02.880,0:07:06.160
-mode mode
-
-0:07:03.680,0:07:09.680
-representation you see that in fact that
-
-0:07:06.160,0:07:09.680
-is the structure that's depicted
-
-0:07:10.479,0:07:14.080
-but in different situations you might
-
-0:07:12.720,0:07:16.080
-find
-
-0:07:14.080,0:07:17.680
-that you that these modes are not the
-
-0:07:16.080,0:07:19.360
-ones that you want you want something
-
-0:07:17.680,0:07:20.880
-more tailored for the specific
-
-0:07:19.360,0:07:23.050
-application
-
-0:07:20.880,0:07:24.240
-for instance if you're editing
-
-0:07:23.050,0:07:27.360
-[Music]
-
-0:07:24.240,0:07:30.880
-lisp code uh or or code in general but
-
-0:07:27.360,0:07:32.960
-list code is a particular example
-
-0:07:30.880,0:07:34.000
-you might want to take advantage of the
-
-0:07:32.960,0:07:37.599
-structure of
-
-0:07:34.000,0:07:40.960
-the code and for lisp code in particular
-
-0:07:37.599,0:07:44.240
-we have a mode called symax mode
-
-0:07:40.960,0:07:46.720
-which is able to reason
-
-0:07:44.240,0:07:47.919
-about your code in terms of its tree
-
-0:07:46.720,0:07:50.560
-structure
-
-0:07:47.919,0:07:51.120
-so you can use the same keystrokes hkl
-
-0:07:50.560,0:07:53.440
-goes
-
-0:07:51.120,0:07:54.960
-left right up and down but you also have
-
-0:07:53.440,0:07:58.080
-other keystrokes that are more
-
-0:07:54.960,0:08:01.520
-specialized to the application
-
-0:07:58.080,0:08:06.160
-and you can run the code and
-
-0:08:01.520,0:08:06.160
-we'll see that happen here in a minute
-
-0:08:06.960,0:08:12.240
-and you can make changes to it really
-
-0:08:10.080,0:08:16.080
-quickly
-
-0:08:12.240,0:08:16.080
-and see the effects of those changes
-
-0:08:18.000,0:08:21.360
-and you're doing this all in a mode
-
-0:08:19.440,0:08:23.199
-that's convenient for
-
-0:08:21.360,0:08:25.039
-this particular application which is
-
-0:08:23.199,0:08:28.960
-editing lisp code
-
-0:08:25.039,0:08:31.039
-and that is in this case symmex mode
-
-0:08:28.960,0:08:32.640
-so typically when you're editing code
-
-0:08:31.039,0:08:34.800
-like this you'd want to be
-
-0:08:32.640,0:08:36.640
-in insert mode actually typing out the
-
-0:08:34.800,0:08:38.320
-code
-
-0:08:36.640,0:08:40.959
-and then you'd want to escape to simex
-
-0:08:38.320,0:08:42.159
-mode rather than normal mode
-
-0:08:40.959,0:08:44.080
-and then you could escape again and
-
-0:08:42.159,0:08:46.720
-you'd end up in normal mode
-
-0:08:44.080,0:08:48.000
-so this if we go to mode mode we see is
-
-0:08:46.720,0:08:51.040
-depicted
-
-0:08:48.000,0:08:52.800
-as this tower where insert is at the
-
-0:08:51.040,0:08:54.800
-bottom and normal is at the top but
-
-0:08:52.800,0:08:57.200
-symmex mode is in between
-
-0:08:54.800,0:08:58.800
-the two you could also change that if
-
-0:08:57.200,0:09:00.640
-you like if you don't want cmx mode to
-
-0:08:58.800,0:09:03.760
-be there you could just
-
-0:09:00.640,0:09:05.600
-move it to the top and now you find some
-
-0:09:03.760,0:09:06.160
-mixes at the top and you enter down to
-
-0:09:05.600,0:09:07.600
-normal
-
-0:09:06.160,0:09:10.480
-you can see it on the status bar at the
-
-0:09:07.600,0:09:13.839
-bottom there enter to insert
-
-0:09:10.480,0:09:16.480
-escape to normal escape to symmex and
-
-0:09:13.839,0:09:19.380
-in fact you can even add more modes if
-
-0:09:16.480,0:09:21.519
-you don't like the existing ones
-
-0:09:19.380,0:09:23.839
-[Music]
-
-0:09:21.519,0:09:25.440
-and now we have an additional mode here
-
-0:09:23.839,0:09:27.519
-we have window mode it goes down to
-
-0:09:25.440,0:09:30.320
-symmex goes down to normal
-
-0:09:27.519,0:09:33.600
-enter the insert escape to normal escape
-
-0:09:30.320,0:09:37.600
-to smx escape the window
-
-0:09:33.600,0:09:41.760
-um so we've talked okay so another thing
-
-0:09:37.600,0:09:45.360
-actually to note here is that in editing
-
-0:09:41.760,0:09:46.720
-modes um
-
-0:09:45.360,0:09:48.399
-if you look at the mode line at the
-
-0:09:46.720,0:09:50.640
-bottom of the screen
-
-0:09:48.399,0:09:51.519
-you'll see that we are currently in this
-
-0:09:50.640,0:09:54.560
-buffer
-
-0:09:51.519,0:09:57.600
-we are currently in line mode
-
-0:09:54.560,0:09:58.720
-and I'm going to hit enter now and
-
-0:09:57.600,0:10:01.519
-you'll see that when I hit
-
-0:09:58.720,0:10:02.160
-enter nothing is happening it's still in
-
-0:10:01.519,0:10:05.120
-line mode
-
-0:10:02.160,0:10:07.200
-if you'd escape it's still in line mode
-
-0:10:05.120,0:10:10.640
-and you can find out the reason for that
-
-0:10:07.200,0:10:12.800
-by taking another meta jump out of this
-
-0:10:10.640,0:10:15.279
-and you'll see that in fact the reason
-
-0:10:12.800,0:10:17.360
-is that we're currently in line mode
-
-0:10:15.279,0:10:19.519
-and line mode is the only one available
-
-0:10:17.360,0:10:21.760
-in this tower
-
-0:10:19.519,0:10:24.880
-for editing the modes that are in
-
-0:10:21.760,0:10:26.560
-operation in your ground level
-
-0:10:24.880,0:10:28.320
-and in fact line mode is all you need
-
-0:10:26.560,0:10:30.320
-here because this is just
-
-0:10:28.320,0:10:32.079
-uh the nature of how these modes are
-
-0:10:30.320,0:10:35.040
-laid out is
-
-0:10:32.079,0:10:36.399
-in in rows and so line mode is the most
-
-0:10:35.040,0:10:37.680
-appropriate thing here
-
-0:10:36.399,0:10:39.740
-but you could change it to something
-
-0:10:37.680,0:10:40.959
-else if you like
-
-0:10:39.740,0:10:44.160
-[Music]
-
-0:10:40.959,0:10:44.560
-and then now we've seen two towers we've
-
-0:10:44.160,0:10:48.079
-seen
-
-0:10:44.560,0:10:53.680
-the vim tower and we've seen
-
-0:10:48.079,0:10:56.959
-also the symex tower the the lisp tower
-
-0:10:53.680,0:10:58.880
-and it turns out that because we've been
-
-0:10:56.959,0:11:01.519
-talking about towers now
-
-0:10:58.880,0:11:02.800
-by the rumpelstiltskin principle towers
-
-0:11:01.519,0:11:06.399
-also
-
-0:11:02.800,0:11:09.279
-um can be talked about
-
-0:11:06.399,0:11:11.200
-and therefore they also are a mode so
-
-0:11:09.279,0:11:14.640
-how do we go to tower mode
-
-0:11:11.200,0:11:18.560
-and the way we go tower mode is we do
-
-0:11:14.640,0:11:18.560
-we go in a slightly different direction
-
-0:11:19.200,0:11:23.120
-and we find that we are now in tower
-
-0:11:20.800,0:11:23.120
-mode
-
-0:11:23.360,0:11:29.279
-and we see that there are many towers
-
-0:11:27.440,0:11:32.640
-available so we're now
-
-0:11:29.279,0:11:36.240
-we're we're seeing several possible
-
-0:11:32.640,0:11:39.120
-towers that we have written
-
-0:11:36.240,0:11:41.440
-um to be available and for use in
-
-0:11:39.120,0:11:44.000
-different buffers and you can edit them
-
-0:11:41.440,0:11:46.320
-on the fly for instance let's enter this
-
-0:11:44.000,0:11:46.320
-tower
-
-0:11:46.630,0:11:49.920
-[Music]
-
-0:11:48.000,0:11:51.519
-and now you see that in the bottom of
-
-0:11:49.920,0:11:52.480
-the in the mode line you see that we're
-
-0:11:51.519,0:11:54.240
-going
-
-0:11:52.480,0:11:56.480
-across all of these different modes that
-
-0:11:54.240,0:11:58.800
-were in the tower
-
-0:11:56.480,0:12:00.399
-and you could escape and you could even
-
-0:11:58.800,0:12:00.880
-move things around you could put window
-
-0:12:00.399,0:12:02.399
-mode
-
-0:12:00.880,0:12:04.079
-all the way at the bottom right above
-
-0:12:02.399,0:12:06.880
-insert mode
-
-0:12:04.079,0:12:09.839
-let's see that happen there it is window
-
-0:12:06.880,0:12:13.040
-is right above insert
-
-0:12:09.839,0:12:14.240
-so on and the tower always reflects your
-
-0:12:13.040,0:12:15.760
-current position
-
-0:12:14.240,0:12:17.600
-so if you're in buffer mode here and you
-
-0:12:15.760,0:12:19.120
-go down to line mode
-
-0:12:17.600,0:12:22.240
-when you go back to mode mode you see
-
-0:12:19.120,0:12:22.240
-that we are in line mode
-
-0:12:22.480,0:12:26.160
-but in practice you wouldn't have a
-
-0:12:24.000,0:12:28.959
-tower this elaborate because
-
-0:12:26.160,0:12:29.440
-you'd rather have several smaller towers
-
-0:12:28.959,0:12:33.360
-you
-
-0:12:29.440,0:12:36.639
-enter that you alternate between
-
-0:12:33.360,0:12:39.839
-um okay so one
-
-0:12:36.639,0:12:42.240
-other thing of interest here is that
-
-0:12:39.839,0:12:43.839
-when you're in tower mode
-
-0:12:42.240,0:12:45.920
-if you look at the status line at the
-
-0:12:43.839,0:12:49.200
-bottom there we are currently
-
-0:12:45.920,0:12:49.839
-in buffer mode while we are in tower
-
-0:12:49.200,0:12:51.600
-mode
-
-0:12:49.839,0:12:53.519
-and tower mode actually isn't a mode
-
-0:12:51.600,0:12:53.920
-really neither is mode mode they're
-
-0:12:53.519,0:12:58.000
-really
-
-0:12:53.920,0:13:00.959
-referential planes or meta planes
-
-0:12:58.000,0:13:03.120
-um in any case you can see that we're in
-
-0:13:00.959,0:13:04.560
-buffer mode and we can take a meta jump
-
-0:13:03.120,0:13:07.120
-out of this to confirm
-
-0:13:04.560,0:13:08.000
-that buffer mode is the only mode
-
-0:13:07.120,0:13:10.560
-available
-
-0:13:08.000,0:13:11.200
-when we're editing towers because that's
-
-0:13:10.560,0:13:14.240
-the one
-
-0:13:11.200,0:13:15.200
-we need given that our towers are
-
-0:13:14.240,0:13:21.839
-represented
-
-0:13:15.200,0:13:21.839
-in individual buffers
-
-0:13:23.200,0:13:26.320
-right so let's uh let's see where we're
-
-0:13:26.000,0:13:28.240
-at
-
-0:13:26.320,0:13:30.160
-trump's still skin principle we talked
-
-0:13:28.240,0:13:32.240
-about mode mode
-
-0:13:30.160,0:13:33.920
-um we talked about the strange loop
-
-0:13:32.240,0:13:37.820
-application of
-
-0:13:33.920,0:13:39.600
-ground level modes in meta levels
-
-0:13:37.820,0:13:42.240
-[Music]
-
-0:13:39.600,0:13:43.199
-and yeah we saw the different towers and
-
-0:13:42.240,0:13:46.639
-in fact
-
-0:13:43.199,0:13:49.839
-you can we're currently in
-
-0:13:46.639,0:13:49.839
-vim tower
-
-0:13:50.720,0:13:54.720
-where you can go to Emacs tower and now
-
-0:13:53.120,0:13:55.760
-with a single keystroke you can
-
-0:13:54.720,0:13:59.040
-alternate
-
-0:13:55.760,0:14:02.399
-between e-max
-
-0:13:59.040,0:14:05.519
-and vim which are represented which are
-
-0:14:02.399,0:14:07.839
-modeled as towers
-
-0:14:05.519,0:14:07.839
-um
-
-0:14:09.279,0:14:11.920
-okay so
-
-0:14:13.360,0:14:17.040
-so there's uh the one thing that we've
-
-0:14:15.360,0:14:18.160
-sort of alluded to is that there are two
-
-0:14:17.040,0:14:20.480
-directions
-
-0:14:18.160,0:14:22.399
-that you can travel in when you're going
-
-0:14:20.480,0:14:25.120
-through this framework
-
-0:14:22.399,0:14:32.560
-one lev one direction is uh and we'll
-
-0:14:25.120,0:14:32.560
-visualize it with uh like so
-
-0:14:33.760,0:14:37.040
-there's two directions you can travel
-
-0:14:35.120,0:14:38.399
-and you can either go sideways or you
-
-0:14:37.040,0:14:40.399
-can go up and down
-
-0:14:38.399,0:14:41.680
-if you go sideways you're changing your
-
-0:14:40.399,0:14:45.440
-perspective
-
-0:14:41.680,0:14:47.360
-so normal mode word mode line mode
-
-0:14:45.440,0:14:49.120
-window mode and so on are all different
-
-0:14:47.360,0:14:51.680
-perspectives on your under on your
-
-0:14:49.120,0:14:53.040
-ground editing experience
-
-0:14:51.680,0:14:55.519
-and the other direction you can travel
-
-0:14:53.040,0:14:57.920
-in is up or down which takes you
-
-0:14:55.519,0:14:59.600
-through meta levels so you go from the
-
-0:14:57.920,0:15:01.920
-ground level editing experience
-
-0:14:59.600,0:15:03.440
-up to mode mode and then up to the tower
-
-0:15:01.920,0:15:07.040
-plane and so on
-
-0:15:03.440,0:15:10.800
-or uh yeah and so on
-
-0:15:07.040,0:15:14.880
-um yeah so this all sounds
-
-0:15:10.800,0:15:18.160
-very complex but the truth is
-
-0:15:14.880,0:15:21.519
-it's not really that complicated
-
-0:15:18.160,0:15:22.959
-even though it feels that way the reason
-
-0:15:21.519,0:15:26.480
-it isn't that complicated
-
-0:15:22.959,0:15:28.800
-is because no matter how many levels
-
-0:15:26.480,0:15:30.160
-up or down you go and no matter where
-
-0:15:28.800,0:15:32.399
-you are
-
-0:15:30.160,0:15:34.079
-whether you're in at the ground level
-
-0:15:32.399,0:15:36.000
-editing the actual text
-
-0:15:34.079,0:15:37.600
-or whether you're at a meta level some
-
-0:15:36.000,0:15:39.279
-unknown meta level and you don't know
-
-0:15:37.600,0:15:42.320
-where you are
-
-0:15:39.279,0:15:44.399
-no matter where you are the way in which
-
-0:15:42.320,0:15:47.519
-you interact with it
-
-0:15:44.399,0:15:52.000
-is the same at every level
-
-0:15:47.519,0:15:55.440
-and that is the great power of um
-
-0:15:52.000,0:15:58.720
-this approach is that
-
-0:15:55.440,0:16:00.880
-all of the different levels um are the
-
-0:15:58.720,0:16:03.839
-same
-
-0:16:00.880,0:16:05.759
-and in fact the complexity of the whole
-
-0:16:03.839,0:16:08.720
-is exactly identical to the
-
-0:16:05.759,0:16:10.000
-complexity of each part so if you know
-
-0:16:08.720,0:16:12.959
-how to edit words
-
-0:16:10.000,0:16:13.440
-in the ground level buffer and you know
-
-0:16:12.959,0:16:15.839
-how to move
-
-0:16:13.440,0:16:16.720
-lines around using line mode then you
-
-0:16:15.839,0:16:19.519
-know how to edit
-
-0:16:16.720,0:16:22.800
-any aspect of your editing experience at
-
-0:16:19.519,0:16:23.310
-any level
-
-0:16:22.800,0:16:26.240
-so
-
-0:16:23.310,0:16:28.480
-[Music]
-
-0:16:26.240,0:16:28.480
-um
-
-0:16:30.079,0:16:33.839
-so this is a pre-release demo this
-
-0:16:32.000,0:16:36.880
-doesn't exist on melpa
-
-0:16:33.839,0:16:40.079
-yet but you can follow updates um
-
-0:16:36.880,0:16:44.079
-at this repo on github
-
-0:16:40.079,0:16:45.199
-and if you can also be a beta tester or
-
-0:16:44.079,0:16:46.000
-something like that if you like that
-
-0:16:45.199,0:16:49.199
-would be very
-
-0:16:46.000,0:16:50.560
-uh helpful and you can learn more about
-
-0:16:49.199,0:16:53.920
-this at
-
-0:16:50.560,0:16:55.920
-dream.org which is where I house
-
-0:16:53.920,0:16:57.279
-the research that I work on and in
-
-0:16:55.920,0:17:00.800
-particular
-
-0:16:57.279,0:17:03.600
-the research on epistemic levels is what
-
-0:17:00.800,0:17:06.480
-inspired this particular Emacs extension
-
-0:17:03.600,0:17:08.480
-you can also learn about dialectical
-
-0:17:06.480,0:17:10.880
-inheritance attribution which is the
-
-0:17:08.480,0:17:14.559
-basis of
-
-0:17:10.880,0:17:16.959
-a new economic system that could be fair
-
-0:17:14.559,0:17:19.439
-and could lead to a prosperous and happy
-
-0:17:16.959,0:17:22.799
-world
-
-0:17:19.439,0:17:26.319
-and um yeah you can follow me on
-
-0:17:22.799,0:17:31.919
-twitter at countwajoula and
-
-0:17:26.319,0:17:31.919
-that's it thank you
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--09-orgmode-your-life-in-plain-text--rainer-koenig-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--09-orgmode-your-life-in-plain-text--rainer-koenig-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 2699f8ae..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--09-orgmode-your-life-in-plain-text--rainer-koenig-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,453 +0,0 @@
-0:00:02.480,0:00:06.240
-so
-
-0:00:03.199,0:00:08.559
-hi there this is reiner I have a 10
-
-0:00:06.240,0:00:11.759
-minute time slot at the imax conf
-
-0:00:08.559,0:00:13.519
-and I will show you a quick uh walk
-
-0:00:11.759,0:00:17.039
-through my gtd
-
-0:00:13.519,0:00:19.520
-system in order mode so
-
-0:00:17.039,0:00:20.640
-let's start with capturing we want to
-
-0:00:19.520,0:00:24.080
-capture
-
-0:00:20.640,0:00:27.279
-what we do here so the idea
-
-0:00:24.080,0:00:29.599
-is I press f6 and I say I want to make a
-
-0:00:27.279,0:00:33.120
-small project because this video
-
-0:00:29.599,0:00:35.120
-will be a small project so the thing is
-
-0:00:33.120,0:00:38.239
-record a video
-
-0:00:35.120,0:00:42.000
-for imax imx
-
-0:00:38.239,0:00:45.920
-conf 2020
-
-0:00:42.000,0:00:49.360
-video is recorded edited
-
-0:00:45.920,0:00:52.160
-and uploaded and we can also
-
-0:00:49.360,0:00:53.680
-set the timeline because we want to
-
-0:00:52.160,0:00:56.640
-upload it and the time
-
-0:00:53.680,0:00:59.440
-the deadline for uploads is we know it
-
-0:00:56.640,0:01:02.719
-already the 14th of november
-
-0:00:59.440,0:01:03.600
-so let me put this in here see this is
-
-0:01:02.719,0:01:05.760
-done
-
-0:01:03.600,0:01:07.600
-and now because it's a project I mean I
-
-0:01:05.760,0:01:09.280
-could say just one task to record a
-
-0:01:07.600,0:01:12.159
-video but it's
-
-0:01:09.280,0:01:27.840
-too much so let's split it down in a few
-
-0:01:12.159,0:01:27.840
-small tasks so the next one
-
-0:01:40.400,0:01:46.159
-so you see I've just typed a few
-
-0:01:43.439,0:01:46.640
-quick tasks we can see them if we look
-
-0:01:46.159,0:01:49.360
-in the
-
-0:01:46.640,0:01:49.360
-capture file
-
-0:01:50.240,0:01:54.479
-so you see there's my project entry and
-
-0:01:52.399,0:01:56.799
-there are all my tasks and since it's a
-
-0:01:54.479,0:02:00.240
-project I can now
-
-0:01:56.799,0:02:02.479
-make it easy I just indent every task by
-
-0:02:00.240,0:02:02.479
-one
-
-0:02:05.360,0:02:09.840
-and then
-
-0:02:14.480,0:02:16.800
-so
-
-0:02:18.560,0:02:27.360
-okay so you see we have one
-
-0:02:23.120,0:02:30.080
-project here and this one we refile now
-
-0:02:27.360,0:02:30.080
-to our
-
-0:02:34.840,0:02:41.680
-backlog
-
-0:02:36.160,0:02:41.680
-so if we look in our backlog
-
-0:02:42.000,0:02:51.840
-you see my project with all the tasks
-
-0:02:45.599,0:02:51.840
-so now next one
-
-0:02:52.480,0:02:56.720
-and I pretend now I'm doing a weekly
-
-0:02:55.040,0:03:00.959
-review
-
-0:02:56.720,0:03:00.959
-see makes me
-
-0:03:01.040,0:03:07.120
-and I already did some things and now
-
-0:03:04.080,0:03:10.319
-the point where I am
-
-0:03:07.120,0:03:14.319
-is schedule tasks with no date
-
-0:03:10.319,0:03:14.319
-those are all those tasks so I have a
-
-0:03:15.200,0:03:19.040
-weekly review help but that says okay
-
-0:03:17.519,0:03:22.080
-show me everything
-
-0:03:19.040,0:03:25.280
-that I need to schedule plan
-
-0:03:22.080,0:03:27.760
-so schedule this class we do
-
-0:03:25.280,0:03:27.760
-everything
-
-0:03:30.879,0:03:34.640
-so everything is scheduled now
-
-0:03:35.040,0:03:42.000
-and we can check off that and so on
-
-0:03:38.239,0:03:44.959
-we can I have a plan
-
-0:03:42.000,0:03:46.879
-for every day that's my free plan I
-
-0:03:44.959,0:03:50.239
-press f6
-
-0:03:46.879,0:03:53.439
-and I say pp plan
-
-0:03:50.239,0:03:57.360
-private things you see there is the
-
-0:03:53.439,0:04:01.120
-first day 12th of november german
-
-0:03:57.360,0:04:03.200
-and now I can
-
-0:04:01.120,0:04:04.239
-look at what I have to do today you see
-
-0:04:03.200,0:04:07.040
-my my uh
-
-0:04:04.239,0:04:09.360
-agenda view is very long and I just want
-
-0:04:07.040,0:04:14.000
-to focus on a few tasks so
-
-0:04:09.360,0:04:16.720
-I copied them to my
-
-0:04:14.000,0:04:16.720
-daily plan
-
-0:04:22.639,0:04:29.919
-I just want to show you so I have a
-
-0:04:25.680,0:04:33.919
-daily plan for every day and that means
-
-0:04:29.919,0:04:37.680
-this one is what I see
-
-0:04:33.919,0:04:41.360
-and this one is gone
-
-0:04:37.680,0:04:43.600
-so now let's pretend we are working on
-
-0:04:41.360,0:04:44.960
-the first refine the requirements for
-
-0:04:43.600,0:04:48.320
-the video
-
-0:04:44.960,0:04:51.520
-and we had a look and uh okay
-
-0:04:48.320,0:04:53.520
-I can mark this task as done here
-
-0:04:51.520,0:04:54.840
-because I knew the requirements the main
-
-0:04:53.520,0:04:57.759
-ct
-
-0:04:54.840,0:05:01.199
-done format
-
-0:04:57.759,0:05:05.199
-is 720p
-
-0:05:01.199,0:05:09.440
-webm codec
-
-0:05:05.199,0:05:10.960
-so this one is done and I can mark it
-
-0:05:09.440,0:05:14.560
-off here
-
-0:05:10.960,0:05:17.600
-as well so now I have marked it off
-
-0:05:14.560,0:05:19.600
-everywhere and the good thing of my
-
-0:05:17.600,0:05:21.600
-daily plan is that I can't
-
-0:05:19.600,0:05:23.520
-really see it all the day and I stick to
-
-0:05:21.600,0:05:24.639
-this what I decided in the morning what
-
-0:05:23.520,0:05:27.120
-I want to do
-
-0:05:24.639,0:05:28.080
-so let's go to the next one make a quick
-
-0:05:27.120,0:05:38.000
-test
-
-0:05:28.080,0:05:40.720
-yeah I did the test already
-
-0:05:38.000,0:05:42.639
-uh I will do a small trick I say okay I
-
-0:05:40.720,0:05:46.960
-record the video here
-
-0:05:42.639,0:05:53.840
-video recorded and then let me do
-
-0:05:46.960,0:05:53.840
-what to show
-
-0:05:55.120,0:06:01.280
-now I'm recording the video so
-
-0:05:58.319,0:06:02.240
-let's see what we do we had capture we
-
-0:06:01.280,0:06:05.440
-had
-
-0:06:02.240,0:06:09.919
-weekly review we had daily planning
-
-0:06:05.440,0:06:12.319
-and how are we processing this very nice
-
-0:06:09.919,0:06:15.120
-so let's pretend the video is recorded
-
-0:06:12.319,0:06:15.120
-ct done
-
-0:06:17.520,0:06:21.120
-let me put this to next again start
-
-0:06:20.479,0:06:26.000
-cardi
-
-0:06:21.120,0:06:26.000
-and live to time lapse
-
-0:06:27.280,0:06:33.759
-and after recording it
-
-0:06:30.319,0:06:36.720
-I pre pretend this is done now
-
-0:06:33.759,0:06:36.720
-ct done
-
-0:06:39.039,0:06:44.639
-and then I have a video ready and then
-
-0:06:42.400,0:06:50.639
-let's pretend I did the upload
-
-0:06:44.639,0:06:55.280
-as well done radio uploaded
-
-0:06:50.639,0:06:58.319
-cc so I can say everything now is done
-
-0:06:55.280,0:06:59.199
-save it so tomorrow I see what I did
-
-0:06:58.319,0:07:02.560
-yesterday
-
-0:06:59.199,0:07:06.000
-and here I'm completely
-
-0:07:02.560,0:07:09.680
-done we have the weekly review
-
-0:07:06.000,0:07:12.639
-and we put another
-
-0:07:09.680,0:07:15.199
-buffer here because I want to show you
-
-0:07:12.639,0:07:16.960
-the the final step of my weekly review
-
-0:07:15.199,0:07:19.199
-if you see the
-
-0:07:16.960,0:07:21.599
-if you see there's a final step that
-
-0:07:19.199,0:07:24.160
-says select finish tasks and make a bulk
-
-0:07:21.599,0:07:26.560
-archive action so if you look at my
-
-0:07:24.160,0:07:27.440
-uh imax coin thing okay the project is
-
-0:07:26.560,0:07:31.360
-done as well
-
-0:07:27.440,0:07:34.880
-project ct done
-
-0:07:31.360,0:07:38.160
-and then what I can do is now see
-
-0:07:34.880,0:07:41.680
-a weekly review helper
-
-0:07:38.160,0:07:44.720
-finish tasks and I could
-
-0:07:41.680,0:07:48.639
-make a bike
-
-0:07:44.720,0:07:50.639
-operation that says archive everything
-
-0:07:48.639,0:07:52.720
-but at the moment I don't need to do
-
-0:07:50.639,0:07:56.720
-that because we have
-
-0:07:52.720,0:08:00.080
-a tree structure so it's cxa I have this
-
-0:07:56.720,0:08:02.800
-task away and the task is done so that's
-
-0:08:00.080,0:08:06.080
-it that's my system you see from
-
-0:08:02.800,0:08:08.000
-capturing tasks to scheduling tasks to
-
-0:08:06.080,0:08:09.759
-putting it on the daily plan
-
-0:08:08.000,0:08:11.120
-performing it and at the end when
-
-0:08:09.759,0:08:13.199
-everything is done
-
-0:08:11.120,0:08:14.879
-and the next weekly review they will go
-
-0:08:13.199,0:08:17.199
-to the ici file
-
-0:08:14.879,0:08:21.759
-because it's finished thank you for
-
-0:08:17.199,0:08:21.759
-watching that's it
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--10-lead-your-future-with-org--andrea.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--10-lead-your-future-with-org--andrea.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 1718ca36..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--10-lead-your-future-with-org--andrea.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,348 +0,0 @@
-0:00:00.220,0:00:03.400
-Welcome to my talk, Lead Your Future with
-Org.
-
-0:00:03.400,0:00:04.680
-Who am I?
-
-0:00:04.680,0:00:05.680
-I'm Andrea.
-
-0:00:05.680,0:00:10.060
-I work as a Scala software engineer somewhere
-in the Netherlands, and I inherited my passion
-
-0:00:10.060,0:00:12.340
-for Emacs from my PhD supervisor.
-
-0:00:12.340,0:00:15.050
-From that moment on, I got in synergy with
-it.
-
-0:00:15.050,0:00:19.830
-You can find more about me and my interests
-at https://ag91.github.io.
-
-0:00:19.830,0:00:27.150
-That is the place where I keep my blog and
-I blog on a weekly basis.
-
-0:00:27.150,0:00:29.449
-Let's get into the bulk of the talk.
-
-0:00:29.449,0:00:31.679
-Why I needed a vision.
-
-0:00:31.679,0:00:34.360
-The main, main problem is that I have too
-many interests.
-
-0:00:34.360,0:00:37.740
-I like a lot of things, and these things take
-time.
-
-0:00:37.740,0:00:44.000
-Then I have too little time to do other things
-that are very important as well.
-
-0:00:44.000,0:00:46.430
-And so I need priority.
-
-0:00:46.430,0:00:51.750
-And the vision in my mind is both an ambition,
-something that I want to do with my life,
-
-0:00:51.750,0:00:59.220
-and at the same time, it's a way to focus
-my efforts and get rid of some stuff that
-
-0:00:59.220,0:01:03.350
-fundamentally is not something I really care
-so much about.
-
-0:01:03.350,0:01:09.400
-Even if you come up with a vision and so with
-a smaller scope of things that you want to
-
-0:01:09.400,0:01:17.150
-do, even then, you have to take this ambition
-of yours, this vision, and disassemble it
-
-0:01:17.150,0:01:19.310
-in very small steps.
-
-0:01:19.310,0:01:28.950
-Org Mode is very good at taking care of this
-because you can keep track of TODOs in Org
-
-0:01:28.950,0:01:29.950
-Mode.
-
-0:01:29.950,0:01:36.740
-So let me show you how I keep an agenda that
-also keeps track of my vision.
-
-0:01:36.740,0:01:40.250
-For this talk, I have a running example.
-
-0:01:40.250,0:01:42.990
-Vision will be "I want to bring joy to people."
-
-0:01:42.990,0:01:45.730
-and "I want to live in synergy with the planet."
-
-0:01:45.730,0:01:49.740
-Okay, so, given these two visions, let's open
-the agenda.
-
-0:01:49.740,0:01:59.560
-You will see on the right that now I have
-some tasks, both on Tuesday and on Friday.
-
-0:01:59.560,0:02:04.560
-Things to notice is that we said one of our
-visions is synergy with the planet, so some
-
-0:02:04.560,0:02:13.010
-tasks are annotated on the left with this
-category and some with "Bring joy to people."
-
-0:02:13.010,0:02:16.730
-In this way, you can distinguish where are
-my...
-
-0:02:16.730,0:02:20.100
-In this day, where my effort is going in this
-day.
-
-0:02:20.100,0:02:27.950
-The other thing is the specification of these
-tasks, and then at the end, you can notice
-
-0:02:27.950,0:02:42.690
-a tag on the right that is essentially a guess
-of how long this task will have an effect
-
-0:02:42.690,0:02:43.750
-over the future.
-
-0:02:43.750,0:02:53.970
-So, for example, installing solar panel onto
-my roof is going to have an effect of 10 years
-
-0:02:53.970,0:02:57.180
-over my life, if I manage to achieve that.
-
-0:02:57.180,0:03:01.230
-That is my rough guess.
-
-0:03:01.230,0:03:08.180
-You will notice that the ones that have a
-bigger amount, so 10 years over the 5 year
-
-0:03:08.180,0:03:15.879
-one, because I order my day so that the tasks
-that are more important or that I believe
-
-0:03:15.879,0:03:21.540
-are more effective over my future, I sort
-them so that they appear at the top.
-
-0:03:21.540,0:03:26.420
-In this way, I can basically decide, okay,
-today, what should I...
-
-0:03:26.420,0:03:36.379
-Find a video on Youtube, but I should take
-into consideration when I look at my agenda
-
-0:03:36.379,0:03:42.379
-that I've traded that small fun for today
-with something that could have had an effect
-
-0:03:42.379,0:03:45.890
-over a longer period of time.
-
-0:03:45.890,0:04:03.909
-Let me show you how I also exploit the facilities
-that Org Mode comes with.
-
-0:04:03.909,0:04:05.190
-I will...
-
-0:04:05.190,0:04:07.830
-I have two templates available to me.
-
-0:04:07.830,0:04:09.330
-I will choose one.
-
-0:04:09.330,0:04:13.970
-The first thing that it asks to me is "How
-long will this affect your life?"
-
-0:04:13.970,0:04:20.660
-So I like ... It will affect a long time,
-if I manage to produce only for myself.
-
-0:04:20.660,0:04:23.400
-So I choose 10 years.
-
-0:04:23.400,0:04:24.750
-And then I specify the task.
-
-0:04:24.750,0:04:29.080
-So, "Learn how to keep bees."
-
-0:04:29.080,0:04:30.080
-I collect this task.
-
-0:04:30.080,0:04:35.870
-It will now appear in the middle because 10
-years is between 20 years and 5 years.
-
-0:04:35.870,0:04:40.860
-So I know that if I put some effort in learning
-how to keep bees, I should be quite happy
-
-0:04:40.860,0:04:41.979
-for today.
-
-0:04:41.979,0:04:43.060
-Okay.
-
-0:04:43.060,0:04:50.470
-So, say that I do it, say that that's it...
-
-0:04:50.470,0:04:52.490
-Once I've done this task, how can I be...
-
-0:04:52.490,0:04:58.000
-How do I know how much progress I am doing?
-
-0:04:58.000,0:05:07.100
-The way I can do that is by retrospecting
-weekly or monthly about the successes or the
-
-0:05:07.100,0:05:09.520
-progress that I am doing.
-
-0:05:09.520,0:05:14.949
-How I do it is simply by running this kind
-of snippet that shows me that for this month,
-
-0:05:14.949,0:05:23.350
-I have done three tasks for bringing joy to
-people and three tasks for synergy with planet.
-
-0:05:23.350,0:05:30.300
-This is useful because you can repeat it and
-it will be appended, so every time you run
-
-0:05:30.300,0:05:38.040
-it again, you can compare if you are... how
-you are working towards your goal and if you're
-
-0:05:38.040,0:05:43.830
-focusing more on bringing joy to people or
-if you're focusing more on synergy.
-
-0:05:43.830,0:05:45.990
-Balance the effort.
-
-0:05:45.990,0:05:51.850
-A thing that I want to share that I think
-will be useful to you is this function I use
-
-0:05:51.850,0:05:55.789
-that I made for myself to create these statistics.
-
-0:05:55.789,0:06:04.509
-It's a wrapper around the very enjoyable library
-org-ql, which allows you to query and group
-
-0:06:04.509,0:06:13.650
-headings, do analysis on headings, or restructuring
-and view headings in a SQL fashion.
-
-0:06:13.650,0:06:19.120
-The syntax is very similar to SQL.
-
-0:06:19.120,0:06:25.390
-You can manipulate your headings and visualize
-them or just get statistics as I have done
-
-0:06:25.390,0:06:26.390
-here.
-
-0:06:26.390,0:06:36.540
-Finally, for this talk, say that you are doing
-progress, that progress most likely will generate
-
-0:06:36.540,0:06:39.950
-some useful knowledge for yourself.
-
-0:06:39.950,0:06:46.050
-My way to store this knowledge is through
-org-roam, another interesting mode that is
-
-0:06:46.050,0:06:54.759
-very... that is becoming very relevant and
-known today.
-
-0:06:54.759,0:06:56.020
-The idea is that I simply...
-
-0:06:56.020,0:07:08.470
-If I learn how to make, how to install solar
-panels, that can be useful knowledge.
-
-0:07:08.470,0:07:15.800
-I can link to some other knowledge that I
-have and so create my own knowledgebase, and
-
-0:07:15.800,0:07:19.020
-save it for later use.
-
-0:07:19.020,0:07:25.160
-My later use is typically, in this case, my
-blog.
-
-0:07:25.160,0:07:31.630
-In here, I have a few notes that are basically
-a synthesis of knowledge that I have collected
-
-0:07:31.630,0:07:34.550
-doing my tasks towards my vision.
-
-0:07:34.550,0:07:39.440
-With this, this is all I wanted to show you
-for this talk.
-
-0:07:39.440,0:07:47.490
-You can follow me on my blog at https://ag91.github.io
-. That is also where I am going to share a
-
-0:07:47.490,0:07:55.370
-version of this Org Mode file that allows
-you basically to create the same kind of configuration
-
-0:07:55.370,0:08:02.950
-I have here, and you can create an instance
-by running this snippet of Emacs in which
-
-0:08:02.950,0:08:04.790
-you can just run this example.
-
-0:08:04.790,0:08:11.890
-An extended example I will also add, to just
-play around safely with this kind of configuration.
-
-0:08:11.890,0:08:13.300
-So enjoy the rest of the conference.
-
-0:08:13.300,0:08:14.460
-Catch you later!
-
-0:08:14.460,0:08:15.650
-Nice to meet you!
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--11-the-org-gtd-package-opinions-about-getting-things-done--aldric-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--11-the-org-gtd-package-opinions-about-getting-things-done--aldric-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index ee8fdb9f..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--11-the-org-gtd-package-opinions-about-getting-things-done--aldric-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1194 +0,0 @@
-0:00:01.680,0:00:07.120
-hello and welcome
-
-0:00:03.439,0:00:07.120
-to my org gt
-
-0:00:07.200,0:00:12.719
-I wrote this package because myself
-
-0:00:10.400,0:00:14.320
-overwhelmed with all the stuff I had to
-
-0:00:12.719,0:00:17.359
-manage at working at home
-
-0:00:14.320,0:00:18.720
-and I'd heard about gtd saw someone
-
-0:00:17.359,0:00:22.320
-using it with
-
-0:00:18.720,0:00:24.720
-just a small notebook
-
-0:00:22.320,0:00:25.920
-and I wanted to do it in emacs because
-
-0:00:24.720,0:00:29.199
-well
-
-0:00:25.920,0:00:31.359
-max can do everything right so
-
-0:00:29.199,0:00:34.559
-I'm going to jump in quickly so just so
-
-0:00:31.359,0:00:36.960
-you know here's kind of a list of the
-
-0:00:34.559,0:00:38.719
-resources obviously org gtd which you
-
-0:00:36.960,0:00:41.120
-can find there you can open an issue ask
-
-0:00:38.719,0:00:43.280
-me questions there about it
-
-0:00:41.120,0:00:45.360
-I use org edna a package for state
-
-0:00:43.280,0:00:46.160
-triggers I'm going to show this briefly
-
-0:00:45.360,0:00:49.840
-when I
-
-0:00:46.160,0:00:52.000
-finish item in a project
-
-0:00:49.840,0:00:53.440
-org agenda property you will see in the
-
-0:00:52.000,0:00:57.360
-agenda it's going to show
-
-0:00:53.440,0:01:00.960
-to whom an action has been delegated to
-
-0:00:57.360,0:01:02.559
-and you will see orgrome briefly as a
-
-0:01:00.960,0:01:04.080
-reference because that is what I have
-
-0:01:02.559,0:01:06.960
-chosen for
-
-0:01:04.080,0:01:07.360
-my knowledge archival tool you can
-
-0:01:06.960,0:01:12.640
-choose
-
-0:01:07.360,0:01:15.520
-whatever you prefer
-
-0:01:12.640,0:01:15.840
-um this is a quick quick reminder on
-
-0:01:15.520,0:01:18.479
-what
-
-0:01:15.840,0:01:19.680
-gtd is and how it works uh this is not a
-
-0:01:18.479,0:01:22.640
-lesson on
-
-0:01:19.680,0:01:23.360
-presentation on gtd because that would
-
-0:01:22.640,0:01:25.680
-be
-
-0:01:23.360,0:01:27.920
-well other people have done it better
-
-0:01:25.680,0:01:30.320
-than me
-
-0:01:27.920,0:01:31.280
-so in short um everything goes into the
-
-0:01:30.320,0:01:34.320
-inbox
-
-0:01:31.280,0:01:35.600
-and then you process the inbox and you
-
-0:01:34.320,0:01:37.200
-decide what to do if
-
-0:01:35.600,0:01:39.119
-it could be actionable or not if it's
-
-0:01:37.200,0:01:40.799
-actionable it could be a project
-
-0:01:39.119,0:01:42.159
-or it could be a single action which you
-
-0:01:40.799,0:01:45.759
-could delegate
-
-0:01:42.159,0:01:48.079
-or soon or schedule or just do
-
-0:01:45.759,0:01:49.680
-do it if it's not actionable you could
-
-0:01:48.079,0:01:51.759
-just throw it away
-
-0:01:49.680,0:01:53.600
-incubate it for later or move it into
-
-0:01:51.759,0:01:56.079
-your files
-
-0:01:53.600,0:01:56.079
-reference
-
-0:01:57.520,0:02:00.240
-over here
-
-0:02:01.920,0:02:08.959
-you can see the global bindings
-
-0:02:05.119,0:02:11.599
-or or gtd those are the the actions that
-
-0:02:08.959,0:02:12.319
-the functions I have made available this
-
-0:02:11.599,0:02:14.000
-is
-
-0:02:12.319,0:02:15.760
-in progress there's more to come some
-
-0:02:14.000,0:02:17.360
-stuff is probably missing but
-
-0:02:15.760,0:02:22.400
-it's grown mostly from my own personal
-
-0:02:17.360,0:02:25.520
-use so far so it doesn't have things
-
-0:02:22.400,0:02:27.200
-and the bottom right you can see the
-
-0:02:25.520,0:02:28.560
-agenda
-
-0:02:27.200,0:02:31.599
-one thing I wanted to do with this
-
-0:02:28.560,0:02:32.959
-package was leverage org mode as much as
-
-0:02:31.599,0:02:36.319
-possible
-
-0:02:32.959,0:02:40.160
-so I tried to not reinvent
-
-0:02:36.319,0:02:43.599
-the wheel as much as I could that meant
-
-0:02:40.160,0:02:45.599
-reusing the agenda you can see here
-
-0:02:43.599,0:02:47.920
-a couple of the things that are made
-
-0:02:45.599,0:02:49.760
-available or kind of
-
-0:02:47.920,0:02:54.160
-custom customized or configure it for
-
-0:02:49.760,0:02:54.160
-you some of the opinions that or gtd has
-
-0:02:54.319,0:02:57.840
-up here for instance you can see a
-
-0:02:56.400,0:03:01.040
-delegated action
-
-0:02:57.840,0:03:03.200
-so a delegated action is
-
-0:03:01.040,0:03:04.720
-as someone to whom it's delegated it's
-
-0:03:03.200,0:03:06.080
-my parents in this case
-
-0:03:04.720,0:03:08.239
-it has the name of the action ask
-
-0:03:06.080,0:03:11.599
-parents what gift they want
-
-0:03:08.239,0:03:14.800
-it's marked as the tag as the state
-
-0:03:11.599,0:03:17.280
-of wait because I'm waiting
-
-0:03:14.800,0:03:18.080
-and it is scheduled because you should
-
-0:03:17.280,0:03:20.239
-ping people
-
-0:03:18.080,0:03:21.840
-or check on the status status of a task
-
-0:03:20.239,0:03:25.680
-when you're waiting for it so you don't
-
-0:03:21.840,0:03:27.599
-forget about it or it gets lost forever
-
-0:03:25.680,0:03:30.560
-I have a scheduled action to give a talk
-
-0:03:27.599,0:03:33.440
-that's what I'm doing right now
-
-0:03:30.560,0:03:35.599
-and I have an incubated action which is
-
-0:03:33.440,0:03:36.640
-also scheduled to make money through the
-
-0:03:35.599,0:03:38.640
-lottery this is a
-
-0:03:36.640,0:03:41.120
-thing to take a look at for you know
-
-0:03:38.640,0:03:42.560
-later decide later what I want to do
-
-0:03:41.120,0:03:44.560
-it might be actionable it might not be I
-
-0:03:42.560,0:03:46.239
-just I don't know right now or I didn't
-
-0:03:44.560,0:03:49.280
-know when I
-
-0:03:46.239,0:03:52.319
-processed it so I incubated it
-
-0:03:49.280,0:03:53.200
-underneath we have all the things that
-
-0:03:52.319,0:03:56.799
-are
-
-0:03:53.200,0:03:56.799
-direct actions for me to take
-
-0:03:59.360,0:04:03.200
-all right you see a little bit of the
-
-0:04:01.439,0:04:04.080
-preparation seeps through the actual
-
-0:04:03.200,0:04:05.519
-talk
-
-0:04:04.080,0:04:07.920
-so I have here two I have a single
-
-0:04:05.519,0:04:09.840
-action of a steal the android uh andreas
-
-0:04:07.920,0:04:12.879
-gtd configuration
-
-0:04:09.840,0:04:15.840
-and an action to read the gtd book it's
-
-0:04:12.879,0:04:15.840
-part of a project
-
-0:04:16.320,0:04:23.840
-so most of the day-to-day operation with
-
-0:04:21.680,0:04:26.000
-with this package should come through
-
-0:04:23.840,0:04:29.600
-just having the agenda open
-
-0:04:26.000,0:04:31.199
-and having having it be your your source
-
-0:04:29.600,0:04:31.919
-for the information you need to know so
-
-0:04:31.199,0:04:34.960
-that you can
-
-0:04:31.919,0:04:35.440
-do the right thing so let's take a look
-
-0:04:34.960,0:04:37.440
-at
-
-0:04:35.440,0:04:39.600
-what's underneath all of this really
-
-0:04:37.440,0:04:42.320
-quickly
-
-0:04:39.600,0:04:43.360
-we have there's three primary files um
-
-0:04:42.320,0:04:45.759
-we have the inbox
-
-0:04:43.360,0:04:46.400
-I'm gonna process it in a second because
-
-0:04:45.759,0:04:48.880
-there's
-
-0:04:46.400,0:04:50.000
-two things here one thing to cancel like
-
-0:04:48.880,0:04:51.919
-an action to
-
-0:04:50.000,0:04:53.919
-not take it's nothing and then something
-
-0:04:51.919,0:04:54.479
-I will just put into org roam just so
-
-0:04:53.919,0:04:58.960
-you can
-
-0:04:54.479,0:05:00.240
-see that there is the incubate file
-
-0:04:58.960,0:05:02.000
-you can see here make money through the
-
-0:05:00.240,0:05:04.800
-lottery
-
-0:05:02.000,0:05:06.560
-captured refiled here and scheduled to
-
-0:05:04.800,0:05:10.000
-so it would show up in the agenda
-
-0:05:06.560,0:05:13.039
-right at a given time and on the right
-
-0:05:10.000,0:05:14.560
-you have the actionable file and this is
-
-0:05:13.039,0:05:15.919
-the one that has the most information
-
-0:05:14.560,0:05:18.960
-because
-
-0:05:15.919,0:05:20.560
-where most things should go so
-
-0:05:18.960,0:05:22.720
-I have the single actions they all go
-
-0:05:20.560,0:05:24.479
-underneath here and so
-
-0:05:22.720,0:05:26.240
-this is marked as next because it's an
-
-0:05:24.479,0:05:28.240
-action for me to take
-
-0:05:26.240,0:05:29.600
-uh delegated is marked as weight it is
-
-0:05:28.240,0:05:31.199
-not an action for me to take it's an
-
-0:05:29.600,0:05:32.400
-action for somebody else to take but it
-
-0:05:31.199,0:05:37.919
-is scheduled because
-
-0:05:32.400,0:05:38.400
-I may wanna I can check in at some point
-
-0:05:37.919,0:05:39.759
-uh
-
-0:05:38.400,0:05:43.120
-things that are scheduled like give a
-
-0:05:39.759,0:05:44.960
-talk do not have a to-do or next or wait
-
-0:05:43.120,0:05:46.400
-state because they are not bound that
-
-0:05:44.960,0:05:48.080
-way they are time-bound
-
-0:05:46.400,0:05:50.320
-so they will show up in the agenda when
-
-0:05:48.080,0:05:53.840
-the time comes I shouldn't act on them
-
-0:05:50.320,0:05:55.280
-or I can't act on them beforehand
-
-0:05:53.840,0:05:56.880
-you can see here I have two projects a
-
-0:05:55.280,0:05:58.880
-test project and I will
-
-0:05:56.880,0:06:00.080
-do something with this in a second and
-
-0:05:58.880,0:06:01.919
-then there's this
-
-0:06:00.080,0:06:04.000
-package make a gte package there's a
-
-0:06:01.919,0:06:07.520
-project here for me to create this back
-
-0:06:04.000,0:06:09.759
-it's made a bunch of actions and
-
-0:06:07.520,0:06:11.440
-I'm going to show you two things here
-
-0:06:09.759,0:06:14.639
-one is
-
-0:06:11.440,0:06:16.400
-since I was trying to leverage org mode
-
-0:06:14.639,0:06:20.479
-as much as possible
-
-0:06:16.400,0:06:24.080
-I didn't try to create very clever
-
-0:06:20.479,0:06:27.199
-operations because org mode has a lot of
-
-0:06:24.080,0:06:29.600
-very powerful tools already
-
-0:06:27.199,0:06:31.039
-so there's automations I could I can add
-
-0:06:29.600,0:06:34.240
-but I thought it might be
-
-0:06:31.039,0:06:35.680
-better to leave more things into the
-
-0:06:34.240,0:06:38.000
-hands of the user
-
-0:06:35.680,0:06:39.199
-so here in this case this test project
-
-0:06:38.000,0:06:42.479
-we can just archive
-
-0:06:39.199,0:06:45.680
-right that's just
-
-0:06:42.479,0:06:46.840
-control c control x control a is the org
-
-0:06:45.680,0:06:51.440
-archive
-
-0:06:46.840,0:06:51.440
-action save this
-
-0:06:52.000,0:06:56.160
-so now if I if we go to the you know
-
-0:06:54.479,0:06:59.440
-this will create an archive file
-
-0:06:56.160,0:07:00.560
-which will have this this information
-
-0:06:59.440,0:07:03.840
-for later perusal
-
-0:07:00.560,0:07:05.360
-brutal if you're interested that's
-
-0:07:03.840,0:07:07.199
-that's one thing if we go back to the
-
-0:07:05.360,0:07:10.479
-agenda for a second
-
-0:07:07.199,0:07:14.080
-um you can see
-
-0:07:10.479,0:07:16.479
-these things here uh org so by the way
-
-0:07:14.080,0:07:19.120
-uh this this parents here with the org
-
-0:07:16.479,0:07:22.319
-agenda property this is what shows here
-
-0:07:19.120,0:07:23.680
-right and here if I finish read the gtd
-
-0:07:22.319,0:07:27.680
-book
-
-0:07:23.680,0:07:31.919
-I mark it as done now refresh
-
-0:07:27.680,0:07:34.720
-you'll see that another item shows up
-
-0:07:31.919,0:07:37.280
-and that is where org edna comes in when
-
-0:07:34.720,0:07:39.759
-an action is marked as done in a project
-
-0:07:37.280,0:07:41.360
-the net the next to do action is
-
-0:07:39.759,0:07:43.759
-automatically marked as next so your
-
-0:07:41.360,0:07:46.400
-agenda is automatically updated
-
-0:07:43.759,0:07:48.400
-this was one of the nice things for me
-
-0:07:46.400,0:07:50.400
-because I didn't want to have to
-
-0:07:48.400,0:07:51.919
-open my file go find the action mark it
-
-0:07:50.400,0:07:53.440
-as done find the next one mark it as
-
-0:07:51.919,0:07:57.280
-next and so forth
-
-0:07:53.440,0:07:58.960
-so I didn't want to bother with it
-
-0:07:57.280,0:08:00.960
-um oh actually you know what let me show
-
-0:07:58.960,0:08:04.080
-you something else
-
-0:08:00.960,0:08:07.120
-this uh simple
-
-0:08:04.080,0:08:07.840
-project I don't need this timestamp to
-
-0:08:07.120,0:08:09.680
-be here but
-
-0:08:07.840,0:08:13.039
-I like having a capture timestamp here
-
-0:08:09.680,0:08:15.919
-so I'm gonna make one up
-
-0:08:13.039,0:08:16.879
-so this is the most convenient thing
-
-0:08:15.919,0:08:17.919
-that I think
-
-0:08:16.879,0:08:20.720
-this is one of the most convenient
-
-0:08:17.919,0:08:22.960
-things that I get out of is binding
-
-0:08:20.720,0:08:24.400
-the next really convenient thing is the
-
-0:08:22.960,0:08:27.440
-way this gets processed
-
-0:08:24.400,0:08:30.080
-let me show you this um
-
-0:08:27.440,0:08:31.440
-when you process the the entire inbox
-
-0:08:30.080,0:08:33.440
-what you see is
-
-0:08:31.440,0:08:34.560
-the items one at a time so you can work
-
-0:08:33.440,0:08:36.320
-with them
-
-0:08:34.560,0:08:38.320
-you can see at the bottom where you can
-
-0:08:36.320,0:08:40.320
-work with them without being distracted
-
-0:08:38.320,0:08:42.399
-you can see at the bottom the the list
-
-0:08:40.320,0:08:45.120
-of things you can do which are all the
-
-0:08:42.399,0:08:45.760
-decisions you can take from gtd right in
-
-0:08:45.120,0:08:48.959
-this case
-
-0:08:45.760,0:08:50.959
-this is one to throw out so press t you
-
-0:08:48.959,0:08:52.320
-have the option to make modifications to
-
-0:08:50.959,0:08:55.200
-this if you want to
-
-0:08:52.320,0:08:56.240
-if you have any reason to store it then
-
-0:08:55.200,0:08:58.160
-you finish editing
-
-0:08:56.240,0:09:00.080
-you can add a tag if you want to because
-
-0:08:58.160,0:09:02.720
-this might still be interesting
-
-0:09:00.080,0:09:03.920
-and then enter and it's done so
-
-0:09:02.720,0:09:06.959
-important knowledge
-
-0:09:03.920,0:09:10.880
-I'm going to hit a for archive it
-
-0:09:06.959,0:09:12.160
-and then um I'm gonna start looking at
-
-0:09:10.880,0:09:17.839
-orgrom
-
-0:09:12.160,0:09:17.839
-so this is uh important knowledge
-
-0:09:20.800,0:09:24.640
-I have to get to this that's it I've
-
-0:09:23.519,0:09:27.920
-captured it
-
-0:09:24.640,0:09:30.959
-uh it is done I uh
-
-0:09:27.920,0:09:34.080
-go back to buffer
-
-0:09:30.959,0:09:35.360
-and I can market control c then
-
-0:09:34.080,0:09:37.279
-there's no archiving because this is
-
-0:09:35.360,0:09:38.800
-just knowledge there's no
-
-0:09:37.279,0:09:40.320
-tagging it's just knowledge but then the
-
-0:09:38.800,0:09:41.040
-simple project I want to show you this
-
-0:09:40.320,0:09:42.800
-because
-
-0:09:41.040,0:09:44.640
-there's some automation that's pretty
-
-0:09:42.800,0:09:48.839
-helpful so
-
-0:09:44.640,0:09:50.000
-in the simple project I have my first
-
-0:09:48.839,0:09:53.920
-action
-
-0:09:50.000,0:09:55.360
-second action third action
-
-0:09:53.920,0:09:56.720
-and you see this is all I'm writing I'm
-
-0:09:55.360,0:10:00.000
-not adding any of the states any of the
-
-0:09:56.720,0:10:00.000
-tags they're going to be added by
-
-0:10:00.399,0:10:05.839
-so um here I can add a
-
-0:10:04.320,0:10:07.360
-I can add a tag if I want to this
-
-0:10:05.839,0:10:09.920
-project I don't care
-
-0:10:07.360,0:10:11.279
-right now but you know I leave the tags
-
-0:10:09.920,0:10:11.920
-to the user so they're not super
-
-0:10:11.279,0:10:15.440
-relevant
-
-0:10:11.920,0:10:19.279
-to me as a package
-
-0:10:15.440,0:10:19.600
-provider and this is where we are this
-
-0:10:19.279,0:10:21.200
-is
-
-0:10:19.600,0:10:23.519
-the whole thing so now if we go back to
-
-0:10:21.200,0:10:27.600
-the agenda
-
-0:10:23.519,0:10:30.720
-I have a first action right and
-
-0:10:27.600,0:10:32.959
-if I go to the actionable file and now
-
-0:10:30.720,0:10:34.079
-see I have a simple project that has my
-
-0:10:32.959,0:10:36.880
-first action as next
-
-0:10:34.079,0:10:38.079
-second option to do third action as to
-
-0:10:36.880,0:10:41.360
-do
-
-0:10:38.079,0:10:42.880
-uh so what I've you know
-
-0:10:41.360,0:10:47.200
-as you can see I hope what I've tried to
-
-0:10:42.880,0:10:50.880
-do is take all of the kind of
-
-0:10:47.200,0:10:52.560
-all the tedium out of working with
-
-0:10:50.880,0:10:54.880
-with emacs and org mode when working
-
-0:10:52.560,0:10:57.200
-with your actions so you could focus on
-
-0:10:54.880,0:10:58.640
-what you want to do what you need to do
-
-0:10:57.200,0:10:59.279
-what you care about and the package
-
-0:10:58.640,0:11:04.079
-would
-
-0:10:59.279,0:11:04.079
-take care of the rest so
-
-0:11:04.880,0:11:08.000
-the last thing I wanted to take a quick
-
-0:11:06.240,0:11:08.640
-look at was some of the the tests
-
-0:11:08.000,0:11:11.120
-there's
-
-0:11:08.640,0:11:13.440
-the code is available here but you can
-
-0:11:11.120,0:11:14.800
-see the code
-
-0:11:13.440,0:11:16.880
-you on see the code on github if you
-
-0:11:14.800,0:11:18.720
-want um
-
-0:11:16.880,0:11:20.320
-I've had some trouble writing good tests
-
-0:11:18.720,0:11:22.000
-for this because org mode was written at
-
-0:11:20.320,0:11:26.000
-a time before
-
-0:11:22.000,0:11:29.200
-testing was quite as important
-
-0:11:26.000,0:11:31.440
-I think or valued quite the same way
-
-0:11:29.200,0:11:34.320
-let's put it this way
-
-0:11:31.440,0:11:34.959
-and as a result a number of things
-
-0:11:34.320,0:11:37.200
-actually
-
-0:11:34.959,0:11:38.240
-it might also be a feature of emacs at
-
-0:11:37.200,0:11:40.560
-the time I don't know
-
-0:11:38.240,0:11:42.480
-but a lot of things in order mode aren't
-
-0:11:40.560,0:11:45.519
-very testable and so
-
-0:11:42.480,0:11:49.440
-what I ended up doing was just having an
-
-0:11:45.519,0:11:53.360
-actual directory in which I
-
-0:11:49.440,0:11:55.279
-actually um with files
-
-0:11:53.360,0:11:57.120
-right so like I don't have much mocking
-
-0:11:55.279,0:11:58.639
-I can do I can't just do a bunch of fake
-
-0:11:57.120,0:12:01.200
-files fake directories
-
-0:11:58.639,0:12:03.360
-so I actually go through the process
-
-0:12:01.200,0:12:05.040
-actually create files and then actually
-
-0:12:03.360,0:12:08.839
-have emacs pointing at this
-
-0:12:05.040,0:12:10.240
-directory to process and get the
-
-0:12:08.839,0:12:12.240
-information
-
-0:12:10.240,0:12:13.920
-so I have to define the key to test that
-
-0:12:12.240,0:12:18.160
-gets bounded properly
-
-0:12:13.920,0:12:19.839
-I have to set the capture templates um
-
-0:12:18.160,0:12:21.839
-other capture templates are how you know
-
-0:12:19.839,0:12:25.600
-things get added I have a wrapper
-
-0:12:21.839,0:12:27.279
-control uh or gtd capture essentially is
-
-0:12:25.600,0:12:29.920
-a wrapper around the capture that
-
-0:12:27.279,0:12:32.000
-makes sure the inbox is there and then
-
-0:12:29.920,0:12:35.920
-captures to the inbox
-
-0:12:32.000,0:12:35.920
-right and
-
-0:12:36.240,0:12:41.519
-making sure the items show in the agenda
-
-0:12:39.360,0:12:42.639
-when I'm done with the with processing
-
-0:12:41.519,0:12:45.519
-was a little bit
-
-0:12:42.639,0:12:46.800
-tricky I had a bug and I had to to fix
-
-0:12:45.519,0:12:49.600
-it so I just wrote this
-
-0:12:46.800,0:12:50.480
-this test but it's uh it's pretty
-
-0:12:49.600,0:12:51.839
-convenient
-
-0:12:50.480,0:12:54.000
-now to have that because it gives me a
-
-0:12:51.839,0:12:55.040
-bunch of sanity so again I have a
-
-0:12:54.000,0:12:56.000
-capture and this is
-
-0:12:55.040,0:12:58.480
-I wanted to be able to do this
-
-0:12:56.000,0:12:59.680
-automatically but ojtd but or capture
-
-0:12:58.480,0:13:02.079
-itself
-
-0:12:59.680,0:13:03.200
-is not super testable right now so the
-
-0:13:02.079,0:13:04.480
-way it's
-
-0:13:03.200,0:13:07.519
-the way you test it is just by
-
-0:13:04.480,0:13:09.279
-programmatically calling it which
-
-0:13:07.519,0:13:10.639
-is not exactly what I wanted because I
-
-0:13:09.279,0:13:13.200
-wanted something more like
-
-0:13:10.639,0:13:15.519
-the user action but I'll you know what I
-
-0:13:13.200,0:13:17.040
-can get
-
-0:13:15.519,0:13:19.360
-and then I can I'll just insert these
-
-0:13:17.040,0:13:21.760
-words into the buffer and then
-
-0:13:19.360,0:13:23.519
-I'll finalize the capture then I have
-
-0:13:21.760,0:13:26.160
-another I have a test package here
-
-0:13:23.519,0:13:29.920
-called with simulated input which
-
-0:13:26.160,0:13:33.040
-um basically calls this and then enters
-
-0:13:29.920,0:13:34.800
-these uh these user actions right so
-
-0:13:33.040,0:13:39.040
-like the letter s
-
-0:13:34.800,0:13:41.360
-control c c and then return and that is
-
-0:13:39.040,0:13:42.480
-uh you know choosing a single action
-
-0:13:41.360,0:13:45.360
-then finishing the edit
-
-0:13:42.480,0:13:46.480
-and then adding zero and not adding tags
-
-0:13:45.360,0:13:48.639
-you
-
-0:13:46.480,0:13:50.320
-as you can tell there's a strong layer
-
-0:13:48.639,0:13:53.760
-of disconnect between the tests
-
-0:13:50.320,0:13:56.160
-and what they represent that's a work in
-
-0:13:53.760,0:13:56.160
-progress
-
-0:13:56.560,0:14:02.320
-um so I have like four tests
-
-0:13:59.680,0:14:03.680
-it's not a lot but I want to I intend to
-
-0:14:02.320,0:14:05.040
-add more as I keep on adding more
-
-0:14:03.680,0:14:09.519
-behavior
-
-0:14:05.040,0:14:13.680
-and I would like this to be eventually
-
-0:14:09.519,0:14:13.680
-a sane starting point for gt
-
-0:14:14.320,0:14:18.720
-there's there's a lot of people like
-
-0:14:16.079,0:14:20.959
-like andre I like reiner like
-
-0:14:18.720,0:14:22.160
-I mean if you search for org mode and
-
-0:14:20.959,0:14:25.279
-gtd you'll find
-
-0:14:22.160,0:14:27.600
-a lot of blog entries a lot of
-
-0:14:25.279,0:14:29.360
-entries a lot of articles that explain
-
-0:14:27.600,0:14:31.199
-how to connect it together how to think
-
-0:14:29.360,0:14:34.320
-that way how to use all the tools that
-
-0:14:31.199,0:14:34.320
-orgmod makes available
-
-0:14:34.880,0:14:40.320
-and hopefully this package is a way to
-
-0:14:38.399,0:14:41.040
-get started without having to write too
-
-0:14:40.320,0:14:45.839
-much
-
-0:14:41.040,0:14:45.839
-of your own code um
-
-0:14:45.920,0:14:48.720
-then eventually you can move away from
-
-0:14:47.279,0:14:50.000
-the package if you want if you realize
-
-0:14:48.720,0:14:52.000
-that you are developing different
-
-0:14:50.000,0:14:54.160
-opinions and you don't want to
-
-0:14:52.000,0:14:55.519
-if gtd doesn't work this way for you if
-
-0:14:54.160,0:14:57.839
-you have a different way
-
-0:14:55.519,0:14:59.279
-it is a better fit for the way you want
-
-0:14:57.839,0:15:02.720
-to organize your life
-
-0:14:59.279,0:15:05.920
-then you know move away from the package
-
-0:15:02.720,0:15:07.839
-in the meanwhile I welcome all thoughts
-
-0:15:05.920,0:15:10.079
-I welcome contributions I welcome
-
-0:15:07.839,0:15:13.920
-questions bug reports everything
-
-0:15:10.079,0:15:17.040
-so you know come say hi try the package
-
-0:15:13.920,0:15:20.560
-and uh yeah see you
-
-0:15:17.040,0:15:20.560
-I'll see you online
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--12-one-big-ass-org-file-or-multiple-tiny-ones-finally-the-end-of-the-debate--leo-vivier-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--12-one-big-ass-org-file-or-multiple-tiny-ones-finally-the-end-of-the-debate--leo-vivier-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 8207d0c3..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--12-one-big-ass-org-file-or-multiple-tiny-ones-finally-the-end-of-the-debate--leo-vivier-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1446 +0,0 @@
-0:00:00.240,0:00:03.679
-I mean we are ahead of the schedule a
-
-0:00:01.520,0:00:05.680
-little bit but I mean we also was a
-
-0:00:03.679,0:00:09.040
-little bit earlier in the day
-
-0:00:05.680,0:00:10.800
-so yeah yeah I'd say that's fine go for
-
-0:00:09.040,0:00:14.240
-it take it away
-
-0:00:10.800,0:00:16.640
-sure thank you so am I live already
-
-0:00:14.240,0:00:17.359
-you are now unmuted um yep your life
-
-0:00:16.640,0:00:18.880
-hello
-
-0:00:17.359,0:00:20.720
-spell it so I'll just start the timer to
-
-0:00:18.880,0:00:22.720
-make sure that I don't go overboard
-
-0:00:20.720,0:00:24.160
-all right so you are now muted okay good
-
-0:00:22.720,0:00:26.960
-to go now so
-
-0:00:24.160,0:00:28.240
-hello again everyone so I hope you had
-
-0:00:26.960,0:00:30.880
-well quite a lot of talks
-
-0:00:28.240,0:00:32.000
-ever since the last one I did and all
-
-0:00:30.880,0:00:35.040
-more interesting
-
-0:00:32.000,0:00:36.559
-uh one after the other so um
-
-0:00:35.040,0:00:38.239
-you know I'm a bit in a bit of a weird
-
-0:00:36.559,0:00:39.760
-spot right now because I'm supposed to
-
-0:00:38.239,0:00:40.239
-be presenting to you as you can see on
-
-0:00:39.760,0:00:42.879
-my screen
-
-0:00:40.239,0:00:44.960
-one big-ass awk file multiple tiny ones
-
-0:00:42.879,0:00:48.160
-finally the end of the debate
-
-0:00:44.960,0:00:49.760
-and it sounds about as clickbaity
-
-0:00:48.160,0:00:51.280
-as you can possibly get with those
-
-0:00:49.760,0:00:54.000
-topics and by the way
-
-0:00:51.280,0:00:55.760
-uh credit where credit is due the title
-
-0:00:54.000,0:00:57.039
-is not mine it's actually from bastian
-
-0:00:55.760,0:01:00.719
-gary the current old
-
-0:00:57.039,0:01:03.199
-maintainer and yeah I wanted to
-
-0:01:00.719,0:01:04.879
-talk to you a little bit today about
-
-0:01:03.199,0:01:07.600
-this question because
-
-0:01:04.879,0:01:09.040
-if you are used to going on our slash
-
-0:01:07.600,0:01:09.600
-emacs you know the subreddit that we
-
-0:01:09.040,0:01:11.840
-have
-
-0:01:09.600,0:01:13.200
-if you go on I can use often you know
-
-0:01:11.840,0:01:16.000
-it's a question that
-
-0:01:13.200,0:01:17.520
-you see pop-up every once in a while
-
-0:01:16.000,0:01:20.640
-should I be using
-
-0:01:17.520,0:01:24.159
-one big file or should I be using
-
-0:01:20.640,0:01:24.799
-a lot of tiny files and I believe you
-
-0:01:24.159,0:01:27.600
-know
-
-0:01:24.799,0:01:29.520
-we've got defenders on both sides if I
-
-0:01:27.600,0:01:32.479
-just show you one examples
-
-0:01:29.520,0:01:35.280
-so we have carl voigt okay so he's one
-
-0:01:32.479,0:01:37.920
-of the organizers for the conference
-
-0:01:35.280,0:01:40.000
-he hears the guy who probably has the
-
-0:01:37.920,0:01:42.000
-biggest augment files
-
-0:01:40.000,0:01:43.759
-right now in all the people I know and
-
-0:01:42.000,0:01:44.479
-god knows I know plenty of people use
-
-0:01:43.759,0:01:46.880
-old mode
-
-0:01:44.479,0:01:48.320
-but if you just look at this line I hope
-
-0:01:46.880,0:01:51.360
-it's not too small you just
-
-0:01:48.320,0:01:56.719
-make it a little larger but
-
-0:01:51.360,0:02:01.759
-carl basically has a file with 126
-
-0:01:56.719,0:02:04.560
-000 lines and I'm just going to pause
-
-0:02:01.759,0:02:06.399
-and try to have you imagine how large a
-
-0:02:04.560,0:02:08.399
-file it actually is
-
-0:02:06.399,0:02:10.000
-just think about all of these lines
-
-0:02:08.399,0:02:12.080
-being tasked in your days
-
-0:02:10.000,0:02:13.200
-think about all those lines being about
-
-0:02:12.080,0:02:14.400
-little thoughts
-
-0:02:13.200,0:02:17.200
-you know that you've had throughout the
-
-0:02:14.400,0:02:19.680
-day or project that you were working on
-
-0:02:17.200,0:02:20.720
-and it's massive and you know one of the
-
-0:02:19.680,0:02:23.920
-problem that
-
-0:02:20.720,0:02:27.680
-uh calvoit actually approaches on
-
-0:02:23.920,0:02:30.160
-this topic is that it takes him roughly
-
-0:02:27.680,0:02:32.400
-20 seconds to get his old agenda going
-
-0:02:30.160,0:02:35.680
-which is a massive amount of time
-
-0:02:32.400,0:02:37.720
-I mean we have very fast computers now
-
-0:02:35.680,0:02:39.200
-you know ever since e-max was created in
-
-0:02:37.720,0:02:42.319
-1976
-
-0:02:39.200,0:02:43.440
-computers I have no idea how much faster
-
-0:02:42.319,0:02:47.760
-they've gotten
-
-0:02:43.440,0:02:49.599
-and yet you know for earth 1000 lines
-
-0:02:47.760,0:02:51.120
-emac seems to be choking and it's
-
-0:02:49.599,0:02:52.720
-certainly not reasonable in a way to
-
-0:02:51.120,0:02:55.360
-have to wait 20 seconds
-
-0:02:52.720,0:02:57.040
-just for your entire file to be passed
-
-0:02:55.360,0:02:58.480
-so basically what I want to do
-
-0:02:57.040,0:03:00.879
-and by the way I forgot to do the
-
-0:02:58.480,0:03:02.879
-presentation but I'm leova I did this
-
-0:03:00.879,0:03:05.519
-before for those who were around
-
-0:03:02.879,0:03:06.640
-and I um help maintain a software which
-
-0:03:05.519,0:03:08.560
-is called orgrom
-
-0:03:06.640,0:03:09.840
-and that's the expertise that I have on
-
-0:03:08.560,0:03:11.760
-the topic
-
-0:03:09.840,0:03:13.599
-actually if you go online I do have a
-
-0:03:11.760,0:03:15.440
-github page I will make sure that you
-
-0:03:13.599,0:03:18.640
-have all the links available afterwards
-
-0:03:15.440,0:03:20.720
-but I do publish my init files
-
-0:03:18.640,0:03:22.319
-and you can see if you scroll at the
-
-0:03:20.720,0:03:23.200
-bottom I have a little demonstration
-
-0:03:22.319,0:03:25.519
-which shows you
-
-0:03:23.200,0:03:27.440
-the fancy things that I can do with my
-
-0:03:25.519,0:03:28.159
-old mood setup and that might be even
-
-0:03:27.440,0:03:30.720
-interesting
-
-0:03:28.159,0:03:32.319
-in lights of the talk you've just had
-
-0:03:30.720,0:03:34.080
-about gtd stuff because
-
-0:03:32.319,0:03:36.159
-the first one is about how I end all my
-
-0:03:34.080,0:03:39.680
-projects the second one is about
-
-0:03:36.159,0:03:40.000
-the flow from a task uh as I work on it
-
-0:03:39.680,0:03:41.519
-so
-
-0:03:40.000,0:03:43.120
-I won't spend too much time on this but
-
-0:03:41.519,0:03:45.440
-basically that's my expertise
-
-0:03:43.120,0:03:46.959
-I have spent eight years working with
-
-0:03:45.440,0:03:48.959
-working with org mode
-
-0:03:46.959,0:03:50.720
-three of them actually thinking about
-
-0:03:48.959,0:03:54.080
-writing packages
-
-0:03:50.720,0:03:55.680
-and the thing is if I go into a little
-
-0:03:54.080,0:03:57.760
-bit of details and obviously it's only a
-
-0:03:55.680,0:04:00.720
-lighting talk so I won't have time to
-
-0:03:57.760,0:04:01.840
-actually go really in depth about it but
-
-0:04:00.720,0:04:03.599
-there is something
-
-0:04:01.840,0:04:05.200
-in the ultimate libraries which is
-
-0:04:03.599,0:04:07.000
-called org elements
-
-0:04:05.200,0:04:08.319
-and you have the name right there org
-
-0:04:07.000,0:04:11.439
-element.el
-
-0:04:08.319,0:04:12.319
-dot el being for e-lisp file and as you
-
-0:04:11.439,0:04:14.799
-can see
-
-0:04:12.319,0:04:16.239
-the page it's on the work wiki so it's
-
-0:04:14.799,0:04:19.280
-accessible by everyone
-
-0:04:16.239,0:04:23.759
-but it's basically the api that
-
-0:04:19.280,0:04:26.400
-org mode uses to pass all mode files
-
-0:04:23.759,0:04:27.199
-so for those who don't know passing
-
-0:04:26.400,0:04:29.360
-means basically
-
-0:04:27.199,0:04:30.880
-checking a file checking all the content
-
-0:04:29.360,0:04:32.880
-of the file and extracting all the
-
-0:04:30.880,0:04:34.960
-information that we need from that file
-
-0:04:32.880,0:04:36.560
-and as you can imagine you all have
-
-0:04:34.960,0:04:38.240
-augmented files in your mind
-
-0:04:36.560,0:04:39.840
-well you know they can be fairly complex
-
-0:04:38.240,0:04:41.759
-you know you can have properties
-
-0:04:39.840,0:04:43.040
-you can have contextual information like
-
-0:04:41.759,0:04:45.199
-if you write a line
-
-0:04:43.040,0:04:46.560
-which starts at column zero which means
-
-0:04:45.199,0:04:48.000
-at the left
-
-0:04:46.560,0:04:49.680
-you know it doesn't have the same
-
-0:04:48.000,0:04:52.639
-meaning whether or not it is
-
-0:04:49.680,0:04:54.160
-before the beginning of a headline or if
-
-0:04:52.639,0:04:55.199
-it is after the beginning of a red line
-
-0:04:54.160,0:04:57.759
-you know it's going to be
-
-0:04:55.199,0:04:58.960
-relatively different hierarchically
-
-0:04:57.759,0:05:01.759
-speaking
-
-0:04:58.960,0:05:02.639
-and so the problem when it comes to the
-
-0:05:01.759,0:05:05.759
-question of
-
-0:05:02.639,0:05:08.560
-many files versus one big file or
-
-0:05:05.759,0:05:09.600
-few big files is that we always have to
-
-0:05:08.560,0:05:12.880
-keep in mind
-
-0:05:09.600,0:05:15.680
-what org elements want you to do
-
-0:05:12.880,0:05:17.440
-and the thing is there are plenty of
-
-0:05:15.680,0:05:18.400
-problems when it comes to passing file
-
-0:05:17.440,0:05:21.360
-the first one
-
-0:05:18.400,0:05:22.160
-being obviously that emacs is a single
-
-0:05:21.360,0:05:24.880
-thread
-
-0:05:22.160,0:05:26.400
-process or has some threading
-
-0:05:24.880,0:05:28.639
-capabilities we're not going to go into
-
-0:05:26.400,0:05:32.400
-the details right now that's not my goal
-
-0:05:28.639,0:05:35.919
-but it makes it incredibly hard to
-
-0:05:32.400,0:05:39.280
-parallelize uh passing processes as
-
-0:05:35.919,0:05:42.320
-we currently with the current technology
-
-0:05:39.280,0:05:44.080
-and so you'd have to imagine that if you
-
-0:05:42.320,0:05:46.479
-have a very large files if you go back
-
-0:05:44.080,0:05:49.199
-to the example of carl voice from before
-
-0:05:46.479,0:05:50.000
-100 000 lines that means that you have
-
-0:05:49.199,0:05:52.320
-to scan
-
-0:05:50.000,0:05:53.759
-through every single line basically
-
-0:05:52.320,0:05:56.080
-because sometimes let's just say that
-
-0:05:53.759,0:05:59.440
-you have a property drawer for instance
-
-0:05:56.080,0:06:03.520
-which tells you oh okay uh this tree
-
-0:05:59.440,0:06:05.120
-has the tag foo so the problem is there
-
-0:06:03.520,0:06:08.720
-are multiple ways for you
-
-0:06:05.120,0:06:11.840
-to define a tag okay so you can use the
-
-0:06:08.720,0:06:14.000
-usual way which is about wrapping in
-
-0:06:11.840,0:06:16.160
-columns the tag at the end of a heading
-
-0:06:14.000,0:06:17.360
-so for instance if I I'm not going to
-
-0:06:16.160,0:06:18.240
-switch to emac that's going to waste too
-
-0:06:17.360,0:06:21.039
-much time
-
-0:06:18.240,0:06:21.520
-but that's one way to say your time but
-
-0:06:21.039,0:06:23.520
-say
-
-0:06:21.520,0:06:25.360
-you have tag inheritance which means
-
-0:06:23.520,0:06:28.160
-that when you have a parent with a tag
-
-0:06:25.360,0:06:29.520
-you also want the child to inherit the
-
-0:06:28.160,0:06:32.400
-tag so if you have
-
-0:06:29.520,0:06:33.680
-first heading with the typhoo you have
-
-0:06:32.400,0:06:37.520
-the first subheading
-
-0:06:33.680,0:06:39.680
-and the tag foo is implied now imagine
-
-0:06:37.520,0:06:41.039
-having to do that with a file that is
-
-0:06:39.680,0:06:44.160
-completely nested
-
-0:06:41.039,0:06:47.280
-a file that has maybe 9 10
-
-0:06:44.160,0:06:49.039
-11 levels of depth to it
-
-0:06:47.280,0:06:51.039
-it's mind-bogglingly complicated for the
-
-0:06:49.039,0:06:52.639
-software to do that knowing that I've
-
-0:06:51.039,0:06:55.919
-told you about tags
-
-0:06:52.639,0:06:58.639
-but any property can be inheritable
-
-0:06:55.919,0:07:00.240
-anything like priorities even though why
-
-0:06:58.639,0:07:03.759
-would you do this
-
-0:07:00.240,0:07:05.599
-you can have groups you can all this and
-
-0:07:03.759,0:07:07.199
-as someone who went through the trouble
-
-0:07:05.599,0:07:08.560
-of optimizing his old agenda so
-
-0:07:07.199,0:07:11.280
-basically if we go back to the
-
-0:07:08.560,0:07:12.160
-gifts gifs oh god we've already had this
-
-0:07:11.280,0:07:14.479
-discussion
-
-0:07:12.160,0:07:16.400
-between the git and magit and now I've
-
-0:07:14.479,0:07:18.080
-started jeff and gif and I only have one
-
-0:07:16.400,0:07:19.599
-more minute left to do so so let's just
-
-0:07:18.080,0:07:23.599
-say I'm going to say gif
-
-0:07:19.599,0:07:26.880
-just to spice people so if you go on
-
-0:07:23.599,0:07:29.120
-the way I organize my agenda what I did
-
-0:07:26.880,0:07:30.960
-in order to keep my agenda build time
-
-0:07:29.120,0:07:33.440
-under two seconds
-
-0:07:30.960,0:07:35.520
-is that I've rewritten a whole lot of
-
-0:07:33.440,0:07:36.560
-codes to be able to pass my organ gender
-
-0:07:35.520,0:07:40.080
-files
-
-0:07:36.560,0:07:41.360
-so the thing is I'm going to be talking
-
-0:07:40.080,0:07:43.440
-more about this later
-
-0:07:41.360,0:07:44.479
-I only have let's say one minutes to
-
-0:07:43.440,0:07:47.440
-conclude
-
-0:07:44.479,0:07:48.479
-so as you've gathered I'm not going to
-
-0:07:47.440,0:07:51.039
-be giving you the answer
-
-0:07:48.479,0:07:53.440
-right now I'm going to be talking about
-
-0:07:51.039,0:07:55.680
-orgrum a little later which is about
-
-0:07:53.440,0:07:57.759
-following the principle of having many
-
-0:07:55.680,0:08:01.120
-small files
-
-0:07:57.759,0:08:02.960
-but as someone who has been using
-
-0:08:01.120,0:08:04.879
-one large file to manage my life you
-
-0:08:02.960,0:08:08.319
-know I'm sitting on the fence
-
-0:08:04.879,0:08:10.560
-I do not know which one is the best
-
-0:08:08.319,0:08:12.240
-but I hope that my presentation has
-
-0:08:10.560,0:08:15.199
-given you a little id
-
-0:08:12.240,0:08:15.520
-of what goes on behind the principles
-
-0:08:15.199,0:08:16.560
-and
-
-0:08:15.520,0:08:18.560
-you also need to think about the
-
-0:08:16.560,0:08:19.120
-philosophy behind the organization of
-
-0:08:18.560,0:08:21.039
-your notes
-
-0:08:19.120,0:08:23.280
-but I hope to be approaching this topic
-
-0:08:21.039,0:08:25.360
-with you in about
-
-0:08:23.280,0:08:27.520
-two hours or so maybe one hour actually
-
-0:08:25.360,0:08:28.960
-so I'm actually finished I've decided to
-
-0:08:27.520,0:08:31.520
-leave you two minutes of questions
-
-0:08:28.960,0:08:32.880
-so uh if someone could feed me the
-
-0:08:31.520,0:08:34.399
-question that might be best
-
-0:08:32.880,0:08:36.240
-because I don't want oh actually I can
-
-0:08:34.399,0:08:39.919
-just open the year
-
-0:08:36.240,0:08:40.800
-I can just open it give me a second okay
-
-0:08:39.919,0:08:43.039
-ah
-
-0:08:40.800,0:08:43.839
-just loading up huh I might stop showing
-
-0:08:43.039,0:08:46.959
-my screen
-
-0:08:43.839,0:08:47.519
-that might make it easier so I mean if
-
-0:08:46.959,0:08:49.360
-you can make
-
-0:08:47.519,0:08:52.000
-myself big now on the screen that would
-
-0:08:49.360,0:08:55.839
-be splendid yeah sure
-
-0:08:52.000,0:08:58.720
-thank you so uh where are we
-
-0:08:55.839,0:09:00.160
-question 12. okay so what's better one
-
-0:08:58.720,0:09:02.160
-big file
-
-0:09:00.160,0:09:03.120
-I did is it did a job to tell me that I
-
-0:09:02.160,0:09:04.240
-haven't answered the question because
-
-0:09:03.120,0:09:06.320
-someone just
-
-0:09:04.240,0:09:08.080
-asked me the question well personally if
-
-0:09:06.320,0:09:08.560
-I were to give you a quick answer in
-
-0:09:08.080,0:09:11.600
-like
-
-0:09:08.560,0:09:13.920
-20 seconds personally I think it's a
-
-0:09:11.600,0:09:15.680
-question that is contextually based
-
-0:09:13.920,0:09:17.839
-do you want something that is efficient
-
-0:09:15.680,0:09:21.200
-as far as optimization is concerned
-
-0:09:17.839,0:09:23.440
-then you need to think about
-
-0:09:21.200,0:09:24.640
-this and personally for all the
-
-0:09:23.440,0:09:26.640
-organization that I do
-
-0:09:24.640,0:09:27.760
-all this stuff all the to-do's that I
-
-0:09:26.640,0:09:30.080
-handle
-
-0:09:27.760,0:09:31.519
-I like to do this in one simple big file
-
-0:09:30.080,0:09:33.760
-because you benefit from all the
-
-0:09:31.519,0:09:36.320
-refiling capabilities of log mode
-
-0:09:33.760,0:09:37.200
-so I would do that but for knowledge
-
-0:09:36.320,0:09:40.080
-management
-
-0:09:37.200,0:09:41.279
-for note-taking and all this well I'd
-
-0:09:40.080,0:09:42.959
-much rather follow the
-
-0:09:41.279,0:09:44.480
-orgrom way of doing things which is
-
-0:09:42.959,0:09:48.240
-about having many
-
-0:09:44.480,0:09:50.000
-small files okay I'm not getting any
-
-0:09:48.240,0:09:52.080
-more questions I'm not sure if there is
-
-0:09:50.000,0:09:53.040
-one on ise that could be fed to me
-
-0:09:52.080,0:09:56.399
-otherwise I'm
-
-0:09:53.040,0:09:57.040
-happy to to uh pass over to the next uh
-
-0:09:56.399,0:09:59.360
-speaker
-
-0:09:57.040,0:10:01.360
-and by the way just before I finish your
-
-0:09:59.360,0:10:04.399
-world is a lie it's not a three-piece
-
-0:10:01.360,0:10:06.520
-suit I'm wearing jeans below so I hope
-
-0:10:04.399,0:10:09.610
-that satisfies your curiosity
-
-0:10:06.520,0:10:09.610
-[Music]
-
-0:10:10.640,0:10:15.040
-okay there's one more question appearing
-
-0:10:12.640,0:10:17.680
-but otherwise one big file to have
-
-0:10:15.040,0:10:19.760
-everything so I'm putting you on the
-
-0:10:17.680,0:10:21.040
-spot I believe it was such a short talk
-
-0:10:19.760,0:10:23.600
-you know the problem is
-
-0:10:21.040,0:10:24.720
-I just wanted to give you a little
-
-0:10:23.600,0:10:26.959
-answer
-
-0:10:24.720,0:10:27.920
-a little you know path of thinking on
-
-0:10:26.959,0:10:29.839
-this topic
-
-0:10:27.920,0:10:31.600
-but obviously it's a topic I could be
-
-0:10:29.839,0:10:33.200
-spending 40 minutes on but
-
-0:10:31.600,0:10:35.120
-I'm going to be drained you're going to
-
-0:10:33.200,0:10:35.680
-be drained nobody's going to be happy if
-
-0:10:35.120,0:10:37.920
-I do this
-
-0:10:35.680,0:10:37.920
-so
-
-0:10:39.440,0:10:42.880
-and someone asked me if I switch between
-
-0:10:41.200,0:10:46.560
-british and french accents
-
-0:10:42.880,0:10:48.480
-so a little a little secret for you um
-
-0:10:46.560,0:10:49.760
-when I'm stressed I tend to relate to a
-
-0:10:48.480,0:10:53.760
-french accent
-
-0:10:49.760,0:10:56.160
-so you can measure the amount of stress
-
-0:10:53.760,0:10:58.880
-that I'm feeling during this talk
-
-0:10:56.160,0:11:00.560
-with the amount of h's that I drop and
-
-0:10:58.880,0:11:02.720
-the amount of uh
-
-0:11:00.560,0:11:04.399
-sheer fright that you can see sometimes
-
-0:11:02.720,0:11:07.200
-in my eyes when I'm thinking about what
-
-0:11:04.399,0:11:07.200
-to say next
-
-0:11:08.240,0:11:11.360
-all right sir so I mean do you believe
-
-0:11:10.880,0:11:14.240
-we can
-
-0:11:11.360,0:11:15.519
-leave it at that and uh I'll be you
-
-0:11:14.240,0:11:17.040
-people will see plenty more with me
-
-0:11:15.519,0:11:20.000
-later on anyway
-
-0:11:17.040,0:11:20.640
-right um so looking at the schedule I
-
-0:11:20.000,0:11:23.920
-think
-
-0:11:20.640,0:11:27.120
-your talk has until like 202 meaning
-
-0:11:23.920,0:11:28.000
-like five or six minutes from now oh
-
-0:11:27.120,0:11:30.000
-right
-
-0:11:28.000,0:11:31.680
-yeah so if you do like to take like one
-
-0:11:30.000,0:11:33.920
-or two questions to add two more
-
-0:11:31.680,0:11:37.040
-questions by all means
-
-0:11:33.920,0:11:38.320
-okay so uh someone has asked me what is
-
-0:11:37.040,0:11:40.640
-the emacs icon
-
-0:11:38.320,0:11:42.880
-icon sorry see another french accent
-
-0:11:40.640,0:11:44.880
-here uh in my status bar
-
-0:11:42.880,0:11:46.640
-uh oh sorry I'm not sharing anymore uh I
-
-0:11:44.880,0:11:49.200
-might just share again just so that
-
-0:11:46.640,0:11:53.120
-everyone can catch a glimpse of that
-
-0:11:49.200,0:11:54.880
-uh there we go allow
-
-0:11:53.120,0:11:56.240
-so it should be so if you could make me
-
-0:11:54.880,0:11:56.959
-small again I'm in I'm not sure if it's
-
-0:11:56.240,0:12:00.480
-going to do it
-
-0:11:56.959,0:12:01.839
-by itself but I do have a little icon
-
-0:12:00.480,0:12:04.480
-here in my status bar
-
-0:12:01.839,0:12:05.760
-which is basically a way to interact
-
-0:12:04.480,0:12:07.279
-with all protocol
-
-0:12:05.760,0:12:09.120
-uh I'm not going to look for it right
-
-0:12:07.279,0:12:10.800
-now but it's uh
-
-0:12:09.120,0:12:12.399
-it's a browser extension that is
-
-0:12:10.800,0:12:15.680
-developed by one of my friends
-
-0:12:12.399,0:12:16.160
-over at ranger whose name is v phone and
-
-0:12:15.680,0:12:18.240
-uh
-
-0:12:16.160,0:12:19.680
-it's very useful I'm someone who uses a
-
-0:12:18.240,0:12:22.320
-lot of uh
-
-0:12:19.680,0:12:23.040
-of uh all protocols and by the way I
-
-0:12:22.320,0:12:25.279
-used to teach
-
-0:12:23.040,0:12:27.279
-english okay to high schoolers and they
-
-0:12:25.279,0:12:29.600
-were supremely worried
-
-0:12:27.279,0:12:30.800
-when I show them my status line and they
-
-0:12:29.600,0:12:34.000
-so kill
-
-0:12:30.800,0:12:36.560
-and explore in my status line so as
-
-0:12:34.000,0:12:37.839
-fellow emacs users you know that
-
-0:12:36.560,0:12:40.880
-obviously kill
-
-0:12:37.839,0:12:44.320
-means to kill a selection of text and
-
-0:12:40.880,0:12:47.279
-keep it inside your clipboard
-
-0:12:44.320,0:12:48.320
-but for my students who you know they
-
-0:12:47.279,0:12:51.600
-were very worried
-
-0:12:48.320,0:12:53.600
-about what their professor was up to
-
-0:12:51.600,0:12:55.120
-doing his nights
-
-0:12:53.600,0:12:56.560
-so let's see if we've got more questions
-
-0:12:55.120,0:12:57.920
-so I'm showing you the questions on the
-
-0:12:56.560,0:13:00.560
-rainbow so let's see if
-
-0:12:57.920,0:13:01.920
-we've got more so people are posting a
-
-0:13:00.560,0:13:03.920
-lot of questions now
-
-0:13:01.920,0:13:06.399
-so how do you feel about archiving files
-
-0:13:03.920,0:13:09.360
-in old mode and how can that work in
-
-0:13:06.399,0:13:10.240
-so one of the thing when we think about
-
-0:13:09.360,0:13:13.920
-optimization
-
-0:13:10.240,0:13:16.240
-is yes archiving done trees
-
-0:13:13.920,0:13:17.920
-is a good idea because it means that if
-
-0:13:16.240,0:13:18.720
-we go back to the org element the way it
-
-0:13:17.920,0:13:20.399
-works
-
-0:13:18.720,0:13:22.079
-and we'll get into technical details
-
-0:13:20.399,0:13:24.079
-afterwards I'm giving a presentation
-
-0:13:22.079,0:13:26.880
-about all grown technical suspect
-
-0:13:24.079,0:13:28.399
-aspects sorry so I'll have a chance to
-
-0:13:26.880,0:13:31.360
-expand a little more on this
-
-0:13:28.399,0:13:32.160
-but basically all elements need to uh
-
-0:13:31.360,0:13:35.279
-every time
-
-0:13:32.160,0:13:38.320
-it sees a to do it has to consider it
-
-0:13:35.279,0:13:40.000
-even though it is a done to do why
-
-0:13:38.320,0:13:41.839
-because let's say for instance that in
-
-0:13:40.000,0:13:45.519
-your agenda you want to activate
-
-0:13:41.839,0:13:48.959
-log mode which is going to show the
-
-0:13:45.519,0:13:49.519
-tasks which are done now you could be
-
-0:13:48.959,0:13:51.440
-clever
-
-0:13:49.519,0:13:53.360
-and say oh okay the old agenda does not
-
-0:13:51.440,0:13:54.880
-need to show don items so it's not going
-
-0:13:53.360,0:13:56.959
-to look for them
-
-0:13:54.880,0:13:58.720
-but the problem is that all elements is
-
-0:13:56.959,0:13:59.519
-always called it always needs to pass
-
-0:13:58.720,0:14:01.839
-the buffer
-
-0:13:59.519,0:14:03.519
-you know uh nicodego as you who is the
-
-0:14:01.839,0:14:05.040
-french developer who's worked a whole
-
-0:14:03.519,0:14:07.440
-lot on all elements
-
-0:14:05.040,0:14:08.399
-has gone through a lot of trouble to
-
-0:14:07.440,0:14:11.600
-optimize all
-
-0:14:08.399,0:14:13.279
-elements but the problem is
-
-0:14:11.600,0:14:14.720
-there's just so much that we can do with
-
-0:14:13.279,0:14:18.560
-a concurrent process
-
-0:14:14.720,0:14:21.120
-and right now it leaves somewhat
-
-0:14:18.560,0:14:22.079
-uh you know things to be desired but
-
-0:14:21.120,0:14:24.800
-we're working on it
-
-0:14:22.079,0:14:25.839
-and one more time I feel like I spent
-
-0:14:24.800,0:14:28.000
-half of this talk
-
-0:14:25.839,0:14:29.360
-teasing my next talks but I'll be
-
-0:14:28.000,0:14:31.279
-talking more about this
-
-0:14:29.360,0:14:32.639
-in my future talks in about one to two
-
-0:14:31.279,0:14:34.959
-hours
-
-0:14:32.639,0:14:36.079
-so continuing with questions how big are
-
-0:14:34.959,0:14:37.760
-my org files
-
-0:14:36.079,0:14:39.839
-so in the background I'm just going to
-
-0:14:37.760,0:14:40.720
-check how many lines I have in my main
-
-0:14:39.839,0:14:42.959
-file
-
-0:14:40.720,0:14:44.079
-so in my own file so the one I told you
-
-0:14:42.959,0:14:47.279
-about where I keep all
-
-0:14:44.079,0:14:50.720
-my to do gtd stuff I have
-
-0:14:47.279,0:14:54.000
-38 000 lines which is
-
-0:14:50.720,0:14:57.040
-you know it's sizable definitely
-
-0:14:54.000,0:14:58.480
-but I do archive a lot of stuff
-
-0:14:57.040,0:15:00.880
-so that might be a slight difference
-
-0:14:58.480,0:15:02.079
-between uh my myself and carl voight
-
-0:15:00.880,0:15:04.880
-even though I don't remember if they
-
-0:15:02.079,0:15:06.639
-actually archive stuff
-
-0:15:04.880,0:15:08.480
-so does it not consume more resources
-
-0:15:06.639,0:15:10.839
-and time to load multiple files
-
-0:15:08.480,0:15:12.560
-files than a large file or the same
-
-0:15:10.839,0:15:15.839
-content now
-
-0:15:12.560,0:15:19.279
-theoretically yes having many files
-
-0:15:15.839,0:15:22.240
-open concurrently is slightly slower
-
-0:15:19.279,0:15:24.160
-than having one main file opened
-
-0:15:22.240,0:15:25.279
-now the problem is for those of you who
-
-0:15:24.160,0:15:27.199
-have large files
-
-0:15:25.279,0:15:29.360
-you may have noticed that when you are
-
-0:15:27.199,0:15:32.560
-scrolling in a very large file
-
-0:15:29.360,0:15:34.480
-it starts taking quite a bit of time why
-
-0:15:32.560,0:15:35.920
-it's because you know in old mode you
-
-0:15:34.480,0:15:38.959
-have a lot of content
-
-0:15:35.920,0:15:40.959
-that is hidden so when you have
-
-0:15:38.959,0:15:43.040
-the view mode which hides as much stuff
-
-0:15:40.959,0:15:43.600
-as possible means meaning that you only
-
-0:15:43.040,0:15:45.360
-see
-
-0:15:43.600,0:15:46.880
-the top heading and I'm checking the
-
-0:15:45.360,0:15:49.360
-time I mean don't worry I'm I'm finished
-
-0:15:46.880,0:15:49.360
-on this one
-
-0:15:50.240,0:15:53.360
-when you're hiding a whole lot of stuff
-
-0:15:52.160,0:15:54.720
-you know orgmo
-
-0:15:53.360,0:15:56.959
-needs to keep track or I should say
-
-0:15:54.720,0:15:58.160
-emacs needs to keep track of which areas
-
-0:15:56.959,0:16:00.560
-of text to show
-
-0:15:58.160,0:16:02.320
-and which areas of text to hide and the
-
-0:16:00.560,0:16:04.480
-problem is that when you're hiding stuff
-
-0:16:02.320,0:16:06.320
-let's say you're moving from line the
-
-0:16:04.480,0:16:08.639
-first heading to the second heading
-
-0:16:06.320,0:16:09.839
-but you've got like 10 000 lines between
-
-0:16:08.639,0:16:11.519
-those two headings
-
-0:16:09.839,0:16:13.680
-well he max needs to compute the
-
-0:16:11.519,0:16:15.680
-difference between the two passages
-
-0:16:13.680,0:16:17.040
-and that takes quite a lot of time and
-
-0:16:15.680,0:16:18.560
-in that that's my
-
-0:16:17.040,0:16:20.560
-why you might realize that it's a little
-
-0:16:18.560,0:16:21.199
-choppy when you start scrolling in large
-
-0:16:20.560,0:16:22.560
-files
-
-0:16:21.199,0:16:24.480
-anyway I could be answering questions
-
-0:16:22.560,0:16:25.120
-about org mode for literally two hours
-
-0:16:24.480,0:16:26.720
-straight
-
-0:16:25.120,0:16:28.639
-so I'm gonna end it over to the next
-
-0:16:26.720,0:16:31.759
-speakers and I'll be seeing
-
-0:16:28.639,0:16:33.440
-seeing you guys a little later thank you
-
-0:16:31.759,0:16:36.959
-very much leo
-
-0:16:33.440,0:16:39.839
-oh thank you yes bye
-
-0:16:36.959,0:16:39.839
-bye
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--13-experience-report-steps-to-emacs-hyper-notebooks--joseph-corneli-raymond-puzio-cameron-ray-smith-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--13-experience-report-steps-to-emacs-hyper-notebooks--joseph-corneli-raymond-puzio-cameron-ray-smith-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 8f77e78a..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--13-experience-report-steps-to-emacs-hyper-notebooks--joseph-corneli-raymond-puzio-cameron-ray-smith-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1080 +0,0 @@
-0:00:00.320,0:00:05.920
-um so hi I'm joe corneli
-
-0:00:03.280,0:00:06.879
-uh this is work I did with ray puzio and
-
-0:00:05.920,0:00:10.559
-cameron smith
-
-0:00:06.879,0:00:11.599
-um and they're the main protagonists in
-
-0:00:10.559,0:00:14.960
-this story they
-
-0:00:11.599,0:00:17.840
-are uh researchers who've been working
-
-0:00:14.960,0:00:20.160
-on theoretical biology um so in a
-
-0:00:17.840,0:00:23.760
-typical project they may use manxima
-
-0:00:20.160,0:00:24.800
-and julia their work for biology physics
-
-0:00:23.760,0:00:27.199
-and computer science
-
-0:00:24.800,0:00:29.439
-computer science and the latest work in
-
-0:00:27.199,0:00:30.800
-progress is on branching processes for
-
-0:00:29.439,0:00:34.719
-cancer modeling so
-
-0:00:30.800,0:00:37.360
-how can um Emacs possibly help
-
-0:00:34.719,0:00:38.399
-let's let's have a look uh moving code
-
-0:00:37.360,0:00:39.680
-and data between these different
-
-0:00:38.399,0:00:42.000
-programs by hand is
-
-0:00:39.680,0:00:43.200
-annoying on separate workflows for
-
-0:00:42.000,0:00:44.399
-writing up notes and preparing
-
-0:00:43.200,0:00:46.000
-publications
-
-0:00:44.399,0:00:48.640
-is perhaps even more annoying all of
-
-0:00:46.000,0:00:52.000
-it's time consuming and error-prone
-
-0:00:48.640,0:00:53.760
-um so what about maybe using jupiter
-
-0:00:52.000,0:00:55.199
-uh we found something called script of
-
-0:00:53.760,0:00:58.399
-scripts and it solves some of those
-
-0:00:55.199,0:01:01.120
-problems because you can use
-
-0:00:58.399,0:01:02.640
-maximum and julia together but we were
-
-0:01:01.120,0:01:05.199
-quite happy to explore emacs based
-
-0:01:02.640,0:01:05.840
-solutions being emax enthusiasts and we
-
-0:01:05.199,0:01:07.760
-even
-
-0:01:05.840,0:01:09.200
-got cameron to be enthusiastic about
-
-0:01:07.760,0:01:11.600
-doing emacs so that
-
-0:01:09.200,0:01:12.400
-went nice so just here's a little
-
-0:01:11.600,0:01:15.360
-feature grid
-
-0:01:12.400,0:01:16.400
-of emacs org versus just sort of your
-
-0:01:15.360,0:01:19.040
-generic
-
-0:01:16.400,0:01:20.960
-um tools that are in a different more
-
-0:01:19.040,0:01:21.520
-general ecosystem so as you can see it's
-
-0:01:20.960,0:01:23.360
-quite
-
-0:01:21.520,0:01:25.520
-feature complete you've got your maximo
-
-0:01:23.360,0:01:27.119
-mode julia mode you can use both of them
-
-0:01:25.520,0:01:28.720
-inside of org mode
-
-0:01:27.119,0:01:30.240
-you can present things with word tree
-
-0:01:28.720,0:01:33.280
-slide you can set up a
-
-0:01:30.240,0:01:33.680
-wiki inside of orgrome this is one I
-
-0:01:33.280,0:01:35.759
-found
-
-0:01:33.680,0:01:37.759
-rather recently you can even use
-
-0:01:35.759,0:01:38.799
-compatibly with orgrome something called
-
-0:01:37.759,0:01:41.520
-log seek
-
-0:01:38.799,0:01:42.159
-which is in the browser um so that's
-
-0:01:41.520,0:01:44.320
-nice
-
-0:01:42.159,0:01:45.840
-um you can do real-time collaborative
-
-0:01:44.320,0:01:47.840
-editing um
-
-0:01:45.840,0:01:49.280
-either in a kind of pairing style or in
-
-0:01:47.840,0:01:51.520
-a more etherpad style
-
-0:01:49.280,0:01:54.159
-obviously you can manage your references
-
-0:01:51.520,0:01:55.759
-you can typeset whatever you want um you
-
-0:01:54.159,0:01:57.439
-can publish work in progress on a blog
-
-0:01:55.759,0:01:58.159
-and the fern is another one of these
-
-0:01:57.439,0:02:00.560
-external
-
-0:01:58.159,0:02:01.360
-org mode tools it's not actually any mac
-
-0:02:00.560,0:02:03.680
-but works with
-
-0:02:01.360,0:02:04.399
-org mode stuff and you know so we're
-
-0:02:03.680,0:02:06.640
-good to go
-
-0:02:04.399,0:02:08.000
-uh with all of that so what does that
-
-0:02:06.640,0:02:09.679
-look like well here's
-
-0:02:08.000,0:02:11.599
-a little example from before they were
-
-0:02:09.679,0:02:12.800
-doing um
-
-0:02:11.599,0:02:14.560
-before we started really thinking
-
-0:02:12.800,0:02:15.599
-seriously about this stuff so this is
-
-0:02:14.560,0:02:17.440
-just maxima
-
-0:02:15.599,0:02:19.280
-well maximo doesn't have a long running
-
-0:02:17.440,0:02:20.160
-process by default if you've ever used
-
-0:02:19.280,0:02:22.480
-python
-
-0:02:20.160,0:02:23.920
-uh you have something called sessions uh
-
-0:02:22.480,0:02:24.959
-they don't have that for maxim at least
-
-0:02:23.920,0:02:27.599
-not by default
-
-0:02:24.959,0:02:29.360
-um so how what was the workaround
-
-0:02:27.599,0:02:32.480
-there's this thing called uh
-
-0:02:29.360,0:02:34.879
-solve for you here and um
-
-0:02:32.480,0:02:36.319
-that shows up down below again in these
-
-0:02:34.879,0:02:37.360
-angle brackets which you've seen maybe
-
-0:02:36.319,0:02:40.480
-in someone else's talk
-
-0:02:37.360,0:02:41.920
-uh which means go to the previous uh
-
-0:02:40.480,0:02:43.920
-thing that was named soul for you
-
-0:02:41.920,0:02:45.280
-and do that all over again so they do
-
-0:02:43.920,0:02:47.440
-that over again
-
-0:02:45.280,0:02:49.519
-and here's the little maxima code for
-
-0:02:47.440,0:02:50.560
-defining you saw so you've now defined
-
-0:02:49.519,0:02:51.920
-you saw
-
-0:02:50.560,0:02:54.000
-and then you can use it in the next
-
-0:02:51.920,0:02:56.560
-expression you get out a nice juicy
-
-0:02:54.000,0:02:57.200
-zero at the end but it's a little bit a
-
-0:02:56.560,0:02:58.959
-little bit
-
-0:02:57.200,0:03:00.640
-like cartridge in a pear tree to have to
-
-0:02:58.959,0:03:02.560
-redefine everything every time
-
-0:03:00.640,0:03:04.159
-so this is clearly at the level of work
-
-0:03:02.560,0:03:06.879
-around um maybe just
-
-0:03:04.159,0:03:07.920
-one more time going looking through that
-
-0:03:06.879,0:03:11.599
-um
-
-0:03:07.920,0:03:13.760
-that stuff um
-
-0:03:11.599,0:03:15.280
-sorry so uh looking through that stuff
-
-0:03:13.760,0:03:17.200
-this is we're going to need something
-
-0:03:15.280,0:03:19.599
-like that probably for stitching
-
-0:03:17.200,0:03:20.319
-maxima and julie julia together so it's
-
-0:03:19.599,0:03:21.680
-good to
-
-0:03:20.319,0:03:23.920
-look a little bit about how that might
-
-0:03:21.680,0:03:25.680
-work so first of all you can cache
-
-0:03:23.920,0:03:26.480
-results so if you wanted to save the
-
-0:03:25.680,0:03:28.480
-date
-
-0:03:26.480,0:03:29.920
-out of block one at a certain time and
-
-0:03:28.480,0:03:32.239
-then use
-
-0:03:29.920,0:03:33.280
-use it again later so at the time when I
-
-0:03:32.239,0:03:34.640
-ran this code
-
-0:03:33.280,0:03:36.720
-you can see I've got two slightly
-
-0:03:34.640,0:03:38.560
-different time stamps down below one's
-
-0:03:36.720,0:03:40.319
-the cached result and the other was the
-
-0:03:38.560,0:03:42.640
-result of reevaluating
-
-0:03:40.319,0:03:43.760
-the block so you can move things around
-
-0:03:42.640,0:03:46.000
-um and that's
-
-0:03:43.760,0:03:47.280
-that's going to be useful but you know
-
-0:03:46.000,0:03:48.080
-that's not really the main problem the
-
-0:03:47.280,0:03:50.799
-main problem is
-
-0:03:48.080,0:03:51.440
-making maxima long running so kind of
-
-0:03:50.799,0:03:53.920
-the
-
-0:03:51.440,0:03:56.400
-core of this talk is a new observant
-
-0:03:53.920,0:03:59.280
-facility which is a general purpose
-
-0:03:56.400,0:04:00.560
-way to do that kind of thing which
-
-0:03:59.280,0:04:04.239
-involves a very simple
-
-0:04:00.560,0:04:05.360
-change to obcor uh so we'll give a quick
-
-0:04:04.239,0:04:08.480
-overview of that and show
-
-0:04:05.360,0:04:11.760
-an example um so here's the example
-
-0:04:08.480,0:04:13.040
-um a very simple sort of silly example
-
-0:04:11.760,0:04:14.640
-uh what does it mean to have a long
-
-0:04:13.040,0:04:15.920
-running process here I've set this
-
-0:04:14.640,0:04:18.560
-display2d
-
-0:04:15.920,0:04:19.440
-to be false um which just means that
-
-0:04:18.560,0:04:22.320
-things are going to come
-
-0:04:19.440,0:04:23.040
-come across in 1d and then I ask it to
-
-0:04:22.320,0:04:25.199
-expand
-
-0:04:23.040,0:04:27.280
-uh something and I get latex by default
-
-0:04:25.199,0:04:28.639
-so so that's what it means is I've sent
-
-0:04:27.280,0:04:30.240
-something in and it's going to come
-
-0:04:28.639,0:04:32.080
-across in one view which is great
-
-0:04:30.240,0:04:34.560
-um maybe you'll also notice that there's
-
-0:04:32.080,0:04:36.720
-no semicolon if you're a maxima fan
-
-0:04:34.560,0:04:38.400
-um and things are coming across as tech
-
-0:04:36.720,0:04:40.320
-so those were some little bonus features
-
-0:04:38.400,0:04:41.040
-and I'll show you how that works later
-
-0:04:40.320,0:04:45.440
-so
-
-0:04:41.040,0:04:48.880
-um the change to obcor is as follows uh
-
-0:04:45.440,0:04:51.520
-um we uh actually this should say uh
-
-0:04:48.880,0:04:52.479
-instead of stream here it should say um
-
-0:04:51.520,0:04:54.800
-servant
-
-0:04:52.479,0:04:56.160
-sorry uh we tried an experimental
-
-0:04:54.800,0:04:58.160
-version what's called stream so now it's
-
-0:04:56.160,0:05:01.520
-called servant but all it does is it
-
-0:04:58.160,0:05:02.639
-overrides uh or babel execute laying for
-
-0:05:01.520,0:05:05.919
-arbitrary laying
-
-0:05:02.639,0:05:07.840
-if you have um a servant
-
-0:05:05.919,0:05:09.759
-in your in your params so that's the
-
-0:05:07.840,0:05:11.919
-change that hasn't been
-
-0:05:09.759,0:05:13.759
-pushed out or sent as a patch to anybody
-
-0:05:11.919,0:05:16.960
-but it's a pretty minor change
-
-0:05:13.759,0:05:19.080
-um here's an overview without the code
-
-0:05:16.960,0:05:20.720
-of just a high level overview of
-
-0:05:19.080,0:05:22.160
-observant.el so
-
-0:05:20.720,0:05:24.479
-it stores information about these
-
-0:05:22.160,0:05:26.080
-processes in a hash table
-
-0:05:24.479,0:05:27.600
-it can do pre-processing and
-
-0:05:26.080,0:05:29.759
-post-processing
-
-0:05:27.600,0:05:30.720
-um it does all these things it stores
-
-0:05:29.759,0:05:32.479
-the output
-
-0:05:30.720,0:05:34.080
-I mentioned here that in principle we
-
-0:05:32.479,0:05:35.280
-could store lots of output and have a
-
-0:05:34.080,0:05:36.560
-kind of browsable
-
-0:05:35.280,0:05:38.880
-history although we don't do that
-
-0:05:36.560,0:05:40.639
-presently um but that's what observant
-
-0:05:38.880,0:05:41.440
-does is it does what you might expect
-
-0:05:40.639,0:05:45.440
-and here's the
-
-0:05:41.440,0:05:48.160
-here's the maxima kind of um
-
-0:05:45.440,0:05:49.600
-on-ramp uh to get maxima brought in so
-
-0:05:48.160,0:05:51.360
-you have to obviously have a maximum
-
-0:05:49.600,0:05:54.960
-process you can call
-
-0:05:51.360,0:05:57.840
-um put hash uh this is the preprocessing
-
-0:05:54.960,0:05:58.960
-thing I mentioned adding in some tech um
-
-0:05:57.840,0:06:01.520
-and adding in
-
-0:05:58.960,0:06:03.120
-uh or deleting rather a substring and
-
-0:06:01.520,0:06:03.759
-here here is why you delete the
-
-0:06:03.120,0:06:06.960
-substring
-
-0:06:03.759,0:06:08.240
-is because um maxima thinks it's a good
-
-0:06:06.960,0:06:10.080
-idea to tell you false
-
-0:06:08.240,0:06:11.759
-once you once you run check on things
-
-0:06:10.080,0:06:13.680
-you've got to delete that back out to
-
-0:06:11.759,0:06:16.960
-get something kind of coherent out of it
-
-0:06:13.680,0:06:19.280
-but so this is how to set up maximal um
-
-0:06:16.960,0:06:20.000
-that's enough really of the demo is not
-
-0:06:19.280,0:06:21.919
-really a demos for
-
-0:06:20.000,0:06:23.600
-show and tell but uh this is an
-
-0:06:21.919,0:06:25.440
-experience report I wanted to talk about
-
-0:06:23.600,0:06:28.080
-the experience of doing this
-
-0:06:25.440,0:06:30.160
-so some some negatives like we tried to
-
-0:06:28.080,0:06:33.199
-get emacs jupiter working
-
-0:06:30.160,0:06:36.000
-prior to prior to working on the um
-
-0:06:33.199,0:06:37.919
-observant and we couldn't get it doing
-
-0:06:36.000,0:06:40.160
-everything we wanted despite a bit of
-
-0:06:37.919,0:06:41.840
-heavy lifting and debugging and stuff so
-
-0:06:40.160,0:06:42.880
-that's not not finished that was a bit
-
-0:06:41.840,0:06:45.360
-difficult
-
-0:06:42.880,0:06:47.759
-um on the other hand working on
-
-0:06:45.360,0:06:48.479
-observing was fun and pretty lightweight
-
-0:06:47.759,0:06:50.400
-and easy
-
-0:06:48.479,0:06:52.400
-um we got some experience co-editing
-
-0:06:50.400,0:06:54.479
-things with these real-time tools
-
-0:06:52.400,0:06:55.919
-obviously the stack is somewhat work in
-
-0:06:54.479,0:06:58.000
-progress um
-
-0:06:55.919,0:07:00.800
-so I just wanted to give a shout out to
-
-0:06:58.000,0:07:03.919
-crdt which was really fun
-
-0:07:00.800,0:07:07.039
-and champion was making bug fiction
-
-0:07:03.919,0:07:08.960
-bug fixes for that as we go similarly
-
-0:07:07.039,0:07:10.160
-for fern and log seek the maintainers
-
-0:07:08.960,0:07:12.960
-were really responsive
-
-0:07:10.160,0:07:14.560
-um and so that was nice we did try to
-
-0:07:12.960,0:07:15.840
-get emacs running in the browser
-
-0:07:14.560,0:07:16.880
-thinking it would be really nice for
-
-0:07:15.840,0:07:19.520
-people who
-
-0:07:16.880,0:07:21.120
-um didn't want to install it to get a
-
-0:07:19.520,0:07:23.120
-chance to just try it
-
-0:07:21.120,0:07:24.479
-uh but actually browsers capture things
-
-0:07:23.120,0:07:27.120
-like uh control n
-
-0:07:24.479,0:07:28.479
-and so that's that was a bit annoying
-
-0:07:27.120,0:07:29.759
-but we did get lots of great feedback
-
-0:07:28.479,0:07:31.599
-and interaction with people including
-
-0:07:29.759,0:07:33.759
-around this conference so thank you
-
-0:07:31.599,0:07:35.599
-to those who we've had discussions with
-
-0:07:33.759,0:07:37.680
-um
-
-0:07:35.599,0:07:38.639
-so future work okay so maybe you
-
-0:07:37.680,0:07:41.039
-remember I didn't
-
-0:07:38.639,0:07:42.400
-give a talk a few years back on arcana
-
-0:07:41.039,0:07:44.479
-so what what
-
-0:07:42.400,0:07:45.919
-might this have to do with org mode and
-
-0:07:44.479,0:07:47.039
-that's always the question one asks
-
-0:07:45.919,0:07:48.720
-about arcata
-
-0:07:47.039,0:07:50.319
-well so arcana one of the things it does
-
-0:07:48.720,0:07:51.680
-is transclusions and so that could be
-
-0:07:50.319,0:07:54.000
-actually very helpful
-
-0:07:51.680,0:07:55.520
-in connection with this combined notes
-
-0:07:54.000,0:07:56.479
-and write-up workflow so you might have
-
-0:07:55.520,0:07:58.400
-a
-
-0:07:56.479,0:08:00.800
-forward mode uh and some of these
-
-0:07:58.400,0:08:03.199
-results we got back as raw results
-
-0:08:00.800,0:08:03.919
-could go right into your write up in a
-
-0:08:03.199,0:08:07.520
-kind of
-
-0:08:03.919,0:08:09.039
-convenient way at a level above um
-
-0:08:07.520,0:08:11.280
-transparently a level above the notebook
-
-0:08:09.039,0:08:13.440
-so you'd have the notebook alongside the
-
-0:08:11.280,0:08:15.599
-write-up in that case
-
-0:08:13.440,0:08:16.800
-which is a sort of variation on the
-
-0:08:15.599,0:08:19.120
-literate programming
-
-0:08:16.800,0:08:20.000
-workflow this is speculative who knows
-
-0:08:19.120,0:08:22.080
-the other thought is
-
-0:08:20.000,0:08:23.520
-it just relates to the idea of network
-
-0:08:22.080,0:08:24.800
-programming so we can imagine these
-
-0:08:23.520,0:08:26.639
-networks of
-
-0:08:24.800,0:08:28.800
-computational nodes maybe sitting inside
-
-0:08:26.639,0:08:31.199
-of orgrome calling each other
-
-0:08:28.800,0:08:32.560
-um and you would want to maintain some
-
-0:08:31.199,0:08:34.959
-kind of model of that
-
-0:08:32.560,0:08:36.640
-process and a sort of general question
-
-0:08:34.959,0:08:38.320
-is how do we have a remote control for
-
-0:08:36.640,0:08:40.240
-long-running processes you could do that
-
-0:08:38.320,0:08:42.479
-in lisp or closure but
-
-0:08:40.240,0:08:44.080
-maybe we could have something a little
-
-0:08:42.479,0:08:45.839
-bit like that here
-
-0:08:44.080,0:08:48.080
-um so conclusions what have we actually
-
-0:08:45.839,0:08:50.080
-addressed well uh we addressed uh
-
-0:08:48.080,0:08:51.600
-accessing any long-running process with
-
-0:08:50.080,0:08:52.959
-a simple or mode interface
-
-0:08:51.600,0:08:54.880
-obviously we're not the only people to
-
-0:08:52.959,0:08:56.880
-think about notebooks but we think that
-
-0:08:54.880,0:08:58.880
-emacs has some advantages
-
-0:08:56.880,0:09:01.120
-related to reproducible research and
-
-0:08:58.880,0:09:01.680
-interdisciplinary collaboration so let's
-
-0:09:01.120,0:09:03.120
-just
-
-0:09:01.680,0:09:04.880
-say that we think something is
-
-0:09:03.120,0:09:07.200
-reproducible if it's actually teachable
-
-0:09:04.880,0:09:09.279
-to someone new and they can do it
-
-0:09:07.200,0:09:11.680
-org mode seems very useful for that many
-
-0:09:09.279,0:09:14.399
-of the other talks have touched on this
-
-0:09:11.680,0:09:16.000
-interdisciplinary collaboration is great
-
-0:09:14.399,0:09:17.839
-this was an interdisciplinary
-
-0:09:16.000,0:09:19.680
-collaboration on some level but
-
-0:09:17.839,0:09:21.600
-what about you know future work for
-
-0:09:19.680,0:09:22.320
-bringing in scenario planners simulation
-
-0:09:21.600,0:09:24.480
-scientists
-
-0:09:22.320,0:09:25.519
-and local farmers and building something
-
-0:09:24.480,0:09:27.200
-that they can all
-
-0:09:25.519,0:09:29.200
-use that's more than the sum of the
-
-0:09:27.200,0:09:30.720
-parts so a little
-
-0:09:29.200,0:09:32.160
-future work for everybody else here so
-
-0:09:30.720,0:09:33.120
-we think science should be widely
-
-0:09:32.160,0:09:34.560
-teachable
-
-0:09:33.120,0:09:36.720
-shareable semi-automated
-
-0:09:34.560,0:09:40.399
-transdisciplinary and real time
-
-0:09:36.720,0:09:43.279
-like EmacsConf so you can get in touch
-
-0:09:40.399,0:09:44.560
-uh via these methods and the code which
-
-0:09:43.279,0:09:45.200
-is very much early stage work in
-
-0:09:44.560,0:09:46.640
-progress
-
-0:09:45.200,0:09:48.800
-as this was meant to be an experience
-
-0:09:46.640,0:09:49.920
-report not a it's all done here it is
-
-0:09:48.800,0:09:51.680
-polished report
-
-0:09:49.920,0:09:53.360
-um it's also online if you'd like to
-
-0:09:51.680,0:09:54.560
-have a look so that's the end of the
-
-0:09:53.360,0:09:55.279
-talk and I don't know if there's time
-
-0:09:54.560,0:09:57.440
-for questions
-
-0:09:55.279,0:10:00.240
-or not but um I'm at your disposal now
-
-0:09:57.440,0:10:04.079
-thank you you are now unmuted
-
-0:10:00.240,0:10:07.120
-um many thanks for the tough job
-
-0:10:04.079,0:10:08.880
-uh let's see we have about I think four
-
-0:10:07.120,0:10:10.880
-minutes four questions
-
-0:10:08.880,0:10:12.320
-um and we have a couple of questions on
-
-0:10:10.880,0:10:14.240
-the pad would you like to read them
-
-0:10:12.320,0:10:16.560
-yourself or should I read them to you
-
-0:10:14.240,0:10:18.079
-uh just for sake of easy management why
-
-0:10:16.560,0:10:21.279
-don't you read them out if that's okay
-
-0:10:18.079,0:10:22.240
-yeah sure uh so they ask have you looked
-
-0:10:21.279,0:10:25.440
-into trying
-
-0:10:22.240,0:10:33.760
-sage math I've long uh long wanted
-
-0:10:25.440,0:10:36.959
-nothing org files
-
-0:10:33.760,0:10:39.279
-right and I and I wrote the answer that
-
-0:10:36.959,0:10:42.079
-we should be possible because one can
-
-0:10:39.279,0:10:42.079
-call it from a command
-
-0:10:44.839,0:10:48.640
-okay
-
-0:10:46.399,0:10:50.079
-and I see there's another sagemath
-
-0:10:48.640,0:10:52.100
-question that you seem to have answered
-
-0:10:50.079,0:10:54.880
-as well so I guess I won't repeat that
-
-0:10:52.100,0:10:56.959
-[Music]
-
-0:10:54.880,0:11:00.640
-there's let's not forget about embedded
-
-0:10:56.959,0:11:03.680
-calc in emacs
-
-0:11:00.640,0:11:05.040
-so so the first demos actually were with
-
-0:11:03.680,0:11:06.640
-calc so that's that's
-
-0:11:05.040,0:11:07.839
-useful uh although I think it was a
-
-0:11:06.640,0:11:08.240
-different kind of a different command
-
-0:11:07.839,0:11:11.839
-line
-
-0:11:08.240,0:11:13.839
-well that was the next calc yeah
-
-0:11:11.839,0:11:15.680
-so sure there is there is calc so that
-
-0:11:13.839,0:11:19.120
-would be calculus and
-
-0:11:15.680,0:11:21.839
-calc is already in org mode yeah
-
-0:11:19.120,0:11:21.839
-yeah yeah
-
-0:11:25.680,0:11:29.839
-um still looking for questions
-
-0:11:39.760,0:11:44.320
-okay I think that's about it I don't see
-
-0:11:41.760,0:11:47.440
-any questions on the ether pad
-
-0:11:44.320,0:11:50.480
-and let's see
-
-0:11:47.440,0:11:50.480
-anything on irc
-
-0:11:53.040,0:11:56.720
-um nothing but phrases and everyone
-
-0:11:55.760,0:11:59.120
-thanking you
-
-0:11:56.720,0:12:00.240
-thank you all right you're welcome
-
-0:11:59.120,0:12:02.880
-thanks a lot uh
-
-0:12:00.240,0:12:06.800
-we'll see you guys around then cheers
-
-0:12:02.880,0:12:06.800
-and see you around
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--14-readme-driven-design--adam-ard-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--14-readme-driven-design--adam-ard-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 506a26eb..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--14-readme-driven-design--adam-ard-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1425 +0,0 @@
-0:00:03.600,0:00:06.560
-hello
-
-0:00:04.400,0:00:08.400
-welcome to readme driven design in Emacs
-
-0:00:06.560,0:00:10.800
-by adam aard
-
-0:00:08.400,0:00:12.559
-if you're a programmer you're accustomed
-
-0:00:10.800,0:00:13.759
-to putting a readme file at the root of
-
-0:00:12.559,0:00:16.400
-your project
-
-0:00:13.759,0:00:17.600
-and it's usually a markdown file but if
-
-0:00:16.400,0:00:20.720
-you use an org
-
-0:00:17.600,0:00:22.560
-more an org mode file instead you can
-
-0:00:20.720,0:00:24.400
-take advantage of the great features
-
-0:00:22.560,0:00:25.920
-that org mode provides including
-
-0:00:24.400,0:00:28.000
-literate programming
-
-0:00:25.920,0:00:31.840
-which lets you generate your source code
-
-0:00:28.000,0:00:34.719
-and markdown documentation dynamically
-
-0:00:31.840,0:00:37.120
-I want to walk you through a little bit
-
-0:00:34.719,0:00:39.440
-of what this looks like
-
-0:00:37.120,0:00:41.280
-when you start a project especially if
-
-0:00:39.440,0:00:43.320
-if you use something like github you
-
-0:00:41.280,0:00:47.039
-begin with an automatically generated
-
-0:00:43.320,0:00:50.239
-readme.md file so just delete that
-
-0:00:47.039,0:00:51.920
-and instead create a readme.org file
-
-0:00:50.239,0:00:54.800
-starting with an empty org file like you
-
-0:00:51.920,0:00:56.559
-see here you can begin
-
-0:00:54.800,0:00:59.440
-by recording important information about
-
-0:00:56.559,0:01:01.920
-your project goals you can add diagrams
-
-0:00:59.440,0:01:03.520
-code snippets to-do lists time tracking
-
-0:01:01.920,0:01:05.360
-and much more
-
-0:01:03.520,0:01:07.760
-I'm going to drop in some documentation
-
-0:01:05.360,0:01:10.840
-that I r that I've written about
-
-0:01:07.760,0:01:12.240
-about my project here so you can kind of
-
-0:01:10.840,0:01:15.280
-see
-
-0:01:12.240,0:01:17.119
-what this would look like
-
-0:01:15.280,0:01:20.320
-so as you can see I have a title and a
-
-0:01:17.119,0:01:23.840
-description and then a sub section
-
-0:01:20.320,0:01:25.520
-as well as some code snippets
-
-0:01:23.840,0:01:28.240
-and you can see that orgmo does a great
-
-0:01:25.520,0:01:31.280
-job of formatting lists and
-
-0:01:28.240,0:01:33.920
-code sections diagrams and so forth
-
-0:01:31.280,0:01:35.040
-it's good or it's as good or better than
-
-0:01:33.920,0:01:37.520
-markdown
-
-0:01:35.040,0:01:38.880
-but when you use it in the Emacs you can
-
-0:01:37.520,0:01:40.479
-do a lot more
-
-0:01:38.880,0:01:43.360
-for example you can dynamically create
-
-0:01:40.479,0:01:45.200
-diagrams using graphviz
-
-0:01:43.360,0:01:46.560
-from a text description so if you go to
-
-0:01:45.200,0:01:49.439
-this source block here
-
-0:01:46.560,0:01:51.439
-and hit control c control c you'll see
-
-0:01:49.439,0:01:55.439
-that we generate a
-
-0:01:51.439,0:01:59.200
-diagram dynamically you can run
-
-0:01:55.439,0:02:00.799
-so you can run these code snippets in
-
-0:01:59.200,0:02:03.040
-place and get the results
-
-0:02:00.799,0:02:06.640
-to show up inside of your your file
-
-0:02:03.040,0:02:06.640
-which is a really powerful paradigm
-
-0:02:08.000,0:02:11.520
-but most important most importantly for
-
-0:02:10.640,0:02:14.800
-the
-
-0:02:11.520,0:02:17.200
-purposes my purpose is here
-
-0:02:14.800,0:02:19.520
-orgmo provides you the ability to do
-
-0:02:17.200,0:02:21.440
-literate programming
-
-0:02:19.520,0:02:23.200
-so take a quick look at this diagram
-
-0:02:21.440,0:02:25.360
-that I generated here
-
-0:02:23.200,0:02:27.520
-and gives you a quick overview of what I
-
-0:02:25.360,0:02:31.200
-mean by literate programming
-
-0:02:27.520,0:02:33.920
-and how I'm using it you can see
-
-0:02:31.200,0:02:34.720
-that we start with a readme.org file on
-
-0:02:33.920,0:02:36.879
-top
-
-0:02:34.720,0:02:37.920
-at this point we can do one of two
-
-0:02:36.879,0:02:41.280
-things
-
-0:02:37.920,0:02:42.720
-tangle or weave tangle is used to
-
-0:02:41.280,0:02:46.319
-describe the process of
-
-0:02:42.720,0:02:47.599
-generating source code while weave
-
-0:02:46.319,0:02:49.840
-is the process of generating
-
-0:02:47.599,0:02:51.920
-documentation these are terms that
-
-0:02:49.840,0:02:53.840
-donald knuth used
-
-0:02:51.920,0:02:55.519
-and he's the one that came up with the
-
-0:02:53.840,0:02:59.920
-idea of literate programming
-
-0:02:55.519,0:03:01.519
-in the early 1980s
-
-0:02:59.920,0:03:04.480
-but this is really all that there is to
-
-0:03:01.519,0:03:06.400
-it you just
-
-0:03:04.480,0:03:07.840
-who are simply using literate illiterate
-
-0:03:06.400,0:03:10.319
-source file
-
-0:03:07.840,0:03:11.680
-in this case the readme.org to generate
-
-0:03:10.319,0:03:15.680
-the rest of the project
-
-0:03:11.680,0:03:15.680
-the rest of the project files basically
-
-0:03:17.120,0:03:22.640
-so let's dig in to the details of how
-
-0:03:20.959,0:03:24.560
-this works
-
-0:03:22.640,0:03:26.159
-and I hope you hopefully you'll see how
-
-0:03:24.560,0:03:28.959
-cool this is
-
-0:03:26.159,0:03:31.120
-so returning to the file here let's
-
-0:03:28.959,0:03:32.080
-assume we have enough documentation now
-
-0:03:31.120,0:03:34.159
-that we want to get started
-
-0:03:32.080,0:03:35.519
-coding so maybe we'll just start with
-
-0:03:34.159,0:03:38.159
-like a hello world
-
-0:03:35.519,0:03:41.519
-app just so we can make sure that our
-
-0:03:38.159,0:03:47.120
-environment is set up correctly
-
-0:03:41.519,0:03:49.519
-so let's get started with a code block
-
-0:03:47.120,0:03:50.319
-so I created a little snippet to help me
-
-0:03:49.519,0:03:52.239
-add
-
-0:03:50.319,0:03:53.599
-a source block for literate programming
-
-0:03:52.239,0:03:56.959
-quickly
-
-0:03:53.599,0:03:58.799
-and there's not much to it
-
-0:03:56.959,0:04:01.599
-but there is some important annotations
-
-0:03:58.799,0:04:04.080
-here so there's
-
-0:04:01.599,0:04:05.200
-excuse me there's a there's a property
-
-0:04:04.080,0:04:09.360
-called tangle
-
-0:04:05.200,0:04:13.280
-and that takes a value of a file name
-
-0:04:09.360,0:04:16.560
-and then there's also a no web property
-
-0:04:13.280,0:04:16.560
-called no export
-
-0:04:18.880,0:04:22.000
-and basically
-
-0:04:23.759,0:04:28.639
-basically the no export will explain
-
-0:04:26.800,0:04:32.080
-that a little bit
-
-0:04:28.639,0:04:33.919
-more later um it has has to do with how
-
-0:04:32.080,0:04:37.600
-the tangling
-
-0:04:33.919,0:04:39.280
-is uh done in the tangle step versus the
-
-0:04:37.600,0:04:41.199
-weave step and I'll explain that a
-
-0:04:39.280,0:04:45.199
-little bit more but the tangle
-
-0:04:41.199,0:04:48.320
-field just simply tells tells uh
-
-0:04:45.199,0:04:50.320
-Emacs where it needs to generate the
-
-0:04:48.320,0:04:53.280
-main.go file and where it needs to put
-
-0:04:50.320,0:04:53.280
-it on the file system
-
-0:04:55.360,0:04:59.040
-uh you'll you'll notice that we we're
-
-0:04:57.680,0:05:01.440
-going to use go
-
-0:04:59.040,0:05:02.160
-that's just the language that I've been
-
-0:05:01.440,0:05:05.360
-using
-
-0:05:02.160,0:05:07.360
-the most lately uh but
-
-0:05:05.360,0:05:08.400
-this programming strategy is language
-
-0:05:07.360,0:05:12.080
-agnostic
-
-0:05:08.400,0:05:14.720
-you could use any language or any mix
-
-0:05:12.080,0:05:16.560
-of languages you could create some files
-
-0:05:14.720,0:05:19.520
-in python some files and go
-
-0:05:16.560,0:05:21.520
-some files in in lisp or whatever you
-
-0:05:19.520,0:05:24.720
-want
-
-0:05:21.520,0:05:28.000
-and so but let's
-
-0:05:24.720,0:05:29.440
-uh let's create just a little hello
-
-0:05:28.000,0:05:32.320
-world
-
-0:05:29.440,0:05:33.520
-let's use another snippet here to
-
-0:05:32.320,0:05:36.560
-generate
-
-0:05:33.520,0:05:39.840
-the basics of a go program
-
-0:05:36.560,0:05:39.840
-so I'm just going to print
-
-0:05:40.240,0:05:42.960
-hello world
-
-0:05:44.960,0:05:48.240
-so that's and then
-
-0:05:48.560,0:05:55.280
-let's make it a section in our
-
-0:05:52.320,0:05:56.400
-file so now you can see we've got this
-
-0:05:55.280,0:05:59.600
-snippet
-
-0:05:56.400,0:06:01.600
-um when you have a source block in
-
-0:05:59.600,0:06:02.880
-inside of org mode you can easily pop
-
-0:06:01.600,0:06:04.960
-into a
-
-0:06:02.880,0:06:07.680
-language specific buffer by typing
-
-0:06:04.960,0:06:10.240
-control c single quote
-
-0:06:07.680,0:06:12.160
-so you can see now I have a a go a
-
-0:06:10.240,0:06:14.240
-buffer that's in go mode
-
-0:06:12.160,0:06:15.520
-and gives you all the ability to edit
-
-0:06:14.240,0:06:18.800
-like you would
-
-0:06:15.520,0:06:20.800
-normally if you hit ctrl c
-
-0:06:18.800,0:06:22.639
-single quote again then it goes back and
-
-0:06:20.800,0:06:25.280
-any changes you
-
-0:06:22.639,0:06:26.160
-make would will be updated there but you
-
-0:06:25.280,0:06:28.000
-can do quite a bit
-
-0:06:26.160,0:06:29.199
-just inside of here too there's quite a
-
-0:06:28.000,0:06:32.400
-bit of
-
-0:06:29.199,0:06:32.400
-language specific
-
-0:06:33.360,0:06:36.880
-functionality just in place and so you
-
-0:06:35.440,0:06:38.080
-don't always have to go over to a
-
-0:06:36.880,0:06:42.319
-separate buffer
-
-0:06:38.080,0:06:44.319
-but it's a it's a nice option sometimes
-
-0:06:42.319,0:06:46.720
-but now that you have the code in here
-
-0:06:44.319,0:06:48.560
-you're going to want to run it
-
-0:06:46.720,0:06:50.240
-but right now it just lives here in this
-
-0:06:48.560,0:06:52.160
-documentation
-
-0:06:50.240,0:06:53.840
-so you need to get a copy of it into a
-
-0:06:52.160,0:06:57.440
-separate file
-
-0:06:53.840,0:07:01.360
-and that's the tangle process that you
-
-0:06:57.440,0:07:03.360
-you need to follow there so I'm gonna
-
-0:07:01.360,0:07:05.280
-drop in a little bit more doc a little
-
-0:07:03.360,0:07:08.960
-bit more
-
-0:07:05.280,0:07:08.960
-documentation really quick here
-
-0:07:12.240,0:07:21.520
-okay all right so just kind of as a
-
-0:07:17.360,0:07:24.800
-kind of as a side note I like to follow
-
-0:07:21.520,0:07:26.639
-this process uh whenever having whenever
-
-0:07:24.800,0:07:28.880
-I have an operation to perform I
-
-0:07:26.639,0:07:31.680
-I'd like to document it here with a
-
-0:07:28.880,0:07:33.280
-snippet that can be executed in line
-
-0:07:31.680,0:07:34.639
-then I don't have to leave org mode and
-
-0:07:33.280,0:07:36.800
-I don't have to try to remember what I
-
-0:07:34.639,0:07:38.960
-did later so instead of just
-
-0:07:36.800,0:07:40.319
-trying to do an operation the first time
-
-0:07:38.960,0:07:41.680
-I do something I take the
-
-0:07:40.319,0:07:43.440
-take the time to figure out what it is
-
-0:07:41.680,0:07:44.879
-and document it and so then it's
-
-0:07:43.440,0:07:48.400
-recorded
-
-0:07:44.879,0:07:49.120
-and so here we find that to do a tangle
-
-0:07:48.400,0:07:51.680
-operation
-
-0:07:49.120,0:07:52.560
-you run the command or babel tangled
-
-0:07:51.680,0:07:55.840
-which is a
-
-0:07:52.560,0:07:59.199
-e-list command so if you hit ctrl c
-
-0:07:55.840,0:08:00.080
-ctrl c to run it in place you get the
-
-0:07:59.199,0:08:02.720
-result
-
-0:08:00.080,0:08:03.759
-of main dot go which basically is
-
-0:08:02.720,0:08:07.680
-telling us that
-
-0:08:03.759,0:08:11.039
-we've tangled one file called main.go
-
-0:08:07.680,0:08:14.000
-and you can see that that's true
-
-0:08:11.039,0:08:14.400
-if you go to the file system and you
-
-0:08:14.000,0:08:17.840
-look
-
-0:08:14.400,0:08:20.960
-so now in uh in our demo directory
-
-0:08:17.840,0:08:22.479
-we have a readme.org we have that png
-
-0:08:20.960,0:08:23.440
-that we generated but we also have a
-
-0:08:22.479,0:08:26.080
-main.go
-
-0:08:23.440,0:08:27.759
-and if you if you visit that file you'll
-
-0:08:26.080,0:08:29.280
-see that it's just the source code that
-
-0:08:27.759,0:08:31.039
-was in our documentation which is
-
-0:08:29.280,0:08:32.880
-exactly what we expected and what we
-
-0:08:31.039,0:08:36.000
-wanted so that's good
-
-0:08:32.880,0:08:36.000
-so if we return to
-
-0:08:36.560,0:08:39.919
-to where we are at
-
-0:08:41.120,0:08:44.640
-now we're we're at the point where we
-
-0:08:42.959,0:08:45.760
-have a file on the file system so now we
-
-0:08:44.640,0:08:48.959
-need
-
-0:08:45.760,0:08:53.600
-um now we need to build it and to
-
-0:08:48.959,0:08:57.040
-run it so let's follow the same
-
-0:08:53.600,0:08:58.720
-philosophy where let's document
-
-0:08:57.040,0:09:00.160
-these operations that we're going to
-
-0:08:58.720,0:09:03.920
-perform
-
-0:09:00.160,0:09:03.920
-so I'm dropping in a
-
-0:09:04.560,0:09:11.200
-a build instruction section and a run
-
-0:09:07.839,0:09:11.200
-instruction section
-
-0:09:13.360,0:09:17.839
-so as you can see here we have a little
-
-0:09:15.279,0:09:20.000
-a bash source block
-
-0:09:17.839,0:09:22.000
-and another batch source block this one
-
-0:09:20.000,0:09:25.440
-compiles the go build command is what
-
-0:09:22.000,0:09:26.880
-compiles a file and then
-
-0:09:25.440,0:09:29.519
-the file that gets generated should be
-
-0:09:26.880,0:09:29.519
-called demo
-
-0:09:30.080,0:09:34.000
-and uh so we just run it here so if if I
-
-0:09:32.959,0:09:37.839
-type control c
-
-0:09:34.000,0:09:40.640
-control c we get an empty results block
-
-0:09:37.839,0:09:41.360
-when you compile things no news is good
-
-0:09:40.640,0:09:44.399
-news
-
-0:09:41.360,0:09:46.560
-so it means there's no errors so
-
-0:09:44.399,0:09:48.000
-presumably we've created an executable
-
-0:09:46.560,0:09:51.440
-that's called demo
-
-0:09:48.000,0:09:54.560
-so let's uh
-
-0:09:51.440,0:09:57.519
-let's look again at the file system and
-
-0:09:54.560,0:09:57.519
-regenerate
-
-0:10:02.480,0:10:07.200
-yep and what we have here is a demo
-
-0:10:05.760,0:10:07.760
-executable which is exactly what we
-
-0:10:07.200,0:10:12.079
-wanted
-
-0:10:07.760,0:10:14.160
-so let's go back
-
-0:10:12.079,0:10:16.079
-so now we should be able to run it so
-
-0:10:14.160,0:10:20.320
-ctrl c ctrl c
-
-0:10:16.079,0:10:20.320
-and we get hello world as a result
-
-0:10:20.399,0:10:26.560
-which was exactly what we were expecting
-
-0:10:23.440,0:10:30.240
-so that's already pretty cool
-
-0:10:26.560,0:10:30.240
-you can you can do that much
-
-0:10:30.839,0:10:34.560
-um but
-
-0:10:33.040,0:10:37.839
-that's really just kind of the tip of
-
-0:10:34.560,0:10:41.040
-the iceberg to uh to really
-
-0:10:37.839,0:10:43.440
-kind of um
-
-0:10:41.040,0:10:46.160
-use the more impressive features of
-
-0:10:43.440,0:10:49.519
-literate programming we need to uh
-
-0:10:46.160,0:10:49.519
-we need to do a little bit more
-
-0:10:49.920,0:10:55.519
-so or at least
-
-0:10:53.200,0:10:56.480
-at least really to get the full benefit
-
-0:10:55.519,0:10:59.120
-of it then
-
-0:10:56.480,0:10:59.120
-we need to do
-
-0:10:59.600,0:11:06.320
-add some sections that will cause uh
-
-0:11:02.959,0:11:06.720
-Emacs to have to to tangle or assemble
-
-0:11:06.320,0:11:09.760
-this
-
-0:11:06.720,0:11:13.120
-this file from different pieces so
-
-0:11:09.760,0:11:16.720
-imagine that we wanted to take this file
-
-0:11:13.120,0:11:19.120
-and maybe kind of templatize it
-
-0:11:16.720,0:11:21.279
-so using literature programming syntax
-
-0:11:19.120,0:11:24.399
-this angle bracket syntax
-
-0:11:21.279,0:11:29.360
-let's say that we want to create an in
-
-0:11:24.399,0:11:32.399
-imports section
-
-0:11:29.360,0:11:35.040
-in a functions section
-
-0:11:32.399,0:11:36.240
-and then maybe just a main section and
-
-0:11:35.040,0:11:37.920
-we'll get rid of this
-
-0:11:36.240,0:11:39.760
-so now you see we've created something
-
-0:11:37.920,0:11:42.000
-that looks a little bit like a
-
-0:11:39.760,0:11:42.880
-like a template or a scaffolding or
-
-0:11:42.000,0:11:46.000
-outline
-
-0:11:42.880,0:11:48.399
-for what what our file is going to be it
-
-0:11:46.000,0:11:50.800
-looks a little bit like pseudocode
-
-0:11:48.399,0:11:52.399
-and what we're going to have literate
-
-0:11:50.800,0:11:54.800
-programming do
-
-0:11:52.399,0:11:56.639
-is dynamically insert those things into
-
-0:11:54.800,0:12:00.079
-those slots
-
-0:11:56.639,0:12:03.200
-so the first thing we need to do
-
-0:12:00.079,0:12:08.079
-is so let's create a section
-
-0:12:03.200,0:12:09.519
-maybe called say hello so we want
-
-0:12:08.079,0:12:12.720
-we want to add some functionality that
-
-0:12:09.519,0:12:15.680
-makes our program say hello
-
-0:12:12.720,0:12:17.600
-so using a different snippet that I have
-
-0:12:15.680,0:12:20.800
-for creating something
-
-0:12:17.600,0:12:24.079
-that I call like a literate section
-
-0:12:20.800,0:12:26.000
-um basically we create a
-
-0:12:24.079,0:12:27.839
-another source block that's almost the
-
-0:12:26.000,0:12:31.040
-same as the one for the file but it's
-
-0:12:27.839,0:12:31.680
-it just has a few differences so say we
-
-0:12:31.040,0:12:34.160
-want to
-
-0:12:31.680,0:12:36.639
-drop code into the import section and we
-
-0:12:34.160,0:12:39.120
-want it to be in go
-
-0:12:36.639,0:12:40.720
-here we use the same noed no web no
-
-0:12:39.120,0:12:43.200
-export syntax
-
-0:12:40.720,0:12:44.560
-but then we've added this no web refs
-
-0:12:43.200,0:12:48.240
-imports
-
-0:12:44.560,0:12:51.120
-and this ties that slot
-
-0:12:48.240,0:12:53.760
-basically to this reference it tells
-
-0:12:51.120,0:12:56.880
-Emacs that when you tangle
-
-0:12:53.760,0:12:58.240
-we want to stick whatever's in here in
-
-0:12:56.880,0:13:02.079
-that spot
-
-0:12:58.240,0:13:03.279
-so you skip the tangle file name section
-
-0:13:02.079,0:13:04.240
-because you're not actually creating a
-
-0:13:03.279,0:13:06.160
-file name you're
-
-0:13:04.240,0:13:07.680
-you're putting information into an
-
-0:13:06.160,0:13:10.720
-existing file
-
-0:13:07.680,0:13:13.680
-so here we would just add the fmt
-
-0:13:10.720,0:13:13.680
-for the imports
-
-0:13:14.399,0:13:22.240
-so let's add another section for uh
-
-0:13:18.839,0:13:25.519
-functions and let's create a
-
-0:13:22.240,0:13:30.240
-let's just create a function called
-
-0:13:25.519,0:13:32.839
-say hello that
-
-0:13:30.240,0:13:34.000
-doesn't have any arguments no return
-
-0:13:32.839,0:13:35.760
-types
-
-0:13:34.000,0:13:37.440
-all it does is kind of pretty much the
-
-0:13:35.760,0:13:39.199
-same thing as we did before
-
-0:13:37.440,0:13:41.360
-just print something but let's just say
-
-0:13:39.199,0:13:45.760
-hello
-
-0:13:41.360,0:13:49.519
-Emacs comp this time
-
-0:13:45.760,0:13:51.040
-okay so now we have a function and now
-
-0:13:49.519,0:13:52.720
-the function won't do anything unless we
-
-0:13:51.040,0:13:56.000
-invoke it so let's do
-
-0:13:52.720,0:13:59.920
-one last literate section
-
-0:13:56.000,0:14:03.519
-called main make that go
-
-0:13:59.920,0:14:06.399
-source block and then let's
-
-0:14:03.519,0:14:06.399
-just invoke
-
-0:14:06.560,0:14:13.360
-that that function
-
-0:14:10.320,0:14:15.600
-so now you can see that we've got
-
-0:14:13.360,0:14:17.199
-our scaffolding scaffolding kind of
-
-0:14:15.600,0:14:20.079
-outline and then we have
-
-0:14:17.199,0:14:21.360
-the sections that we want to get tangled
-
-0:14:20.079,0:14:25.440
-or inserted
-
-0:14:21.360,0:14:27.199
-so I I've kind of used this syntax
-
-0:14:25.440,0:14:28.560
-it's it's kind of borrowed from
-
-0:14:27.199,0:14:30.320
-literature programming a little bit with
-
-0:14:28.560,0:14:32.480
-a plus equals so really it's just saying
-
-0:14:30.320,0:14:35.760
-that I want to append
-
-0:14:32.480,0:14:37.600
-this item into the import section so
-
-0:14:35.760,0:14:39.839
-it's really just to make a little bit
-
-0:14:37.600,0:14:41.519
-more clear what's going on
-
-0:14:39.839,0:14:43.519
-when you generate documentation you
-
-0:14:41.519,0:14:46.160
-won't see these
-
-0:14:43.519,0:14:49.360
-these these particular property
-
-0:14:46.160,0:14:51.440
-annotations and so you won't know
-
-0:14:49.360,0:14:53.839
-immediately that this section goes in
-
-0:14:51.440,0:14:55.440
-the imports area and so I usually put
-
-0:14:53.839,0:14:57.760
-a little bit of documentation on top
-
-0:14:55.440,0:15:01.120
-there so that it's easy to see
-
-0:14:57.760,0:15:03.040
-and you would probably if this was very
-
-0:15:01.120,0:15:06.399
-complicated you'd put some
-
-0:15:03.040,0:15:07.360
-documentation above to explain what you
-
-0:15:06.399,0:15:10.320
-were doing
-
-0:15:07.360,0:15:10.320
-maybe right here
-
-0:15:11.519,0:15:15.040
-you could you could picture yourself
-
-0:15:13.279,0:15:17.440
-maybe explaining
-
-0:15:15.040,0:15:18.079
-a complicated algorithm or something up
-
-0:15:17.440,0:15:21.120
-here
-
-0:15:18.079,0:15:22.959
-and having a nice way to document it
-
-0:15:21.120,0:15:25.600
-so now that we've got that here in the
-
-0:15:22.959,0:15:27.040
-documentation we need to figure out
-
-0:15:25.600,0:15:29.920
-we need to make sure that it's going to
-
-0:15:27.040,0:15:33.519
-tangle properly so your best friend
-
-0:15:29.920,0:15:35.680
-at this point is is uh
-
-0:15:33.519,0:15:38.240
-is a keyboard shortcut that lets you
-
-0:15:35.680,0:15:38.959
-preview the tangled operation so if you
-
-0:15:38.240,0:15:42.560
-say control
-
-0:15:38.959,0:15:45.120
-c control v control v
-
-0:15:42.560,0:15:46.480
-it will create a new buffer with the
-
-0:15:45.120,0:15:49.360
-tangled
-
-0:15:46.480,0:15:50.639
-contents and so you can see here that
-
-0:15:49.360,0:15:53.199
-the fmt
-
-0:15:50.639,0:15:54.720
-import went to the right place that
-
-0:15:53.199,0:15:56.160
-function went to the right place the
-
-0:15:54.720,0:15:58.480
-function invocation went to the right
-
-0:15:56.160,0:16:01.279
-place and so we're feeling good
-
-0:15:58.480,0:16:02.800
-you can nest these things many layers
-
-0:16:01.279,0:16:04.800
-deep
-
-0:16:02.800,0:16:07.199
-actually so like if you came into the
-
-0:16:04.800,0:16:10.160
-say hello function you could add
-
-0:16:07.199,0:16:10.160
-more sections
-
-0:16:10.560,0:16:13.759
-you know and it gets and it'll go
-
-0:16:12.160,0:16:15.680
-through and it'll
-
-0:16:13.759,0:16:16.959
-keep track of all that and tangle it for
-
-0:16:15.680,0:16:18.320
-you so you really get a lot of freedom
-
-0:16:16.959,0:16:19.600
-and flexibility for how you want to
-
-0:16:18.320,0:16:22.320
-document things
-
-0:16:19.600,0:16:25.839
-by doing this so now that we've
-
-0:16:22.320,0:16:28.639
-previewed it and we feel good about it
-
-0:16:25.839,0:16:31.440
-we need to uh we need to tangle so we
-
-0:16:28.639,0:16:34.480
-get the file on the file system
-
-0:16:31.440,0:16:37.199
-so ctrl c ctrl c and
-
-0:16:34.480,0:16:37.920
-get just main.go comes back again
-
-0:16:37.199,0:16:40.959
-control c
-
-0:16:37.920,0:16:43.839
-control c and no errors come back
-
-0:16:40.959,0:16:45.600
-and then if we did this right when we
-
-0:16:43.839,0:16:47.199
-when we run this we should get hello
-
-0:16:45.600,0:16:51.199
-Emacs comp so ctrl c
-
-0:16:47.199,0:16:54.800
-ctrl c hello Emacs comp
-
-0:16:51.199,0:16:57.120
-so I uh
-
-0:16:54.800,0:16:58.240
-I think that's pretty pretty cool
-
-0:16:57.120,0:17:00.160
-actually so we've got
-
-0:16:58.240,0:17:02.399
-kind of the breadcrumbs of the process
-
-0:17:00.160,0:17:05.520
-we've gone through to get to this point
-
-0:17:02.399,0:17:08.000
-this initial this initial
-
-0:17:05.520,0:17:09.919
-document that has some tangling in it we
-
-0:17:08.000,0:17:12.799
-have documentation for how to tangle
-
-0:17:09.919,0:17:14.079
-how to build how to run it's we've
-
-0:17:12.799,0:17:17.760
-really built a nice
-
-0:17:14.079,0:17:20.160
-foundation for
-
-0:17:17.760,0:17:21.439
-moving forward on our project and a nice
-
-0:17:20.160,0:17:23.280
-way of breaking things out and
-
-0:17:21.439,0:17:27.120
-documenting further
-
-0:17:23.280,0:17:30.559
-the last piece that we need to
-
-0:17:27.120,0:17:34.799
-take care of is the weave that I
-
-0:17:30.559,0:17:38.640
-that's I showed you in the diagram above
-
-0:17:34.799,0:17:41.760
-so one more time we'll drop in
-
-0:17:38.640,0:17:42.400
-some documentation so this time on how
-
-0:17:41.760,0:17:44.400
-to weave
-
-0:17:42.400,0:17:47.520
-so it's really just an export function
-
-0:17:44.400,0:17:49.280
-it's not there's not a separate weave
-
-0:17:47.520,0:17:50.640
-command going on here we're just going
-
-0:17:49.280,0:17:52.799
-to export
-
-0:17:50.640,0:17:55.200
-what we've got here into a markdown
-
-0:17:52.799,0:17:57.440
-format so we're using org
-
-0:17:55.200,0:17:58.880
-gfm export to markdown which is the
-
-0:17:57.440,0:18:02.160
-github style
-
-0:17:58.880,0:18:05.440
-markdown you can use the other just
-
-0:18:02.160,0:18:10.320
-more standard type as well so hit ctrl c
-
-0:18:05.440,0:18:15.280
-ctrl c now you see we've got a readme
-
-0:18:10.320,0:18:17.440
-file and if you look
-
-0:18:15.280,0:18:19.120
-in the file system we've got that right
-
-0:18:17.440,0:18:23.120
-there and so
-
-0:18:19.120,0:18:29.840
-if you go to something like ghostwriter
-
-0:18:23.120,0:18:29.840
-and open that file
-
-0:18:31.679,0:18:35.520
-now you can see that it's generated some
-
-0:18:34.559,0:18:38.320
-documentation
-
-0:18:35.520,0:18:39.679
-it puts a index at top at the top I
-
-0:18:38.320,0:18:42.000
-usually just
-
-0:18:39.679,0:18:43.679
-I usually turn that off it's easy to do
-
-0:18:42.000,0:18:44.559
-that by putting a property at the top of
-
-0:18:43.679,0:18:46.880
-your
-
-0:18:44.559,0:18:48.559
-your org file but some people like to
-
-0:18:46.880,0:18:50.799
-have an index
-
-0:18:48.559,0:18:52.160
-but here you can see that it's generated
-
-0:18:50.799,0:18:55.200
-pretty nicely and
-
-0:18:52.160,0:18:56.880
-formatted snippets well
-
-0:18:55.200,0:18:58.240
-put the diagram in there and then it's
-
-0:18:56.880,0:19:01.039
-preserved
-
-0:18:58.240,0:19:02.799
-it's preserved this literate programming
-
-0:19:01.039,0:19:04.960
-syntax
-
-0:19:02.799,0:19:06.480
-which is important because that's how we
-
-0:19:04.960,0:19:07.200
-want to view the documentation that's
-
-0:19:06.480,0:19:10.559
-what the no
-
-0:19:07.200,0:19:13.360
-exports um
-
-0:19:10.559,0:19:14.000
-property was was trying to maintain so
-
-0:19:13.360,0:19:16.080
-that
-
-0:19:14.000,0:19:18.400
-no exports means when you export do not
-
-0:19:16.080,0:19:20.559
-try to tangle so that's
-
-0:19:18.400,0:19:22.240
-hopefully that makes more sense now but
-
-0:19:20.559,0:19:26.080
-now you can see all the documentation
-
-0:19:22.240,0:19:29.919
-and I think it demonstrates a
-
-0:19:26.080,0:19:33.520
-pretty useful feature that's inside of
-
-0:19:29.919,0:19:35.039
-Emacs and and hopefully
-
-0:19:33.520,0:19:39.840
-hopefully you'll have as much fun using
-
-0:19:35.039,0:19:39.840
-that as I have
-
-0:19:39.919,0:19:43.600
-so thanks
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--15-moving-from-jekyll-to-orgmode-an-experience-report--adolfo-villafiorita-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--15-moving-from-jekyll-to-orgmode-an-experience-report--adolfo-villafiorita-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 02c40424..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--15-moving-from-jekyll-to-orgmode-an-experience-report--adolfo-villafiorita-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1182 +0,0 @@
-0:00:00.080,0:00:06.960
-okay okay excellent sorry okay so
-
-0:00:03.120,0:00:10.080
-uh hello everyone um and um
-
-0:00:06.960,0:00:12.400
-uh nice meeting you and let me
-
-0:00:10.080,0:00:13.920
-thank the the organizer for all the
-
-0:00:12.400,0:00:15.200
-organization and all the work they are
-
-0:00:13.920,0:00:18.400
-doing to support us
-
-0:00:15.200,0:00:19.920
-my name is adolfo villaferita
-
-0:00:18.400,0:00:21.920
-I'm teaching at the university of
-
-0:00:19.920,0:00:24.480
-trenton I'm also
-
-0:00:21.920,0:00:26.240
-work will shortly be working at
-
-0:00:24.480,0:00:29.359
-shared.tech which is a comp
-
-0:00:26.240,0:00:30.530
-a non-profit organization developing an
-
-0:00:29.359,0:00:32.399
-applications to
-
-0:00:30.530,0:00:35.680
-[Music]
-
-0:00:32.399,0:00:38.960
-recover surplus food but the the
-
-0:00:35.680,0:00:40.079
-reason of the talk today and the reason
-
-0:00:38.960,0:00:42.719
-I'm here today
-
-0:00:40.079,0:00:44.000
-is to talk about my experience in moving
-
-0:00:42.719,0:00:47.200
-from jekyll uh
-
-0:00:44.000,0:00:49.200
-static website generator to org mode and
-
-0:00:47.200,0:00:52.079
-the reason
-
-0:00:49.200,0:00:53.039
-I move to work mode is to have better
-
-0:00:52.079,0:00:56.800
-support for
-
-0:00:53.039,0:00:58.399
-literary programming on the websites
-
-0:00:56.800,0:01:00.480
-at the university of trento where we
-
-0:00:58.399,0:01:04.720
-make available the content for the
-
-0:01:00.480,0:01:08.000
-the students okay so
-
-0:01:04.720,0:01:10.080
-first of all what is a static website
-
-0:01:08.000,0:01:11.360
-generator it is basically a tool which
-
-0:01:10.080,0:01:15.360
-allows you to
-
-0:01:11.360,0:01:17.439
-generate html files out of text files
-
-0:01:15.360,0:01:19.280
-containing basically two types of
-
-0:01:17.439,0:01:23.119
-information metadata
-
-0:01:19.280,0:01:26.159
-and content metadata is let's say a
-
-0:01:23.119,0:01:28.560
-set of key pairs describing the the
-
-0:01:26.159,0:01:30.000
-content of the file such as the title
-
-0:01:28.560,0:01:31.759
-author
-
-0:01:30.000,0:01:34.560
-tags and so on and so forth and the
-
-0:01:31.759,0:01:37.040
-content is what you actually want to to
-
-0:01:34.560,0:01:38.880
-get published on the on the internet in
-
-0:01:37.040,0:01:41.439
-the html file
-
-0:01:38.880,0:01:44.240
-and usually the content is written in
-
-0:01:41.439,0:01:44.240
-some kind of
-
-0:01:44.560,0:01:49.759
-markup language such as markdown or
-
-0:01:47.520,0:01:53.200
-possibly
-
-0:01:49.759,0:01:55.759
-org mode and well jackie is a very
-
-0:01:53.200,0:01:58.719
-popular website uh
-
-0:01:55.759,0:01:59.840
-a static website generator it is written
-
-0:01:58.719,0:02:03.280
-in a ruby
-
-0:01:59.840,0:02:06.840
-and what it does it it it systematically
-
-0:02:03.280,0:02:09.440
-let's say transforms all the input files
-
-0:02:06.840,0:02:11.599
-by making the content into
-
-0:02:09.440,0:02:14.000
-html and systematically applying a
-
-0:02:11.599,0:02:17.120
-template in order to generate the
-
-0:02:14.000,0:02:19.840
-html files which you can then deploy
-
-0:02:17.120,0:02:22.160
-on your server of choice to make them
-
-0:02:19.840,0:02:26.160
-available on the on the internet
-
-0:02:22.160,0:02:28.480
-and one of the features uh most
-
-0:02:26.160,0:02:30.239
-well I would say all static website
-
-0:02:28.480,0:02:32.560
-generators have
-
-0:02:30.239,0:02:34.879
-is a debt of being able to let's say
-
-0:02:32.560,0:02:38.400
-collect the metadata information
-
-0:02:34.879,0:02:39.440
-uh of the files being part of your of
-
-0:02:38.400,0:02:45.280
-your project
-
-0:02:39.440,0:02:47.840
-and the reason they do that is because
-
-0:02:45.280,0:02:49.280
-you sometimes want to generate pages
-
-0:02:47.840,0:02:53.200
-based on the content
-
-0:02:49.280,0:02:56.239
-of your um of your projects
-
-0:02:53.200,0:02:59.040
-such as for instance the the list of
-
-0:02:56.239,0:03:00.400
-posts you have recently published or
-
-0:02:59.040,0:03:03.840
-maybe the list of tags
-
-0:03:00.400,0:03:07.280
-uh you uh have defined for your post and
-
-0:03:03.840,0:03:09.760
-so on and so forth so so
-
-0:03:07.280,0:03:12.400
-dracula gives the possibility of
-
-0:03:09.760,0:03:15.760
-generating this kind of dynamic
-
-0:03:12.400,0:03:18.800
-content by using liquid which is a
-
-0:03:15.760,0:03:21.840
-templating language which
-
-0:03:18.800,0:03:24.879
-looks like these
-
-0:03:21.840,0:03:26.879
-so basically you you have all the
-
-0:03:24.879,0:03:29.120
-constructs you can
-
-0:03:26.879,0:03:29.920
-expect in a programming language this
-
-0:03:29.120,0:03:33.360
-for instance
-
-0:03:29.920,0:03:37.440
-is a fourth cycle which
-
-0:03:33.360,0:03:39.599
-iterates over all the post or the
-
-0:03:37.440,0:03:41.040
-files in a specific directory of the
-
-0:03:39.599,0:03:45.040
-jacket project
-
-0:03:41.040,0:03:48.400
-and for each post it takes the the title
-
-0:03:45.040,0:03:51.840
-and the url and generates a link
-
-0:03:48.400,0:03:55.200
-okay so dracule is
-
-0:03:51.840,0:03:57.760
-nice and sweet but over the years
-
-0:03:55.200,0:03:59.519
-I started using more and more
-
-0:03:57.760,0:04:02.959
-systematically
-
-0:03:59.519,0:04:05.439
-or mode to write all my files and I
-
-0:04:02.959,0:04:07.439
-moved from markdown to word mode I am a
-
-0:04:05.439,0:04:09.680
-long time Emacs user so I've been using
-
-0:04:07.439,0:04:12.799
-imax for 30 years now so
-
-0:04:09.680,0:04:15.280
-or mode is a more recent discovery
-
-0:04:12.799,0:04:16.239
-but it is a very nice uh let's say
-
-0:04:15.280,0:04:19.680
-discovery I
-
-0:04:16.239,0:04:22.320
-I made and the reason I like org mode
-
-0:04:19.680,0:04:23.600
-is because for instance you can write
-
-0:04:22.320,0:04:26.639
-formulas using
-
-0:04:23.600,0:04:30.320
-mac jacks and you can generate diagrams
-
-0:04:26.639,0:04:32.240
-or plots with new plots and
-
-0:04:30.320,0:04:34.080
-also important is the fact that you have
-
-0:04:32.240,0:04:35.919
-the possibility of let's say publishing
-
-0:04:34.080,0:04:39.520
-your documents
-
-0:04:35.919,0:04:40.400
-to multiple ends backhands such as pdf
-
-0:04:39.520,0:04:43.600
-or
-
-0:04:40.400,0:04:47.199
-maybe a review presentations or
-
-0:04:43.600,0:04:50.479
-or html and this is all made possible
-
-0:04:47.199,0:04:52.560
-by bubble which is
-
-0:04:50.479,0:04:54.639
-exactly what we just saw in the the
-
-0:04:52.560,0:04:57.440
-previous talk
-
-0:04:54.639,0:04:59.520
-namely the possibility of executing a
-
-0:04:57.440,0:05:02.560
-snippet of code
-
-0:04:59.520,0:05:06.400
-embedded in in your pages
-
-0:05:02.560,0:05:09.600
-um and our model can also be used
-
-0:05:06.400,0:05:10.720
-within let's say jackie and in fact
-
-0:05:09.600,0:05:15.199
-there is a
-
-0:05:10.720,0:05:18.880
-a nice gem a nice library called jackie
-
-0:05:15.199,0:05:19.680
-org which allows you to use org modifies
-
-0:05:18.880,0:05:22.880
-directly
-
-0:05:19.680,0:05:26.560
-into jekyll but when you start using
-
-0:05:22.880,0:05:30.560
-org mode when I started using
-
-0:05:26.560,0:05:34.240
-mode I realized I could move
-
-0:05:30.560,0:05:36.840
-all my workflow to or my publishing
-
-0:05:34.240,0:05:39.520
-workflow to image
-
-0:05:36.840,0:05:41.600
-and and and in fact
-
-0:05:39.520,0:05:42.880
-org mode is also static website
-
-0:05:41.600,0:05:46.240
-generator because
-
-0:05:42.880,0:05:50.880
-it has got the possibility of publishing
-
-0:05:46.240,0:05:53.840
-um projects made of org mode files
-
-0:05:50.880,0:05:55.759
-and one of the nice things about let's
-
-0:05:53.840,0:05:56.479
-say that the publishing features of work
-
-0:05:55.759,0:05:58.880
-mode
-
-0:05:56.479,0:05:59.840
-is that it allows you to define in the
-
-0:05:58.880,0:06:03.199
-org publish
-
-0:05:59.840,0:06:06.479
-project a list of the components
-
-0:06:03.199,0:06:07.520
-which are part of your project and in a
-
-0:06:06.479,0:06:10.479
-sense it is
-
-0:06:07.520,0:06:12.400
-also more flexible than jackie lee's
-
-0:06:10.479,0:06:12.880
-because it also allows you for instance
-
-0:06:12.400,0:06:15.120
-to
-
-0:06:12.880,0:06:17.440
-let's say publish a single file rather
-
-0:06:15.120,0:06:20.080
-than having to recompile everything
-
-0:06:17.440,0:06:23.919
-every time you want to publish your
-
-0:06:20.080,0:06:25.840
-your project to your website however
-
-0:06:23.919,0:06:27.120
-there are some short comments I would
-
-0:06:25.840,0:06:29.520
-say or some some
-
-0:06:27.120,0:06:30.400
-areas of improvement improvement let me
-
-0:06:29.520,0:06:32.720
-say
-
-0:06:30.400,0:06:33.600
-the first is that let's say support for
-
-0:06:32.720,0:06:36.639
-templating
-
-0:06:33.600,0:06:39.280
-is not so obvious as it is let's say
-
-0:06:36.639,0:06:40.560
-in jackie or even though there are some
-
-0:06:39.280,0:06:44.560
-let's say
-
-0:06:40.560,0:06:46.160
-nice extensions such as argo t html
-
-0:06:44.560,0:06:48.400
-for instance which allows you to use
-
-0:06:46.160,0:06:51.840
-templates and
-
-0:06:48.400,0:06:54.080
-more important to me was the fact that
-
-0:06:51.840,0:06:55.520
-apparently there is little support for
-
-0:06:54.080,0:06:58.240
-the creation of dynamic
-
-0:06:55.520,0:06:59.360
-content so I was very curious and very
-
-0:06:58.240,0:07:02.800
-keen to use
-
-0:06:59.360,0:07:05.440
-or mode for let's say publishing my blog
-
-0:07:02.800,0:07:08.720
-and my the the courses at the university
-
-0:07:05.440,0:07:11.440
-but then uh I had to find a way
-
-0:07:08.720,0:07:13.599
-to let's say being able to publish these
-
-0:07:11.440,0:07:16.000
-dynamic pages finding some kind of
-
-0:07:13.599,0:07:16.720
-replacement so to speak for uh the
-
-0:07:16.000,0:07:19.759
-liquid
-
-0:07:16.720,0:07:20.160
-the liquid engine and and the solution
-
-0:07:19.759,0:07:24.160
-was
-
-0:07:20.160,0:07:27.280
-that at hand actually because
-
-0:07:24.160,0:07:30.800
-basically I realized I could use bubble
-
-0:07:27.280,0:07:32.720
-for exactly this purpose so rather than
-
-0:07:30.800,0:07:35.759
-using bubble for generating
-
-0:07:32.720,0:07:37.919
-plots or let's say my other computation
-
-0:07:35.759,0:07:41.039
-or whatever I was using them for
-
-0:07:37.919,0:07:42.080
-I realized they could use bubble to
-
-0:07:41.039,0:07:45.120
-generate
-
-0:07:42.080,0:07:48.960
-html which could be let's say
-
-0:07:45.120,0:07:52.720
-uh then published uh uh
-
-0:07:48.960,0:07:53.680
-in the project so uh so all I needed to
-
-0:07:52.720,0:07:56.240
-do then
-
-0:07:53.680,0:07:58.319
-was defining some kind of functions some
-
-0:07:56.240,0:08:01.840
-kind of code in order to read
-
-0:07:58.319,0:08:02.400
-all the org mode uh the metadata of all
-
-0:08:01.840,0:08:05.759
-the
-
-0:08:02.400,0:08:09.680
-opmod files of my web project so that
-
-0:08:05.759,0:08:13.280
-I could let's say then publish uh
-
-0:08:09.680,0:08:17.440
-generate the dynamic content and
-
-0:08:13.280,0:08:17.440
-this is a snippet taken from
-
-0:08:18.080,0:08:24.800
-one of my html projects
-
-0:08:21.759,0:08:27.599
-which basically shows the way in which
-
-0:08:24.800,0:08:29.360
-I generate the um the list of posts on
-
-0:08:27.599,0:08:32.560
-my on my page it is uh
-
-0:08:29.360,0:08:34.320
-exactly how the the liquid that we saw
-
-0:08:32.560,0:08:35.680
-in a couple of a couple of slides
-
-0:08:34.320,0:08:39.200
-earlier that looks like
-
-0:08:35.680,0:08:42.320
-uh in inner mode
-
-0:08:39.200,0:08:46.720
-and basically what I'm doing I'm using I
-
-0:08:42.320,0:08:49.680
-wrote a ruby script which
-
-0:08:46.720,0:08:51.040
-reads all the metadata so this uh
-
-0:08:49.680,0:08:53.440
-highlighted code
-
-0:08:51.040,0:08:54.240
-basically loads the script which is
-
-0:08:53.440,0:08:56.800
-stored
-
-0:08:54.240,0:08:58.320
-externally and then it collects all the
-
-0:08:56.800,0:09:00.880
-metadata from the
-
-0:08:58.320,0:09:02.240
-org mode files in the current uh in the
-
-0:09:00.880,0:09:04.800
-current directory
-
-0:09:02.240,0:09:06.480
-and then the the following the the code
-
-0:09:04.800,0:09:09.839
-you can see here
-
-0:09:06.480,0:09:12.959
-basically iterate over all the
-
-0:09:09.839,0:09:16.399
-past red the at the previous step
-
-0:09:12.959,0:09:19.519
-and it generates um
-
-0:09:16.399,0:09:22.959
-a list with the title and uh
-
-0:09:19.519,0:09:27.440
-and the urls and so basically
-
-0:09:22.959,0:09:30.240
-replicating what jackie does so
-
-0:09:27.440,0:09:32.399
-okay so there are some some other things
-
-0:09:30.240,0:09:33.200
-I have to to deal with in order to let's
-
-0:09:32.399,0:09:36.480
-say
-
-0:09:33.200,0:09:39.200
-accommodate my workflow and but that was
-
-0:09:36.480,0:09:40.240
-relatively easy in the sense that one of
-
-0:09:39.200,0:09:43.279
-the
-
-0:09:40.240,0:09:45.360
-uh problem one of the issue I had to
-
-0:09:43.279,0:09:48.480
-solve was that of let's say having
-
-0:09:45.360,0:09:51.040
-a common navigation on all my
-
-0:09:48.480,0:09:51.920
-pages uh but that was easily solved
-
-0:09:51.040,0:09:54.959
-using
-
-0:09:51.920,0:09:56.000
-uh the include feature so I basically
-
-0:09:54.959,0:09:57.839
-made available
-
-0:09:56.000,0:10:00.560
-and include with all the navigation
-
-0:09:57.839,0:10:01.839
-which is uh embedded in all the pages of
-
-0:10:00.560,0:10:04.959
-my websites
-
-0:10:01.839,0:10:06.160
-uh through the could include and another
-
-0:10:04.959,0:10:08.560
-nice feature which
-
-0:10:06.160,0:10:09.760
-jackie las is the possibility of
-
-0:10:08.560,0:10:12.800
-previewing
-
-0:10:09.760,0:10:13.200
-a website before deploying it and but
-
-0:10:12.800,0:10:16.079
-then
-
-0:10:13.200,0:10:17.839
-Emacs also has got a node which allows
-
-0:10:16.079,0:10:21.200
-you to
-
-0:10:17.839,0:10:24.320
-launch a web server and in fact
-
-0:10:21.200,0:10:26.959
-I wrote a quick ack
-
-0:10:24.320,0:10:28.000
-which allows you to which allows to
-
-0:10:26.959,0:10:31.519
-basically
-
-0:10:28.000,0:10:34.720
-invoke a node on a on our
-
-0:10:31.519,0:10:37.920
-mode project and start a local preview
-
-0:10:34.720,0:10:43.680
-and then use rsync
-
-0:10:37.920,0:10:43.680
-in order to deploy the the website
-
-0:10:44.839,0:10:48.720
-um
-
-0:10:46.240,0:10:51.200
-five minutes left okay okay more than
-
-0:10:48.720,0:10:53.200
-enough okay
-
-0:10:51.200,0:10:55.440
-thanks thank you thank you very much I'm
-
-0:10:53.200,0:10:56.480
-nearly done so then I can take some some
-
-0:10:55.440,0:11:00.560
-questions
-
-0:10:56.480,0:11:03.680
-so okay just to give you maybe
-
-0:11:00.560,0:11:06.480
-a slightly more in-depth uh
-
-0:11:03.680,0:11:07.200
-view of what the pages look like so
-
-0:11:06.480,0:11:11.120
-these are
-
-0:11:07.200,0:11:14.720
-one of the pages or the source files
-
-0:11:11.120,0:11:18.480
-of one of the websites it is
-
-0:11:14.720,0:11:20.399
-in literate programming so basically uh
-
-0:11:18.480,0:11:22.640
-you see there is some metadata here I
-
-0:11:20.399,0:11:26.640
-mean this is a regular old mod file
-
-0:11:22.640,0:11:29.920
-and this part here
-
-0:11:26.640,0:11:31.519
-basically defines some common options
-
-0:11:29.920,0:11:35.920
-for publication
-
-0:11:31.519,0:11:41.120
-and these two includes here
-
-0:11:35.920,0:11:44.480
-put some extra html in the head part and
-
-0:11:41.120,0:11:48.079
-the navigation and here as you can see
-
-0:11:44.480,0:11:50.160
-is the code generating the
-
-0:11:48.079,0:11:52.240
-the list in chronological order it is
-
-0:11:50.160,0:11:53.839
-slightly more complex than the example I
-
-0:11:52.240,0:11:56.240
-made in the slide
-
-0:11:53.839,0:11:57.839
-because uh there is some more
-
-0:11:56.240,0:11:59.760
-elaboration to
-
-0:11:57.839,0:12:01.839
-uh to do including putting some
-
-0:11:59.760,0:12:05.120
-javascript to identify
-
-0:12:01.839,0:12:08.160
-according to let's say the the tags
-
-0:12:05.120,0:12:11.200
-so to go back to the to the presentation
-
-0:12:08.160,0:12:13.600
-um so the okay so
-
-0:12:11.200,0:12:14.560
-I I managed this migration uh a few
-
-0:12:13.600,0:12:17.680
-months ago
-
-0:12:14.560,0:12:20.399
-and then uh all my workflow is within
-
-0:12:17.680,0:12:23.079
-with old mode and within imax and um
-
-0:12:20.399,0:12:24.240
-I'm very happy with it because it's
-
-0:12:23.079,0:12:26.800
-simplified
-
-0:12:24.240,0:12:28.480
-uh quite a bit let's say my public
-
-0:12:26.800,0:12:31.839
-publication process
-
-0:12:28.480,0:12:34.240
-and uh one of the advantages so another
-
-0:12:31.839,0:12:36.959
-advantage so the first advantage is that
-
-0:12:34.240,0:12:38.160
-everything is in ork mode and dmax
-
-0:12:36.959,0:12:41.680
-second advantage
-
-0:12:38.160,0:12:44.880
-is that everything is based on the
-
-0:12:41.680,0:12:47.760
-standard machinery provided by orb mode
-
-0:12:44.880,0:12:50.079
-so in a sense it is kind of let's say
-
-0:12:47.760,0:12:53.040
-more robust with respect to
-
-0:12:50.079,0:12:54.320
-dependencies and possible errors and so
-
-0:12:53.040,0:12:56.639
-on and so forth
-
-0:12:54.320,0:12:58.240
-and um and the fact that the old mode
-
-0:12:56.639,0:13:00.880
-allows you to publish
-
-0:12:58.240,0:13:03.839
-a single file in a project is is also
-
-0:13:00.880,0:13:07.839
-very interesting because
-
-0:13:03.839,0:13:11.040
-it allows to let's say be more robust to
-
-0:13:07.839,0:13:14.079
-problems you might introduce when
-
-0:13:11.040,0:13:14.959
-you're changing when I'm changing the
-
-0:13:14.079,0:13:16.880
-setup
-
-0:13:14.959,0:13:18.320
-and another interesting thing which I
-
-0:13:16.880,0:13:21.519
-realized that I
-
-0:13:18.320,0:13:23.600
-uh I could have is that
-
-0:13:21.519,0:13:24.880
-in a sense the specification of the
-
-0:13:23.600,0:13:27.360
-website
-
-0:13:24.880,0:13:28.480
-is uh can be embedded in the website
-
-0:13:27.360,0:13:30.800
-itself
-
-0:13:28.480,0:13:31.839
-so in a sense this is some kind of let's
-
-0:13:30.800,0:13:35.120
-say self
-
-0:13:31.839,0:13:37.200
-the command it's a real set documenting
-
-0:13:35.120,0:13:38.560
-uh what I'm actually doing so for
-
-0:13:37.200,0:13:42.800
-instance
-
-0:13:38.560,0:13:42.800
-uh here on my
-
-0:13:43.199,0:13:48.240
-website you can see let's say the
-
-0:13:46.399,0:13:51.519
-specification of the
-
-0:13:48.240,0:13:52.320
-of the of the project which is uh loaded
-
-0:13:51.519,0:13:55.519
-from my
-
-0:13:52.320,0:13:56.320
-initialization file but then it is also
-
-0:13:55.519,0:13:59.440
-published
-
-0:13:56.320,0:14:01.360
-together with my home page and it leaves
-
-0:13:59.440,0:14:05.360
-with the repository where
-
-0:14:01.360,0:14:08.079
-I keep all the sources of my website
-
-0:14:05.360,0:14:09.839
-which is kind of nice because it
-
-0:14:08.079,0:14:14.079
-basically isolates
-
-0:14:09.839,0:14:16.880
-everything in a single in a single place
-
-0:14:14.079,0:14:18.000
-okay so there are some examples I'm
-
-0:14:16.880,0:14:20.320
-showing them
-
-0:14:18.000,0:14:21.760
-more because of the let's say source
-
-0:14:20.320,0:14:25.519
-code which
-
-0:14:21.760,0:14:26.160
-you can grab from the git repositories
-
-0:14:25.519,0:14:28.399
-if you are
-
-0:14:26.160,0:14:30.079
-interested of course I'm also available
-
-0:14:28.399,0:14:32.959
-to provide some
-
-0:14:30.079,0:14:34.480
-support and help if you are interested
-
-0:14:32.959,0:14:37.760
-in this kind of stuff
-
-0:14:34.480,0:14:38.560
-the the next step for me will be that of
-
-0:14:37.760,0:14:41.600
-let's say trying
-
-0:14:38.560,0:14:45.199
-making this kind of machinery available
-
-0:14:41.600,0:14:47.120
-for more general use at the moment
-
-0:14:45.199,0:14:48.800
-if you are interested in trying out my
-
-0:14:47.120,0:14:49.839
-suggestion is let's say grabbing the
-
-0:14:48.800,0:14:52.959
-sources
-
-0:14:49.839,0:14:56.000
-or one of the let's say websites to see
-
-0:14:52.959,0:14:56.720
-what how they look like and maybe try
-
-0:14:56.000,0:15:00.160
-and
-
-0:14:56.720,0:15:02.720
-customize it for your purposes
-
-0:15:00.160,0:15:03.839
-and this is basically the content of my
-
-0:15:02.720,0:15:06.959
-talk so
-
-0:15:03.839,0:15:07.279
-I'm open to two questions and thank you
-
-0:15:06.959,0:15:10.880
-for
-
-0:15:07.279,0:15:12.880
-your attention you are now unmuted uh
-
-0:15:10.880,0:15:14.480
-thank you very much adolfo for your
-
-0:15:12.880,0:15:17.360
-awesome presentation
-
-0:15:14.480,0:15:19.360
-um I think we have time for maybe like
-
-0:15:17.360,0:15:21.279
-one or two questions
-
-0:15:19.360,0:15:22.880
-um and then the rest maybe you could
-
-0:15:21.279,0:15:26.639
-take up um
-
-0:15:22.880,0:15:30.000
-after the stream after sure
-
-0:15:26.639,0:15:31.839
-uh I we should do um would you like me
-
-0:15:30.000,0:15:35.199
-to read you the questions
-
-0:15:31.839,0:15:40.399
-uh yeah probably better because
-
-0:15:35.199,0:15:42.480
-I kind of lost there okay no problem um
-
-0:15:40.399,0:15:45.440
-okay so someone asks do you have any
-
-0:15:42.480,0:15:48.639
-opinion on fern
-
-0:15:45.440,0:15:51.839
-fan I I don't know fans
-
-0:15:48.639,0:15:55.040
-so I'll give it a try and uh and uh
-
-0:15:51.839,0:15:57.839
-and check it out okay
-
-0:15:55.040,0:15:59.680
-thanks and um people are also asking do
-
-0:15:57.839,0:16:01.279
-you discuss this for example in a blog
-
-0:15:59.680,0:16:02.800
-or anywhere else they could find more
-
-0:16:01.279,0:16:05.600
-about it
-
-0:16:02.800,0:16:08.560
-oh yes I'm going to publish the let's
-
-0:16:05.600,0:16:11.120
-say the talk and the content on the
-
-0:16:08.560,0:16:12.320
-on my website and then I'll link it from
-
-0:16:11.120,0:16:14.720
-the max conf
-
-0:16:12.320,0:16:15.680
-conference so that it will be easier for
-
-0:16:14.720,0:16:19.040
-people to
-
-0:16:15.680,0:16:22.880
-to reach it so I will shortly make it
-
-0:16:19.040,0:16:25.440
-available right after the conference
-
-0:16:22.880,0:16:26.160
-wonderful and I think that's all for the
-
-0:16:25.440,0:16:28.560
-questions
-
-0:16:26.160,0:16:29.600
-thank you very much okay thank you very
-
-0:16:28.560,0:16:34.800
-much thank you
-
-0:16:29.600,0:16:34.800
-and cheers bye cheers bye
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--16-org-roam-presentation-demonstration-and-whats-on-the-horizon--leo-vivier-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--16-org-roam-presentation-demonstration-and-whats-on-the-horizon--leo-vivier-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 515970f8..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--16-org-roam-presentation-demonstration-and-whats-on-the-horizon--leo-vivier-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1800 +0,0 @@
-0:00:00.000,0:00:03.919
-I'm hoping to keep this talk in the 15
-
-0:00:02.480,0:00:05.279
-minutes and I'll take five minutes of
-
-0:00:03.919,0:00:07.520
-question at the end
-
-0:00:05.279,0:00:09.200
-so hello again I suppose you're starting
-
-0:00:07.520,0:00:10.719
-to get pretty familiar with me and my
-
-0:00:09.200,0:00:12.480
-start right now so
-
-0:00:10.719,0:00:14.719
-right now we're getting into the nitty
-
-0:00:12.480,0:00:17.039
-gritty we started today
-
-0:00:14.719,0:00:18.480
-I told you about how I'd ventured from
-
-0:00:17.039,0:00:20.800
-being a user
-
-0:00:18.480,0:00:22.080
-to being a maintainer and right now I'm
-
-0:00:20.800,0:00:24.240
-going to get the chance to
-
-0:00:22.080,0:00:25.279
-actually tell you more about the project
-
-0:00:24.240,0:00:28.480
-that I'm maintaining
-
-0:00:25.279,0:00:30.560
-which is called org rome
-
-0:00:28.480,0:00:32.320
-so even if I it would have had a better
-
-0:00:30.560,0:00:33.840
-impact if I'd
-
-0:00:32.320,0:00:35.520
-didn't scroll the page but you know
-
-0:00:33.840,0:00:37.120
-sadly I'm out of tea
-
-0:00:35.520,0:00:39.600
-it's getting late in europe and I'm
-
-0:00:37.120,0:00:43.360
-starting to get tired
-
-0:00:39.600,0:00:46.160
-so what I'm gonna do during this talk
-
-0:00:43.360,0:00:48.079
-is just to do real survey for people who
-
-0:00:46.160,0:00:50.480
-do not know what orgrom is about
-
-0:00:48.079,0:00:52.320
-some of you might might have you know
-
-0:00:50.480,0:00:54.879
-whilst browsing reddit
-
-0:00:52.320,0:00:56.480
-found a topic about orgrom and thought
-
-0:00:54.879,0:00:57.199
-to yourself oh that looks interesting
-
-0:00:56.480,0:00:59.680
-but
-
-0:00:57.199,0:01:01.039
-you know I have my own workflow and I
-
-0:00:59.680,0:01:03.199
-get it don't need to change anything
-
-0:01:01.039,0:01:05.680
-about it you know I'm completely fine
-
-0:01:03.199,0:01:07.520
-using my very very large file or I'm
-
-0:01:05.680,0:01:10.960
-completely fine having my
-
-0:01:07.520,0:01:14.560
-database of notes which is I've been
-
-0:01:10.960,0:01:17.759
-accruing for like 10 20 30 years or so
-
-0:01:14.560,0:01:20.080
-so what I want to do during this talk
-
-0:01:17.759,0:01:20.960
-is both to present to you what orgrom is
-
-0:01:20.080,0:01:23.439
-about
-
-0:01:20.960,0:01:24.000
-if you are in this group of people who
-
-0:01:23.439,0:01:25.600
-do not
-
-0:01:24.000,0:01:27.520
-know what algorithm is about but would
-
-0:01:25.600,0:01:30.560
-like to know more but
-
-0:01:27.520,0:01:33.360
-also for people who have close to no
-
-0:01:30.560,0:01:35.040
-experience with Emacs and org mode and
-
-0:01:33.360,0:01:36.880
-was just found their way you know they
-
-0:01:35.040,0:01:39.840
-wanted to find the system to
-
-0:01:36.880,0:01:41.439
-write their notes basically and you know
-
-0:01:39.840,0:01:42.960
-they discovered this little tool which
-
-0:01:41.439,0:01:44.479
-is called orgrome
-
-0:01:42.960,0:01:46.240
-and they'd like to know more about this
-
-0:01:44.479,0:01:49.360
-so I've got 13
-
-0:01:46.240,0:01:53.360
-minutes to convince you to use hologram
-
-0:01:49.360,0:01:56.799
-so if we go in a very broad strokes
-
-0:01:53.360,0:01:59.759
-what is orgram orgrom
-
-0:01:56.799,0:02:00.320
-is a way for you to manage backlinks
-
-0:01:59.759,0:02:03.439
-inside
-
-0:02:00.320,0:02:07.040
-old mode and the keyword
-
-0:02:03.439,0:02:10.080
-in what I've just said is links now
-
-0:02:07.040,0:02:12.879
-there is a principle behind orgrom
-
-0:02:10.080,0:02:14.239
-which is called the zettelgasten method
-
-0:02:12.879,0:02:15.440
-which you can see written right there
-
-0:02:14.239,0:02:18.000
-it's a german word
-
-0:02:15.440,0:02:19.280
-which means a slit box if you remember
-
-0:02:18.000,0:02:22.080
-in old libraries
-
-0:02:19.280,0:02:23.440
-you had actually I believe if I scroll I
-
-0:02:22.080,0:02:26.640
-should have an example of this
-
-0:02:23.440,0:02:28.879
-yes so this is a slip box basically in
-
-0:02:26.640,0:02:30.560
-all libraries you used to have all the
-
-0:02:28.879,0:02:31.599
-references to the books that the library
-
-0:02:30.560,0:02:34.720
-used to have
-
-0:02:31.599,0:02:36.080
-inside those boxes and they're called
-
-0:02:34.720,0:02:38.480
-slim boxes because you can
-
-0:02:36.080,0:02:41.200
-insert stuff into the boxes and you can
-
-0:02:38.480,0:02:44.720
-remove stuff out of the boxes
-
-0:02:41.200,0:02:48.000
-now basically if I try
-
-0:02:44.720,0:02:49.360
-to summarize as simply as I may what the
-
-0:02:48.000,0:02:52.800
-zettel cast method
-
-0:02:49.360,0:02:56.560
-is about it's about having a way
-
-0:02:52.800,0:02:59.920
-to work with your notes which considers
-
-0:02:56.560,0:03:02.000
-elements of knowledge as atoms
-
-0:02:59.920,0:03:04.159
-so as something that is individual like
-
-0:03:02.000,0:03:06.640
-a single file
-
-0:03:04.159,0:03:07.440
-and you consider that in order to build
-
-0:03:06.640,0:03:10.560
-knowledge
-
-0:03:07.440,0:03:11.120
-you have to combine atoms together so
-
-0:03:10.560,0:03:14.720
-that
-
-0:03:11.120,0:03:17.519
-when you have one atom another atom
-
-0:03:14.720,0:03:18.879
-if you link them together you have a
-
-0:03:17.519,0:03:22.000
-complex
-
-0:03:18.879,0:03:24.000
-thought or a complex molecule
-
-0:03:22.000,0:03:25.360
-okay don't quote me on the chemistry by
-
-0:03:24.000,0:03:26.879
-the way I shall remind you I'm an
-
-0:03:25.360,0:03:28.239
-english major I have no idea what I'm
-
-0:03:26.879,0:03:31.360
-talking about
-
-0:03:28.239,0:03:32.000
-so how does it work as far as a
-
-0:03:31.360,0:03:35.280
-note-taking
-
-0:03:32.000,0:03:37.599
-system is concerned and to do so
-
-0:03:35.280,0:03:39.760
-I'm just going to switch really quickly
-
-0:03:37.599,0:03:43.040
-to my Emacs if I
-
-0:03:39.760,0:03:44.959
-may so I'm just going to screenshot
-
-0:03:43.040,0:03:47.840
-onto my mac just give me a second to get
-
-0:03:44.959,0:03:52.080
-the windows all right
-
-0:03:47.840,0:03:54.720
-okay it's loading up oh no
-
-0:03:52.080,0:03:56.000
-I think firefox has crashed again okay
-
-0:03:54.720,0:03:58.840
-so you're gonna have to give me a second
-
-0:03:56.000,0:04:01.680
-I need to figure this out
-
-0:03:58.840,0:04:03.120
-okay so everything is frozen right now
-
-0:04:01.680,0:04:04.720
-just to tell you so you're gonna have to
-
-0:04:03.120,0:04:06.159
-deal with my lovely voice
-
-0:04:04.720,0:04:07.920
-uh I mean can you confirm that if I
-
-0:04:06.159,0:04:09.840
-switch to a new ttr you can still hear
-
-0:04:07.920,0:04:12.959
-me
-
-0:04:09.840,0:04:14.879
-so can you still hear me now
-
-0:04:12.959,0:04:16.479
-okay so I'm gonna have probably to kill
-
-0:04:14.879,0:04:18.000
-firefox and log in again
-
-0:04:16.479,0:04:19.600
-so I'm sorry it's gonna cost us two
-
-0:04:18.000,0:04:20.560
-minutes but I'm gonna try to be as fast
-
-0:04:19.600,0:04:28.560
-as I can okay
-
-0:04:20.560,0:04:31.040
-okay no problem thanks
-
-0:04:28.560,0:04:31.040
-all right
-
-0:04:35.199,0:04:39.280
-I guess no event is a good one without
-
-0:04:37.520,0:04:42.800
-one or two technical difficulties
-
-0:04:39.280,0:04:45.360
-so I guess this is our share of
-
-0:04:42.800,0:04:57.840
-technical difficulties this year
-
-0:04:45.360,0:04:57.840
-no problem
-
-0:05:04.800,0:05:08.160
-all right guess who's back it's not
-
-0:05:06.320,0:05:10.800
-britney it's just me sadly so you're
-
-0:05:08.160,0:05:12.880
-gonna have to make do with me
-
-0:05:10.800,0:05:15.520
-welcome back well thank you I'm just
-
-0:05:12.880,0:05:18.320
-gonna turn back on the camera if I may
-
-0:05:15.520,0:05:18.320
-all righty
-
-0:05:19.919,0:05:23.520
-and I'm going to make myself a presenter
-
-0:05:22.400,0:05:26.160
-and I'm going to
-
-0:05:23.520,0:05:26.880
-share my screen with you sleep box
-
-0:05:26.160,0:05:29.360
-testing
-
-0:05:26.880,0:05:29.360
-hello
-
-0:05:29.919,0:05:34.160
-so if my calculations are correct you
-
-0:05:32.720,0:05:34.800
-should be able to see my monitor right
-
-0:05:34.160,0:05:38.160
-now
-
-0:05:34.800,0:05:39.919
-um yep but not your webcam feed
-
-0:05:38.160,0:05:42.320
-not my webcam feed okay so I'm going to
-
-0:05:39.919,0:05:42.320
-stop it
-
-0:05:42.800,0:05:46.000
-sorry for the little delay folks you
-
-0:05:44.720,0:05:49.039
-know it's uh
-
-0:05:46.000,0:05:52.320
-the show must go on can you see it now
-
-0:05:49.039,0:05:58.000
-um not yet still not
-
-0:05:52.320,0:05:58.000
-damn it can I stop it okay so I'm gonna
-
-0:06:00.080,0:06:07.840
-yeah maybe try like sharing a webcam
-
-0:06:04.840,0:06:07.840
-first
-
-0:06:32.960,0:06:37.759
-all right I'm back now so I'm going to
-
-0:06:36.319,0:06:39.550
-share my webcam first
-
-0:06:37.759,0:06:43.440
-okay
-
-0:06:39.550,0:06:46.560
-[Music]
-
-0:06:43.440,0:06:49.360
-all righty so can you confirm whenever
-
-0:06:46.560,0:06:52.880
-you've got my webcam working
-
-0:06:49.360,0:06:55.919
-let's see I don't see it yet
-
-0:06:52.880,0:06:57.120
-unfortunately oh it's loading up yeah
-
-0:06:55.919,0:06:59.680
-it's coming up
-
-0:06:57.120,0:07:01.199
-yep I can see it awesome all right okay
-
-0:06:59.680,0:07:02.880
-we're back on track I've got still eight
-
-0:07:01.199,0:07:04.160
-minutes left to do so I might have to
-
-0:07:02.880,0:07:06.000
-have a couple of minutes to my talk if
-
-0:07:04.160,0:07:07.599
-you don't mind and shave off some
-
-0:07:06.000,0:07:10.800
-questions
-
-0:07:07.599,0:07:13.759
-okay do you want to share okay yeah
-
-0:07:10.800,0:07:14.639
-I'm on my way too all right all right so
-
-0:07:13.759,0:07:16.240
-please forget
-
-0:07:14.639,0:07:18.000
-whatever whichever technical
-
-0:07:16.240,0:07:18.479
-difficulties we might have have had for
-
-0:07:18.000,0:07:20.240
-the last
-
-0:07:18.479,0:07:22.080
-three four minutes but we're back on
-
-0:07:20.240,0:07:24.960
-track now so
-
-0:07:22.080,0:07:26.639
-uh orgrom what is it and how does it
-
-0:07:24.960,0:07:28.720
-work so I was telling you all about
-
-0:07:26.639,0:07:30.720
-atoms and I was telling you about links
-
-0:07:28.720,0:07:32.800
-but how does it work concretely
-
-0:07:30.720,0:07:33.840
-so right now what you're seeing on your
-
-0:07:32.800,0:07:37.199
-screens
-
-0:07:33.840,0:07:38.800
-is a slip box which is what we the fancy
-
-0:07:37.199,0:07:39.520
-word that we use to designate your
-
-0:07:38.800,0:07:41.039
-folder
-
-0:07:39.520,0:07:43.280
-where all your notes are going to be
-
-0:07:41.039,0:07:44.000
-living so you have here and I hope you
-
-0:07:43.280,0:07:47.039
-can see my
-
-0:07:44.000,0:07:48.199
-uh cursor yes you can so we have a file
-
-0:07:47.039,0:07:51.120
-which is called
-
-0:07:48.199,0:07:52.960
-index.org and the good thing is
-
-0:07:51.120,0:07:54.240
-as you might have garnered by the fact
-
-0:07:52.960,0:07:57.039
-that it finishes by
-
-0:07:54.240,0:07:57.599
-that org is that it is just an old mod
-
-0:07:57.039,0:08:00.800
-file
-
-0:07:57.599,0:08:03.520
-so I can create a heading
-
-0:08:00.800,0:08:05.280
-I can create another heading and
-
-0:08:03.520,0:08:05.599
-everything works as you would expect it
-
-0:08:05.280,0:08:08.879
-to
-
-0:08:05.599,0:08:10.400
-it is completely it's just an awkward
-
-0:08:08.879,0:08:13.759
-file at the end of the day
-
-0:08:10.400,0:08:15.840
-so now what can we do with this
-
-0:08:13.759,0:08:16.800
-now I've told you about links and you do
-
-0:08:15.840,0:08:19.520
-know that
-
-0:08:16.800,0:08:20.080
-org mode has links so what we're going
-
-0:08:19.520,0:08:22.479
-to do
-
-0:08:20.080,0:08:23.440
-is that we're going to create a new file
-
-0:08:22.479,0:08:26.240
-so we're going to go back
-
-0:08:23.440,0:08:28.000
-to our directory and what I'm going to
-
-0:08:26.240,0:08:28.879
-do is that we have a special commands
-
-0:08:28.000,0:08:31.199
-actually let me just
-
-0:08:28.879,0:08:32.240
-show you my command I might help you a
-
-0:08:31.199,0:08:35.360
-little bit
-
-0:08:32.240,0:08:36.479
-see what I'm doing uh wait which is the
-
-0:08:35.360,0:08:39.680
-buffer
-
-0:08:36.479,0:08:41.039
-uh log mode yes exlog so now on the
-
-0:08:39.680,0:08:43.120
-right side of the monitor you'll be able
-
-0:08:41.039,0:08:45.040
-to see the command that I'm using
-
-0:08:43.120,0:08:46.640
-if you don't mind in order to have as
-
-0:08:45.040,0:08:48.480
-much realistic as possible I'm going to
-
-0:08:46.640,0:08:50.720
-make it a little bit shorter
-
-0:08:48.480,0:08:52.320
-smaller I should say is it not too small
-
-0:08:50.720,0:08:54.720
-yeah I believe it's good
-
-0:08:52.320,0:08:55.760
-so what I'm going to do is I'm going to
-
-0:08:54.720,0:08:57.920
-run a command
-
-0:08:55.760,0:08:59.200
-in orgrome which allows me to create a
-
-0:08:57.920,0:09:02.320
-new note
-
-0:08:59.200,0:09:04.720
-so I'm going to use my keybinding which
-
-0:09:02.320,0:09:06.800
-is not this one definitely
-
-0:09:04.720,0:09:08.000
-and I'm going to create a new file which
-
-0:09:06.800,0:09:09.839
-is in a
-
-0:09:08.000,0:09:11.680
-great tradition of examples in
-
-0:09:09.839,0:09:15.519
-programming I'm going to call
-
-0:09:11.680,0:09:17.600
-foo right so at the bottom
-
-0:09:15.519,0:09:18.720
-in the bottom buffer I should say you
-
-0:09:17.600,0:09:21.760
-are seeing the file
-
-0:09:18.720,0:09:22.720
-foo which is as you can see here a
-
-0:09:21.760,0:09:24.640
-capture buffer
-
-0:09:22.720,0:09:25.839
-just like you would have in blog mode
-
-0:09:24.640,0:09:28.560
-now what I'm going to do
-
-0:09:25.839,0:09:29.200
-is that I'm going to validate this file
-
-0:09:28.560,0:09:32.560
-and now
-
-0:09:29.200,0:09:36.240
-you see that we are in the file foo
-
-0:09:32.560,0:09:39.440
-and the good thing is that I can start
-
-0:09:36.240,0:09:42.160
-writing without having to worry
-
-0:09:39.440,0:09:43.760
-about anything else and I was thinking I
-
-0:09:42.160,0:09:46.160
-was going to say to say that I'm
-
-0:09:43.760,0:09:47.680
-showing off about my typing skills but I
-
-0:09:46.160,0:09:50.959
-did make mistakes so
-
-0:09:47.680,0:09:53.760
-well nobody's perfect right so now we do
-
-0:09:50.959,0:09:55.519
-have this view file and we're going to
-
-0:09:53.760,0:09:56.800
-go back to the index so let's go back to
-
-0:09:55.519,0:09:58.560
-the directory
-
-0:09:56.800,0:10:00.000
-we're going to refresh the file as you
-
-0:09:58.560,0:10:00.560
-can see we have a file which is called
-
-0:10:00.000,0:10:03.360
-foo
-
-0:10:00.560,0:10:04.399
-and we have the index so now what I'm
-
-0:10:03.360,0:10:06.480
-going to do
-
-0:10:04.399,0:10:07.760
-is that I'm going to insert a link to
-
-0:10:06.480,0:10:09.920
-this file
-
-0:10:07.760,0:10:11.360
-so we're going to run another orgrim
-
-0:10:09.920,0:10:14.160
-command which you can see here
-
-0:10:11.360,0:10:15.279
-orgrim inset and I'm going to insert a
-
-0:10:14.160,0:10:17.279
-link to the file
-
-0:10:15.279,0:10:18.959
-foo and as you can see it has now
-
-0:10:17.279,0:10:21.920
-appeared now what I'm going to do
-
-0:10:18.959,0:10:23.040
-I'm going to save the file and now I'm
-
-0:10:21.920,0:10:24.480
-going to show you
-
-0:10:23.040,0:10:26.720
-the little thing I told you about
-
-0:10:24.480,0:10:27.680
-backlinks before so I'm afraid I'm going
-
-0:10:26.720,0:10:29.680
-to have to hide
-
-0:10:27.680,0:10:30.880
-the commands for now but don't worry
-
-0:10:29.680,0:10:33.760
-I'll be back
-
-0:10:30.880,0:10:34.320
-and I'm going to show you the side
-
-0:10:33.760,0:10:35.839
-buffer
-
-0:10:34.320,0:10:38.079
-so it is the buffer that you see on the
-
-0:10:35.839,0:10:40.000
-right side of your screen
-
-0:10:38.079,0:10:42.560
-and right now it's telling you that
-
-0:10:40.000,0:10:45.440
-index does not have any backlink
-
-0:10:42.560,0:10:46.320
-which is normal but if we follow the
-
-0:10:45.440,0:10:49.200
-link
-
-0:10:46.320,0:10:50.560
-fu now you see something different on
-
-0:10:49.200,0:10:52.160
-the right side so as you can see on the
-
-0:10:50.560,0:10:53.360
-left side we're back insta inside the
-
-0:10:52.160,0:10:55.600
-file foo
-
-0:10:53.360,0:10:56.560
-but on the right side we have something
-
-0:10:55.600,0:11:00.160
-showing up
-
-0:10:56.560,0:11:03.519
-one backlink in the file index
-
-0:11:00.160,0:11:04.399
-in under the heading heading you have
-
-0:11:03.519,0:11:07.680
-the file
-
-0:11:04.399,0:11:08.720
-sorry the link foo and you can just open
-
-0:11:07.680,0:11:10.720
-the link
-
-0:11:08.720,0:11:12.640
-and you will be brought exactly where it
-
-0:11:10.720,0:11:16.240
-is so
-
-0:11:12.640,0:11:17.600
-okay so that was one thing now just
-
-0:11:16.240,0:11:19.360
-to make sure that you've understood
-
-0:11:17.600,0:11:20.320
-properly I'm going to go back to the
-
-0:11:19.360,0:11:23.920
-index
-
-0:11:20.320,0:11:25.440
-I'm going to create a second file
-
-0:11:23.920,0:11:27.680
-so now I'm going to use a command that
-
-0:11:25.440,0:11:30.800
-is slightly different so let me just uh
-
-0:11:27.680,0:11:32.480
-show you the commands on the right
-
-0:11:30.800,0:11:33.839
-I'm going to run the command orgrim
-
-0:11:32.480,0:11:37.519
-insert and I'm going to
-
-0:11:33.839,0:11:39.600
-end to enter a file which is called bar
-
-0:11:37.519,0:11:41.440
-so again at the bottom you can see that
-
-0:11:39.600,0:11:45.920
-I have a new file bar
-
-0:11:41.440,0:11:49.760
-I'm going to validate this file
-
-0:11:45.920,0:11:52.959
-okay I'm going to save index.org
-
-0:11:49.760,0:11:54.320
-and now if we go in bar and if I show
-
-0:11:52.959,0:11:55.920
-you
-
-0:11:54.320,0:11:58.240
-the links on the side you can see that
-
-0:11:55.920,0:12:00.480
-exactly the same we have a link
-
-0:11:58.240,0:12:02.639
-now just to make the pictures complete
-
-0:12:00.480,0:12:05.200
-inside the file bar I'm going to insert
-
-0:12:02.639,0:12:06.959
-a link to foo I'm going to save I'm
-
-0:12:05.200,0:12:07.920
-going to go to the file foo and now on
-
-0:12:06.959,0:12:11.120
-the right side
-
-0:12:07.920,0:12:13.839
-you can see that we have two backlinks
-
-0:12:11.120,0:12:14.720
-now you're gonna tell me yeah thank you
-
-0:12:13.839,0:12:17.760
-leo but
-
-0:12:14.720,0:12:20.320
-what's the point well the thing is
-
-0:12:17.760,0:12:22.160
-it might sound it might seem very simple
-
-0:12:20.320,0:12:24.160
-but I've just shown you
-
-0:12:22.160,0:12:26.160
-but programmatically it's a little hard
-
-0:12:24.160,0:12:28.000
-to do like we have to
-
-0:12:26.160,0:12:30.079
-look into your files to make sure that
-
-0:12:28.000,0:12:32.240
-every time you link your file
-
-0:12:30.079,0:12:34.079
-somewhere else we need to track
-
-0:12:32.240,0:12:37.920
-everything down
-
-0:12:34.079,0:12:39.519
-and now as simple as orgrum might be
-
-0:12:37.920,0:12:42.240
-looking to you
-
-0:12:39.519,0:12:43.279
-the thing is what we try to do with
-
-0:12:42.240,0:12:45.920
-orgrum
-
-0:12:43.279,0:12:46.399
-is to make sure that your collection of
-
-0:12:45.920,0:12:50.320
-notes
-
-0:12:46.399,0:12:54.079
-remains consistent whatever we do
-
-0:12:50.320,0:12:56.880
-an example for instance like right now
-
-0:12:54.079,0:12:58.000
-I've told you about a file named foo and
-
-0:12:56.880,0:13:01.120
-the file name
-
-0:12:58.000,0:13:03.920
-bar let's say that for whatever reason
-
-0:13:01.120,0:13:04.720
-you decide to rename your file foo to
-
-0:13:03.920,0:13:08.079
-something
-
-0:13:04.720,0:13:11.040
-very original let's just say bar
-
-0:13:08.079,0:13:12.320
-so we actually have a way in Emacs in
-
-0:13:11.040,0:13:14.560
-orgrim I should say
-
-0:13:12.320,0:13:15.680
-when you modify the title at the top of
-
-0:13:14.560,0:13:18.880
-the file
-
-0:13:15.680,0:13:20.320
-so we get foo I've modified it with baz
-
-0:13:18.880,0:13:22.000
-you can see at the bottom that right now
-
-0:13:20.320,0:13:22.519
-we haven't saved and we are still in the
-
-0:13:22.000,0:13:26.079
-file
-
-0:13:22.519,0:13:29.360
-fu.org I'm going to save
-
-0:13:26.079,0:13:32.560
-and now what you see is
-
-0:13:29.360,0:13:35.360
-a new name for the file but you may ask
-
-0:13:32.560,0:13:36.880
-wait a second in the other file we had a
-
-0:13:35.360,0:13:38.880
-link to this file
-
-0:13:36.880,0:13:40.560
-does it mean that it's broken does it
-
-0:13:38.880,0:13:43.440
-means does it mean sorry
-
-0:13:40.560,0:13:43.920
-that we cannot access the file anymore
-
-0:13:43.440,0:13:46.959
-but
-
-0:13:43.920,0:13:48.000
-when we go there beginning to go in the
-
-0:13:46.959,0:13:50.399
-index
-
-0:13:48.000,0:13:52.079
-so obviously the actual description of
-
-0:13:50.399,0:13:54.320
-the link hasn't been updated
-
-0:13:52.079,0:13:55.680
-but if I show you what goes on under the
-
-0:13:54.320,0:13:57.440
-hood by showing you
-
-0:13:55.680,0:14:00.000
-what is fontify what is behind the
-
-0:13:57.440,0:14:02.320
-content of the link
-
-0:14:00.000,0:14:04.079
-actually it didn't work and that's why
-
-0:14:02.320,0:14:04.639
-you never present live folks because
-
-0:14:04.079,0:14:05.920
-otherwise you're
-
-0:14:04.639,0:14:08.880
-just going to show problems with the
-
-0:14:05.920,0:14:12.079
-software and that's not good
-
-0:14:08.880,0:14:15.120
-so something must have gone on obviously
-
-0:14:12.079,0:14:17.120
-but generally speaking the file should
-
-0:14:15.120,0:14:18.959
-have been updated
-
-0:14:17.120,0:14:21.279
-damn I'm showing you bugging my software
-
-0:14:18.959,0:14:25.040
-that's not very professional now is it
-
-0:14:21.279,0:14:28.079
-basically to come back to the main id
-
-0:14:25.040,0:14:28.880
-what we try to do with orgrom is to make
-
-0:14:28.079,0:14:32.639
-sure that
-
-0:14:28.880,0:14:35.279
-everything remains consistent we
-
-0:14:32.639,0:14:37.360
-really much love the system of
-
-0:14:35.279,0:14:38.720
-organization that is behind this little
-
-0:14:37.360,0:14:40.240
-castle method
-
-0:14:38.720,0:14:41.600
-now I was going at this point of the
-
-0:14:40.240,0:14:42.639
-presentation basically I wanted to go
-
-0:14:41.600,0:14:45.199
-back to firefox
-
-0:14:42.639,0:14:46.880
-and show you more stuff but it's likely
-
-0:14:45.199,0:14:48.959
-that it's going to crash again
-
-0:14:46.880,0:14:50.240
-so I'm not going to tempt the devil and
-
-0:14:48.959,0:14:51.680
-I'm just going to continue talking to
-
-0:14:50.240,0:14:54.800
-you like that
-
-0:14:51.680,0:14:58.160
-so the zettelkasten method
-
-0:14:54.800,0:15:01.839
-is a very organic way
-
-0:14:58.160,0:15:04.959
-to write notes and if you think
-
-0:15:01.839,0:15:06.639
-I I believe as all mode users
-
-0:15:04.959,0:15:08.000
-we share quite a lot of features and I'm
-
-0:15:06.639,0:15:09.600
-out of time I'm just going to take one
-
-0:15:08.000,0:15:12.320
-more minute to answer this question
-
-0:15:09.600,0:15:14.560
-that I'm asking myself anyway but if
-
-0:15:12.320,0:15:16.079
-you're anything like me
-
-0:15:14.560,0:15:18.240
-you've you've been through many
-
-0:15:16.079,0:15:18.959
-iterations of your workflow inside of
-
-0:15:18.240,0:15:20.959
-mode
-
-0:15:18.959,0:15:22.959
-do I keep all my professional stuff
-
-0:15:20.959,0:15:24.399
-under one heading or do I create a
-
-0:15:22.959,0:15:25.920
-separate file for this
-
-0:15:24.399,0:15:28.000
-you know those types of questions on
-
-0:15:25.920,0:15:30.639
-which you could ponder for
-
-0:15:28.000,0:15:31.360
-many many hours at night generally when
-
-0:15:30.639,0:15:34.560
-you have a
-
-0:15:31.360,0:15:36.959
-tight deadline to be following but
-
-0:15:34.560,0:15:38.240
-what I've discovered by using orgrim for
-
-0:15:36.959,0:15:40.720
-taking notes about
-
-0:15:38.240,0:15:41.360
-my academic projects or by taking notes
-
-0:15:40.720,0:15:44.880
-on
-
-0:15:41.360,0:15:47.440
-you know anything worth writing about
-
-0:15:44.880,0:15:49.199
-is that not having to worry about the
-
-0:15:47.440,0:15:52.399
-structure if you files
-
-0:15:49.199,0:15:56.079
-just having to worry about atoms
-
-0:15:52.399,0:15:58.480
-and links it does wonder
-
-0:15:56.079,0:16:00.639
-for the way you think about problems it
-
-0:15:58.480,0:16:04.800
-does wonder about your creativity
-
-0:16:00.639,0:16:07.519
-and it does wonder about your ability to
-
-0:16:04.800,0:16:08.800
-take your thoughts put them on a paper
-
-0:16:07.519,0:16:10.399
-and generally you know during this
-
-0:16:08.800,0:16:13.120
-process you realize oh maybe I do not
-
-0:16:10.399,0:16:16.079
-know this concept as well as I should
-
-0:16:13.120,0:16:16.800
-but I've never had a system which
-
-0:16:16.079,0:16:19.839
-brought me
-
-0:16:16.800,0:16:21.440
-as much serendipity as this system
-
-0:16:19.839,0:16:24.880
-and for those who don't know serendipity
-
-0:16:21.440,0:16:28.800
-the ability to come up with novel ideas
-
-0:16:24.880,0:16:32.240
-on the spot contextually so
-
-0:16:28.800,0:16:34.959
-this was just a little primer on what
-
-0:16:32.240,0:16:36.000
-orgrom and the zettelkasten is about in
-
-0:16:34.959,0:16:38.000
-about
-
-0:16:36.000,0:16:39.680
-20 minutes I'll be giving you a talk
-
-0:16:38.000,0:16:40.800
-about the technical aspects of orgrim
-
-0:16:39.680,0:16:43.040
-which I'm certain
-
-0:16:40.800,0:16:44.160
-some of you will be very interested in
-
-0:16:43.040,0:16:46.160
-and
-
-0:16:44.160,0:16:48.560
-otherwise I do have a youtube channel
-
-0:16:46.160,0:16:50.720
-where I try to
-
-0:16:48.560,0:16:52.079
-record videos where I explain to you
-
-0:16:50.720,0:16:53.839
-what the org
-
-0:16:52.079,0:16:55.600
-what organ is about what the method is
-
-0:16:53.839,0:16:57.040
-about and
-
-0:16:55.600,0:16:58.720
-and I'll just finish on this I'm two
-
-0:16:57.040,0:17:02.399
-minutes extra time sorry
-
-0:16:58.720,0:17:04.079
-but um we do know that a lot of people
-
-0:17:02.399,0:17:04.959
-are interested into orgrim I mentioned
-
-0:17:04.079,0:17:06.160
-at the very beginning of the
-
-0:17:04.959,0:17:09.360
-presentation
-
-0:17:06.160,0:17:10.640
-that a lot of people discovered Emacs
-
-0:17:09.360,0:17:14.640
-and orgrom
-
-0:17:10.640,0:17:18.400
-and old mode even through orgrom
-
-0:17:14.640,0:17:20.959
-and we feel that we have a duty to
-
-0:17:18.400,0:17:22.720
-introduce those people this new pool of
-
-0:17:20.959,0:17:25.439
-people most of whom are
-
-0:17:22.720,0:17:27.600
-academics into the world of Emacs and
-
-0:17:25.439,0:17:30.240
-into the water free software
-
-0:17:27.600,0:17:32.240
-and right now the thing is we're not
-
-0:17:30.240,0:17:34.080
-doing a particularly good job at writing
-
-0:17:32.240,0:17:36.160
-manuals I'm just going to try
-
-0:17:34.080,0:17:37.360
-to stop sharing my screen because I'm
-
-0:17:36.160,0:17:40.240
-nearly to the end
-
-0:17:37.360,0:17:41.919
-and just try sharing my firefox windows
-
-0:17:40.240,0:17:43.120
-if it allows me no it doesn't allow me
-
-0:17:41.919,0:17:44.160
-which is very good that's why I won't
-
-0:17:43.120,0:17:47.200
-have to
-
-0:17:44.160,0:17:50.080
-to screw things up but
-
-0:17:47.200,0:17:50.880
-uh we know that our manual is not fully
-
-0:17:50.080,0:17:53.760
-up to date
-
-0:17:50.880,0:17:54.480
-but believe me one of the key focus
-
-0:17:53.760,0:17:56.960
-right now
-
-0:17:54.480,0:17:57.840
-is making sure that within two to three
-
-0:17:56.960,0:17:59.679
-months
-
-0:17:57.840,0:18:02.559
-we have a good tutorial for people to
-
-0:17:59.679,0:18:03.840
-join and we have good videos for people
-
-0:18:02.559,0:18:04.640
-to get introduced to the topics we're
-
-0:18:03.840,0:18:06.320
-covering
-
-0:18:04.640,0:18:07.679
-and that's me done so thank you so much
-
-0:18:06.320,0:18:09.840
-for listening and now I'll be taking
-
-0:18:07.679,0:18:12.880
-some questions
-
-0:18:09.840,0:18:17.679
-thank you very much leo oh thank you
-
-0:18:12.880,0:18:19.440
-cheers we have I think about two minutes
-
-0:18:17.679,0:18:20.880
-four questions and I see a lot of them
-
-0:18:19.440,0:18:23.120
-on the pad
-
-0:18:20.880,0:18:24.320
-would you take them sure so yep I'm
-
-0:18:23.120,0:18:27.600
-scrolling I'm scrolling
-
-0:18:24.320,0:18:30.000
-uh getting things done that's aldrich uh
-
-0:18:27.600,0:18:31.679
-still scrolling okay olgram oh wow okay
-
-0:18:30.000,0:18:33.600
-so we do have quite a lot of questions
-
-0:18:31.679,0:18:34.799
-so please excuse me if I'm answering
-
-0:18:33.600,0:18:35.760
-your questions really fast but I just
-
-0:18:34.799,0:18:38.080
-want to make sure that I cover
-
-0:18:35.760,0:18:40.240
-as much ground as possible so what is
-
-0:18:38.080,0:18:41.039
-the functionality of all chrome unlinked
-
-0:18:40.240,0:18:43.200
-references
-
-0:18:41.039,0:18:45.200
-so basically when you have a file that
-
-0:18:43.200,0:18:48.000
-is not linked anywhere
-
-0:18:45.200,0:18:49.520
-this function allows you to see uh let's
-
-0:18:48.000,0:18:51.200
-say we have a file Emacs
-
-0:18:49.520,0:18:53.200
-and we've talked about Emacs in another
-
-0:18:51.200,0:18:57.440
-note but we haven't created a link
-
-0:18:53.200,0:18:59.520
-what this command do is that it
-
-0:18:57.440,0:19:00.720
-looks into your folder for every mention
-
-0:18:59.520,0:19:03.840
-of Emacs that is not
-
-0:19:00.720,0:19:05.039
-linked to the note Emacs and it prints
-
-0:19:03.840,0:19:06.480
-all the results in the buffer so that
-
-0:19:05.039,0:19:07.840
-you know okay I've talked about Emacs
-
-0:19:06.480,0:19:10.480
-here but I didn't create a link
-
-0:19:07.840,0:19:11.840
-do I want to create a link that's it so
-
-0:19:10.480,0:19:12.480
-is it possible to use the backlinks
-
-0:19:11.840,0:19:15.039
-features
-
-0:19:12.480,0:19:16.400
-in regular old buffers right now no it
-
-0:19:15.039,0:19:18.080
-is not possible we are
-
-0:19:16.400,0:19:20.240
-having a very controlled environment
-
-0:19:18.080,0:19:21.280
-which is I told you about this clipbox
-
-0:19:20.240,0:19:22.799
-folder before
-
-0:19:21.280,0:19:24.400
-this is where we keep all the nodes and
-
-0:19:22.799,0:19:26.080
-the reason why we do this will be more
-
-0:19:24.400,0:19:27.360
-evident when I go through the technical
-
-0:19:26.080,0:19:30.720
-presentation
-
-0:19:27.360,0:19:32.080
-but uh it's because of optimization
-
-0:19:30.720,0:19:33.760
-so I'll get back to you on that
-
-0:19:32.080,0:19:35.440
-afterwards um
-
-0:19:33.760,0:19:37.039
-do you make all group database
-
-0:19:35.440,0:19:39.760
-accessible across computers
-
-0:19:37.039,0:19:41.760
-uh no I do not because I'm only using my
-
-0:19:39.760,0:19:44.559
-laptop but plenty of people have had
-
-0:19:41.760,0:19:47.039
-a lot of success doing so either by
-
-0:19:44.559,0:19:47.679
-sharing the files via a sync thing or by
-
-0:19:47.039,0:19:49.760
-any other
-
-0:19:47.679,0:19:52.400
-method we have a section in a manual
-
-0:19:49.760,0:19:53.760
-specifying how to do this uh how do you
-
-0:19:52.400,0:19:54.880
-discover the tags links to add to your
-
-0:19:53.760,0:19:56.160
-new algorithm note
-
-0:19:54.880,0:19:57.679
-there is something that I didn't tell
-
-0:19:56.160,0:19:58.240
-you about which is called orgrim server
-
-0:19:57.679,0:20:01.679
-which is a
-
-0:19:58.240,0:20:04.320
-magnificent way to uh access
-
-0:20:01.679,0:20:05.360
-visually the nodes that you have in your
-
-0:20:04.320,0:20:07.840
-in your system
-
-0:20:05.360,0:20:08.799
-you'll have to go to the orgrom.com
-
-0:20:07.840,0:20:10.640
-website
-
-0:20:08.799,0:20:12.080
-and please go on our github page and we
-
-0:20:10.640,0:20:14.640
-show everything and
-
-0:20:12.080,0:20:16.000
-um I hope what I've told you has excited
-
-0:20:14.640,0:20:18.000
-you so please go
-
-0:20:16.000,0:20:20.080
-uh maybe one more question two more
-
-0:20:18.000,0:20:21.679
-questions just to make sure uh is it
-
-0:20:20.080,0:20:23.039
-possible to seamlessly link to other
-
-0:20:21.679,0:20:23.919
-notes with syntax instead of a
-
-0:20:23.039,0:20:25.840
-keybinding
-
-0:20:23.919,0:20:27.120
-yes we are working on this this is a
-
-0:20:25.840,0:20:28.880
-huge project that we're doing with
-
-0:20:27.120,0:20:30.960
-orgrim which is called uh
-
-0:20:28.880,0:20:32.880
-link ux and we're trying to do something
-
-0:20:30.960,0:20:34.559
-which is very close to rome research
-
-0:20:32.880,0:20:36.880
-which is the software we're using for
-
-0:20:34.559,0:20:39.200
-inspiration for orgrom
-
-0:20:36.880,0:20:41.280
-and uh yes there's there are going to be
-
-0:20:39.200,0:20:42.640
-ways to do this in the future I'm going
-
-0:20:41.280,0:20:45.280
-to give you a window of
-
-0:20:42.640,0:20:46.320
-maybe three to four months and one last
-
-0:20:45.280,0:20:48.480
-question
-
-0:20:46.320,0:20:49.440
-uh good on you thank you well thank you
-
-0:20:48.480,0:20:51.039
-for for this
-
-0:20:49.440,0:20:53.200
-is there an easy way to export several
-
-0:20:51.039,0:20:56.960
-selected nodes to say a lattice file
-
-0:20:53.200,0:20:59.840
-latex yes uh I mean it's old mode
-
-0:20:56.960,0:21:00.480
-at the very core it is org mode so you
-
-0:20:59.840,0:21:02.559
-know you don't
-
-0:21:00.480,0:21:04.000
-if you want to export to latex file you
-
-0:21:02.559,0:21:06.320
-can you just use the
-
-0:21:04.000,0:21:08.320
-aux latex library which you can access
-
-0:21:06.320,0:21:11.760
-by pressing ctrl c ctrl
-
-0:21:08.320,0:21:12.480
-e for export all right is it uh I
-
-0:21:11.760,0:21:13.919
-believe I'm
-
-0:21:12.480,0:21:16.880
-it's all the time I had I mean can you
-
-0:21:13.919,0:21:19.039
-confirm this
-
-0:21:16.880,0:21:20.240
-okay so if you have more questions don't
-
-0:21:19.039,0:21:23.679
-worry I'll be in chat
-
-0:21:20.240,0:21:26.799
-I'll be answering them uh I'm also on on
-
-0:21:23.679,0:21:28.159
-all the platforms we advertise on on
-
-0:21:26.799,0:21:29.280
-orgram if you want to reach me I'm
-
-0:21:28.159,0:21:31.919
-really easy to reach
-
-0:21:29.280,0:21:32.559
-our gita page is always open so thank
-
-0:21:31.919,0:21:35.520
-you all for
-
-0:21:32.559,0:21:37.440
-all your questions and all your energy
-
-0:21:35.520,0:21:38.640
-about orgrim it is very exciting for me
-
-0:21:37.440,0:21:42.000
-to to see all this
-
-0:21:38.640,0:21:44.080
-but right now I'll be ending off the
-
-0:21:42.000,0:21:45.840
-microphone I should say to nura who is
-
-0:21:44.080,0:21:48.480
-going to talk to you about the
-
-0:21:45.840,0:21:50.080
-academic way to use orgrom and I'll be
-
-0:21:48.480,0:21:53.760
-back afterwards with the technical talk
-
-0:21:50.080,0:21:57.760
-okay thank you thank you very much leo
-
-0:21:53.760,0:21:57.760
-see you later guys
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--17-org-mode-and-org-roam-for-scholars-and-researchers--noorah-alhasan-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--17-org-mode-and-org-roam-for-scholars-and-researchers--noorah-alhasan-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index c48f061b..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--17-org-mode-and-org-roam-for-scholars-and-researchers--noorah-alhasan-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1794 +0,0 @@
-0:00:00.320,0:00:03.040
-good afternoon or good evening everyone
-
-0:00:02.639,0:00:05.440
-uh
-
-0:00:03.040,0:00:07.759
-today my talk is going to be on org mode
-
-0:00:05.440,0:00:10.559
-and or group for skulls and researchers
-
-0:00:07.759,0:00:12.639
-leo has talked about like the overall
-
-0:00:10.559,0:00:15.120
-picture of orgrim and or
-
-0:00:12.639,0:00:16.240
-uh bibtex or groundbreak tech I will be
-
-0:00:15.120,0:00:19.199
-talking more about
-
-0:00:16.240,0:00:20.320
-the research process itself using these
-
-0:00:19.199,0:00:22.400
-tools
-
-0:00:20.320,0:00:25.039
-all right so just to introduce that the
-
-0:00:22.400,0:00:28.080
-research process is really messy
-
-0:00:25.039,0:00:31.039
-um you're always working in like
-
-0:00:28.080,0:00:32.960
-piecemeal tasks and things move around
-
-0:00:31.039,0:00:35.280
-all the time and so
-
-0:00:32.960,0:00:36.880
-there needs to be a system where you can
-
-0:00:35.280,0:00:39.360
-organize all these tasks
-
-0:00:36.880,0:00:41.760
-all these ideas in a way that is
-
-0:00:39.360,0:00:44.239
-flexible and effective
-
-0:00:41.760,0:00:44.960
-so my motivation is that research is
-
-0:00:44.239,0:00:47.120
-hard and
-
-0:00:44.960,0:00:49.600
-writing about it is even more difficult
-
-0:00:47.120,0:00:51.120
-and my goal is to add some structure to
-
-0:00:49.600,0:00:52.800
-this whole madness
-
-0:00:51.120,0:00:54.480
-so here's a list of some of the stuff
-
-0:00:52.800,0:00:57.199
-that I've been using since I first
-
-0:00:54.480,0:01:00.160
-learned about Emacs in 2019
-
-0:00:57.199,0:01:02.000
-and what I've what I've found useful um
-
-0:01:00.160,0:01:05.199
-during my res uh like um
-
-0:01:02.000,0:01:07.920
-within my research process all right so
-
-0:01:05.199,0:01:10.400
-I've organized org mode for researchers
-
-0:01:07.920,0:01:12.400
-and scholars within the writing process
-
-0:01:10.400,0:01:14.320
-into three modules first there's like
-
-0:01:12.400,0:01:15.759
-the planning aspect of it
-
-0:01:14.320,0:01:17.680
-then you've got the writing and the
-
-0:01:15.759,0:01:18.320
-reference management which I will join
-
-0:01:17.680,0:01:20.560
-together
-
-0:01:18.320,0:01:21.920
-by looking at the example of doing your
-
-0:01:20.560,0:01:24.720
-literature review
-
-0:01:21.920,0:01:26.479
-all right so when we're talking about
-
-0:01:24.720,0:01:27.360
-planning we're talking about either task
-
-0:01:26.479,0:01:30.880
-management or
-
-0:01:27.360,0:01:31.600
-time management with task management
-
-0:01:30.880,0:01:33.840
-you've got
-
-0:01:31.600,0:01:36.159
-org modes to do's and tags and
-
-0:01:33.840,0:01:38.479
-categories these are really powerful
-
-0:01:36.159,0:01:41.600
-tools that you could use
-
-0:01:38.479,0:01:44.799
-um in your org files to just um
-
-0:01:41.600,0:01:47.040
-uh like organize your tasks and
-
-0:01:44.799,0:01:49.040
-your appointments so there are different
-
-0:01:47.040,0:01:50.960
-types of to-do's that you can either set
-
-0:01:49.040,0:01:52.799
-globally in your init file or they can
-
-0:01:50.960,0:01:55.200
-be file buffer specific
-
-0:01:52.799,0:01:56.079
-so that means based on context based on
-
-0:01:55.200,0:01:57.759
-the type of
-
-0:01:56.079,0:01:59.280
-manuscript you're working on whether
-
-0:01:57.759,0:02:02.240
-it's like a literate programming
-
-0:01:59.280,0:02:03.759
-report or your actual thesis slash
-
-0:02:02.240,0:02:05.840
-dissertation
-
-0:02:03.759,0:02:07.759
-um also these to-do's are either created
-
-0:02:05.840,0:02:11.440
-as a set tree like think of them as
-
-0:02:07.759,0:02:14.800
-headings and sections if you use latex
-
-0:02:11.440,0:02:15.360
-or inline text which are like org inline
-
-0:02:14.800,0:02:17.760
-tasks I
-
-0:02:15.360,0:02:19.120
-like organ line tasks because like I can
-
-0:02:17.760,0:02:21.520
-add
-
-0:02:19.120,0:02:22.879
-to do's between two paragraphs and that
-
-0:02:21.520,0:02:25.360
-way it doesn't show up
-
-0:02:22.879,0:02:27.280
-in the table of contents when I export
-
-0:02:25.360,0:02:30.879
-into pdf or html or
-
-0:02:27.280,0:02:34.319
-anything else all right so this is an
-
-0:02:30.879,0:02:37.360
-example of buffer specific to do's
-
-0:02:34.319,0:02:39.120
-and and this is example of like a little
-
-0:02:37.360,0:02:40.800
-programming report that I was working on
-
-0:02:39.120,0:02:43.200
-where I was like dealing with
-
-0:02:40.800,0:02:44.080
-data and like analysis and all of that
-
-0:02:43.200,0:02:47.519
-stuff and so
-
-0:02:44.080,0:02:49.440
-I needed um context specific to do's to
-
-0:02:47.519,0:02:52.080
-use them within this buffer
-
-0:02:49.440,0:02:54.319
-um and that's how I would organize it
-
-0:02:52.080,0:02:57.200
-and there's also also another example
-
-0:02:54.319,0:02:57.920
-of an org inline task where you could
-
-0:02:57.200,0:03:01.360
-see it
-
-0:02:57.920,0:03:03.040
-in the middle between the two headings
-
-0:03:01.360,0:03:04.959
-that way it wouldn't show up in the
-
-0:03:03.040,0:03:06.480
-table of contents and it would look like
-
-0:03:04.959,0:03:09.519
-nature within the
-
-0:03:06.480,0:03:11.920
-text when you export it
-
-0:03:09.519,0:03:13.280
-oh but I also added a tag of no export
-
-0:03:11.920,0:03:16.400
-so it won't show up at all
-
-0:03:13.280,0:03:19.360
-when I export it into like either pdf
-
-0:03:16.400,0:03:21.599
-which I use all the time all right so
-
-0:03:19.360,0:03:24.159
-another useful tool
-
-0:03:21.599,0:03:25.200
-um for the research and just like
-
-0:03:24.159,0:03:27.920
-general planning
-
-0:03:25.200,0:03:29.120
-is the org capture um when I first
-
-0:03:27.920,0:03:32.080
-started with Emacs
-
-0:03:29.120,0:03:34.239
-actually it was for org agenda and I
-
-0:03:32.080,0:03:35.360
-went crazy with my capture template I
-
-0:03:34.239,0:03:37.599
-created a template for
-
-0:03:35.360,0:03:38.640
-everything um because I was just so
-
-0:03:37.599,0:03:40.720
-excited
-
-0:03:38.640,0:03:42.400
-but with time I was using less and less
-
-0:03:40.720,0:03:46.319
-of them so I kept taking them out
-
-0:03:42.400,0:03:48.239
-and now this is my simplified um
-
-0:03:46.319,0:03:49.599
-capture templates that I use either for
-
-0:03:48.239,0:03:52.159
-a general to do
-
-0:03:49.599,0:03:54.159
-um for a regular appointment a fleeting
-
-0:03:52.159,0:03:55.200
-note research tasks because like those
-
-0:03:54.159,0:03:56.959
-are what I focus on
-
-0:03:55.200,0:03:58.720
-like my bread and butter and then
-
-0:03:56.959,0:04:00.879
-finally with meetings which I find
-
-0:03:58.720,0:04:01.680
-sometimes I don't use it as much because
-
-0:04:00.879,0:04:03.519
-I would just like
-
-0:04:01.680,0:04:04.879
-have the org file ready instead of
-
-0:04:03.519,0:04:07.920
-needing to capture
-
-0:04:04.879,0:04:11.439
-you know open a capture template
-
-0:04:07.920,0:04:12.400
-right or agenda um that's how I got into
-
-0:04:11.439,0:04:15.439
-Emacs
-
-0:04:12.400,0:04:16.799
-I needed to um organize my life and I
-
-0:04:15.439,0:04:19.199
-found Emacs and
-
-0:04:16.799,0:04:20.479
-it's been great ever since um it
-
-0:04:19.199,0:04:22.720
-populates all your to-do's and
-
-0:04:20.479,0:04:25.280
-appointments into a singular view so the
-
-0:04:22.720,0:04:29.120
-default view I think it's a weak view
-
-0:04:25.280,0:04:31.919
-however I use org super agenda love this
-
-0:04:29.120,0:04:34.160
-um package and I set up my agenda as a
-
-0:04:31.919,0:04:37.360
-daily view with just appointments
-
-0:04:34.160,0:04:38.720
-deadlines and a habit tracker um and
-
-0:04:37.360,0:04:40.639
-a side note you guys I'm still
-
-0:04:38.720,0:04:42.320
-struggling with organizing the perfect
-
-0:04:40.639,0:04:45.360
-agenda so it's a process
-
-0:04:42.320,0:04:47.919
-and take it easy all right
-
-0:04:45.360,0:04:50.320
-so this is just an overview of my daily
-
-0:04:47.919,0:04:52.800
-agenda as you can see they're just like
-
-0:04:50.320,0:04:55.520
-appointments that I import from gmail
-
-0:04:52.800,0:04:57.919
-using org gcal
-
-0:04:55.520,0:04:58.880
-a simple habit tracker of like daily
-
-0:04:57.919,0:05:00.960
-free writing
-
-0:04:58.880,0:05:02.800
-as you can see there are a lot of times
-
-0:05:00.960,0:05:05.199
-where I'm skipping and the asterisk is
-
-0:05:02.800,0:05:08.479
-the one where I've completed that day
-
-0:05:05.199,0:05:10.080
-so you know it's a process and then just
-
-0:05:08.479,0:05:12.639
-like regular deadlines
-
-0:05:10.080,0:05:14.000
-so what happens is that I have other
-
-0:05:12.639,0:05:17.120
-to-do's that I have
-
-0:05:14.000,0:05:17.919
-not scheduled or not added a deadline
-
-0:05:17.120,0:05:20.560
-but they're just
-
-0:05:17.919,0:05:22.320
-tasks that keep piling up when I first
-
-0:05:20.560,0:05:24.880
-started with Emacs and org agenda
-
-0:05:22.320,0:05:26.880
-I had everything in there and it got
-
-0:05:24.880,0:05:29.680
-overwhelming and then I decided no
-
-0:05:26.880,0:05:30.800
-I'm not gonna even let them show up so
-
-0:05:29.680,0:05:33.120
-what I would do
-
-0:05:30.800,0:05:34.479
-at the beginning of each week or the
-
-0:05:33.120,0:05:36.800
-night before
-
-0:05:34.479,0:05:38.000
-um I would sit down look at all my to
-
-0:05:36.800,0:05:40.720
-to-do's that I have
-
-0:05:38.000,0:05:42.639
-not assigned yet to a deadline or a
-
-0:05:40.720,0:05:45.360
-schedule or just a simple
-
-0:05:42.639,0:05:46.320
-timestamp um and I would organize them
-
-0:05:45.360,0:05:49.520
-throughout the week
-
-0:05:46.320,0:05:51.680
-so here's an example of what I did
-
-0:05:49.520,0:05:53.039
-so on that wednesday from my gmail I had
-
-0:05:51.680,0:05:55.600
-all these appointments but
-
-0:05:53.039,0:05:56.560
-one of them is I have a writing group
-
-0:05:55.600,0:05:58.400
-session
-
-0:05:56.560,0:05:59.759
-and so I looked at my tasks and I
-
-0:05:58.400,0:06:02.639
-thought okay then I will just
-
-0:05:59.759,0:06:03.520
-assign um like for example my emac
-
-0:06:02.639,0:06:06.319
-slides
-
-0:06:03.520,0:06:07.280
-or the framework diagram into that
-
-0:06:06.319,0:06:09.600
-writing session
-
-0:06:07.280,0:06:10.800
-and all I did was just add an active
-
-0:06:09.600,0:06:12.960
-timestamp
-
-0:06:10.800,0:06:14.000
-that is all I needed to do and it went
-
-0:06:12.960,0:06:17.120
-straight into my
-
-0:06:14.000,0:06:20.080
-appointment now if I miss that
-
-0:06:17.120,0:06:21.520
-it won't show up on the next day so if
-
-0:06:20.080,0:06:24.639
-you put in a deadline
-
-0:06:21.520,0:06:26.560
-it will show up as an overdue but if you
-
-0:06:24.639,0:06:29.280
-have no deadline or schedule it will not
-
-0:06:26.560,0:06:32.960
-show up in your daily org agenda
-
-0:06:29.280,0:06:35.680
-so just a star
-
-0:06:32.960,0:06:37.520
-all right another way of accessing your
-
-0:06:35.680,0:06:40.880
-to do's is that if it's
-
-0:06:37.520,0:06:42.160
-um file specific org file specific
-
-0:06:40.880,0:06:44.160
-buffer specific
-
-0:06:42.160,0:06:46.400
-and so like when we talked about like
-
-0:06:44.160,0:06:47.680
-whether to have a big ass org file or
-
-0:06:46.400,0:06:50.720
-like tiny files
-
-0:06:47.680,0:06:54.560
-it all depends and this isn't the the
-
-0:06:50.720,0:06:55.759
-um you know the way this depends
-
-0:06:54.560,0:06:58.400
-because if you're working on like a
-
-0:06:55.759,0:06:59.680
-dissertation um it's a huge manuscript
-
-0:06:58.400,0:07:02.880
-you need to like work
-
-0:06:59.680,0:07:05.759
-on that org file all the time um
-
-0:07:02.880,0:07:07.680
-then yes it might do should be in that
-
-0:07:05.759,0:07:08.000
-file specifically because every time if
-
-0:07:07.680,0:07:09.680
-I'm
-
-0:07:08.000,0:07:12.479
-if I'm visiting this org file all the
-
-0:07:09.680,0:07:15.520
-time I should be able to just look at my
-
-0:07:12.479,0:07:18.639
-tasks from uh within that buffer
-
-0:07:15.520,0:07:21.599
-and so I use org sidebar to
-
-0:07:18.639,0:07:22.960
-keep all these specific uh to do's
-
-0:07:21.599,0:07:26.560
-within that org file
-
-0:07:22.960,0:07:28.400
-I find it helpful okay
-
-0:07:26.560,0:07:29.759
-now that we're going into the writing
-
-0:07:28.400,0:07:33.039
-and reference management
-
-0:07:29.759,0:07:35.840
-we'll call it a literature review um
-
-0:07:33.039,0:07:36.639
-and this is something I've built as a
-
-0:07:35.840,0:07:40.240
-schema
-
-0:07:36.639,0:07:43.759
-I think that it works for now
-
-0:07:40.240,0:07:45.919
-um and it requires one outside pack
-
-0:07:43.759,0:07:47.680
-of outside software which is zotero what
-
-0:07:45.919,0:07:48.720
-I use it's an open source reference
-
-0:07:47.680,0:07:51.759
-management
-
-0:07:48.720,0:07:53.599
-software um it's great
-
-0:07:51.759,0:07:55.120
-but the things to keep in mind is that I
-
-0:07:53.599,0:07:58.319
-use two um
-
-0:07:55.120,0:08:01.039
-plugins that is really needed for when
-
-0:07:58.319,0:08:03.840
-we work with orgrim bibtex and orgrim
-
-0:08:01.039,0:08:06.160
-and org mode um and the zap file so
-
-0:08:03.840,0:08:07.039
-better bibtex organizes your reference
-
-0:08:06.160,0:08:10.560
-keys
-
-0:08:07.039,0:08:13.360
-um in um in a way like in a fashion that
-
-0:08:10.560,0:08:14.240
-works for you so for me all my reference
-
-0:08:13.360,0:08:17.280
-keys are like
-
-0:08:14.240,0:08:21.120
-last author and gear um and with zap
-
-0:08:17.280,0:08:22.319
-file I um I let it like rename all the
-
-0:08:21.120,0:08:24.400
-pdf files
-
-0:08:22.319,0:08:26.000
-the same way that I have for my bit of
-
-0:08:24.400,0:08:29.360
-my bib keys which is like
-
-0:08:26.000,0:08:33.440
-last name of author and year all right
-
-0:08:29.360,0:08:37.120
-once you export your entire
-
-0:08:33.440,0:08:39.440
-library as a bib file then you can work
-
-0:08:37.120,0:08:42.880
-on it within org mode and Emacs
-
-0:08:39.440,0:08:45.040
-using um the following packages
-
-0:08:42.880,0:08:47.839
-all right so with orgrim bibtex it
-
-0:08:45.040,0:08:49.519
-creates an org file for each bib entry
-
-0:08:47.839,0:08:52.240
-and you have the option of like
-
-0:08:49.519,0:08:54.880
-templating and doing other stuff with it
-
-0:08:52.240,0:08:56.240
-and then finally there's like this orb
-
-0:08:54.880,0:08:58.800
-pdf scraper
-
-0:08:56.240,0:09:00.240
-I've used it briefly but I think the
-
-0:08:58.800,0:09:02.880
-potential
-
-0:09:00.240,0:09:05.920
-with or pdf scraper is if you're gonna
-
-0:09:02.880,0:09:08.320
-do a bibliometric study or like a
-
-0:09:05.920,0:09:10.000
-systematic literature view there's
-
-0:09:08.320,0:09:10.959
-something there but I have to look
-
-0:09:10.000,0:09:14.399
-through it
-
-0:09:10.959,0:09:16.880
-anyway so once you create your you know
-
-0:09:14.399,0:09:18.160
-your reference file of reference x and
-
-0:09:16.880,0:09:20.240
-you're writing your notes
-
-0:09:18.160,0:09:22.399
-you can either go like with going
-
-0:09:20.240,0:09:24.080
-through org mode you're writing
-
-0:09:22.399,0:09:26.080
-your ideas you're writing your notes
-
-0:09:24.080,0:09:27.839
-you're assigning tasks
-
-0:09:26.080,0:09:30.480
-and then there's org transclusion which
-
-0:09:27.839,0:09:32.240
-I will mention briefly at the end
-
-0:09:30.480,0:09:35.360
-and ways to extract if you're going to
-
-0:09:32.240,0:09:36.640
-go through the orgrom
-
-0:09:35.360,0:09:38.720
-things that you're going to use within
-
-0:09:36.640,0:09:40.000
-orgrom it's a great way to build your
-
-0:09:38.720,0:09:42.880
-database you start making the
-
-0:09:40.000,0:09:44.959
-connections and you can visualize your
-
-0:09:42.880,0:09:46.240
-notes and like how these references are
-
-0:09:44.959,0:09:48.839
-linked to each other
-
-0:09:46.240,0:09:50.240
-through the organ server or or ground
-
-0:09:48.839,0:09:53.120
-graph
-
-0:09:50.240,0:09:53.680
-all right this is just notes for later
-
-0:09:53.120,0:09:56.240
-okay
-
-0:09:53.680,0:09:57.360
-so this is an example of like an orgram
-
-0:09:56.240,0:09:59.279
-file that I have
-
-0:09:57.360,0:10:01.760
-for example if I'm working on adaptation
-
-0:09:59.279,0:10:02.560
-policy I have these hyperlinks that are
-
-0:10:01.760,0:10:04.959
-linked to other
-
-0:10:02.560,0:10:06.640
-concepts and ideas such as either
-
-0:10:04.959,0:10:08.720
-climate security
-
-0:10:06.640,0:10:10.560
-um changing global environment so on and
-
-0:10:08.720,0:10:13.920
-so forth and the backlinks
-
-0:10:10.560,0:10:15.839
-are other references that talk about
-
-0:10:13.920,0:10:17.680
-this specific concept
-
-0:10:15.839,0:10:19.920
-so this is really helpful and then when
-
-0:10:17.680,0:10:22.160
-you visualize it the picture on the left
-
-0:10:19.920,0:10:24.160
-which I'm sure looks really small
-
-0:10:22.160,0:10:25.680
-um you can see the connections that it's
-
-0:10:24.160,0:10:28.160
-making with other
-
-0:10:25.680,0:10:29.760
-references so of course this is just
-
-0:10:28.160,0:10:32.720
-like a buffer
-
-0:10:29.760,0:10:34.560
-network when you look at the entire
-
-0:10:32.720,0:10:38.000
-database network it's it's
-
-0:10:34.560,0:10:41.680
-it's growing okay
-
-0:10:38.000,0:10:44.079
-so going into organ bidtech
-
-0:10:41.680,0:10:46.000
-so it utilizes a combination of the or
-
-0:10:44.079,0:10:46.880
-graph package helmbik tech candidate
-
-0:10:46.000,0:10:50.079
-completion
-
-0:10:46.880,0:10:51.440
-and it works with orgrom functionalities
-
-0:10:50.079,0:10:54.880
-and
-
-0:10:51.440,0:10:57.440
-other good stuff this is an example
-
-0:10:54.880,0:10:58.720
-of my orgrim bibtex file all right so
-
-0:10:57.440,0:11:01.200
-I've created
-
-0:10:58.720,0:11:02.320
-um the template which I pretty much use
-
-0:11:01.200,0:11:05.920
-what leo
-
-0:11:02.320,0:11:08.640
-has uh produced like in his um
-
-0:11:05.920,0:11:10.160
-tutorial so I think it's it's great it
-
-0:11:08.640,0:11:12.880
-works well for me
-
-0:11:10.160,0:11:14.480
-um and what it does is that it works
-
-0:11:12.880,0:11:17.519
-with your bib file
-
-0:11:14.480,0:11:19.519
-so if you're in your bib file you have a
-
-0:11:17.519,0:11:21.040
-sub entry that's called keywords and
-
-0:11:19.519,0:11:23.120
-usually that's within
-
-0:11:21.040,0:11:24.560
-a journal article the author would
-
-0:11:23.120,0:11:27.519
-specify these
-
-0:11:24.560,0:11:28.160
-keywords um when it gets imported into
-
-0:11:27.519,0:11:30.399
-zotero
-
-0:11:28.160,0:11:32.399
-it extracts those keywords and then it
-
-0:11:30.399,0:11:34.959
-gets populated as an org file
-
-0:11:32.399,0:11:36.959
-with orgrim bibtex so I always start
-
-0:11:34.959,0:11:38.560
-with the meta information first and then
-
-0:11:36.959,0:11:42.480
-I would write my notes
-
-0:11:38.560,0:11:45.760
-after that this is an example though
-
-0:11:42.480,0:11:49.120
-for reference of a physical book so
-
-0:11:45.760,0:11:51.519
-I don't have a pdf file for it um
-
-0:11:49.120,0:11:53.920
-so what I've figured out like a new idea
-
-0:11:51.519,0:11:55.760
-for it so if I'm writing notes on it
-
-0:11:53.920,0:11:57.279
-I would create a property that says
-
-0:11:55.760,0:11:58.959
-pages um
-
-0:11:57.279,0:12:00.639
-that way it's easier for you when you go
-
-0:11:58.959,0:12:02.720
-back to citing
-
-0:12:00.639,0:12:04.720
-um certain ideas or something that you
-
-0:12:02.720,0:12:07.839
-have the pages prepared there
-
-0:12:04.720,0:12:11.279
-it's easier that way okay
-
-0:12:07.839,0:12:13.040
-org noter which is something I
-
-0:12:11.279,0:12:14.880
-use a lot especially with journal
-
-0:12:13.040,0:12:15.600
-articles that have pdfs and stuff like
-
-0:12:14.880,0:12:19.120
-that
-
-0:12:15.600,0:12:22.720
-they're really helpful if you are gonna
-
-0:12:19.120,0:12:23.760
-if you've just started using um Emacs
-
-0:12:22.720,0:12:26.959
-and orgrim
-
-0:12:23.760,0:12:29.519
-and you have all these pdfs that have
-
-0:12:26.959,0:12:30.079
-all the annotations and highlighting and
-
-0:12:29.519,0:12:32.639
-the
-
-0:12:30.079,0:12:33.200
-all that stuff with org noter you can
-
-0:12:32.639,0:12:36.720
-just
-
-0:12:33.200,0:12:39.519
-use the org note or create skeleton
-
-0:12:36.720,0:12:41.200
-uh command and it will populate all your
-
-0:12:39.519,0:12:43.760
-notes that have already been
-
-0:12:41.200,0:12:44.800
-um entered within the pdf file if you're
-
-0:12:43.760,0:12:48.160
-using an outside
-
-0:12:44.800,0:12:52.560
-software and creates them like as a neat
-
-0:12:48.160,0:12:55.920
-org file I I highly recommend
-
-0:12:52.560,0:12:57.920
-finally org transclusion um
-
-0:12:55.920,0:13:01.040
-I think this is still in its beta phase
-
-0:12:57.920,0:13:02.720
-but I've been enjoying it so far
-
-0:13:01.040,0:13:04.800
-um I'm guessing people know what
-
-0:13:02.720,0:13:06.480
-translation mean which is sort of like
-
-0:13:04.800,0:13:09.600
-copy pasting text from
-
-0:13:06.480,0:13:11.839
-one org file to another this is helpful
-
-0:13:09.600,0:13:12.959
-I I think I I peeked at a question that
-
-0:13:11.839,0:13:16.320
-was talking about like
-
-0:13:12.959,0:13:18.320
-you know linking um to other org files
-
-0:13:16.320,0:13:20.320
-I think org transclusion could really
-
-0:13:18.320,0:13:24.399
-work okay it's
-
-0:13:20.320,0:13:27.760
-equivalent to the include
-
-0:13:24.399,0:13:29.519
-function within org mode um but I think
-
-0:13:27.760,0:13:32.560
-so like if you have other files
-
-0:13:29.519,0:13:34.800
-that you know which region that you
-
-0:13:32.560,0:13:36.079
-need in another file you could use the
-
-0:13:34.800,0:13:38.160
-include but with
-
-0:13:36.079,0:13:39.440
-org transclusion it's great I mean you
-
-0:13:38.160,0:13:42.720
-just have
-
-0:13:39.440,0:13:43.360
-um you're just linking one part to the
-
-0:13:42.720,0:13:45.760
-other
-
-0:13:43.360,0:13:47.760
-sort of like not refiling but you know
-
-0:13:45.760,0:13:49.680
-hyperlinking
-
-0:13:47.760,0:13:51.120
-so this is an example of what org
-
-0:13:49.680,0:13:53.680
-transclusion looks like
-
-0:13:51.120,0:13:54.720
-um so the highlighted problem statement
-
-0:13:53.680,0:13:57.760
-is from another
-
-0:13:54.720,0:13:58.240
-org file and then what I would do is
-
-0:13:57.760,0:13:59.760
-just like
-
-0:13:58.240,0:14:01.440
-link it to there and there was like a
-
-0:13:59.760,0:14:05.440
-transclusion command
-
-0:14:01.440,0:14:08.399
-I wish I made another screenshot of it
-
-0:14:05.440,0:14:09.120
-and so when you invoke org transclusion
-
-0:14:08.399,0:14:12.079
-mode
-
-0:14:09.120,0:14:12.480
-it turns um it prints it out like that
-
-0:14:12.079,0:14:15.120
-so
-
-0:14:12.480,0:14:16.560
-it's in view mode and then when you want
-
-0:14:15.120,0:14:18.480
-to edit it will take you back to that
-
-0:14:16.560,0:14:21.839
-buffer and you can edit the text
-
-0:14:18.480,0:14:22.720
-however you want all right so thank you
-
-0:14:21.839,0:14:26.000
-so much
-
-0:14:22.720,0:14:29.120
-um I wanted to leave room for questions
-
-0:14:26.000,0:14:32.560
-but special thanks to all the folks that
-
-0:14:29.120,0:14:33.440
-work on orgrom or ground bibtex orgrim
-
-0:14:32.560,0:14:36.320
-server or
-
-0:14:33.440,0:14:38.240
-transclusion and of course alpha papo on
-
-0:14:36.320,0:14:42.560
-or super agenda and org sidebar
-
-0:14:38.240,0:14:42.560
-that's how I got into Emacs thank you
-
-0:14:43.440,0:14:47.120
-all right and uh well thank you so yeah
-
-0:14:45.600,0:14:49.120
-this time I'll be the one asking the
-
-0:14:47.120,0:14:51.360
-question and not I'm in so
-
-0:14:49.120,0:14:53.120
-I'm feeling filling big shoes right now
-
-0:14:51.360,0:14:54.880
-so you'll have to bear with me folks
-
-0:14:53.120,0:14:56.240
-so thank you so much noora for your
-
-0:14:54.880,0:14:57.279
-presentation that is incredibly
-
-0:14:56.240,0:14:58.959
-interesting
-
-0:14:57.279,0:15:00.800
-so would you mind if I fed you questions
-
-0:14:58.959,0:15:04.000
-from the charts yeah
-
-0:15:00.800,0:15:06.160
-go ahead okay so the first one I I've
-
-0:15:04.000,0:15:07.920
-picked on my end was did you try using
-
-0:15:06.160,0:15:10.560
-ebib instead of zotero
-
-0:15:07.920,0:15:12.079
-and if so is it better than zotero in
-
-0:15:10.560,0:15:14.880
-some ways
-
-0:15:12.079,0:15:15.680
-I no I have not used eb I've only used
-
-0:15:14.880,0:15:18.560
-mendeley
-
-0:15:15.680,0:15:20.320
-and then they got bought by el savior
-
-0:15:18.560,0:15:23.040
-and so like I was like okay I'm done
-
-0:15:20.320,0:15:25.120
-I'm going to zotero um there are a lot
-
-0:15:23.040,0:15:26.240
-of plugins with zotero that you can play
-
-0:15:25.120,0:15:28.320
-around with
-
-0:15:26.240,0:15:30.480
-so I can't speak for ebit but definitely
-
-0:15:28.320,0:15:32.079
-zotero it's been a good experience so
-
-0:15:30.480,0:15:34.880
-far
-
-0:15:32.079,0:15:35.360
-yes same I also I also do research on
-
-0:15:34.880,0:15:38.079
-the site
-
-0:15:35.360,0:15:39.360
-as I told you english major and yeah I
-
-0:15:38.079,0:15:41.839
-also do zotero
-
-0:15:39.360,0:15:43.759
-some people have been using uh a
-
-0:15:41.839,0:15:44.160
-connector between zotero and Emacs which
-
-0:15:43.759,0:15:46.000
-has
-
-0:15:44.160,0:15:47.360
-they've had great success with them but
-
-0:15:46.000,0:15:50.480
-personally I haven't touched
-
-0:15:47.360,0:15:52.240
-touched it already so yeah
-
-0:15:50.480,0:15:53.920
-oh go ahead sorry all right so far I
-
-0:15:52.240,0:15:54.880
-don't have any problems with zotero but
-
-0:15:53.920,0:15:56.320
-maybe if I
-
-0:15:54.880,0:15:58.320
-run into something I might check out
-
-0:15:56.320,0:16:00.240
-ebay in the future
-
-0:15:58.320,0:16:01.680
-yeah definitely I think zotero is a very
-
-0:16:00.240,0:16:02.560
-solid project and you know the fact that
-
-0:16:01.680,0:16:04.959
-it's being used
-
-0:16:02.560,0:16:06.560
-by people outside of Emacs also ensures
-
-0:16:04.959,0:16:07.680
-that there's quite a lot of packing
-
-0:16:06.560,0:16:09.759
-behind the software
-
-0:16:07.680,0:16:11.759
-which is reassuring when your livelihood
-
-0:16:09.759,0:16:13.519
-depends on your research
-
-0:16:11.759,0:16:15.600
-right and then I think one more thing
-
-0:16:13.519,0:16:17.519
-with zotero is that you can create
-
-0:16:15.600,0:16:18.079
-groups so if you're in a collaborative
-
-0:16:17.519,0:16:20.160
-project
-
-0:16:18.079,0:16:22.320
-you can create a reference you know a
-
-0:16:20.160,0:16:23.759
-library just for your group and I think
-
-0:16:22.320,0:16:25.279
-that could help because like I
-
-0:16:23.759,0:16:27.600
-I'm going to be in a project next
-
-0:16:25.279,0:16:29.839
-semester that requires that
-
-0:16:27.600,0:16:31.600
-yeah definitely I believe the ability to
-
-0:16:29.839,0:16:33.839
-have folders inside zotero
-
-0:16:31.600,0:16:35.360
-makes it incredibly useful to manage
-
-0:16:33.839,0:16:37.440
-your different projects concurrent
-
-0:16:35.360,0:16:39.279
-projects
-
-0:16:37.440,0:16:41.279
-so moving on to the questions do you
-
-0:16:39.279,0:16:43.440
-have any suggestion on what subjects or
-
-0:16:41.279,0:16:46.560
-things should be tags or separate organ
-
-0:16:43.440,0:16:50.320
-files for cross-linking
-
-0:16:46.560,0:16:52.720
-right um so so far now like I'm having
-
-0:16:50.320,0:16:55.360
-trouble with like should I be combining
-
-0:16:52.720,0:16:55.839
-certain concepts together as one like
-
-0:16:55.360,0:16:59.360
-this is
-
-0:16:55.839,0:17:00.959
-where the the thought process you know
-
-0:16:59.360,0:17:02.959
-starts coming to fruit is that when you
-
-0:17:00.959,0:17:04.880
-start you know combining
-
-0:17:02.959,0:17:06.480
-ideas together so you won't need a
-
-0:17:04.880,0:17:09.199
-specific tag
-
-0:17:06.480,0:17:11.280
-and another one that are like similar in
-
-0:17:09.199,0:17:12.720
-ideas
-
-0:17:11.280,0:17:14.799
-I'm not sure if that answers the
-
-0:17:12.720,0:17:15.919
-question but like so far I've been using
-
-0:17:14.799,0:17:17.919
-the orgrum
-
-0:17:15.919,0:17:19.039
-you know the default way which is like
-
-0:17:17.919,0:17:22.160
-many small
-
-0:17:19.039,0:17:24.400
-um files and then just
-
-0:17:22.160,0:17:26.319
-linking them to my like either if I have
-
-0:17:24.400,0:17:26.959
-a report to write or if I have a like
-
-0:17:26.319,0:17:32.240
-you know
-
-0:17:26.959,0:17:35.360
-essay to write
-
-0:17:32.240,0:17:37.760
-I think you're muted
-
-0:17:35.360,0:17:38.400
-q and I just I did two stupid things the
-
-0:17:37.760,0:17:40.640
-first one
-
-0:17:38.400,0:17:42.320
-was filling up my water the second one
-
-0:17:40.640,0:17:43.760
-was peeking without actually turning on
-
-0:17:42.320,0:17:45.760
-my microphone
-
-0:17:43.760,0:17:47.760
-so let's just hope that nothing is going
-
-0:17:45.760,0:17:48.320
-to fry in the near vicinity of me right
-
-0:17:47.760,0:17:49.840
-now
-
-0:17:48.320,0:17:51.440
-but uh yeah I believe you've answered
-
-0:17:49.840,0:17:53.200
-the question so don't worry about it I'm
-
-0:17:51.440,0:17:55.280
-slightly wet right now which is not a
-
-0:17:53.200,0:17:57.280
-very agreeable feeling but we'll have to
-
-0:17:55.280,0:17:59.360
-carry on I suppose
-
-0:17:57.280,0:18:01.600
-another question is there a place where
-
-0:17:59.360,0:18:04.320
-people are collaborating on research
-
-0:18:01.600,0:18:06.160
-about Emacs so do you want to try to
-
-0:18:04.320,0:18:08.559
-take this one
-
-0:18:06.160,0:18:10.559
-um I don't know but I'm definitely
-
-0:18:08.559,0:18:12.480
-interested in the user experience of
-
-0:18:10.559,0:18:14.720
-Emacs so
-
-0:18:12.480,0:18:16.400
-if anyone wants to work on that I'm
-
-0:18:14.720,0:18:18.320
-happy
-
-0:18:16.400,0:18:19.760
-well you do have a a pretty good
-
-0:18:18.320,0:18:22.080
-candidate in front of you if I
-
-0:18:19.760,0:18:22.960
-should say so myself I'm incredibly
-
-0:18:22.080,0:18:25.039
-interested about
-
-0:18:22.960,0:18:26.960
-um the ability to do research in Emacs
-
-0:18:25.039,0:18:30.480
-and about the ability to
-
-0:18:26.960,0:18:32.480
-um preach the floss way
-
-0:18:30.480,0:18:34.080
-to academia and to the academe
-
-0:18:32.480,0:18:35.280
-especially because I believe there's
-
-0:18:34.080,0:18:38.240
-really something
-
-0:18:35.280,0:18:39.919
-great to be done sorry I'm just looking
-
-0:18:38.240,0:18:41.840
-at the puddle of water on the side which
-
-0:18:39.919,0:18:45.039
-is slightly oozing my way
-
-0:18:41.840,0:18:46.880
-which is not a very good feeling really
-
-0:18:45.039,0:18:48.320
-but yeah I believe I believe some work
-
-0:18:46.880,0:18:50.000
-could be done and if people are
-
-0:18:48.320,0:18:52.320
-interested in the chat right now
-
-0:18:50.000,0:18:53.440
-I mean do get in touch with us both
-
-0:18:52.320,0:18:56.480
-neuron and I
-
-0:18:53.440,0:18:57.280
-are on our slack channel yes I know
-
-0:18:56.480,0:19:00.080
-slack
-
-0:18:57.280,0:19:01.919
-the corporate hive mind that it's like
-
-0:19:00.080,0:19:02.720
-but we've decided with orgrim to use
-
-0:19:01.919,0:19:05.520
-slack
-
-0:19:02.720,0:19:06.880
-but you can find us very easily and uh
-
-0:19:05.520,0:19:07.360
-if you want to talk about these topics
-
-0:19:06.880,0:19:08.720
-yes
-
-0:19:07.360,0:19:10.720
-by all means do and we'll be very
-
-0:19:08.720,0:19:12.640
-interested to answer your questions
-
-0:19:10.720,0:19:15.520
-so I have a question here says like how
-
-0:19:12.640,0:19:18.640
-does the view for time blocking works
-
-0:19:15.520,0:19:22.000
-um I use org super agenda so
-
-0:19:18.640,0:19:23.200
-um what happens is that my active
-
-0:19:22.000,0:19:26.960
-timestamps are
-
-0:19:23.200,0:19:29.200
-only in my gmail or file
-
-0:19:26.960,0:19:30.080
-so if you use org gcal you have to
-
-0:19:29.200,0:19:32.559
-specify
-
-0:19:30.080,0:19:34.320
-a certain org file and when it you know
-
-0:19:32.559,0:19:35.679
-imports them it imports them as like
-
-0:19:34.320,0:19:38.400
-active
-
-0:19:35.679,0:19:40.480
-timestamps and I make sure whenever I
-
-0:19:38.400,0:19:42.480
-create a to-do or even a research task
-
-0:19:40.480,0:19:45.039
-that it doesn't have a time stamp on it
-
-0:19:42.480,0:19:48.480
-because what I want to do is go back
-
-0:19:45.039,0:19:50.160
-and then move around um these tags
-
-0:19:48.480,0:19:51.919
-according to my you know either weekly
-
-0:19:50.160,0:19:52.960
-schedule or monthly or however long you
-
-0:19:51.919,0:19:56.480
-want to do it
-
-0:19:52.960,0:19:59.679
-um so yeah only active timestamps or
-
-0:19:56.480,0:20:03.280
-deadlines um appear in your time grid
-
-0:19:59.679,0:20:05.440
-so that could work um that's very good
-
-0:20:03.280,0:20:06.320
-just just to uh interject for a second
-
-0:20:05.440,0:20:07.840
-about this
-
-0:20:06.320,0:20:10.720
-you know with orgrim right now we're
-
-0:20:07.840,0:20:13.039
-mostly uh focused on optimization
-
-0:20:10.720,0:20:14.720
-but we're hoping to move on to ux very
-
-0:20:13.039,0:20:16.720
-soon so all those matters about
-
-0:20:14.720,0:20:18.159
-you know having to do's in your files it
-
-0:20:16.720,0:20:20.000
-is something that we've been thinking
-
-0:20:18.159,0:20:20.880
-about with jethro kwan who is my main
-
-0:20:20.000,0:20:23.280
-commentator
-
-0:20:20.880,0:20:24.480
-or grow and we'll be working on this in
-
-0:20:23.280,0:20:26.080
-the coming months so don't worry too
-
-0:20:24.480,0:20:29.760
-much about it and stay tuned
-
-0:20:26.080,0:20:33.200
-yeah um so I've got the ebib
-
-0:20:29.760,0:20:34.080
-and what else um what subjects I think
-
-0:20:33.200,0:20:35.919
-okay
-
-0:20:34.080,0:20:37.120
-what is this question have you seen the
-
-0:20:35.919,0:20:40.400
-project papi's
-
-0:20:37.120,0:20:41.280
-I'm not sure what oh it's a zotero
-
-0:20:40.400,0:20:43.840
-alternative okay
-
-0:20:41.280,0:20:45.919
-I'll look into it thank you I don't know
-
-0:20:43.840,0:20:49.600
-I don't know about it either so
-
-0:20:45.919,0:20:53.200
-please look into it and let me know yeah
-
-0:20:49.600,0:20:55.679
-um have we covered all the questions
-
-0:20:53.200,0:20:56.880
-I believe we have and we have about
-
-0:20:55.679,0:20:58.880
-two-minute leeway
-
-0:20:56.880,0:21:00.240
-for me to move into the next talk so
-
-0:20:58.880,0:21:01.760
-we're right on time
-
-0:21:00.240,0:21:04.159
-all right thank you so much really
-
-0:21:01.760,0:21:05.440
-appreciate it and good luck everyone
-
-0:21:04.159,0:21:07.600
-well thank you and thank you so much for
-
-0:21:05.440,0:21:08.400
-coming and uh doing allowing me not to
-
-0:21:07.600,0:21:11.440
-be the only one
-
-0:21:08.400,0:21:14.559
-talking about all room today sounds good
-
-0:21:11.440,0:21:16.799
-all right thank you both very much
-
-0:21:14.559,0:21:16.799
-yes
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--18-org-roam-technical-presentation--leo-vivier-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--18-org-roam-technical-presentation--leo-vivier-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index a133b61d..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--18-org-roam-technical-presentation--leo-vivier-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1803 +0,0 @@
-0:00:00.000,0:00:03.760
-at the end we are right on time so I'm
-
-0:00:02.399,0:00:04.319
-sorry if you have a lot of questions
-
-0:00:03.760,0:00:06.960
-before
-
-0:00:04.319,0:00:08.559
-you had some so many questions and I
-
-0:00:06.960,0:00:10.080
-couldn't answer all of them and I'm
-
-0:00:08.559,0:00:11.599
-really happy about it but I'm also
-
-0:00:10.080,0:00:12.719
-really sad that I don't have enough time
-
-0:00:11.599,0:00:15.040
-to do so
-
-0:00:12.719,0:00:17.119
-so I'm gonna try to do a better job this
-
-0:00:15.040,0:00:20.240
-time of leaving you a little more time
-
-0:00:17.119,0:00:22.960
-for the questions so just before
-
-0:00:20.240,0:00:24.400
-a little addendum because I did screw up
-
-0:00:22.960,0:00:27.439
-in the previous presentation
-
-0:00:24.400,0:00:28.800
-you remember I tried to rename the file
-
-0:00:27.439,0:00:31.599
-and it didn't work
-
-0:00:28.800,0:00:32.559
-well it turns out uh I had two file name
-
-0:00:31.599,0:00:34.480
-baz so
-
-0:00:32.559,0:00:36.000
-my software works great thank you very
-
-0:00:34.480,0:00:38.800
-much uh
-
-0:00:36.000,0:00:40.239
-all right so now what I'm gonna do
-
-0:00:38.800,0:00:43.040
-during this presentation
-
-0:00:40.239,0:00:44.399
-is that I'm going to oops I didn't stop
-
-0:00:43.040,0:00:47.520
-my timer just give me
-
-0:00:44.399,0:00:50.719
-a little second and let's subtract
-
-0:00:47.520,0:00:52.239
-one minute okay good so
-
-0:00:50.719,0:00:54.079
-what I'm going to do right now it's a
-
-0:00:52.239,0:00:56.879
-little different from the previous
-
-0:00:54.079,0:00:58.239
-talk I've gave you and different even
-
-0:00:56.879,0:01:00.480
-from what nura gave you
-
-0:00:58.239,0:01:02.399
-there's like uh scaling the mountain as
-
-0:01:00.480,0:01:03.359
-far as difficulty is concerned and on
-
-0:01:02.399,0:01:04.879
-this one
-
-0:01:03.359,0:01:06.799
-I will be telling you about the
-
-0:01:04.879,0:01:09.360
-technical aspects of orgrim
-
-0:01:06.799,0:01:11.119
-because you know I've been telling you
-
-0:01:09.360,0:01:13.119
-about the general philosophy
-
-0:01:11.119,0:01:14.560
-of the notes and the general philosophy
-
-0:01:13.119,0:01:16.159
-of organization
-
-0:01:14.560,0:01:18.479
-but right now I really want to get into
-
-0:01:16.159,0:01:22.640
-the nitty gritty about or grow
-
-0:01:18.479,0:01:25.759
-so if we go in the git repository
-
-0:01:22.640,0:01:27.920
-this at the very core is all grown and
-
-0:01:25.759,0:01:28.960
-for some of you who have no experience
-
-0:01:27.920,0:01:31.280
-whatsoever
-
-0:01:28.960,0:01:32.880
-uh developing stuff or programming or
-
-0:01:31.280,0:01:36.000
-anything along those lines
-
-0:01:32.880,0:01:36.720
-this is how all the development around
-
-0:01:36.000,0:01:40.000
-the world
-
-0:01:36.720,0:01:42.159
-is working you have a repository a
-
-0:01:40.000,0:01:44.399
-git repository where you have all the
-
-0:01:42.159,0:01:46.399
-files all the libraries you're using
-
-0:01:44.399,0:01:48.720
-all the programs all the commands
-
-0:01:46.399,0:01:52.240
-everything is inside your files
-
-0:01:48.720,0:01:53.759
-and in a way this is the organ project
-
-0:01:52.240,0:01:55.600
-you can see that we have many files we
-
-0:01:53.759,0:01:57.040
-have organ buffer capture compat
-
-0:01:55.600,0:02:00.399
-completion dailies
-
-0:01:57.040,0:02:02.000
-etc etc so
-
-0:02:00.399,0:02:04.079
-before we dive a little deeper I just
-
-0:02:02.000,0:02:04.640
-want to give you a lay of the land so to
-
-0:02:04.079,0:02:08.160
-speak to
-
-0:02:04.640,0:02:11.680
-to know where we're heading so
-
-0:02:08.160,0:02:15.599
-orgro is built on top of old mode
-
-0:02:11.680,0:02:17.760
-and org mode gives us plenty of tools
-
-0:02:15.599,0:02:18.800
-to play around with the files I'm moving
-
-0:02:17.760,0:02:20.080
-the glass I'm
-
-0:02:18.800,0:02:21.360
-I'm starting to move my hands a little
-
-0:02:20.080,0:02:22.959
-bit you know when I get excited about
-
-0:02:21.360,0:02:26.640
-something I move my hand
-
-0:02:22.959,0:02:29.360
-and then that stuff happens so
-
-0:02:26.640,0:02:31.360
-in all chrome we have org mode and
-
-0:02:29.360,0:02:33.360
-augment gives us plenty of tools which
-
-0:02:31.360,0:02:36.560
-are incredibly useful
-
-0:02:33.360,0:02:37.440
-for writing stuff so you know we already
-
-0:02:36.560,0:02:39.440
-have the links
-
-0:02:37.440,0:02:40.560
-we already have the hierarchy which is
-
-0:02:39.440,0:02:43.360
-given by having
-
-0:02:40.560,0:02:43.760
-trees within trees within trees we have
-
-0:02:43.360,0:02:45.760
-uh
-
-0:02:43.760,0:02:48.000
-quote blocks we have babel blocks we
-
-0:02:45.760,0:02:49.680
-have so much stuff we have an arsenal of
-
-0:02:48.000,0:02:53.519
-tools that have been developed
-
-0:02:49.680,0:02:56.640
-for the last 15 years and
-
-0:02:53.519,0:02:59.760
-when you think about it all chrome just
-
-0:02:56.640,0:03:01.360
-wants to create backlinks but it sounds
-
-0:02:59.760,0:03:02.239
-something very simple but the problem is
-
-0:03:01.360,0:03:05.519
-that we need
-
-0:03:02.239,0:03:06.400
-to play nicely with all of those
-
-0:03:05.519,0:03:09.360
-intricate
-
-0:03:06.400,0:03:10.879
-pieces and the fact is it takes quite a
-
-0:03:09.360,0:03:11.440
-lot of expertise to be able to do so
-
-0:03:10.879,0:03:14.400
-because
-
-0:03:11.440,0:03:15.200
-if right now we are in the brain of all
-
-0:03:14.400,0:03:18.959
-grow
-
-0:03:15.200,0:03:21.599
-but if I show you the brain of org mode
-
-0:03:18.959,0:03:23.280
-so this is the brain of org mode and it
-
-0:03:21.599,0:03:25.519
-looks very simple like this because I
-
-0:03:23.280,0:03:28.000
-haven't entered the less folder
-
-0:03:25.519,0:03:29.120
-but I'm just going to enter it I'm going
-
-0:03:28.000,0:03:32.000
-to
-
-0:03:29.120,0:03:32.959
-zoom out a little bit don't worry if you
-
-0:03:32.000,0:03:35.519
-don't see everything
-
-0:03:32.959,0:03:37.519
-but I just want you to get a fear the
-
-0:03:35.519,0:03:41.280
-sheer feel of magnitude
-
-0:03:37.519,0:03:42.640
-that is um org mode so right now we are
-
-0:03:41.280,0:03:43.760
-in a very small size what I'm gonna do
-
-0:03:42.640,0:03:47.519
-I'm going to skip
-
-0:03:43.760,0:03:51.040
-one page okay one two
-
-0:03:47.519,0:03:52.319
-three we have let's just check how many
-
-0:03:51.040,0:03:54.640
-lines we have
-
-0:03:52.319,0:03:56.480
-okay let me just revert to a fairly
-
-0:03:54.640,0:03:58.560
-readable side
-
-0:03:56.480,0:03:59.599
-at the bottom you can see that we have
-
-0:03:58.560,0:04:00.959
-oh it's not showing because it's a
-
-0:03:59.599,0:04:03.840
-little small okay I'm just going to
-
-0:04:00.959,0:04:06.959
-resize the window a little bit
-
-0:04:03.840,0:04:08.720
-it's not showing up give me a second I
-
-0:04:06.959,0:04:10.159
-can't see how many lines I have okay so
-
-0:04:08.720,0:04:11.840
-let's do it to get away
-
-0:04:10.159,0:04:14.000
-I'm going to go back at the beginning of
-
-0:04:11.840,0:04:16.160
-the buffer and we're going to count
-
-0:04:14.000,0:04:17.840
-how many lines we have so the bottom in
-
-0:04:16.160,0:04:18.880
-a midi buffer and the mini buffer is
-
-0:04:17.840,0:04:22.320
-this area
-
-0:04:18.880,0:04:25.919
-we have 377 lines
-
-0:04:22.320,0:04:29.759
-which means 377
-
-0:04:25.919,0:04:31.520
-libraries within org mode and mind you
-
-0:04:29.759,0:04:32.960
-that's not counting all the modules that
-
-0:04:31.520,0:04:36.240
-we have on the side which
-
-0:04:32.960,0:04:37.360
-come on top of volt mode now when you
-
-0:04:36.240,0:04:40.639
-try to think
-
-0:04:37.360,0:04:44.400
-about something so elemental
-
-0:04:40.639,0:04:45.520
-as links you have to think about how to
-
-0:04:44.400,0:04:48.560
-play well
-
-0:04:45.520,0:04:50.000
-with every single one of these modules
-
-0:04:48.560,0:04:53.759
-now obviously not
-
-0:04:50.000,0:04:56.080
-the 370 370. sometimes you know
-
-0:04:53.759,0:04:57.680
-one module it's not going to do anything
-
-0:04:56.080,0:04:58.639
-like I'm not sure op car could be doing
-
-0:04:57.680,0:05:00.080
-anything with it
-
-0:04:58.639,0:05:03.039
-but it's something that we have to keep
-
-0:05:00.080,0:05:04.720
-in mind and so
-
-0:05:03.039,0:05:07.520
-really early on when we started
-
-0:05:04.720,0:05:10.080
-developing all grown with jethro kwan my
-
-0:05:07.520,0:05:10.639
-co-maintainer you know we had this idea
-
-0:05:10.080,0:05:13.520
-that
-
-0:05:10.639,0:05:14.639
-we wanted to develop something that was
-
-0:05:13.520,0:05:18.240
-optimized
-
-0:05:14.639,0:05:20.160
-something that would you know scale very
-
-0:05:18.240,0:05:21.600
-nicely whether or not you had
-
-0:05:20.160,0:05:24.560
-you know something that would work as
-
-0:05:21.600,0:05:27.680
-fast if you had 10 files
-
-0:05:24.560,0:05:30.880
-or if you had 100 files or if you had
-
-0:05:27.680,0:05:32.080
-10 000 files and maybe more so the
-
-0:05:30.880,0:05:34.400
-problem when you do this
-
-0:05:32.080,0:05:36.320
-and I'm doing some callbacks to the talk
-
-0:05:34.400,0:05:41.280
-I gave you earlier today about
-
-0:05:36.320,0:05:44.800
-few small few big files this is many
-
-0:05:41.280,0:05:45.919
-I got confused few big files versus many
-
-0:05:44.800,0:05:49.280
-small files
-
-0:05:45.919,0:05:51.600
-the problem with this is that we need to
-
-0:05:49.280,0:05:53.680
-think about optimization from the get go
-
-0:05:51.600,0:05:54.800
-and so one of the decision we took when
-
-0:05:53.680,0:05:59.199
-we got started
-
-0:05:54.800,0:06:02.479
-with orgrum is that if I go in my
-
-0:05:59.199,0:06:04.240
-test repository so that's the one in
-
-0:06:02.479,0:06:08.000
-which we were right before
-
-0:06:04.240,0:06:11.600
-we have a file which is called orgrumdb
-
-0:06:08.000,0:06:14.160
-now if I open it it's not it's a
-
-0:06:11.600,0:06:15.120
-little garbage because uh it's a binary
-
-0:06:14.160,0:06:18.560
-but what we have
-
-0:06:15.120,0:06:21.919
-is a database with which we communicate
-
-0:06:18.560,0:06:25.120
-via sorry it's an sql database
-
-0:06:21.919,0:06:28.479
-and what this allows us to do
-
-0:06:25.120,0:06:31.919
-is we store all the information we need
-
-0:06:28.479,0:06:34.720
-inside this sql database which allows us
-
-0:06:31.919,0:06:35.360
-to speed up a lot of the operations that
-
-0:06:34.720,0:06:37.840
-are
-
-0:06:35.360,0:06:38.479
-necessary for the functioning of our
-
-0:06:37.840,0:06:40.240
-ground
-
-0:06:38.479,0:06:41.759
-so for instance if I go back to the
-
-0:06:40.240,0:06:43.440
-index file that I had before
-
-0:06:41.759,0:06:45.680
-let's just go back to who actually this
-
-0:06:43.440,0:06:47.919
-way you'll see a little more on the side
-
-0:06:45.680,0:06:48.720
-so you see that on the side we have
-
-0:06:47.919,0:06:50.319
-whoops
-
-0:06:48.720,0:06:51.759
-two links I'm not going to click on them
-
-0:06:50.319,0:06:53.199
-otherwise I'm going to open them but we
-
-0:06:51.759,0:06:56.319
-have two links
-
-0:06:53.199,0:06:58.240
-now there are many implementations of
-
-0:06:56.319,0:07:00.800
-the zettol casten method inside
-
-0:06:58.240,0:07:02.400
-Emacs and inside and with old mode but
-
-0:07:00.800,0:07:04.639
-what we've decided to do
-
-0:07:02.400,0:07:05.520
-is that every time you have a link so if
-
-0:07:04.639,0:07:08.479
-we go to
-
-0:07:05.520,0:07:09.120
-the index again here at point we have
-
-0:07:08.479,0:07:12.400
-the link
-
-0:07:09.120,0:07:14.160
-foo every time we create a link we
-
-0:07:12.400,0:07:16.800
-update our database
-
-0:07:14.160,0:07:17.919
-to say okay so we have a link in the
-
-0:07:16.800,0:07:21.080
-file
-
-0:07:17.919,0:07:24.319
-index which is leading to the file
-
-0:07:21.080,0:07:27.840
-fu.org and it is situated
-
-0:07:24.319,0:07:29.840
-under the heading a heading and
-
-0:07:27.840,0:07:31.440
-if you check the site buffer you see
-
-0:07:29.840,0:07:33.120
-that all this all these information
-
-0:07:31.440,0:07:36.720
-which I just highlighted to you
-
-0:07:33.120,0:07:36.720
-are present right here
-
-0:07:42.639,0:07:46.400
-oh well sorry I forgot this thank you
-
-0:07:45.599,0:07:50.879
-okay
-
-0:07:46.400,0:07:53.039
-so let's see log okay I'm going to split
-
-0:07:50.879,0:07:54.960
-actually I'm going to split like this
-
-0:07:53.039,0:07:56.960
-I'm going to go back there
-
-0:07:54.960,0:07:58.720
-the problem is that I can't show my
-
-0:07:56.960,0:08:02.080
-keystrokes at the same time as a machine
-
-0:07:58.720,0:08:03.599
-I'm showing the site buffer so I'll
-
-0:08:02.080,0:08:05.199
-keep it right now for your own
-
-0:08:03.599,0:08:07.039
-discretion anyway getting back to the
-
-0:08:05.199,0:08:10.160
-talk
-
-0:08:07.039,0:08:12.720
-so the thing is we have this
-
-0:08:10.160,0:08:13.520
-sql database and the goal is to keep it
-
-0:08:12.720,0:08:16.400
-optimized
-
-0:08:13.520,0:08:17.039
-now why is it better optimized than just
-
-0:08:16.400,0:08:20.960
-using
-
-0:08:17.039,0:08:23.520
-orgrom sorry just using default org mode
-
-0:08:20.960,0:08:24.080
-so in my talk about many big files
-
-0:08:23.520,0:08:26.879
-versus
-
-0:08:24.080,0:08:28.080
-a few I keep getting you know you got
-
-0:08:26.879,0:08:29.120
-what I was saying I'm not going to
-
-0:08:28.080,0:08:32.240
-repeat it
-
-0:08:29.120,0:08:35.200
-by the way it is uh 10 to 10.
-
-0:08:32.240,0:08:36.399
-I'm starting really to be tired now so
-
-0:08:35.200,0:08:39.279
-uh moving on to
-
-0:08:36.399,0:08:40.800
-um what did I want to show you so it was
-
-0:08:39.279,0:08:44.959
-almost yes all the elements
-
-0:08:40.800,0:08:47.200
-so what I'm going to do I'm going to
-
-0:08:44.959,0:08:48.399
-see I believe it's org element pass
-
-0:08:47.200,0:08:51.040
-buffer
-
-0:08:48.399,0:08:51.920
-so I was telling you about all elements
-
-0:08:51.040,0:08:53.600
-before
-
-0:08:51.920,0:08:55.760
-and the main command sorry the main
-
-0:08:53.600,0:08:58.560
-function that is used by org element
-
-0:08:55.760,0:08:59.760
-is pass buffer what it does and you can
-
-0:08:58.560,0:09:01.040
-see the dock string is that it
-
-0:08:59.760,0:09:03.279
-recursively passed
-
-0:09:01.040,0:09:04.959
-the buffer and return structure
-
-0:09:03.279,0:09:06.320
-structure being all the information that
-
-0:09:04.959,0:09:07.680
-we have in this buffer
-
-0:09:06.320,0:09:09.600
-so just to show you a little more we're
-
-0:09:07.680,0:09:10.880
-going to move into a scratch buffer
-
-0:09:09.600,0:09:12.800
-and what we're going to do is that we're
-
-0:09:10.880,0:09:16.320
-going to write this command
-
-0:09:12.800,0:09:17.760
-pass buffer and we're going to check the
-
-0:09:16.320,0:09:19.600
-output of this command
-
-0:09:17.760,0:09:22.000
-oh sorry not this one we're going to go
-
-0:09:19.600,0:09:23.680
-in the index so the index file you have
-
-0:09:22.000,0:09:25.120
-a title you have a heading you have a
-
-0:09:23.680,0:09:26.880
-link etc etc
-
-0:09:25.120,0:09:28.560
-so what I'm going to do I'm going to
-
-0:09:26.880,0:09:30.800
-evaluate this text
-
-0:09:28.560,0:09:32.560
-and now at the bottom in the midi buffer
-
-0:09:30.800,0:09:36.160
-in the mini buffer sorry
-
-0:09:32.560,0:09:37.600
-you see an ast an abstract
-
-0:09:36.160,0:09:39.839
-obviously don't remember what the s
-
-0:09:37.600,0:09:42.720
-stands for semantic
-
-0:09:39.839,0:09:43.519
-huh interesting anyway a representation
-
-0:09:42.720,0:09:45.279
-of the data
-
-0:09:43.519,0:09:47.600
-in a way that is exploitable by a
-
-0:09:45.279,0:09:49.839
-machine now what I'm going to do
-
-0:09:47.600,0:09:52.000
-syntax thank you so what I'm going to do
-
-0:09:49.839,0:09:54.480
-I'm going to paste it inside the buffer
-
-0:09:52.000,0:09:56.399
-in a way that is humanly readable and
-
-0:09:54.480,0:09:58.800
-you can see that we have plenty of
-
-0:09:56.399,0:10:00.560
-information we have a section which
-
-0:09:58.800,0:10:05.040
-starts at the char
-
-0:10:00.560,0:10:07.040
-1 which ends at the character 45
-
-0:10:05.040,0:10:08.240
-we have the content so he makes scratch
-
-0:10:07.040,0:10:10.240
-oh actually no
-
-0:10:08.240,0:10:11.279
-never mind I did something wrong I run
-
-0:10:10.240,0:10:13.040
-it in the wrong buffer
-
-0:10:11.279,0:10:14.399
-so actually what I'm going to do we're
-
-0:10:13.040,0:10:17.519
-going to run this command
-
-0:10:14.399,0:10:21.120
-with the selected window next
-
-0:10:17.519,0:10:23.760
-window okay that's a bit of live
-
-0:10:21.120,0:10:24.640
-elise writing for you right now okay so
-
-0:10:23.760,0:10:26.240
-now if I
-
-0:10:24.640,0:10:28.480
-evaluate this and paste the content of
-
-0:10:26.240,0:10:31.600
-the buffer
-
-0:10:28.480,0:10:32.399
-it is doing its bidding so now what we
-
-0:10:31.600,0:10:34.959
-have
-
-0:10:32.399,0:10:36.720
-we have a section we have the keyword
-
-0:10:34.959,0:10:38.160
-title which you see right here you have
-
-0:10:36.720,0:10:39.920
-the value
-
-0:10:38.160,0:10:41.360
-if we scroll down a little bit we have a
-
-0:10:39.920,0:10:42.480
-heading which is right here we have the
-
-0:10:41.360,0:10:44.800
-contents
-
-0:10:42.480,0:10:46.320
-which should be yes the content is not
-
-0:10:44.800,0:10:48.079
-listed exactly here but you have a
-
-0:10:46.320,0:10:50.640
-paragraph which is this
-
-0:10:48.079,0:10:51.200
-and then you have a link etc etc it is
-
-0:10:50.640,0:10:53.839
-all
-
-0:10:51.200,0:10:54.640
-uh parenthesis if you're not used to
-
-0:10:53.839,0:10:56.320
-e-list
-
-0:10:54.640,0:10:58.640
-like right now I've selected only the
-
-0:10:56.320,0:11:00.399
-content of the parenthesis link
-
-0:10:58.640,0:11:01.680
-I can move like this etcetera etcetera
-
-0:11:00.399,0:11:03.760
-I'm not it's not a needle
-
-0:11:01.680,0:11:05.279
-lessons that I'm doing right now but
-
-0:11:03.760,0:11:08.399
-basically
-
-0:11:05.279,0:11:09.120
-if we were to use the default tooling of
-
-0:11:08.399,0:11:10.880
-orgrom
-
-0:11:09.120,0:11:12.480
-org mode sorry I keep getting too
-
-0:11:10.880,0:11:14.240
-confused sorry for that
-
-0:11:12.480,0:11:16.399
-uh it would be extremely slow to do what
-
-0:11:14.240,0:11:19.760
-we're doing some people
-
-0:11:16.399,0:11:22.240
-are doing so some implementations of the
-
-0:11:19.760,0:11:23.040
-zettelkassen method inside Emacs have
-
-0:11:22.240,0:11:26.480
-opted
-
-0:11:23.040,0:11:27.360
-for this method but the problem is that
-
-0:11:26.480,0:11:30.160
-we think
-
-0:11:27.360,0:11:30.560
-that it scales poorly now some other
-
-0:11:30.160,0:11:33.920
-people
-
-0:11:30.560,0:11:35.600
-have decided to not do with a database
-
-0:11:33.920,0:11:37.200
-and what they do is that they use a tool
-
-0:11:35.600,0:11:38.800
-which is called rip grep
-
-0:11:37.200,0:11:41.279
-you might know grep which is a tool that
-
-0:11:38.800,0:11:43.440
-allows you to search
-
-0:11:41.279,0:11:46.560
-a file the content of a file for a line
-
-0:11:43.440,0:11:49.680
-so for instance if we open v term here
-
-0:11:46.560,0:11:51.839
-uh let's see so I've opened the term I
-
-0:11:49.680,0:11:54.399
-am in this repository what I'm going to
-
-0:11:51.839,0:11:58.000
-do is that I'm going to
-
-0:11:54.399,0:12:00.480
-load the content of the file uh
-
-0:11:58.000,0:12:02.480
-how am I going to do this oh um I need
-
-0:12:00.480,0:12:06.160
-to move to bash
-
-0:12:02.480,0:12:08.000
-let's do crap
-
-0:12:06.160,0:12:09.519
-for the line which links do we did we
-
-0:12:08.000,0:12:11.600
-have grep foo
-
-0:12:09.519,0:12:13.760
-inside the file is it three I can
-
-0:12:11.600,0:12:16.880
-remember okay let's do this
-
-0:12:13.760,0:12:16.880
-am I working no
-
-0:12:18.079,0:12:22.800
-let's go for four why is it eight
-
-0:12:21.279,0:12:24.320
-ah damn it oh you know what I'm just
-
-0:12:22.800,0:12:28.240
-going to copy the name
-
-0:12:24.320,0:12:33.279
-up there we go no
-
-0:12:28.240,0:12:33.279
-ah problem with live presentation always
-
-0:12:33.680,0:12:36.720
-you know what I'm struggling so I'm
-
-0:12:34.800,0:12:38.560
-going to drop this point anyway
-
-0:12:36.720,0:12:40.000
-so grep is a simple tool that allows you
-
-0:12:38.560,0:12:42.480
-to search the content of a file but
-
-0:12:40.000,0:12:44.160
-rig grep is a solution that is written
-
-0:12:42.480,0:12:45.920
-in rust and which is supposed to be
-
-0:12:44.160,0:12:48.880
-well not supposed which is far more
-
-0:12:45.920,0:12:50.639
-capable now
-
-0:12:48.880,0:12:52.320
-I'd like to talk to you about the future
-
-0:12:50.639,0:12:54.720
-of orgrim right now I've told you about
-
-0:12:52.320,0:12:58.399
-the general concept which is about using
-
-0:12:54.720,0:13:01.519
-uh this sql database and about
-
-0:12:58.399,0:13:03.279
-playing nicely with old mode but
-
-0:13:01.519,0:13:05.200
-we think that there's something great
-
-0:13:03.279,0:13:08.320
-that we can do about orgrim
-
-0:13:05.200,0:13:10.320
-now I've been talking with the a lot of
-
-0:13:08.320,0:13:10.880
-people who are behind org mode and you
-
-0:13:10.320,0:13:14.000
-know
-
-0:13:10.880,0:13:16.880
-they've told us do you think that
-
-0:13:14.000,0:13:18.320
-orgrom could have something to bring to
-
-0:13:16.880,0:13:20.160
-old mode let's say
-
-0:13:18.320,0:13:21.600
-backlinks is there something that we
-
-0:13:20.160,0:13:25.600
-could be doing to
-
-0:13:21.600,0:13:27.200
-import backlinks into old mode and
-
-0:13:25.600,0:13:29.200
-we thought about it with jethro and the
-
-0:13:27.200,0:13:30.800
-problem is uh
-
-0:13:29.200,0:13:32.720
-we've always tried to have an
-
-0:13:30.800,0:13:35.360
-experimental ground a very
-
-0:13:32.720,0:13:36.320
-uh can a very isolated portion of your
-
-0:13:35.360,0:13:37.920
-system
-
-0:13:36.320,0:13:40.320
-where we could track backlinks and
-
-0:13:37.920,0:13:42.320
-that's why we use um
-
-0:13:40.320,0:13:44.880
-a slipbox directory so that we only
-
-0:13:42.320,0:13:47.040
-track backlinks in one specific place
-
-0:13:44.880,0:13:48.639
-but now because there seems to be so
-
-0:13:47.040,0:13:50.079
-much interest about the method and we
-
-0:13:48.639,0:13:52.480
-have so much backing
-
-0:13:50.079,0:13:53.120
-on uh you know on github we have like
-
-0:13:52.480,0:13:56.399
-200
-
-0:13:53.120,0:13:59.760
-2 600 stars which is mind-boggling to us
-
-0:13:56.399,0:14:02.399
-because we have so much success but
-
-0:13:59.760,0:14:03.360
-we have plenty of ideas about the future
-
-0:14:02.399,0:14:06.000
-one of the key
-
-0:14:03.360,0:14:08.480
-parts of development being the writing
-
-0:14:06.000,0:14:09.680
-of an external parser for orgrim
-
-0:14:08.480,0:14:11.839
-so I've been telling you about org
-
-0:14:09.680,0:14:15.279
-element org elements runs
-
-0:14:11.839,0:14:19.519
-inside Emacs but what if
-
-0:14:15.279,0:14:23.600
-we wrote a background process
-
-0:14:19.519,0:14:25.760
-that could read a file an augment file
-
-0:14:23.600,0:14:27.440
-extract the same type of data that you
-
-0:14:25.760,0:14:30.240
-see on your screen right now
-
-0:14:27.440,0:14:30.959
-so that we could use to update a
-
-0:14:30.240,0:14:33.279
-database
-
-0:14:30.959,0:14:34.959
-so that we could use to compute the
-
-0:14:33.279,0:14:37.360
-links so that we could use it
-
-0:14:34.959,0:14:39.519
-to show you know orgrim server all the
-
-0:14:37.360,0:14:41.360
-connections between your nodes
-
-0:14:39.519,0:14:44.320
-now there is a path of improvement here
-
-0:14:41.360,0:14:47.360
-that is extremely important to us
-
-0:14:44.320,0:14:48.639
-but you know that's the technical aspect
-
-0:14:47.360,0:14:50.079
-and I'm out of time I'm just going to
-
-0:14:48.639,0:14:51.360
-take one more minute to finish on this
-
-0:14:50.079,0:14:54.560
-point
-
-0:14:51.360,0:14:57.680
-but we believe
-
-0:14:54.560,0:14:58.399
-that orgrim has the potential to be a
-
-0:14:57.680,0:15:00.639
-think tank
-
-0:14:58.399,0:15:01.920
-in a way for org mode and the way we
-
-0:15:00.639,0:15:04.079
-think about
-
-0:15:01.920,0:15:06.079
-note-taking in general I've stressed a
-
-0:15:04.079,0:15:10.240
-great deal in my first presentation
-
-0:15:06.079,0:15:12.480
-sorry the one I did before neura that
-
-0:15:10.240,0:15:14.639
-all chrome is really great as a way to
-
-0:15:12.480,0:15:17.600
-think organically about knowledge
-
-0:15:14.639,0:15:19.279
-and honestly we kind of want to put the
-
-0:15:17.600,0:15:22.079
-theory into practice with orgrim
-
-0:15:19.279,0:15:23.440
-we are holding something which has the
-
-0:15:22.079,0:15:25.120
-potential to be
-
-0:15:23.440,0:15:27.279
-a great factor of innovation for the
-
-0:15:25.120,0:15:29.600
-future whether it be or org mode
-
-0:15:27.279,0:15:31.440
-or even for software in general you know
-
-0:15:29.600,0:15:34.880
-the way to think about
-
-0:15:31.440,0:15:37.440
-build nodes of knowledge in a way
-
-0:15:34.880,0:15:38.240
-and the way to represent all those ids
-
-0:15:37.440,0:15:40.560
-with the graph
-
-0:15:38.240,0:15:41.600
-the way to basically have a note-taking
-
-0:15:40.560,0:15:43.360
-system that
-
-0:15:41.600,0:15:45.839
-corresponds to the research that
-
-0:15:43.360,0:15:49.120
-corresponds to the way you think
-
-0:15:45.839,0:15:51.839
-so yeah I believe we are
-
-0:15:49.120,0:15:53.519
-really excited about this and if you
-
-0:15:51.839,0:15:55.360
-want to keep track of the development of
-
-0:15:53.519,0:15:57.600
-all chrome
-
-0:15:55.360,0:15:59.279
-I on my youtube channel which is already
-
-0:15:57.600,0:16:02.639
-linked a little earlier
-
-0:15:59.279,0:16:04.240
-inside this present inside the pad sorry
-
-0:16:02.639,0:16:06.079
-I do have a youtube channel where I try
-
-0:16:04.240,0:16:09.519
-to present novelties
-
-0:16:06.079,0:16:11.519
-or the new stuff inside um orgrim
-
-0:16:09.519,0:16:13.360
-but I also be recording videos about the
-
-0:16:11.519,0:16:15.519
-technical aspects about the direction
-
-0:16:13.360,0:16:18.000
-that we're taking with orgrim
-
-0:16:15.519,0:16:18.560
-and if you want to talk with us we are
-
-0:16:18.000,0:16:22.160
-always
-
-0:16:18.560,0:16:23.680
-available either on isc channel orgrom
-
-0:16:22.160,0:16:25.279
-I believe there's a dash between org and
-
-0:16:23.680,0:16:27.279
-rome but also
-
-0:16:25.279,0:16:29.440
-on the discourse and I'll be putting all
-
-0:16:27.279,0:16:31.199
-the links inside the conversation
-
-0:16:29.440,0:16:32.880
-and that's me done so thank you for
-
-0:16:31.199,0:16:34.560
-listening and now I'll be taking
-
-0:16:32.880,0:16:37.360
-three minutes of questions so as to be
-
-0:16:34.560,0:16:39.920
-right on time
-
-0:16:37.360,0:16:41.120
-mini thanks for your awesome talk leo
-
-0:16:39.920,0:16:43.040
-thank you
-
-0:16:41.120,0:16:44.959
-so I'm just refreshing the page and I'm
-
-0:16:43.040,0:16:49.279
-going to scroll down to my
-
-0:16:44.959,0:16:49.279
-talk if I can find the right section
-
-0:16:49.600,0:16:52.720
-let me just scroll a little bit
-
-0:16:53.120,0:16:57.120
-uh reproducible Emacs no I think it's
-
-0:16:55.600,0:16:59.279
-slower
-
-0:16:57.120,0:17:00.639
-god we have so many questions so at the
-
-0:16:59.279,0:17:01.120
-same time I'm pissed because I can't
-
-0:17:00.639,0:17:02.639
-find it
-
-0:17:01.120,0:17:05.360
-but I'm really really impressed by the
-
-0:17:02.639,0:17:07.760
-number of questions that we had oh yeah
-
-0:17:05.360,0:17:08.260
-um which is about I think about line 600
-
-0:17:07.760,0:17:09.919
-or so
-
-0:17:08.260,0:17:13.199
-[Music]
-
-0:17:09.919,0:17:16.400
-yes got it splendid
-
-0:17:13.199,0:17:18.160
-so um the questions so why not run a
-
-0:17:16.400,0:17:19.919
-background Emacs for passing instead of
-
-0:17:18.160,0:17:22.559
-implementing a new parser
-
-0:17:19.919,0:17:24.480
-so I believe we've had this question uh
-
-0:17:22.559,0:17:27.600
-I was giving a similar talk
-
-0:17:24.480,0:17:31.679
-earlier this week and this week
-
-0:17:27.600,0:17:33.280
-I'm not french this week sorry and
-
-0:17:31.679,0:17:35.679
-someone asked me this question and the
-
-0:17:33.280,0:17:38.320
-thing is running a background Emacs
-
-0:17:35.679,0:17:40.400
-process you know it sounds great
-
-0:17:38.320,0:17:41.760
-but it's also very limited because all
-
-0:17:40.400,0:17:45.520
-the problems we have
-
-0:17:41.760,0:17:48.160
-about concurrency about threads in Emacs
-
-0:17:45.520,0:17:49.200
-well yes we can forward all our calls to
-
-0:17:48.160,0:17:51.760
-background Emacs
-
-0:17:49.200,0:17:52.240
-just like uh you know when you export a
-
-0:17:51.760,0:17:56.400
-file
-
-0:17:52.240,0:17:57.840
-with uh um sorry
-
-0:17:56.400,0:17:58.799
-I mean could you mute microphone when
-
-0:17:57.840,0:18:01.520
-you're speaking it's a little hard for
-
-0:17:58.799,0:18:03.600
-me to concentrate
-
-0:18:01.520,0:18:04.640
-that's fine don't worry you are now uh
-
-0:18:03.600,0:18:06.960
-so um
-
-0:18:04.640,0:18:07.679
-dammit where was I I'm sorry the
-
-0:18:06.960,0:18:09.280
-question yes
-
-0:18:07.679,0:18:11.840
-so basically forwarding all the
-
-0:18:09.280,0:18:13.039
-questions uh sorry all our queries to uh
-
-0:18:11.840,0:18:16.000
-background Emacs
-
-0:18:13.039,0:18:17.960
-that is what uh org export is doing like
-
-0:18:16.000,0:18:20.799
-you have the ability to
-
-0:18:17.960,0:18:22.080
-asynchronously export latex documents
-
-0:18:20.799,0:18:24.480
-odt documents from
-
-0:18:22.080,0:18:26.000
-org mode and it uses a very minimal
-
-0:18:24.480,0:18:28.240
-version of Emacs to do that but the
-
-0:18:26.000,0:18:30.320
-problem is that we think that it's not
-
-0:18:28.240,0:18:33.039
-going to scale as well as a true
-
-0:18:30.320,0:18:34.480
-genuine background process and since we
-
-0:18:33.039,0:18:36.000
-have been talking a lot
-
-0:18:34.480,0:18:38.160
-as far as the old mode development is
-
-0:18:36.000,0:18:40.640
-concerned about
-
-0:18:38.160,0:18:41.760
-writing a proper parser writing a proper
-
-0:18:40.640,0:18:43.440
-documentation
-
-0:18:41.760,0:18:46.000
-for the passing of old mode file and
-
-0:18:43.440,0:18:48.400
-writing a proper document standard
-
-0:18:46.000,0:18:50.000
-that says okay this is how the old mode
-
-0:18:48.400,0:18:52.000
-format works you know to
-
-0:18:50.000,0:18:55.120
-basically have a way to not fall into
-
-0:18:52.000,0:18:56.559
-the traps of markdown which has many
-
-0:18:55.120,0:18:58.480
-many standards
-
-0:18:56.559,0:19:00.000
-we need to think about this and we
-
-0:18:58.480,0:19:01.360
-believe that all grown has
-
-0:19:00.000,0:19:03.120
-the ability to think about these
-
-0:19:01.360,0:19:04.640
-questions and as a
-
-0:19:03.120,0:19:06.400
-as a person I'm also really interested
-
-0:19:04.640,0:19:07.840
-about this so
-
-0:19:06.400,0:19:10.160
-I can take the question I mean so don't
-
-0:19:07.840,0:19:11.760
-worry about feeding them to me so how
-
-0:19:10.160,0:19:13.679
-often does the
-
-0:19:11.760,0:19:14.799
-db index get updated in order to contain
-
-0:19:13.679,0:19:17.360
-changes within the
-
-0:19:14.799,0:19:19.440
-files so we have two ways either we
-
-0:19:17.360,0:19:22.160
-update as soon as you save a file
-
-0:19:19.440,0:19:23.600
-or we have a timer which is an idle
-
-0:19:22.160,0:19:25.600
-timer which waits okay
-
-0:19:23.600,0:19:26.960
-the user has not imputed inputted
-
-0:19:25.600,0:19:29.360
-anything in the last
-
-0:19:26.960,0:19:30.080
-five seconds so it's time to queue a
-
-0:19:29.360,0:19:33.039
-database
-
-0:19:30.080,0:19:33.919
-passing a rebuild of the data not a an
-
-0:19:33.039,0:19:37.120
-incrementation
-
-0:19:33.919,0:19:38.799
-of the database I should say so
-
-0:19:37.120,0:19:40.320
-did you ever think of uh I believe I
-
-0:19:38.799,0:19:42.240
-have one more one more minutes and then
-
-0:19:40.320,0:19:43.440
-I'll hand it to the other folks
-
-0:19:42.240,0:19:45.440
-do you ever think of opening up or
-
-0:19:43.440,0:19:47.200
-designing the sqldb as a general all
-
-0:19:45.440,0:19:48.160
-speed up tool outside of orgrom so that
-
-0:19:47.200,0:19:49.919
-other libraries
-
-0:19:48.160,0:19:51.679
-that do execute complex queries are able
-
-0:19:49.919,0:19:52.960
-to use it well
-
-0:19:51.679,0:19:54.640
-a lot of people have been working on
-
-0:19:52.960,0:19:56.480
-this and I believe alpha papa has been
-
-0:19:54.640,0:19:57.679
-thinking quite a lot about this you know
-
-0:19:56.480,0:20:01.120
-all ql
-
-0:19:57.679,0:20:03.679
-is the ql stands for language
-
-0:20:01.120,0:20:04.720
-and I I can't remember now what's uh
-
-0:20:03.679,0:20:08.080
-what's the backend
-
-0:20:04.720,0:20:10.080
-is for all ql but the idea is relatively
-
-0:20:08.080,0:20:13.039
-relatively the same you know it's about
-
-0:20:10.080,0:20:14.880
-finding ways to optimize the way we
-
-0:20:13.039,0:20:16.640
-store the data about an old mode file
-
-0:20:14.880,0:20:20.400
-and how we retrieve it
-
-0:20:16.640,0:20:22.159
-and sql for us seems to seem to be a
-
-0:20:20.400,0:20:24.240
-good idea now obviously
-
-0:20:22.159,0:20:26.080
-maybe we could do something about old
-
-0:20:24.240,0:20:27.360
-mode but the problem is I think a
-
-0:20:26.080,0:20:30.799
-background process
-
-0:20:27.360,0:20:32.960
-is not necessarily um in
-
-0:20:30.799,0:20:34.000
-the core mentality of old mode but it's
-
-0:20:32.960,0:20:36.080
-definitely a
-
-0:20:34.000,0:20:37.679
-something that we could suggest uh when
-
-0:20:36.080,0:20:40.960
-we are a little more mature because well
-
-0:20:37.679,0:20:41.679
-orgrom was started last february and so
-
-0:20:40.960,0:20:44.480
-it's a fairly
-
-0:20:41.679,0:20:45.840
-young project in a way so uh I see
-
-0:20:44.480,0:20:48.400
-plenty more questions but
-
-0:20:45.840,0:20:50.559
-I'm out of time folks so I'm not sure uh
-
-0:20:48.400,0:20:52.559
-the other speaker is probably ready
-
-0:20:50.559,0:20:54.000
-so what I'll do is I'll probably try to
-
-0:20:52.559,0:20:55.360
-answer your questions when I get the
-
-0:20:54.000,0:20:58.960
-time inside the pad
-
-0:20:55.360,0:21:01.039
-but feel free to ping me on isc
-
-0:20:58.960,0:21:02.320
-or on the different channels we have
-
-0:21:01.039,0:21:04.000
-foreground and
-
-0:21:02.320,0:21:05.520
-I answer them with you know as much
-
-0:21:04.000,0:21:07.600
-energy as I can gather
-
-0:21:05.520,0:21:08.880
-all right thank you so much you are now
-
-0:21:07.600,0:21:11.760
-unmuted
-
-0:21:08.880,0:21:13.120
-thank you again very much leo and that
-
-0:21:11.760,0:21:14.000
-was me done for today so you'll see me
-
-0:21:13.120,0:21:15.840
-at the end but I'm
-
-0:21:14.000,0:21:17.840
-officially done and I am free of
-
-0:21:15.840,0:21:22.640
-thoughts I can focus on
-
-0:21:17.840,0:21:27.760
-sleeping probably awesome
-
-0:21:22.640,0:21:27.760
-all right see you guys later bye bye
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--19-sharing-blogs-and-more-with-org-webring--brett-gilio-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--19-sharing-blogs-and-more-with-org-webring--brett-gilio-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 23334b94..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--19-sharing-blogs-and-more-with-org-webring--brett-gilio-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,708 +0,0 @@
-0:00:01.120,0:00:04.560
-hi my name is brett gillio
-
-0:00:03.120,0:00:05.920
-and today I'll be sharing a project that
-
-0:00:04.560,0:00:07.520
-several people and I've been working on
-
-0:00:05.920,0:00:08.480
-for the past few months called org
-
-0:00:07.520,0:00:10.559
-webbery
-
-0:00:08.480,0:00:12.240
-the essential idea behind org webbering
-
-0:00:10.559,0:00:13.679
-is to take the power of creating a
-
-0:00:12.240,0:00:15.360
-website with org mode
-
-0:00:13.679,0:00:17.520
-and its built-in features to control
-
-0:00:15.360,0:00:19.119
-html and xml output
-
-0:00:17.520,0:00:22.080
-and utilize it to share blogs git
-
-0:00:19.119,0:00:22.640
-commits or other rss or atom static feed
-
-0:00:22.080,0:00:25.920
-content
-
-0:00:22.640,0:00:28.560
-to share directly with your audiences
-
-0:00:25.920,0:00:30.000
-my website is created entirely using org
-
-0:00:28.560,0:00:31.679
-mode and I love the amount of
-
-0:00:30.000,0:00:34.079
-flexibility it offers me while keeping
-
-0:00:31.679,0:00:35.920
-everything quite simple
-
-0:00:34.079,0:00:37.600
-I am able to put information about
-
-0:00:35.920,0:00:40.079
-myself a blog
-
-0:00:37.600,0:00:42.879
-and my org web ring tool directly on on
-
-0:00:40.079,0:00:44.640
-the home page using symbol org syntax
-
-0:00:42.879,0:00:46.239
-as you can see I am currently displaying
-
-0:00:44.640,0:00:48.239
-three posts on my website
-
-0:00:46.239,0:00:49.840
-the first is the geeksday announcement
-
-0:00:48.239,0:00:51.039
-the second is a quarterly financial
-
-0:00:49.840,0:00:52.320
-update from sourcehut
-
-0:00:51.039,0:00:54.480
-and the third is a post from
-
-0:00:52.320,0:00:55.120
-drewdevault's blog drew devault by the
-
-0:00:54.480,0:00:57.680
-way
-
-0:00:55.120,0:00:59.039
-his open ring is what helped inspire
-
-0:00:57.680,0:01:01.359
-what is today or
-
-0:00:59.039,0:01:03.440
-web ring all this information is
-
-0:01:01.359,0:01:05.360
-gathered using a sort of manifest file
-
-0:01:03.440,0:01:07.040
-that org web ring will use to acquire
-
-0:01:05.360,0:01:07.760
-and place the information in the correct
-
-0:01:07.040,0:01:10.000
-format
-
-0:01:07.760,0:01:10.799
-according to your specification
-
-0:01:10.000,0:01:11.840
-additionally
-
-0:01:10.799,0:01:14.159
-you can see that the geeksday
-
-0:01:11.840,0:01:16.000
-announcement is post is pinned
-
-0:01:14.159,0:01:17.200
-stylization is likewise controlled by
-
-0:01:16.000,0:01:18.960
-using css
-
-0:01:17.200,0:01:20.720
-you can add nice subtle color changes on
-
-0:01:18.960,0:01:23.759
-mouse hover or control the size of the
-
-0:01:20.720,0:01:26.080
-flexboxes all using standard css
-
-0:01:23.759,0:01:28.320
-let's examine a simple scenario of using
-
-0:01:26.080,0:01:30.400
-org webroom
-
-0:01:28.320,0:01:32.000
-after you have org webbing installed
-
-0:01:30.400,0:01:33.759
-you'll be able to create a manifest file
-
-0:01:32.000,0:01:35.680
-that looks something like this
-
-0:01:33.759,0:01:37.840
-this particular manifest file is an
-
-0:01:35.680,0:01:39.520
-example offered in the repository under
-
-0:01:37.840,0:01:41.200
-the assets directory
-
-0:01:39.520,0:01:42.640
-please feel free to utilize them as a
-
-0:01:41.200,0:01:44.399
-starting point if you are interested in
-
-0:01:42.640,0:01:46.320
-using org web ring
-
-0:01:44.399,0:01:48.640
-as you can see here we are able to place
-
-0:01:46.320,0:01:50.479
-an rss or atom feed in this file and
-
-0:01:48.640,0:01:51.920
-specify information about the feed we
-
-0:01:50.479,0:01:54.640
-wish to produce
-
-0:01:51.920,0:01:56.159
-for example the total number of items
-
-0:01:54.640,0:01:57.439
-and the total number of entries per
-
-0:01:56.159,0:01:59.439
-source item
-
-0:01:57.439,0:02:00.960
-additionally you're able to filter posts
-
-0:01:59.439,0:02:02.079
-you feel would not be relevant to your
-
-0:02:00.960,0:02:04.079
-web ring
-
-0:02:02.079,0:02:09.840
-we can take this example file and run
-
-0:02:04.079,0:02:09.840
-the dispatch and see the result
-
-0:02:13.120,0:02:17.760
-the web ring displays a proper summary
-
-0:02:15.280,0:02:19.599
-set to a character limit you can specify
-
-0:02:17.760,0:02:21.520
-additionally all the links in the web
-
-0:02:19.599,0:02:22.560
-ring are navigable and will open in a
-
-0:02:21.520,0:02:24.239
-new tab
-
-0:02:22.560,0:02:25.920
-that way if someone wishes to view the
-
-0:02:24.239,0:02:30.319
-content they simply need to
-
-0:02:25.920,0:02:32.879
-click on the title or their source name
-
-0:02:30.319,0:02:34.800
-now this particular example is not
-
-0:02:32.879,0:02:37.120
-stylized because we have not given the
-
-0:02:34.800,0:02:38.720
-website a css file to reference
-
-0:02:37.120,0:02:40.319
-let's examine what is happening from
-
-0:02:38.720,0:02:43.040
-behind the scenes a little bit
-
-0:02:40.319,0:02:43.360
-from inside of the org mode file let's
-
-0:02:43.040,0:02:46.959
-run
-
-0:02:43.360,0:02:46.959
-the org web ring function
-
-0:02:48.800,0:02:54.239
-as you can see it takes that xml file
-
-0:02:51.280,0:02:56.080
-and processes it into the correct html
-
-0:02:54.239,0:02:58.080
-you will then be able to embed this org
-
-0:02:56.080,0:03:00.080
-function into another org file to be
-
-0:02:58.080,0:03:02.840
-able to display it on your website
-
-0:03:00.080,0:03:05.440
-pretty neat let's look at an at another
-
-0:03:02.840,0:03:07.360
-example
-
-0:03:05.440,0:03:09.519
-on my website we have an example of
-
-0:03:07.360,0:03:10.800
-using org webbring to reply to another
-
-0:03:09.519,0:03:12.480
-blog post
-
-0:03:10.800,0:03:14.640
-what I have here is a post from drew to
-
-0:03:12.480,0:03:16.239
-vault's blog it is showcased clearly at
-
-0:03:14.640,0:03:19.040
-the top as a single entry
-
-0:03:16.239,0:03:20.800
-and you can see it is pinned the pinning
-
-0:03:19.040,0:03:22.400
-functionality ensures that this post is
-
-0:03:20.800,0:03:23.120
-moved to the front of the hypothetical
-
-0:03:22.400,0:03:25.760
-web ring
-
-0:03:23.120,0:03:27.599
-and guaranteeing its visibility this is
-
-0:03:25.760,0:03:29.840
-then coupled with a few changes such as
-
-0:03:27.599,0:03:31.120
-disabling the generation time
-
-0:03:29.840,0:03:33.280
-which would not be relevant to the
-
-0:03:31.120,0:03:34.000
-readers and a change of the text in the
-
-0:03:33.280,0:03:37.040
-header
-
-0:03:34.000,0:03:39.599
-to demonstrate is indeed used as a reply
-
-0:03:37.040,0:03:42.319
-an example of this is also provided in
-
-0:03:39.599,0:03:44.799
-the assets directory
-
-0:03:42.319,0:03:45.519
-last we can use org webbring as a blog
-
-0:03:44.799,0:03:47.599
-planet
-
-0:03:45.519,0:03:49.360
-which is one of my favorites this takes
-
-0:03:47.599,0:03:51.120
-after the emax life planet which I
-
-0:03:49.360,0:03:53.200
-believe is moderated by sasha
-
-0:03:51.120,0:03:54.720
-and others as well as the haskell and
-
-0:03:53.200,0:03:56.959
-ocamoplanets
-
-0:03:54.720,0:03:58.879
-a planet for the uninitiated is a
-
-0:03:56.959,0:04:00.159
-curated form of content sharing about a
-
-0:03:58.879,0:04:02.400
-set of topics
-
-0:04:00.159,0:04:03.439
-the max life haskell and ocampo planets
-
-0:04:02.400,0:04:05.920
-as their names imply
-
-0:04:03.439,0:04:07.200
-cover Emacs haskell and ocampo blogs
-
-0:04:05.920,0:04:09.680
-respectively
-
-0:04:07.200,0:04:11.360
-likewise my planet covers programming
-
-0:04:09.680,0:04:12.239
-language theory and category theory
-
-0:04:11.360,0:04:13.920
-primarily
-
-0:04:12.239,0:04:15.840
-it works in essentially the same way as
-
-0:04:13.920,0:04:17.519
-the org web ring you provide it with a
-
-0:04:15.840,0:04:20.000
-list of feeds that get parsed
-
-0:04:17.519,0:04:21.919
-however unlike the web ring the planet
-
-0:04:20.000,0:04:23.040
-function has no limits on the number of
-
-0:04:21.919,0:04:24.639
-entries per source
-
-0:04:23.040,0:04:27.600
-and the display number of posts is
-
-0:04:24.639,0:04:29.759
-increased significantly
-
-0:04:27.600,0:04:30.720
-the syndicates or sources have their
-
-0:04:29.759,0:04:32.639
-feeds shown
-
-0:04:30.720,0:04:33.759
-visibly to users who may wish to fetch
-
-0:04:32.639,0:04:35.440
-them
-
-0:04:33.759,0:04:37.040
-a planet is typically meant to be a
-
-0:04:35.440,0:04:38.639
-standalone page and not something you
-
-0:04:37.040,0:04:39.440
-would embed in another page like a web
-
-0:04:38.639,0:04:41.680
-ring
-
-0:04:39.440,0:04:43.600
-all this is provided under a single file
-
-0:04:41.680,0:04:45.280
-in the org web ring package as the code
-
-0:04:43.600,0:04:48.240
-reuse is quite high
-
-0:04:45.280,0:04:49.840
-aside from my own website we can view
-
-0:04:48.240,0:04:52.400
-the org web ring being used in neat
-
-0:04:49.840,0:04:54.320
-context with varying stylizations
-
-0:04:52.400,0:04:57.680
-here's a nice example from mikhail
-
-0:04:54.320,0:05:00.000
-kirilov at w96k.ru
-
-0:04:57.680,0:05:00.960
-featuring a four symmetrical flexbox
-
-0:05:00.000,0:05:02.720
-layout
-
-0:05:00.960,0:05:04.720
-an appropriate russian language timing
-
-0:05:02.720,0:05:07.360
-coding which can be also set in the org
-
-0:05:04.720,0:05:09.600
-web ring manifest
-
-0:05:07.360,0:05:10.400
-another is an example from camilo mesa
-
-0:05:09.600,0:05:13.280
-gayete
-
-0:05:10.400,0:05:14.320
-using ox hugo with org webring and
-
-0:05:13.280,0:05:15.840
-likewise correct
-
-0:05:14.320,0:05:17.680
-features the correct spanish time
-
-0:05:15.840,0:05:22.240
-encoding
-
-0:05:17.680,0:05:24.400
-last my other website workircd.org
-
-0:05:22.240,0:05:26.560
-shows the web ring being used in
-
-0:05:24.400,0:05:27.440
-combination with ocamo's tool link
-
-0:05:26.560,0:05:31.440
-supalt
-
-0:05:27.440,0:05:31.440
-to fetch git logs for that project
-
-0:05:32.800,0:05:36.320
-you may obtain org web ring directly
-
-0:05:34.639,0:05:37.039
-from source hut and add it to your load
-
-0:05:36.320,0:05:39.639
-path
-
-0:05:37.039,0:05:40.800
-additionally you will need to obtain
-
-0:05:39.639,0:05:43.280
-xmlgen.el
-
-0:05:40.800,0:05:44.960
-which is unfortunately not yet on alpha
-
-0:05:43.280,0:05:46.800
-although I have been trying to get this
-
-0:05:44.960,0:05:49.840
-rectified so I do not have to rewrite
-
-0:05:46.800,0:05:51.759
-org web brings xml to html parser
-
-0:05:49.840,0:05:54.000
-or if you're one of the cool kids using
-
-0:05:51.759,0:06:06.319
-my favorite package manager gnu geeks
-
-0:05:54.000,0:06:08.800
-you can obtain it like so
-
-0:06:06.319,0:06:09.840
-all of the documentation for org web
-
-0:06:08.800,0:06:12.000
-ring is available
-
-0:06:09.840,0:06:13.840
-on the sourceup website or in the readme
-
-0:06:12.000,0:06:15.039
-file after you check it out from the get
-
-0:06:13.840,0:06:17.360
-tree
-
-0:06:15.039,0:06:18.240
-there are so many ways to customize org
-
-0:06:17.360,0:06:20.880
-web ring
-
-0:06:18.240,0:06:21.520
-as there are just as many variables as
-
-0:06:20.880,0:06:24.319
-there are
-
-0:06:21.520,0:06:25.759
-parts and components to org web ring for
-
-0:06:24.319,0:06:27.759
-you to change
-
-0:06:25.759,0:06:31.520
-all of this is able to be done simply
-
-0:06:27.759,0:06:31.520
-from that same manifest file
-
-0:06:31.600,0:06:35.759
-now taking a moment to examine some of
-
-0:06:33.919,0:06:37.840
-the org web ring code
-
-0:06:35.759,0:06:40.160
-you can see it is all done in the same
-
-0:06:37.840,0:06:43.120
-e-lisp that everybody else is used to
-
-0:06:40.160,0:06:43.919
-now admittedly my e-lisp is not as
-
-0:06:43.120,0:06:47.120
-strong as
-
-0:06:43.919,0:06:50.479
-probably somebody else's so if you are
-
-0:06:47.120,0:06:53.280
-an e-lisp ninja please feel free to
-
-0:06:50.479,0:06:54.880
-send a contribution or a patch and tell
-
-0:06:53.280,0:06:57.039
-me what I'm doing wrong
-
-0:06:54.880,0:06:58.639
-it's I am not going to be offended by
-
-0:06:57.039,0:06:59.360
-that at all I would love to see this
-
-0:06:58.639,0:07:02.560
-code to
-
-0:06:59.360,0:07:04.160
-improve otherwise I don't think it's
-
-0:07:02.560,0:07:06.800
-half bad
-
-0:07:04.160,0:07:08.880
-considering that my experience with
-
-0:07:06.800,0:07:11.280
-lisps is usually in scheme
-
-0:07:08.880,0:07:13.680
-me moving from scheme to e-lisp was not
-
-0:07:11.280,0:07:17.120
-all that hard
-
-0:07:13.680,0:07:20.880
-taking the syntax apart
-
-0:07:17.120,0:07:24.240
-we're able to see that we can
-
-0:07:20.880,0:07:27.680
-fetch urls which are then parsed and
-
-0:07:24.240,0:07:28.479
-filtered sorted and then kind of reverse
-
-0:07:27.680,0:07:32.960
-sorted
-
-0:07:28.479,0:07:34.639
-rather to get you to the web ring result
-
-0:07:32.960,0:07:37.840
-all of this is then passed through
-
-0:07:34.639,0:07:40.639
-different parts of the xmlgen.el
-
-0:07:37.840,0:07:43.360
-functions which gets you that html that
-
-0:07:40.639,0:07:43.360
-you saw earlier
-
-0:07:43.520,0:07:47.440
-org webbring is fully free software
-
-0:07:45.599,0:07:49.280
-distributed under the gnu general public
-
-0:07:47.440,0:07:52.000
-license versions three or later
-
-0:07:49.280,0:07:53.120
-at your option I love accepting patches
-
-0:07:52.000,0:07:54.319
-and collaborating
-
-0:07:53.120,0:07:56.720
-I hope you will consider using
-
-0:07:54.319,0:07:59.759
-orawebring you can contact me on
-
-0:07:56.720,0:08:01.520
-freenode oftc or many other ioc irc
-
-0:07:59.759,0:08:05.120
-networks at brettgillio
-
-0:08:01.520,0:08:07.759
-or email me at brettgee gnu.org
-
-0:08:05.120,0:08:08.720
-thanks so much to amin bendali and the
-
-0:08:07.759,0:08:11.120
-Emacs cough
-
-0:08:08.720,0:08:13.840
-organizers and to you the audience
-
-0:08:11.120,0:08:13.840
-thanks
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--20-omg-macros--corwin-brust-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--20-omg-macros--corwin-brust-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 83a99db6..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--20-omg-macros--corwin-brust-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1605 +0,0 @@
-0:00:00.480,0:00:04.319
-uh well good evening again uh I think I
-
-0:00:02.879,0:00:07.359
-have a little time here
-
-0:00:04.319,0:00:09.120
-uh to talk about macros uh is there
-
-0:00:07.359,0:00:09.440
-still room in our in our schedule for
-
-0:00:09.120,0:00:11.440
-that
-
-0:00:09.440,0:00:12.559
-or should I just kind of jump to some of
-
-0:00:11.440,0:00:15.920
-my thoughts on the day
-
-0:00:12.559,0:00:17.039
-you are now unmuted um pretty sure we
-
-0:00:15.920,0:00:19.439
-have some time
-
-0:00:17.039,0:00:20.720
-all right great yeah go for it well I'll
-
-0:00:19.439,0:00:22.640
-just drive into my pre
-
-0:00:20.720,0:00:24.720
-prepared thing to hear that yeah
-
-0:00:22.640,0:00:28.400
-actually you're right on time so
-
-0:00:24.720,0:00:31.199
-oh what an amazing thing I I just uh
-
-0:00:28.400,0:00:33.040
-you know I have been trying to do what I
-
-0:00:31.199,0:00:36.239
-I've got a big thank you planet to get
-
-0:00:33.040,0:00:39.200
-at the end but let me just say I uh
-
-0:00:36.239,0:00:42.160
-it's it's been really cool to watch the
-
-0:00:39.200,0:00:46.000
-way that people work together
-
-0:00:42.160,0:00:46.800
-absolutely it's this whole event today
-
-0:00:46.000,0:00:50.879
-has been
-
-0:00:46.800,0:00:53.120
-nothing but awesome and uh no less like
-
-0:00:50.879,0:00:54.719
-no little part thanks to all of the help
-
-0:00:53.120,0:00:59.120
-from all of you guys
-
-0:00:54.719,0:01:02.399
-and um everyone oh yeah it's awesome
-
-0:00:59.120,0:01:03.520
-um yeah with that all just um shut up
-
-0:01:02.399,0:01:06.479
-for now and uh
-
-0:01:03.520,0:01:09.840
-take it away corwin you know how to make
-
-0:01:06.479,0:01:12.799
-make that the default and good old cemex
-
-0:01:09.840,0:01:14.880
-all right so I'm gonna try to continue
-
-0:01:12.799,0:01:16.960
-my theme from the previous talk I'm a
-
-0:01:14.880,0:01:20.240
-longtime Emacs user but I'm
-
-0:01:16.960,0:01:22.880
-a pretty new person
-
-0:01:20.240,0:01:24.960
-to trying to really understand what's
-
-0:01:22.880,0:01:28.240
-going on within Emacs and make
-
-0:01:24.960,0:01:30.960
-my customizations to it uh simple for
-
-0:01:28.240,0:01:33.280
-what I tend to just think of will work
-
-0:01:30.960,0:01:36.240
-and maybe that's that's that's a nice
-
-0:01:33.280,0:01:40.479
-bow to put on that earlier talk
-
-0:01:36.240,0:01:43.759
-so uh whoops
-
-0:01:40.479,0:01:47.759
-uh let's see here now it's ctrl x
-
-0:01:43.759,0:01:47.759
-alt I that's right
-
-0:01:48.159,0:01:52.000
-and let's try that again okay good
-
-0:01:52.960,0:01:58.000
-so demoing is fun uh but I
-
-0:01:56.000,0:01:59.759
-will save most of that for tomorrow
-
-0:01:58.000,0:02:03.040
-where my
-
-0:01:59.759,0:02:04.799
-dear friend and co-collaborator in
-
-0:02:03.040,0:02:07.119
-bringing you the dungeon mode project
-
-0:02:04.799,0:02:08.720
-which is uh sort of
-
-0:02:07.119,0:02:10.800
-the exciting thing that we we hope
-
-0:02:08.720,0:02:14.480
-you'll be interested in
-
-0:02:10.800,0:02:15.680
-um I think gets a little more of a
-
-0:02:14.480,0:02:19.360
-reveal
-
-0:02:15.680,0:02:22.640
-uh tonight I'll just uh close saying
-
-0:02:19.360,0:02:24.319
-um a few things about the process of
-
-0:02:22.640,0:02:25.680
-making it and continuing my theme of
-
-0:02:24.319,0:02:28.720
-community
-
-0:02:25.680,0:02:29.760
-uh first of all a specific and upfront
-
-0:02:28.720,0:02:33.120
-shout out
-
-0:02:29.760,0:02:36.239
-to tv's wasa masa who
-
-0:02:33.120,0:02:38.720
-um absolutely shaped and guided this
-
-0:02:36.239,0:02:40.080
-this program I I may have taken out a
-
-0:02:38.720,0:02:43.599
-slide with your name on it but
-
-0:02:40.080,0:02:46.720
-thank you um
-
-0:02:43.599,0:02:47.120
-so when we think about Emacs macros and
-
-0:02:46.720,0:02:50.239
-the
-
-0:02:47.120,0:02:53.280
-power that they give us
-
-0:02:50.239,0:02:54.720
-I think about them the the
-
-0:02:53.280,0:02:56.400
-you know I think about them as a really
-
-0:02:54.720,0:03:00.239
-deep rabbit hole they confuse
-
-0:02:56.400,0:03:02.480
-people a lot and so to try to center
-
-0:03:00.239,0:03:03.599
-myself on that I remember first that
-
-0:03:02.480,0:03:05.840
-they're
-
-0:03:03.599,0:03:08.239
-they're going to be talking to us about
-
-0:03:05.840,0:03:08.239
-code
-
-0:03:09.599,0:03:13.519
-uh excuse me I realize I hadn't set my
-
-0:03:12.080,0:03:18.000
-timer
-
-0:03:13.519,0:03:21.680
-here we are
-
-0:03:18.000,0:03:22.239
-um so a simple macro syntax is going to
-
-0:03:21.680,0:03:25.920
-generate
-
-0:03:22.239,0:03:27.760
-something that is implicitly confusing
-
-0:03:25.920,0:03:28.720
-to somebody that knows the syntax of
-
-0:03:27.760,0:03:31.200
-emax lisp
-
-0:03:28.720,0:03:32.000
-well we see something like this and a
-
-0:03:31.200,0:03:36.239
-veteran I
-
-0:03:32.000,0:03:39.760
-says that x isn't quoted what's going on
-
-0:03:36.239,0:03:39.760
-but it can be hard to miss
-
-0:03:39.840,0:03:44.640
-um a lot of the functions as we'll talk
-
-0:03:43.040,0:03:46.640
-about in a moment that are built into
-
-0:03:44.640,0:03:48.959
-Emacs
-
-0:03:46.640,0:03:50.480
-really are macros so a lot of Emacs
-
-0:03:48.959,0:03:53.040
-features work this way
-
-0:03:50.480,0:03:54.640
-it might be scary but we have to look at
-
-0:03:53.040,0:03:57.760
-it closely if we really want to get
-
-0:03:54.640,0:03:57.760
-friendly with Emacs
-
-0:03:58.400,0:04:03.920
-um let's just jump right into deaf macro
-
-0:04:01.439,0:04:04.720
-which is which is our key entry point
-
-0:04:03.920,0:04:08.560
-and the
-
-0:04:04.720,0:04:12.000
-notes from this talk include the link um
-
-0:04:08.560,0:04:14.640
-to that uh which which definitely
-
-0:04:12.000,0:04:16.000
-uh read through a couple of times and
-
-0:04:14.640,0:04:19.440
-that may take you through
-
-0:04:16.000,0:04:23.440
-into the cldf macro which adds
-
-0:04:19.440,0:04:26.840
-the common list lisp extensions
-
-0:04:23.440,0:04:30.560
-and uh definitely
-
-0:04:26.840,0:04:31.759
-uh challenging uh I've struggled there
-
-0:04:30.560,0:04:34.800
-as we'll take a look at in
-
-0:04:31.759,0:04:36.400
-in a moment um
-
-0:04:34.800,0:04:38.320
-so I haven't played too much with cl
-
-0:04:36.400,0:04:42.160
-maclet perhaps success in
-
-0:04:38.320,0:04:44.320
-in that uh keyword space and figuring
-
-0:04:42.160,0:04:46.000
-out what the right balance is there
-
-0:04:44.320,0:04:47.680
-what will give me the confidence to try
-
-0:04:46.000,0:04:51.600
-some more lexical
-
-0:04:47.680,0:04:51.600
-uh macros
-
-0:04:51.680,0:04:55.440
-let me also briefly introduce the comma
-
-0:04:53.919,0:04:58.479
-and back quote if you
-
-0:04:55.440,0:05:00.080
-have uh allowed your eyes to cross when
-
-0:04:58.479,0:05:03.600
-you see these and that's not
-
-0:05:00.080,0:05:06.080
-uh a shameful shameful thing it's
-
-0:05:03.600,0:05:08.160
-confusing and we should be
-
-0:05:06.080,0:05:09.520
-alerting each other when we when we
-
-0:05:08.160,0:05:11.199
-stick macros in
-
-0:05:09.520,0:05:12.960
-often by putting them in different
-
-0:05:11.199,0:05:14.160
-different library spaces for complicated
-
-0:05:12.960,0:05:17.520
-projects
-
-0:05:14.160,0:05:19.520
-or um otherwise sort of warning people
-
-0:05:17.520,0:05:21.919
-that this is not an interactive function
-
-0:05:19.520,0:05:22.639
-if you get away with using it like one
-
-0:05:21.919,0:05:25.840
-um
-
-0:05:22.639,0:05:25.840
-to watch your back
-
-0:05:26.000,0:05:32.800
-the uh
-
-0:05:29.440,0:05:35.840
-the manual itself talks about macros
-
-0:05:32.800,0:05:39.039
-as being a way of evaluating
-
-0:05:35.840,0:05:41.520
-you know as as being um
-
-0:05:39.039,0:05:42.800
-an evaluator that will take our amex
-
-0:05:41.520,0:05:44.800
-lisp expression
-
-0:05:42.800,0:05:47.590
-and the set of forms that kind of that
-
-0:05:44.800,0:05:48.960
-will feed to it our code
-
-0:05:47.590,0:05:51.120
-[Music]
-
-0:05:48.960,0:05:52.000
-but it also provides us with this
-
-0:05:51.120,0:05:55.039
-concept of an
-
-0:05:52.000,0:05:56.639
-environment and and and that's really
-
-0:05:55.039,0:05:58.240
-where the power
-
-0:05:56.639,0:06:00.080
-comes in through that we can have
-
-0:05:58.240,0:06:03.199
-lexical variables and
-
-0:06:00.080,0:06:06.400
-um think about uh bring in some of the
-
-0:06:03.199,0:06:09.759
-capabilities that
-
-0:06:06.400,0:06:13.840
-um can be harder to reach with
-
-0:06:09.759,0:06:14.800
-a a a pure declarative statement that
-
-0:06:13.840,0:06:18.000
-doesn't allow
-
-0:06:14.800,0:06:21.440
-for uh
-
-0:06:18.000,0:06:27.360
-top level
-
-0:06:21.440,0:06:27.360
-um asynchronous asynchronicity
-
-0:06:28.639,0:06:33.520
-uh I'm gonna basically
-
-0:06:31.950,0:06:35.759
-[Music]
-
-0:06:33.520,0:06:36.880
-ignore the bike compilation phase for
-
-0:06:35.759,0:06:38.639
-this talk
-
-0:06:36.880,0:06:39.919
-uh in order to have any prayer of
-
-0:06:38.639,0:06:43.600
-getting through it in the
-
-0:06:39.919,0:06:48.319
-remaining nine or 11 minutes or whatever
-
-0:06:43.600,0:06:50.160
-uh but
-
-0:06:48.319,0:06:52.240
-suffice it to say it that's a scary
-
-0:06:50.160,0:06:54.160
-space and that's that's that's really
-
-0:06:52.240,0:06:57.199
-the thing that you want to start
-
-0:06:54.160,0:07:02.160
-learning about as you think about taking
-
-0:06:57.199,0:07:05.919
-taking macros on uh in earnest
-
-0:07:02.160,0:07:07.440
-the um coming back to the comma syntax
-
-0:07:05.919,0:07:09.759
-then
-
-0:07:07.440,0:07:12.479
-having having given ourselves sort of a
-
-0:07:09.759,0:07:14.479
-working definition for the Emacs lisp
-
-0:07:12.479,0:07:15.840
-runtime environment then we can say that
-
-0:07:14.479,0:07:20.880
-macros are going to
-
-0:07:15.840,0:07:20.880
-inject code back into that stream
-
-0:07:21.120,0:07:28.479
-whereas back quote is going to
-
-0:07:25.280,0:07:31.919
-uh going to give code back
-
-0:07:28.479,0:07:34.560
-to the to the stream or interject sorry
-
-0:07:31.919,0:07:35.360
-it's going to interject uh back into the
-
-0:07:34.560,0:07:39.840
-stream
-
-0:07:35.360,0:07:43.280
-uh sort of uh an exclamatory excuse me
-
-0:07:39.840,0:07:46.720
-I'd like to uh
-
-0:07:43.280,0:07:48.639
-have a value here and we can take that
-
-0:07:46.720,0:07:52.560
-value from the environment as it exists
-
-0:07:48.639,0:07:52.560
-when our macro is evaluated
-
-0:07:54.160,0:07:57.280
-back quote on the other hand takes the
-
-0:07:56.639,0:08:00.560
-result
-
-0:07:57.280,0:08:02.400
-from that and uh
-
-0:08:00.560,0:08:04.319
-and returns it back to the stream for
-
-0:08:02.400,0:08:05.680
-evaluation at the processing level that
-
-0:08:04.319,0:08:08.720
-invoked us
-
-0:08:05.680,0:08:10.960
-so in other words perhaps back up to
-
-0:08:08.720,0:08:14.080
-a top level eval expression where our
-
-0:08:10.960,0:08:14.080
-macro is invoked
-
-0:08:16.720,0:08:22.560
-uh wrong way so um
-
-0:08:20.080,0:08:23.759
-with what's I'm going to briefly bring
-
-0:08:22.560,0:08:27.120
-you back to the game
-
-0:08:23.759,0:08:30.240
-for just a moment
-
-0:08:27.120,0:08:32.479
-um I won't
-
-0:08:30.240,0:08:33.599
-I won't has I won't linger on this slide
-
-0:08:32.479,0:08:37.039
-but but
-
-0:08:33.599,0:08:40.080
-briefly uh this is a
-
-0:08:37.039,0:08:43.599
-roll paper role-playing pen
-
-0:08:40.080,0:08:46.320
-and pencil uh physical dice
-
-0:08:43.599,0:08:48.080
-tradition that dates back a long time
-
-0:08:46.320,0:08:51.279
-from a technology perspective
-
-0:08:48.080,0:08:54.640
-it's it's old in the same way that uh
-
-0:08:51.279,0:08:56.959
-other tools uh that I like are
-
-0:08:54.640,0:08:56.959
-old
-
-0:08:58.560,0:09:02.560
-uh it's simple to understand and I can
-
-0:09:00.560,0:09:04.160
-communicate a lot with it with a simple
-
-0:09:02.560,0:09:09.120
-amount of you know typing or
-
-0:09:04.160,0:09:12.399
-scribbling something on a piece of paper
-
-0:09:09.120,0:09:15.519
-it has a complicated problem space um
-
-0:09:12.399,0:09:18.560
-of its own again I don't want to
-
-0:09:15.519,0:09:21.680
-get too much into the game here but
-
-0:09:18.560,0:09:23.360
-uh in this in this talk for the last
-
-0:09:21.680,0:09:26.640
-five minutes I'll focus
-
-0:09:23.360,0:09:29.920
-on the process that we took to to
-
-0:09:26.640,0:09:31.120
-automate uh getting data out of the org
-
-0:09:29.920,0:09:32.720
-mode tables which
-
-0:09:31.120,0:09:36.000
-eventually as we'll talk about more
-
-0:09:32.720,0:09:39.279
-tomorrow are used to draw
-
-0:09:36.000,0:09:39.279
-game maps and other things
-
-0:09:39.440,0:09:45.279
-um here I talk about kind of why we did
-
-0:09:42.240,0:09:49.360
-that I'm going to skip briefly past that
-
-0:09:45.279,0:09:51.920
-and say instead that at a high level
-
-0:09:49.360,0:09:53.519
-it's it's symbolic informatics we're
-
-0:09:51.920,0:09:58.080
-giving a symbolic name
-
-0:09:53.519,0:10:00.320
-to a tile set and then
-
-0:09:58.080,0:10:00.320
-uh
-
-0:10:02.000,0:10:05.360
-and then assigning that tile set some
-
-0:10:04.000,0:10:06.000
-some characteristics like physical
-
-0:10:05.360,0:10:08.399
-speeds
-
-0:10:06.000,0:10:09.279
-screen space a variable that we might
-
-0:10:08.399,0:10:12.800
-want to swap in
-
-0:10:09.279,0:10:15.200
-and so forth uh and
-
-0:10:12.800,0:10:16.160
-you know our project rests heavily on on
-
-0:10:15.200,0:10:19.839
-org mode and
-
-0:10:16.160,0:10:19.839
-it's it's fundamental capabilities
-
-0:10:21.040,0:10:24.959
-so the the code I'm going to show here
-
-0:10:24.000,0:10:28.320
-is
-
-0:10:24.959,0:10:31.360
-uh is
-
-0:10:28.320,0:10:33.040
-is focused around sort of a a sticky
-
-0:10:31.360,0:10:35.600
-problem space in in the information
-
-0:10:33.040,0:10:39.120
-technology and I'm I'm a professional
-
-0:10:35.600,0:10:41.120
-uh uh software engineer turned uh
-
-0:10:39.120,0:10:45.120
-technology architect I support
-
-0:10:41.120,0:10:47.600
-the websites for a recognizable
-
-0:10:45.120,0:10:49.680
-financial services brand that I don't
-
-0:10:47.600,0:10:50.720
-identify just so I don't accidentally
-
-0:10:49.680,0:10:54.399
-end up
-
-0:10:50.720,0:10:55.600
-uh inadvertently misrepresenting my firm
-
-0:10:54.399,0:10:57.760
-in some financial
-
-0:10:55.600,0:11:00.480
-uh perspective if I let some other
-
-0:10:57.760,0:11:01.760
-companies slip at certain let some other
-
-0:11:00.480,0:11:05.839
-companies slip
-
-0:11:01.760,0:11:05.839
-name slip or my own it's certainly no
-
-0:11:06.560,0:11:10.560
-representation of an opinion other than
-
-0:11:08.160,0:11:10.560
-my own
-
-0:11:11.279,0:11:17.109
-the um
-
-0:11:13.980,0:11:17.109
-[Music]
-
-0:11:18.800,0:11:26.240
-so etl has to do with moving data around
-
-0:11:22.720,0:11:29.200
-we we have the idea of of
-
-0:11:26.240,0:11:30.560
-a pipeline where we'll be able to verify
-
-0:11:29.200,0:11:32.480
-certain assumptions not
-
-0:11:30.560,0:11:33.600
-nominally about data quality but it
-
-0:11:32.480,0:11:36.000
-could be about anything
-
-0:11:33.600,0:11:37.279
-before the pipeline starts okay we've
-
-0:11:36.000,0:11:38.560
-got a state where we think it should
-
-0:11:37.279,0:11:41.920
-work if we run it
-
-0:11:38.560,0:11:44.160
-we have uh some extraction where we'll
-
-0:11:41.920,0:11:45.040
-get our sources and we may have the the
-
-0:11:44.160,0:11:47.920
-opportunity to
-
-0:11:45.040,0:11:48.720
-uh make some assertions there and in the
-
-0:11:47.920,0:11:51.360
-transform
-
-0:11:48.720,0:11:52.720
-stage as well as the load things get a
-
-0:11:51.360,0:11:54.079
-little dicer
-
-0:11:52.720,0:11:55.360
-to the point where we come out of the
-
-0:11:54.079,0:11:57.040
-load stage and we should have some
-
-0:11:55.360,0:11:58.480
-really solid assertions again that we
-
-0:11:57.040,0:11:59.680
-can even go back and compare to the
-
-0:11:58.480,0:12:02.639
-extract stage
-
-0:11:59.680,0:12:04.959
-and from this we have the rudimentaries
-
-0:12:02.639,0:12:08.399
-of a data quality practice
-
-0:12:04.959,0:12:09.360
-uh in this case we have a number of org
-
-0:12:08.399,0:12:12.639
-mode files that will all
-
-0:12:09.360,0:12:16.720
-be distributed across a
-
-0:12:12.639,0:12:18.959
-number of players uh computers
-
-0:12:16.720,0:12:20.320
-so we might not want to update every
-
-0:12:18.959,0:12:22.720
-part of every buffer
-
-0:12:20.320,0:12:24.560
-I think it's a complicated problem space
-
-0:12:22.720,0:12:27.839
-and so we tried to take
-
-0:12:24.560,0:12:31.120
-a long-term view of
-
-0:12:27.839,0:12:32.160
-the solution that we needed um so I'll
-
-0:12:31.120,0:12:35.760
-go ahead
-
-0:12:32.160,0:12:37.839
-and open up the fun function
-
-0:12:35.760,0:12:41.680
-that well let's let's actually start
-
-0:12:37.839,0:12:45.040
-with the one that's pretty easy to read
-
-0:12:41.680,0:12:46.800
-and uh I'm gonna go ahead and just crank
-
-0:12:45.040,0:12:51.600
-it up huge
-
-0:12:46.800,0:12:51.600
-in case anybody's watching in 480.
-
-0:12:51.680,0:12:58.560
-um so this this program is not
-
-0:12:56.480,0:13:01.120
-a work of art it's a simple
-
-0:12:58.560,0:13:05.440
-implementation of the idea that a list
-
-0:13:01.120,0:13:08.160
-an a list of functions that return
-
-0:13:05.440,0:13:10.399
-maybe some data maybe some data and an
-
-0:13:08.160,0:13:13.040
-entry back into that a list
-
-0:13:10.399,0:13:15.680
-um can be done quite extensively with
-
-0:13:13.040,0:13:17.760
-very few lines of code
-
-0:13:15.680,0:13:19.600
-neither is it an especially tight or
-
-0:13:17.760,0:13:22.000
-thrifty implementation
-
-0:13:19.600,0:13:22.800
-it's just trying to get the job done
-
-0:13:22.000,0:13:26.160
-with a doc
-
-0:13:22.800,0:13:30.880
-statement for everything at the heart
-
-0:13:26.160,0:13:32.480
-um we see a call to this macro called dm
-
-0:13:30.880,0:13:35.360
-coalesce hash and that's what I'd like
-
-0:13:32.480,0:13:37.680
-to focus in on you can see I think
-
-0:13:35.360,0:13:38.800
-that something on unpleasant is
-
-0:13:37.680,0:13:42.480
-happening here
-
-0:13:38.800,0:13:46.560
-I've got an eval in um
-
-0:13:42.480,0:13:49.519
-what is I will share a a
-
-0:13:46.560,0:13:49.920
-fairly central function that that that
-
-0:13:49.519,0:13:52.160
-that
-
-0:13:49.920,0:13:53.920
-those implementing this etl pattern are
-
-0:13:52.160,0:13:56.639
-welcome to
-
-0:13:53.920,0:13:57.680
-derive from that is this is a default
-
-0:13:56.639,0:13:59.680
-transform
-
-0:13:57.680,0:14:00.959
-that you can get when loading certain
-
-0:13:59.680,0:14:04.560
-kinds of
-
-0:14:00.959,0:14:06.399
-uh orgmo tables that have been uh
-
-0:14:04.560,0:14:09.120
-properly adorned and again we'll get
-
-0:14:06.399,0:14:11.440
-into that all tomorrow
-
-0:14:09.120,0:14:13.760
-so keep an eye on time couple minutes
-
-0:14:11.440,0:14:15.360
-left let's look at the macro itself and
-
-0:14:13.760,0:14:19.040
-I have a slide on this but let's go
-
-0:14:15.360,0:14:19.040
-ahead and risk getting off page
-
-0:14:24.639,0:14:28.959
-oh boy here we go so this is my
-
-0:14:27.199,0:14:31.920
-utilities bucket
-
-0:14:28.959,0:14:34.000
-it has such basic features as give me a
-
-0:14:31.920,0:14:36.000
-hash table with some defaults I'll think
-
-0:14:34.000,0:14:38.320
-about that later
-
-0:14:36.000,0:14:38.320
-and
-
-0:14:39.680,0:14:47.600
-and add to list um a special version
-
-0:14:44.720,0:14:49.360
-that enables us to be a little cavalier
-
-0:14:47.600,0:14:50.480
-in experimenting with a-list versus
-
-0:14:49.360,0:14:52.800
-hashes versus p
-
-0:14:50.480,0:14:54.399
-lists we've made a right mess for
-
-0:14:52.800,0:14:55.279
-ourselves in the proof of concept area
-
-0:14:54.399,0:14:58.560
-and it's ripe
-
-0:14:55.279,0:15:00.240
-for someone to write a white paper about
-
-0:14:58.560,0:15:03.360
-when to prefer these things
-
-0:15:00.240,0:15:03.360
-and fix
-
-0:15:04.800,0:15:10.720
-the merge a list uh
-
-0:15:08.000,0:15:12.959
-same work here let's get let's get down
-
-0:15:10.720,0:15:16.000
-to business
-
-0:15:12.959,0:15:18.560
-this function has quite a this a macro
-
-0:15:16.000,0:15:20.720
-has quite a doc string and I think I
-
-0:15:18.560,0:15:22.240
-mentioned earlier that I got myself into
-
-0:15:20.720,0:15:23.519
-trouble with the keyword properties you
-
-0:15:22.240,0:15:27.839
-can see that we have
-
-0:15:23.519,0:15:32.240
-not only quite a number of them but
-
-0:15:27.839,0:15:32.880
-a lot of a lot of default values many of
-
-0:15:32.240,0:15:36.000
-which
-
-0:15:32.880,0:15:37.680
-may be relying on the
-
-0:15:36.000,0:15:40.000
-values that are passed in here this is
-
-0:15:37.680,0:15:44.000
-complicated and as it turns out
-
-0:15:40.000,0:15:46.079
-um I wasn't brave enough in most cases
-
-0:15:44.000,0:15:47.279
-to try to write a lambda that could
-
-0:15:46.079,0:15:49.680
-understand and
-
-0:15:47.279,0:15:50.399
-replace uh its own local variable I just
-
-0:15:49.680,0:15:53.519
-didn't
-
-0:15:50.399,0:15:54.800
-it didn't save me enough time this was
-
-0:15:53.519,0:15:56.800
-really easy
-
-0:15:54.800,0:15:58.240
-to read and write and understand as I
-
-0:15:56.800,0:16:01.440
-thought through my problem
-
-0:15:58.240,0:16:03.360
-but now as I use it I I've lost a little
-
-0:16:01.440,0:16:04.079
-ground maybe with this and I'm not even
-
-0:16:03.360,0:16:07.279
-sure
-
-0:16:04.079,0:16:08.079
-I like what I got from uh the many
-
-0:16:07.279,0:16:10.560
-keyword
-
-0:16:08.079,0:16:11.920
-properties when it and we can look
-
-0:16:10.560,0:16:17.120
-perhaps if we have
-
-0:16:11.920,0:16:17.120
-the time at what that looks like in uh
-
-0:16:17.340,0:16:22.720
-[Music]
-
-0:16:19.920,0:16:24.480
-oh all right I have to separately
-
-0:16:22.720,0:16:27.519
-dismiss and restart that
-
-0:16:24.480,0:16:29.600
-um so that so that's just about my time
-
-0:16:27.519,0:16:31.920
-uh and being respectful of that I want
-
-0:16:29.600,0:16:35.519
-to invite presenters to just jump in at
-
-0:16:31.920,0:16:38.079
-any of the many large pauses I leave
-
-0:16:35.519,0:16:40.160
-uh as I'll just leave up the doc string
-
-0:16:38.079,0:16:43.279
-for a moment and maybe split the screen
-
-0:16:40.160,0:16:43.279
-and pull open an item
-
-0:16:45.199,0:16:50.720
-you are now unmuted uh thank you very
-
-0:16:48.720,0:16:53.839
-much for your talk corwin
-
-0:16:50.720,0:16:55.279
-um I think you still have like uh
-
-0:16:53.839,0:16:57.680
-maybe three or four more minutes if you
-
-0:16:55.279,0:17:01.040
-want to quickly wrap up
-
-0:16:57.680,0:17:02.160
-okay so three or four more minutes I can
-
-0:17:01.040,0:17:05.439
-easily spend
-
-0:17:02.160,0:17:07.280
-on thank yous
-
-0:17:05.439,0:17:08.270
-I might switch to that if there aren't
-
-0:17:07.280,0:17:10.160
-questions on the path
-
-0:17:08.270,0:17:12.559
-[Music]
-
-0:17:10.160,0:17:14.079
-um would you like me to pull up the pad
-
-0:17:12.559,0:17:17.199
-or are you looking at it
-
-0:17:14.079,0:17:21.839
-I am I bookmarked it I am
-
-0:17:17.199,0:17:21.839
-pulling the tab and I'll bring it in
-
-0:17:30.840,0:17:33.840
-okay
-
-0:17:34.960,0:17:41.520
-all right this is the wrong ether pad
-
-0:17:38.799,0:17:41.520
-thanks for the link
-
-0:17:44.480,0:17:50.640
-all right um so I think I'm looking for
-
-0:17:48.000,0:17:50.640
-macros
-
-0:17:54.880,0:18:01.679
-uh okay key message sure so the
-
-0:17:58.400,0:18:02.960
-the key message is that it's um it's a
-
-0:18:01.679,0:18:06.240
-jungle out there
-
-0:18:02.960,0:18:08.559
-macros along with any other design can
-
-0:18:06.240,0:18:11.919
-leave you in a position
-
-0:18:08.559,0:18:13.600
-where you have a nice api and I can show
-
-0:18:11.919,0:18:14.960
-you other examples you can find them in
-
-0:18:13.600,0:18:18.480
-the dungeon mode source
-
-0:18:14.960,0:18:21.600
-of many many other places where I use
-
-0:18:18.480,0:18:23.840
-this exact same formula quickly
-
-0:18:21.600,0:18:26.960
-sketching out how a character sheet
-
-0:18:23.840,0:18:28.480
-or another big data set needs to
-
-0:18:26.960,0:18:29.600
-needs to figure out what tables are
-
-0:18:28.480,0:18:30.720
-going to be interesting from the
-
-0:18:29.600,0:18:34.400
-collection of files
-
-0:18:30.720,0:18:38.880
-and then load up the tile set and
-
-0:18:34.400,0:18:41.600
-the uh layout file from that
-
-0:18:38.880,0:18:43.280
-and I mean it works this the project is
-
-0:18:41.600,0:18:44.799
-moving forward with this I have the
-
-0:18:43.280,0:18:46.720
-flexibility that I need
-
-0:18:44.799,0:18:48.640
-but here I am evaling my own code to
-
-0:18:46.720,0:18:52.400
-make darn sure even if I get by
-
-0:18:48.640,0:18:55.440
-by compiled uh this macro doesn't uh
-
-0:18:52.400,0:18:58.160
-does get evaluated in the user's real
-
-0:18:55.440,0:18:58.880
-run time clearly a design fail so that
-
-0:18:58.160,0:19:00.880
-would be
-
-0:18:58.880,0:19:02.400
-the key point of my talk is is to
-
-0:19:00.880,0:19:05.600
-present this design
-
-0:19:02.400,0:19:08.320
-fail and uh thank
-
-0:19:05.600,0:19:09.520
-um thank the community but especially
-
-0:19:08.320,0:19:12.160
-wasa masa
-
-0:19:09.520,0:19:13.280
-for for some patience and let me add at
-
-0:19:12.160,0:19:15.200
-this moment that
-
-0:19:13.280,0:19:16.799
-uh he was so frustrated with me they
-
-0:19:15.200,0:19:17.360
-were sort of frustrated with me I think
-
-0:19:16.799,0:19:20.400
-I
-
-0:19:17.360,0:19:24.240
-didn't qualify pronouns um
-
-0:19:20.400,0:19:26.640
-with um
-
-0:19:24.240,0:19:28.160
-with doing this the the first the this
-
-0:19:26.640,0:19:29.919
-was one of our first interactions and
-
-0:19:28.160,0:19:34.240
-the feedback was
-
-0:19:29.919,0:19:36.640
-why is this a macro full stop
-
-0:19:34.240,0:19:38.320
-and uh that's a great message actually
-
-0:19:36.640,0:19:40.160
-and I and I hope that
-
-0:19:38.320,0:19:42.720
-uh maybe this can encourage further
-
-0:19:40.160,0:19:44.160
-talks across the subject about
-
-0:19:42.720,0:19:46.720
-you know hey wait a minute macros are
-
-0:19:44.160,0:19:48.559
-really fantastic as I hope I made
-
-0:19:46.720,0:19:51.039
-clear you can do a tremendous amount
-
-0:19:48.559,0:19:52.320
-about uh with them and we rely on them
-
-0:19:51.039,0:19:55.200
-for
-
-0:19:52.320,0:19:56.480
-almost all the fun goodies um from you
-
-0:19:55.200,0:19:58.880
-know defund
-
-0:19:56.480,0:19:58.880
-secu
-
-0:20:02.159,0:20:05.440
-um I want to get to my my thank yous let
-
-0:20:04.960,0:20:08.559
-me just
-
-0:20:05.440,0:20:08.559
-peek back at the pad
-
-0:20:18.840,0:20:22.080
-oh
-
-0:20:20.000,0:20:23.760
-well that was actually a scratch buffer
-
-0:20:22.080,0:20:24.720
-so I'll have to sort of read it cold off
-
-0:20:23.760,0:20:27.039
-my notes
-
-0:20:24.720,0:20:27.039
-um
-
-0:20:27.919,0:20:31.600
-but also but I'll switch to I'll also
-
-0:20:30.320,0:20:34.320
-I'll say a couple of thank yous if you
-
-0:20:31.600,0:20:36.080
-don't mind
-
-0:20:34.320,0:20:38.400
-in addition to the big thank you that I
-
-0:20:36.080,0:20:39.360
-hope was implied by my shout out to wasa
-
-0:20:38.400,0:20:42.720
-masa
-
-0:20:39.360,0:20:46.640
-um I also want to thank you amen for
-
-0:20:42.720,0:20:51.360
-um your kindness in extending
-
-0:20:46.640,0:20:54.320
-to the project as well as to me the
-
-0:20:51.360,0:20:55.440
-the chance to present here and and and
-
-0:20:54.320,0:20:56.799
-you've you've also
-
-0:20:55.440,0:20:59.360
-just done a lot of great stuff for our
-
-0:20:56.799,0:21:02.080
-project thank you very much for that and
-
-0:20:59.360,0:21:02.080
-sasha
-
-0:21:13.120,0:21:17.200
-I'll get there um thank you so much for
-
-0:21:15.919,0:21:18.320
-the inspiration that you are to our
-
-0:21:17.200,0:21:22.400
-whole community
-
-0:21:18.320,0:21:25.600
-I also want to thank the presenters
-
-0:21:22.400,0:21:27.600
-um for just being so flexible and
-
-0:21:25.600,0:21:29.120
-uh nagging back through the whole thing
-
-0:21:27.600,0:21:30.960
-and especially to leo
-
-0:21:29.120,0:21:32.159
-who has done so much to drive the show
-
-0:21:30.960,0:21:35.520
-today
-
-0:21:32.159,0:21:37.840
-um I
-
-0:21:35.520,0:21:38.960
-this is a fractious tent at times and
-
-0:21:37.840,0:21:41.360
-sometimes
-
-0:21:38.960,0:21:43.039
-it is indeed a little bit of a circus
-
-0:21:41.360,0:21:45.520
-but I
-
-0:21:43.039,0:21:46.880
-am learning so much so fast I'm just
-
-0:21:45.520,0:21:50.320
-inspired by how much
-
-0:21:46.880,0:21:53.120
-Emacs can teach us thank you
-
-0:21:50.320,0:21:54.960
-uh corbin for your kind words and you
-
-0:21:53.120,0:21:56.000
-know about me of course but all about
-
-0:21:54.960,0:21:59.760
-you know all of us
-
-0:21:56.000,0:22:02.400
-and the conference and you know indeed
-
-0:21:59.760,0:22:04.159
-thanks to everyone who's helped uh
-
-0:22:02.400,0:22:05.840
-including the speakers of course
-
-0:22:04.159,0:22:08.960
-without whom you know a maxcom really
-
-0:22:05.840,0:22:10.640
-wouldn't have been a EmacsConf
-
-0:22:08.960,0:22:12.080
-and you know it's been a pleasure
-
-0:22:10.640,0:22:15.520
-knowing you and working with
-
-0:22:12.080,0:22:17.360
-you um I guess um from afar for the most
-
-0:22:15.520,0:22:18.960
-part on dungeon mode like helping
-
-0:22:17.360,0:22:20.720
-helping with like small things here and
-
-0:22:18.960,0:22:22.320
-there but um
-
-0:22:20.720,0:22:23.840
-yeah it's been my pleasure and it's
-
-0:22:22.320,0:22:25.840
-great to have you and
-
-0:22:23.840,0:22:26.880
-um everyone else you know part of the
-
-0:22:25.840,0:22:29.440
-community and
-
-0:22:26.880,0:22:30.559
-for me to be part of the community it's
-
-0:22:29.440,0:22:33.039
-been a lot of fun
-
-0:22:30.559,0:22:33.039
-thank you
-
-0:22:33.679,0:22:38.000
-it's it's it's it's an honor and I don't
-
-0:22:36.080,0:22:38.720
-use that word an awful lot because I
-
-0:22:38.000,0:22:41.760
-sort of
-
-0:22:38.720,0:22:44.320
-sort of smirk at it but um gets us in a
-
-0:22:41.760,0:22:47.360
-lot of trouble honor does but
-
-0:22:44.320,0:22:48.840
-this will be a sure time to use it thank
-
-0:22:47.360,0:22:51.840
-you
-
-0:22:48.840,0:22:51.840
-likewise
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--21-on-why-most-of-the-best-features-in-eev-look-like-5-minute-hacks--eduardo-ochs-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--21-on-why-most-of-the-best-features-in-eev-look-like-5-minute-hacks--eduardo-ochs-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 62287278..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--21-on-why-most-of-the-best-features-in-eev-look-like-5-minute-hacks--eduardo-ochs-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3300 +0,0 @@
-0:00:00.080,0:00:03.439
-hi my name is eduardo x I'm this person
-
-0:00:02.639,0:00:06.240
-here
-
-0:00:03.439,0:00:07.120
-and the title of this talk is on why
-
-0:00:06.240,0:00:09.519
-most of
-
-0:00:07.120,0:00:11.599
-most of the best features in ev look
-
-0:00:09.519,0:00:13.759
-like five minute hacks
-
-0:00:11.599,0:00:15.280
-and this is a presentation at the max
-
-0:00:13.759,0:00:21.920
-conf 2020
-
-0:00:15.280,0:00:21.920
-happening in november 22 28 and 29 2020
-
-0:00:23.199,0:00:27.680
-so this is part one of the presentation
-
-0:00:25.519,0:00:29.840
-and here I'm going to explain some
-
-0:00:27.680,0:00:31.039
-some ideas that are prerequisites for
-
-0:00:29.840,0:00:32.320
-understanding the rest of the
-
-0:00:31.039,0:00:35.440
-presentation
-
-0:00:32.320,0:00:35.760
-the three main keys of ev are matay meta
-
-0:00:35.440,0:00:37.920
-k
-
-0:00:35.760,0:00:41.520
-and mata j and I'm going to start by
-
-0:00:37.920,0:00:41.520
-explaining metae and meta k
-
-0:00:42.079,0:00:46.800
-metae is used to follow hyperlink and
-
-0:00:44.960,0:00:49.680
-technically it is
-
-0:00:46.800,0:00:50.879
-essentially just a ctrl e to move to the
-
-0:00:49.680,0:00:54.320
-end of the line and then
-
-0:00:50.879,0:00:58.960
-a ctrl x control e to execute this the
-
-0:00:54.320,0:01:00.879
-sext before point at the end of the line
-
-0:00:58.960,0:01:03.120
-and the thing is that a max comes with
-
-0:01:00.879,0:01:05.040
-many functions that can be used as sex
-
-0:01:03.120,0:01:07.040
-hyperlinks
-
-0:01:05.040,0:01:09.040
-we can consider that they point to
-
-0:01:07.040,0:01:09.520
-somewhere I'm going to refer to that as
-
-0:01:09.040,0:01:11.920
-the
-
-0:01:09.520,0:01:12.960
-target of the hyperlink and if we
-
-0:01:11.920,0:01:15.759
-execute this
-
-0:01:12.960,0:01:17.119
-sex paper links would go to that target
-
-0:01:15.759,0:01:20.000
-for example this one
-
-0:01:17.119,0:01:22.720
-is a hyperlink that points to a buffer
-
-0:01:20.000,0:01:25.040
-with demand paid for cat
-
-0:01:22.720,0:01:27.040
-and usually but not always after
-
-0:01:25.040,0:01:29.840
-following the hyperlink we can go back
-
-0:01:27.040,0:01:30.720
-by just skilling the the current buffer
-
-0:01:29.840,0:01:34.400
-that the hyperlink
-
-0:01:30.720,0:01:38.000
-created the target of the hyperlink
-
-0:01:34.400,0:01:41.360
-but this example here is badly behaved
-
-0:01:38.000,0:01:43.360
-if we execute it it creates a new frame
-
-0:01:41.360,0:01:44.640
-and to go back to the previous situation
-
-0:01:43.360,0:01:50.079
-we have to either
-
-0:01:44.640,0:01:50.079
-click here or type ctrl x50
-
-0:01:52.840,0:01:57.520
-uh
-
-0:01:54.880,0:02:00.640
-so here are some examples of sex
-
-0:01:57.520,0:02:03.600
-hyperlinks using standard max functions
-
-0:02:00.640,0:02:04.880
-this third one is uh badly behaved in a
-
-0:02:03.600,0:02:08.879
-different way
-
-0:02:04.880,0:02:09.840
-if executed we the target is created in
-
-0:02:08.879,0:02:13.840
-the same window
-
-0:02:09.840,0:02:16.000
-as we are now but it also shows a lot of
-
-0:02:13.840,0:02:20.840
-garbage here in the aqua area so
-
-0:02:16.000,0:02:23.280
-the the current frame becomes a bit
-
-0:02:20.840,0:02:26.160
-messy
-
-0:02:23.280,0:02:28.319
-and well one of the first things that I
-
-0:02:26.160,0:02:30.720
-did when I was creating av
-
-0:02:28.319,0:02:31.680
-many many years ago was that I created
-
-0:02:30.720,0:02:34.840
-variants
-
-0:02:31.680,0:02:36.640
-of all these functions that were better
-
-0:02:34.840,0:02:38.640
-behaved
-
-0:02:36.640,0:02:40.480
-and they were better behaved in two
-
-0:02:38.640,0:02:43.040
-senses the obvious one
-
-0:02:40.480,0:02:43.680
-was that they they all created the
-
-0:02:43.040,0:02:45.840
-target
-
-0:02:43.680,0:02:48.720
-in the same window as before so I could
-
-0:02:45.840,0:02:51.040
-go back by just typing meta k
-
-0:02:48.720,0:02:52.879
-which is essentially just killed this
-
-0:02:51.040,0:02:55.200
-buffer
-
-0:02:52.879,0:02:56.480
-and well but I also implemented
-
-0:02:55.200,0:02:59.040
-something extra that
-
-0:02:56.480,0:02:59.840
-are the post back lists for example for
-
-0:02:59.040,0:03:03.599
-example these
-
-0:02:59.840,0:03:06.080
-extra arguments here are a postback list
-
-0:03:03.599,0:03:09.599
-and this extra arguments specify
-
-0:03:06.080,0:03:13.040
-position and the target buffer
-
-0:03:09.599,0:03:16.720
-and in this example this this spot
-
-0:03:13.040,0:03:18.239
-spec list means starting from the from
-
-0:03:16.720,0:03:20.560
-the beginning of the buffer
-
-0:03:18.239,0:03:22.239
-search for the first occurrence of this
-
-0:03:20.560,0:03:24.159
-string
-
-0:03:22.239,0:03:25.519
-after that after the beginning of the
-
-0:03:24.159,0:03:28.159
-buffer and then
-
-0:03:25.519,0:03:29.120
-search for the first occurrence of this
-
-0:03:28.159,0:03:33.760
-string
-
-0:03:29.120,0:03:36.560
-after that
-
-0:03:33.760,0:03:38.799
-eev also defines some hyperlinks that do
-
-0:03:36.560,0:03:41.280
-not create new buffers
-
-0:03:38.799,0:03:41.840
-uh here is the first example if I
-
-0:03:41.280,0:03:45.920
-execute
-
-0:03:41.840,0:03:46.959
-this one this one is a hyperlink to the
-
-0:03:45.920,0:03:50.720
-to the result
-
-0:03:46.959,0:03:52.959
-of running this show comment date uh
-
-0:03:50.720,0:03:55.040
-but instead of showing the result in the
-
-0:03:52.959,0:03:58.959
-new buffer the result is shown
-
-0:03:55.040,0:04:01.840
-here so if execute to this type link
-
-0:03:58.959,0:04:04.239
-the result of date the output of data is
-
-0:04:01.840,0:04:06.640
-shown in the echo area and if executed
-
-0:04:04.239,0:04:06.640
-again
-
-0:04:07.120,0:04:11.519
-it shows the result again and the result
-
-0:04:09.519,0:04:15.200
-changes every second
-
-0:04:11.519,0:04:18.720
-and if so this is a variant
-
-0:04:15.200,0:04:21.840
-of fine sh
-
-0:04:18.720,0:04:24.960
-uh find sh0 is the variant that
-
-0:04:21.840,0:04:28.080
-just shows the output in the echo area
-
-0:04:24.960,0:04:31.120
-and find sh shows the output in
-
-0:04:28.080,0:04:31.120
-a new buffer
-
-0:04:31.759,0:04:37.520
-and here is an example of a hyperlink
-
-0:04:35.919,0:04:40.000
-that
-
-0:04:37.520,0:04:41.280
-calls an external program if execute
-
-0:04:40.000,0:04:43.759
-this
-
-0:04:41.280,0:04:46.639
-it it calls google chrome to open a
-
-0:04:43.759,0:04:51.520
-certain url
-
-0:04:46.639,0:04:55.280
-here it is let's go back to mx
-
-0:04:51.520,0:04:58.479
-if execute this happening here
-
-0:04:55.280,0:04:58.880
-it invokes my favorite pdf viewer which
-
-0:04:58.479,0:05:02.560
-is
-
-0:04:58.880,0:05:07.440
-xpdf it makes xpdf
-
-0:05:02.560,0:05:07.440
-open this pdf page it is pdf
-
-0:05:07.759,0:05:15.199
-in this page and this other arguments
-
-0:05:10.880,0:05:19.120
-are ignored let me show how it works
-
-0:05:15.199,0:05:20.160
-here it is this is a an accept from a
-
-0:05:19.120,0:05:22.639
-book
-
-0:05:20.160,0:05:23.199
-so page 3 and the pdf corresponds to
-
-0:05:22.639,0:05:26.400
-page
-
-0:05:23.199,0:05:29.360
-113 in the book and
-
-0:05:26.400,0:05:31.759
-this variant here of the hyperlink above
-
-0:05:29.360,0:05:34.560
-it opens the pdf in a different way
-
-0:05:31.759,0:05:36.479
-it runs a program called pdf to text on
-
-0:05:34.560,0:05:39.600
-this pdf here
-
-0:05:36.479,0:05:42.880
-and max takes the output of
-
-0:05:39.600,0:05:46.080
-run epd after text on this pdf here
-
-0:05:42.880,0:05:47.280
-and displays it in a buffer and now this
-
-0:05:46.080,0:05:50.000
-postback list
-
-0:05:47.280,0:05:51.280
-is interpreted in a different way this
-
-0:05:50.000,0:05:54.400
-thing is interpreted
-
-0:05:51.280,0:05:54.800
-as a as a number of a page and a max
-
-0:05:54.400,0:05:57.520
-goes
-
-0:05:54.800,0:05:58.240
-to page three by counting form feeds in
-
-0:05:57.520,0:06:01.440
-the
-
-0:05:58.240,0:06:03.039
-converted version of the pdf and then it
-
-0:06:01.440,0:06:06.319
-searches for this string
-
-0:06:03.039,0:06:08.479
-and in this three so let's execute this
-
-0:06:06.319,0:06:10.800
-to see what happens
-
-0:06:08.479,0:06:13.280
-here it is I opened the same page as
-
-0:06:10.800,0:06:13.280
-before
-
-0:06:14.800,0:06:20.720
-it starts with lecture one so
-
-0:06:18.400,0:06:24.720
-the other hyperlink searched for this
-
-0:06:20.720,0:06:24.720
-string and for this string here
-
-0:06:25.520,0:06:30.400
-uh and this thing here is a hyperlink to
-
-0:06:28.160,0:06:32.720
-video
-
-0:06:30.400,0:06:34.560
-and when I executed it's going to open
-
-0:06:32.720,0:06:37.759
-this video here
-
-0:06:34.560,0:06:41.199
-at this time this time stamp let's see
-
-0:06:37.759,0:06:46.840
-one two three one
-
-0:06:41.199,0:06:49.440
-two three that's the way to do
-
-0:06:46.840,0:06:52.560
-it
-
-0:06:49.440,0:06:53.680
-and also some hyperlinks that that I
-
-0:06:52.560,0:06:56.479
-defined
-
-0:06:53.680,0:06:58.160
-uh they don't work like like usual
-
-0:06:56.479,0:07:01.440
-hyperlinks they work more
-
-0:06:58.160,0:07:05.759
-like browser buttons
-
-0:07:01.440,0:07:05.759
-these buttons that appear in web pages
-
-0:07:06.240,0:07:11.360
-in the sense that these buttons usually
-
-0:07:09.120,0:07:13.280
-don't open a new page they usually
-
-0:07:11.360,0:07:14.960
-just do something to change the current
-
-0:07:13.280,0:07:18.160
-page
-
-0:07:14.960,0:07:18.880
-if I execute this the action of this
-
-0:07:18.160,0:07:22.240
-function
-
-0:07:18.880,0:07:24.800
-eek is to uh
-
-0:07:22.240,0:07:25.919
-it interprets this string as a series of
-
-0:07:24.800,0:07:28.840
-keys and it
-
-0:07:25.919,0:07:30.319
-acts as if the user had typed all these
-
-0:07:28.840,0:07:33.680
-keys so
-
-0:07:30.319,0:07:34.400
-if executed I get a hello in the next
-
-0:07:33.680,0:07:36.639
-line
-
-0:07:34.400,0:07:39.440
-if executed again I get another hello
-
-0:07:36.639,0:07:44.319
-another hello hello hello etc etc
-
-0:07:39.440,0:07:47.840
-let me undo this mess oops
-
-0:07:44.319,0:07:51.440
-and here is another kind of button
-
-0:07:47.840,0:07:54.879
-that defines a new function if I execute
-
-0:07:51.440,0:07:55.759
-this sex here at this moment though is
-
-0:07:54.879,0:07:57.919
-not defined
-
-0:07:55.759,0:08:00.000
-and if I execute this mx is going to
-
-0:07:57.919,0:08:03.599
-show me a message saying
-
-0:08:00.000,0:08:05.840
-uh symbols function cell is not defined
-
-0:08:03.599,0:08:09.520
-something like this
-
-0:08:05.840,0:08:12.960
-but if I execute the defund
-
-0:08:09.520,0:08:16.479
-this the action of this function o here
-
-0:08:12.960,0:08:18.960
-is to run this which opens a certain
-
-0:08:16.479,0:08:21.840
-directory
-
-0:08:18.960,0:08:23.039
-let me go back and here is another
-
-0:08:21.840,0:08:25.840
-button that defines
-
-0:08:23.039,0:08:26.479
-several functions at the same time if I
-
-0:08:25.840,0:08:28.879
-execute
-
-0:08:26.479,0:08:28.879
-this
-
-0:08:32.320,0:08:36.719
-note that the the result of executing
-
-0:08:35.599,0:08:38.640
-this expression
-
-0:08:36.719,0:08:40.080
-is the name of one of the functions that
-
-0:08:38.640,0:08:42.800
-it defined
-
-0:08:40.080,0:08:43.360
-that is this one here and let me explain
-
-0:08:42.800,0:08:46.959
-the
-
-0:08:43.360,0:08:48.800
-these examples uh one of the functions
-
-0:08:46.959,0:08:51.839
-that this thing here defined
-
-0:08:48.800,0:08:54.640
-is called find or git file where
-
-0:08:51.839,0:08:55.040
-this or gate in the middle of its name
-
-0:08:54.640,0:08:59.600
-is
-
-0:08:55.040,0:09:02.640
-exactly this first argument to code cd
-
-0:08:59.600,0:09:03.120
-and the action of running find or get
-
-0:09:02.640,0:09:06.399
-file
-
-0:09:03.120,0:09:09.680
-on a string like this is that
-
-0:09:06.399,0:09:13.360
-find or get file takes the string
-
-0:09:09.680,0:09:15.600
-and prepends this string to it
-
-0:09:13.360,0:09:17.920
-this one here which is the second
-
-0:09:15.600,0:09:21.760
-argument to called cd
-
-0:09:17.920,0:09:25.600
-and then it executes find flying
-
-0:09:21.760,0:09:25.600
-on the result which is this one
-
-0:09:25.680,0:09:28.800
-and fine flying is my variant of find
-
-0:09:28.320,0:09:32.080
-file
-
-0:09:28.800,0:09:36.880
-that supports both spec lists
-
-0:09:32.080,0:09:39.600
-and this function here that I'm
-
-0:09:36.880,0:09:41.200
-referring to as a button it also defines
-
-0:09:39.600,0:09:44.880
-a function called
-
-0:09:41.200,0:09:46.080
-find audit node here where the or gate
-
-0:09:44.880,0:09:50.320
-is the same string
-
-0:09:46.080,0:09:54.160
-as here and this function opens a node
-
-0:09:50.320,0:09:57.920
-of of an info manual this one
-
-0:09:54.160,0:10:00.080
-this text here opens this node in the
-
-0:09:57.920,0:10:03.519
-org manual
-
-0:10:00.080,0:10:06.800
-it is equivalent to this text here
-
-0:10:03.519,0:10:08.720
-so in the passage from this line to this
-
-0:10:06.800,0:10:11.920
-line we prepended
-
-0:10:08.720,0:10:15.040
-to the node name the name of the manual
-
-0:10:11.920,0:10:18.160
-here and find node is my variant
-
-0:10:15.040,0:10:20.399
-of this standard mx function here
-
-0:10:18.160,0:10:23.200
-but find node also supports post
-
-0:10:20.399,0:10:23.200
-backlists
-
-0:10:23.519,0:10:28.640
-eevee also defines some functions that
-
-0:10:26.640,0:10:30.800
-define shorter hyperlinks to pdfs and
-
-0:10:28.640,0:10:32.880
-videos
-
-0:10:30.800,0:10:34.720
-remember that this thing here is a
-
-0:10:32.880,0:10:37.120
-shorter hyperlink to a
-
-0:10:34.720,0:10:39.040
-to a file and this thing here is a
-
-0:10:37.120,0:10:43.200
-shorter hyperlink to a node and
-
-0:10:39.040,0:10:46.079
-in an mx menu in an info manual
-
-0:10:43.200,0:10:47.279
-uh if we run this thing here this code
-
-0:10:46.079,0:10:50.240
-pdf page
-
-0:10:47.279,0:10:52.880
-this acts like a button that defines a
-
-0:10:50.240,0:10:56.399
-certain function
-
-0:10:52.880,0:10:59.040
-and this string this other sex
-
-0:10:56.399,0:11:00.240
-here defines another function the first
-
-0:10:59.040,0:11:03.040
-one defines
-
-0:11:00.240,0:11:05.360
-the function find funcspivac page and
-
-0:11:03.040,0:11:09.279
-the second one defines the function find
-
-0:11:05.360,0:11:12.240
-from text when we run the
-
-0:11:09.279,0:11:13.440
-file when we run findfoxpivotpage it
-
-0:11:12.240,0:11:17.600
-opens
-
-0:11:13.440,0:11:20.640
-this pdf here the name is
-
-0:11:17.600,0:11:23.839
-quite long uh
-
-0:11:20.640,0:11:26.079
-this example opens this pdf at page 8
-
-0:11:23.839,0:11:28.000
-and searches for the string contents
-
-0:11:26.079,0:11:31.279
-oops sorry in this case
-
-0:11:28.000,0:11:33.519
-in this case it just ignores this string
-
-0:11:31.279,0:11:37.360
-here it only considers
-
-0:11:33.519,0:11:42.640
-the number of the page let's try
-
-0:11:37.360,0:11:45.200
-ah we got
-
-0:11:42.640,0:11:46.880
-here it is uh the contents of a book
-
-0:11:45.200,0:11:50.800
-that is freely
-
-0:11:46.880,0:11:51.760
-available uh here is another page of the
-
-0:11:50.800,0:11:55.040
-book
-
-0:11:51.760,0:11:55.519
-and if we execute the this happening
-
-0:11:55.040,0:11:58.399
-here
-
-0:11:55.519,0:11:59.920
-find funk's pivot text it converts the
-
-0:11:58.399,0:12:03.040
-pdf to text
-
-0:11:59.920,0:12:05.040
-and it searches for the page eight
-
-0:12:03.040,0:12:08.079
-in it and then for the string this
-
-0:12:05.040,0:12:11.839
-string here in page eight
-
-0:12:08.079,0:12:11.839
-it takes a few seconds
-
-0:12:12.240,0:12:20.320
-here it is so this is the
-
-0:12:16.160,0:12:25.040
-ascii version of this contents page
-
-0:12:20.320,0:12:28.800
-here uh note that this block here
-
-0:12:25.040,0:12:31.680
-is a kind of an index to that book
-
-0:12:28.800,0:12:33.600
-uh I have the full index somewhere but
-
-0:12:31.680,0:12:34.959
-it's very long so I just copied a few
-
-0:12:33.600,0:12:38.959
-lines here
-
-0:12:34.959,0:12:42.160
-uh so this is a link to the to set
-
-0:12:38.959,0:12:45.360
-section one chapter one this is the
-
-0:12:42.160,0:12:48.959
-section 1.1
-
-0:12:45.360,0:12:53.839
-section 1.1.1 and so on
-
-0:12:48.959,0:12:53.839
-and here is a link to the index
-
-0:12:54.000,0:13:02.800
-and here is a part of my index
-
-0:12:58.079,0:13:03.279
-of positions in the video that we just
-
-0:13:02.800,0:13:05.760
-saw
-
-0:13:03.279,0:13:07.360
-that I think that are especially
-
-0:13:05.760,0:13:10.639
-relevant
-
-0:13:07.360,0:13:12.399
-uh so this I believe
-
-0:13:10.639,0:13:14.160
-hyperlink is a kind of a button that
-
-0:13:12.399,0:13:18.560
-defines this function here
-
-0:13:14.160,0:13:18.560
-find punch and punch into the video
-
-0:13:18.839,0:13:21.839
-uh
-
-0:13:27.600,0:13:33.360
-and we can also use this for video
-
-0:13:31.440,0:13:37.200
-tutorials for example
-
-0:13:33.360,0:13:40.639
-this is a very good tutorial on on magic
-
-0:13:37.200,0:13:40.639
-if we execute this
-
-0:13:40.880,0:13:44.800
-then these functions are going to be
-
-0:13:42.560,0:13:48.399
-defined and these functions open
-
-0:13:44.800,0:13:50.079
-this tutorial on magic
-
-0:13:48.399,0:13:51.839
-these are some of the positions in the
-
-0:13:50.079,0:13:53.920
-tutorial that I found especially
-
-0:13:51.839,0:13:55.600
-especially relevant this is a very dense
-
-0:13:53.920,0:13:56.480
-tutorial I had to take notes of
-
-0:13:55.600,0:13:59.040
-everything
-
-0:13:56.480,0:14:00.800
-and I had to watch everything things
-
-0:13:59.040,0:14:03.440
-several times
-
-0:14:00.800,0:14:06.480
-and for example this is a link to the
-
-0:14:03.440,0:14:09.600
-position in the tutorial that explains
-
-0:14:06.480,0:14:12.880
-uh how in space
-
-0:14:09.600,0:14:17.600
-space max magic magic
-
-0:14:12.880,0:14:20.480
-interprets space gs magic status
-
-0:14:17.600,0:14:22.320
-let's see beginners space gs to initiate
-
-0:14:20.480,0:14:25.600
-magic's git status
-
-0:14:22.320,0:14:28.800
-uh you can also do that's it
-
-0:14:25.600,0:14:32.160
-and here are some examples that I
-
-0:14:28.800,0:14:34.240
-took from somewhere else the video
-
-0:14:32.160,0:14:38.800
-tutorials from
-
-0:14:34.240,0:14:38.800
-ralph koenig about org mode
-
-0:14:43.519,0:14:47.440
-now let me show how the functions that
-
-0:14:45.519,0:14:48.720
-define this router hyperlinks are
-
-0:14:47.440,0:14:51.199
-implemented
-
-0:14:48.720,0:14:52.480
-the standard ways in max to define
-
-0:14:51.199,0:14:55.760
-functions that define
-
-0:14:52.480,0:14:58.320
-other functions would be with macros uh
-
-0:14:55.760,0:14:59.040
-let's see an example this is a standard
-
-0:14:58.320,0:15:01.540
-function that
-
-0:14:59.040,0:15:02.959
-defines new functions
-
-0:15:01.540,0:15:06.959
-[Music]
-
-0:15:02.959,0:15:09.040
-and if we execute it one of the res
-
-0:15:06.959,0:15:10.160
-its result is the last function that it
-
-0:15:09.040,0:15:13.839
-defined which is
-
-0:15:10.160,0:15:13.839
-e-grief which is here
-
-0:15:13.920,0:15:19.360
-it's implemented as a macro we can
-
-0:15:16.959,0:15:20.880
-look at the result of macro expand which
-
-0:15:19.360,0:15:23.519
-is going to show
-
-0:15:20.880,0:15:25.519
-show us the result of of this of the
-
-0:15:23.519,0:15:28.000
-expansion of this
-
-0:15:25.519,0:15:28.959
-instead of expanding and executing it
-
-0:15:28.000,0:15:33.199
-just
-
-0:15:28.959,0:15:36.000
-expands and shows us the result
-
-0:15:33.199,0:15:37.600
-here the result is a bit messy is too
-
-0:15:36.000,0:15:40.959
-big for
-
-0:15:37.600,0:15:44.240
-humans to understand but we can run
-
-0:15:40.959,0:15:47.519
-this or this text here that takes that
-
-0:15:44.240,0:15:50.959
-that result and pretty prints it
-
-0:15:47.519,0:15:54.000
-so this is the pretty printed version of
-
-0:15:50.959,0:15:57.600
-uh this macro here
-
-0:15:54.000,0:16:01.120
-we can see that it defines
-
-0:15:57.600,0:16:04.399
-several functions here
-
-0:16:01.120,0:16:04.399
-for example this one
-
-0:16:06.399,0:16:09.920
-and this just as a curiosity is a link
-
-0:16:09.360,0:16:13.839
-to
-
-0:16:09.920,0:16:16.880
-the definition of cld struct
-
-0:16:13.839,0:16:19.199
-and note that the code is huge uh
-
-0:16:16.880,0:16:20.079
-well it's very well commented but it's
-
-0:16:19.199,0:16:23.759
-it has
-
-0:16:20.079,0:16:26.959
-lots of special cases it has uh
-
-0:16:23.759,0:16:27.920
-it supports lots of constructions and so
-
-0:16:26.959,0:16:30.639
-it's huge and
-
-0:16:27.920,0:16:33.360
-it's very difficult to understand I mean
-
-0:16:30.639,0:16:35.040
-I found it very difficult to understand
-
-0:16:33.360,0:16:37.759
-and here's a link to document the
-
-0:16:35.040,0:16:42.000
-documentation of cld struct
-
-0:16:37.759,0:16:46.000
-here in the manual for
-
-0:16:42.000,0:16:50.480
-cl which is a kind of support for some
-
-0:16:46.000,0:16:53.600
-features of common lisp in the max
-
-0:16:50.480,0:16:54.639
-so let's compare this standard way of
-
-0:16:53.600,0:16:56.560
-defining
-
-0:16:54.639,0:16:58.320
-functions that define new functions
-
-0:16:56.560,0:17:01.680
-which is with macros
-
-0:16:58.320,0:17:04.160
-with this I'm going to use a slogan
-
-0:17:01.680,0:17:06.319
-repeatedly the slogan is I am a very bad
-
-0:17:04.160,0:17:08.880
-programmer
-
-0:17:06.319,0:17:10.640
-I'm a very bad programmer so when I was
-
-0:17:08.880,0:17:12.240
-trying to create functions that would
-
-0:17:10.640,0:17:14.480
-define new functions
-
-0:17:12.240,0:17:16.400
-I found it easier to generally generate
-
-0:17:14.480,0:17:20.559
-this code as text
-
-0:17:16.400,0:17:23.199
-and then run read and eval in it
-
-0:17:20.559,0:17:24.640
-the code cd that we saw in the previous
-
-0:17:23.199,0:17:28.079
-section
-
-0:17:24.640,0:17:29.039
-we can see the the code that it produces
-
-0:17:28.079,0:17:31.039
-by
-
-0:17:29.039,0:17:33.280
-making a copy of this line and
-
-0:17:31.039,0:17:34.480
-prepending this string here to the name
-
-0:17:33.280,0:17:36.720
-of the function
-
-0:17:34.480,0:17:38.400
-so instead of running code cd we run
-
-0:17:36.720,0:17:41.280
-find code cd
-
-0:17:38.400,0:17:44.400
-and it creates a new temporary buffer
-
-0:17:41.280,0:17:47.760
-with the code that
-
-0:17:44.400,0:17:50.320
-code cd would execute
-
-0:17:47.760,0:17:53.919
-so it's a series of the fonts and a few
-
-0:17:50.320,0:17:53.919
-set cues and so on
-
-0:17:54.080,0:17:59.120
-and this thing is implemented mostly as
-
-0:17:57.600,0:18:02.160
-a template
-
-0:17:59.120,0:18:04.160
-uh the lola the
-
-0:18:02.160,0:18:06.240
-there's an inner function called ee
-
-0:18:04.160,0:18:08.799
-called cd base that receives just
-
-0:18:06.240,0:18:10.640
-these two arguments and it says
-
-0:18:08.799,0:18:14.320
-essentially just runs the function
-
-0:18:10.640,0:18:16.480
-e template zero on the string here and
-
-0:18:14.320,0:18:18.559
-the things between curly braces are
-
-0:18:16.480,0:18:22.559
-substituted by the values
-
-0:18:18.559,0:18:22.559
-of these arguments here
-
-0:18:23.600,0:18:28.480
-there's one part of the tutorial here
-
-0:18:25.919,0:18:31.039
-that explains all these things
-
-0:18:28.480,0:18:32.559
-uh except for the rationale for some
-
-0:18:31.039,0:18:35.360
-design decisions
-
-0:18:32.559,0:18:37.280
-and those design decisions are one of
-
-0:18:35.360,0:18:37.760
-the many motivations for this talk but
-
-0:18:37.280,0:18:39.679
-um
-
-0:18:37.760,0:18:42.640
-we are I'm only going to explain these
-
-0:18:39.679,0:18:46.799
-things in detail at the end
-
-0:18:42.640,0:18:46.799
-which is kind of so on
-
-0:18:48.480,0:18:51.600
-in the beginning I said that the three
-
-0:18:50.320,0:18:56.000
-main keys of av
-
-0:18:51.600,0:19:00.080
-are meta e meta k and meta j
-
-0:18:56.000,0:19:01.520
-let's see now what met what meta j does
-
-0:19:00.080,0:19:04.640
-uh but I need to start with some
-
-0:19:01.520,0:19:06.559
-motivation uh the motivation is that we
-
-0:19:04.640,0:19:08.240
-can define commands with very short
-
-0:19:06.559,0:19:10.160
-names and actually I became kind of
-
-0:19:08.240,0:19:13.200
-addicted to that
-
-0:19:10.160,0:19:15.600
-this is an example of the fund that
-
-0:19:13.200,0:19:18.000
-defines a comment with a very short name
-
-0:19:15.600,0:19:21.200
-its name is just one letter e
-
-0:19:18.000,0:19:21.520
-and I can invoke you invoke it with meta
-
-0:19:21.200,0:19:24.720
-x
-
-0:19:21.520,0:19:27.360
-e if I type meta xp
-
-0:19:24.720,0:19:30.000
-now it opens a latex file that I'm
-
-0:19:27.360,0:19:30.000
-working on
-
-0:19:31.130,0:19:35.200
-[Music]
-
-0:19:32.559,0:19:37.120
-and I create most of my latex files
-
-0:19:35.200,0:19:39.200
-using
-
-0:19:37.120,0:19:40.559
-template template-based functions like
-
-0:19:39.200,0:19:43.760
-the the
-
-0:19:40.559,0:19:46.559
-implementation of code cd above and
-
-0:19:43.760,0:19:49.280
-this template-based functions create
-
-0:19:46.559,0:19:51.280
-files with extension.tag
-
-0:19:49.280,0:19:53.919
-that start with a series of the fonts
-
-0:19:51.280,0:19:56.240
-and comments for example
-
-0:19:53.919,0:19:58.320
-let's look at this example here if I
-
-0:19:56.240,0:19:59.440
-execute find the attack links with this
-
-0:19:58.320,0:20:02.159
-argument
-
-0:19:59.440,0:20:03.440
-uh it's going it's going to do several
-
-0:20:02.159,0:20:06.880
-things for creating a
-
-0:20:03.440,0:20:08.320
-file called slash tmp slash forward
-
-0:20:06.880,0:20:11.200
-attack
-
-0:20:08.320,0:20:12.400
-and the header of that file is going to
-
-0:20:11.200,0:20:16.080
-be this
-
-0:20:12.400,0:20:19.280
-which starts with two and with three
-
-0:20:16.080,0:20:21.919
-the fonts with functions with very short
-
-0:20:19.280,0:20:26.240
-names and comments
-
-0:20:21.919,0:20:26.240
-let's compare with the situation here
-
-0:20:27.520,0:20:34.640
-in my file 2020 favorite conventions.tag
-
-0:20:32.799,0:20:37.039
-I have this header here in which I
-
-0:20:34.640,0:20:39.360
-define six functions with very short
-
-0:20:37.039,0:20:41.919
-names
-
-0:20:39.360,0:20:44.799
-and in this case here that is even
-
-0:20:41.919,0:20:48.000
-explained in the tutorial
-
-0:20:44.799,0:20:51.520
-this we have mnemonics for
-
-0:20:48.000,0:20:54.799
-these short names here and c is compile
-
-0:20:51.520,0:20:57.760
-d is display I mean display the pdf
-
-0:20:54.799,0:20:58.159
-and e is added in the sense of make a
-
-0:20:57.760,0:21:02.320
-max
-
-0:20:58.159,0:21:05.039
-visit that file
-
-0:21:02.320,0:21:06.480
-okay now I can explain what is meta j
-
-0:21:05.039,0:21:08.880
-itself
-
-0:21:06.480,0:21:09.600
-uh we just saw comments with very short
-
-0:21:08.880,0:21:12.320
-names
-
-0:21:09.600,0:21:14.840
-and the idea is behind meta j is that we
-
-0:21:12.320,0:21:16.480
-can define comments with very short
-
-0:21:14.840,0:21:19.679
-numbers
-
-0:21:16.480,0:21:22.559
-let me explain this uh
-
-0:21:19.679,0:21:23.039
-the short explanation for what meta j
-
-0:21:22.559,0:21:25.360
-does
-
-0:21:23.039,0:21:27.039
-is that it jumps to set certain
-
-0:21:25.360,0:21:29.760
-predefined places
-
-0:21:27.039,0:21:30.799
-in particular a meta j without a numeric
-
-0:21:29.760,0:21:33.280
-argument
-
-0:21:30.799,0:21:34.080
-takes us to a buffer with with the basic
-
-0:21:33.280,0:21:37.679
-help
-
-0:21:34.080,0:21:39.760
-and a list of the current age of targets
-
-0:21:37.679,0:21:41.520
-and this is something that is a bit
-
-0:21:39.760,0:21:44.559
-simpler to understand
-
-0:21:41.520,0:21:47.919
-if we type meta five meta j
-
-0:21:44.559,0:21:51.120
-then meta j runs this sex
-
-0:21:47.919,0:21:55.440
-here that is associated to
-
-0:21:51.120,0:21:59.039
-the argument five I say that the target
-
-0:21:55.440,0:22:01.520
-for the argument five is this one
-
-0:21:59.039,0:22:03.760
-and if the argument is true then the
-
-0:22:01.520,0:22:07.039
-target associated to the to the true
-
-0:22:03.760,0:22:09.600
-is this sex here that opens
-
-0:22:07.039,0:22:10.240
-well this one opens the main tutorial vv
-
-0:22:09.600,0:22:13.679
-and this one
-
-0:22:10.240,0:22:15.679
-opens another tutorial
-
-0:22:13.679,0:22:20.480
-this is a link to one of the tutorials
-
-0:22:15.679,0:22:22.559
-of ev to the part that explains meta j
-
-0:22:20.480,0:22:24.559
-I've copied the the main part of the
-
-0:22:22.559,0:22:28.159
-text here
-
-0:22:24.559,0:22:31.360
-the header the header that meta j shows
-
-0:22:28.159,0:22:33.919
-let me show it very quickly here
-
-0:22:31.360,0:22:36.320
-here is their header and here is their
-
-0:22:33.919,0:22:39.039
-rest
-
-0:22:36.320,0:22:40.000
-the header is very beginner friendly and
-
-0:22:39.039,0:22:42.159
-if you're a beginner
-
-0:22:40.000,0:22:44.559
-who only knows how to use meta e to
-
-0:22:42.159,0:22:46.799
-execute and met
-
-0:22:44.559,0:22:48.240
-this should be okay and meta k to go
-
-0:22:46.799,0:22:52.320
-back
-
-0:22:48.240,0:22:55.840
-then you can and should use that header
-
-0:22:52.320,0:22:55.840
-I mean this header here
-
-0:22:56.720,0:23:00.799
-as your main starting point and every
-
-0:22:59.360,0:23:03.679
-time that you feel lost
-
-0:23:00.799,0:23:04.799
-you can type meta j and to go back to
-
-0:23:03.679,0:23:07.039
-that header
-
-0:23:04.799,0:23:08.000
-and you can use its links to navigate to
-
-0:23:07.039,0:23:11.360
-the documentation
-
-0:23:08.000,0:23:14.799
-for max nav let me explain that
-
-0:23:11.360,0:23:15.679
-uh this header here has several ellis
-
-0:23:14.799,0:23:19.039
-hyperlinks
-
-0:23:15.679,0:23:22.400
-one here one here
-
-0:23:19.039,0:23:25.760
-one here one here and so on
-
-0:23:22.400,0:23:29.280
-uh these ones are links to the
-
-0:23:25.760,0:23:30.880
-to the intros which are the tutorials
-
-0:23:29.280,0:23:32.480
-find if you quick enter in the main
-
-0:23:30.880,0:23:35.760
-tutorial and find ev
-
-0:23:32.480,0:23:36.720
-keys intro is a kind of tutorial that is
-
-0:23:35.760,0:23:39.520
-an index of
-
-0:23:36.720,0:23:39.520
-the main keys
-
-0:23:40.000,0:23:43.279
-and after that we have an explanation of
-
-0:23:42.559,0:23:46.799
-what some
-
-0:23:43.279,0:23:50.240
-numeric prefixes do so if we type
-
-0:23:46.799,0:23:53.200
-met one method j the effect of that is
-
-0:23:50.240,0:23:54.640
-exactly the same as executing this and
-
-0:23:53.200,0:23:58.080
-we can execute this
-
-0:23:54.640,0:23:58.080
-with meta e also
-
-0:24:00.159,0:24:06.960
-meta tube meta j runs this sex and
-
-0:24:03.679,0:24:10.559
-I can also execute it with meta e
-
-0:24:06.960,0:24:14.240
-here it is it's this uh
-
-0:24:10.559,0:24:18.400
-intro this uh
-
-0:24:14.240,0:24:22.960
-sandbox tutorial and
-
-0:24:18.400,0:24:22.960
-here is another sandbox tutorial
-
-0:24:24.640,0:24:28.720
-let me go back and then the
-
-0:24:27.039,0:24:30.880
-documentation says that
-
-0:24:28.720,0:24:31.760
-that header the header that is beginner
-
-0:24:30.880,0:24:33.679
-friendly
-
-0:24:31.760,0:24:35.520
-is followed by a section that is very
-
-0:24:33.679,0:24:37.600
-beginner unfriendly
-
-0:24:35.520,0:24:40.240
-that contains a series of the fonts like
-
-0:24:37.600,0:24:40.240
-these ones
-
-0:24:40.400,0:24:44.640
-here the last line of the header is this
-
-0:24:43.440,0:24:46.720
-comment here
-
-0:24:44.640,0:24:48.559
-and then we have several defense like
-
-0:24:46.720,0:24:51.440
-this
-
-0:24:48.559,0:24:53.840
-let me explain how these things work
-
-0:24:51.440,0:24:57.360
-technically what happens when we type
-
-0:24:53.840,0:24:57.840
-meta j without any arguments is that it
-
-0:24:57.360,0:25:00.960
-runs
-
-0:24:57.840,0:25:04.640
-eu jump with argument neil and then
-
-0:25:00.960,0:25:06.480
-this runs 5 e jumps
-
-0:25:04.640,0:25:08.000
-when I run meta j with a numeric
-
-0:25:06.480,0:25:11.120
-argument for example
-
-0:25:08.000,0:25:14.400
-with argument 5 it runs a jump
-
-0:25:11.120,0:25:17.679
-5 and e jump five
-
-0:25:14.400,0:25:20.400
-uh concatenates this five one
-
-0:25:17.679,0:25:21.679
-to make a name of a function this
-
-0:25:20.400,0:25:24.320
-function here
-
-0:25:21.679,0:25:24.720
-and it executes this function e jump
-
-0:25:24.320,0:25:28.880
-five
-
-0:25:24.720,0:25:31.919
-you jump uh dash five
-
-0:25:28.880,0:25:35.520
-and eu jump dash five is
-
-0:25:31.919,0:25:39.360
-executes find ev equity intro
-
-0:25:35.520,0:25:41.440
-if I execute just meta j
-
-0:25:39.360,0:25:43.919
-the section that shows the current age
-
-0:25:41.440,0:25:47.120
-on targets
-
-0:25:43.919,0:25:48.159
-has a line for e job five this is that
-
-0:25:47.120,0:25:52.159
-is exactly the
-
-0:25:48.159,0:25:52.159
-thing that I was explaining before
-
-0:25:52.400,0:25:59.520
-so we can use meta j to navigate the
-
-0:25:54.840,0:26:03.440
-tutorials and we can copy the links
-
-0:25:59.520,0:26:06.799
-sorry we can copy links to the to
-
-0:26:03.440,0:26:06.799
-tutorials to our notes
-
-0:26:07.919,0:26:14.880
-oh sorry this has some typos
-
-0:26:11.840,0:26:18.080
-for example if I execute this
-
-0:26:14.880,0:26:20.640
-I go to a section of this tutorial here
-
-0:26:18.080,0:26:24.320
-that explains the main keys of ev
-
-0:26:20.640,0:26:26.240
-and these things are hyperlinks I can
-
-0:26:24.320,0:26:27.440
-mark a hyperlink like this it is just
-
-0:26:26.240,0:26:30.559
-plain text and I
-
-0:26:27.440,0:26:31.760
-can copy it to my notes and the idea is
-
-0:26:30.559,0:26:33.520
-that every time
-
-0:26:31.760,0:26:35.520
-every time that I find something that is
-
-0:26:33.520,0:26:36.240
-interesting I can create a hyperlink to
-
-0:26:35.520,0:26:38.720
-it
-
-0:26:36.240,0:26:40.799
-and I can put these links in my notes so
-
-0:26:38.720,0:26:42.960
-I can navigate back
-
-0:26:40.799,0:26:45.360
-to all the interesting positions very
-
-0:26:42.960,0:26:45.360
-quickly
-
-0:26:48.799,0:26:54.080
-okay next feature if we type meta
-
-0:26:51.760,0:26:57.039
-uppercase j
-
-0:26:54.080,0:26:57.039
-uh then
-
-0:26:57.600,0:27:03.679
-this this is a function that transforms
-
-0:27:00.080,0:27:06.080
-the current line in a certain way
-
-0:27:03.679,0:27:07.360
-let me give an example let me isolate
-
-0:27:06.080,0:27:09.919
-this and let me create
-
-0:27:07.360,0:27:11.039
-duplicate this line to to make clear
-
-0:27:09.919,0:27:14.240
-what happens
-
-0:27:11.039,0:27:16.880
-if I type meta uppercase j here
-
-0:27:14.240,0:27:17.440
-this line here becomes the fund for a
-
-0:27:16.880,0:27:21.200
-jump
-
-0:27:17.440,0:27:24.799
-6 and the target of this e-jump
-
-0:27:21.200,0:27:28.399
-is exactly this sex here
-
-0:27:24.799,0:27:28.399
-let me undo this mess
-
-0:27:28.559,0:27:32.840
-and if the first word in the line is not
-
-0:27:31.360,0:27:36.240
-a number for example
-
-0:27:32.840,0:27:39.039
-here let me do the same thing
-
-0:27:36.240,0:27:41.200
-duplicate the line and type meta
-
-0:27:39.039,0:27:44.240
-uppercase j
-
-0:27:41.200,0:27:45.600
-then mat uppercase j converts that to a
-
-0:27:44.240,0:27:49.440
-defund that defines
-
-0:27:45.600,0:27:52.720
-a function with a very short name
-
-0:27:49.440,0:27:56.720
-and this function with a very short name
-
-0:27:52.720,0:27:59.360
-opens this file here in the directory
-
-0:27:56.720,0:28:01.360
-with the copy of the the git repository
-
-0:27:59.360,0:28:04.880
-for org mode
-
-0:28:01.360,0:28:04.880
-let me undo the mass again
-
-0:28:05.360,0:28:07.760
-oops
-
-0:28:09.120,0:28:11.679
-that's it
-
-0:28:14.640,0:28:21.279
-meta uppercase j is a
-
-0:28:17.760,0:28:24.559
-particular case of of something that
-
-0:28:21.279,0:28:25.279
-I use a lot in eevee I have if he has
-
-0:28:24.559,0:28:28.799
-lots of
-
-0:28:25.279,0:28:31.780
-comments that sorry key sequences
-
-0:28:28.799,0:28:33.200
-that are like meta uppercase letter and
-
-0:28:31.780,0:28:35.279
-[Music]
-
-0:28:33.200,0:28:37.279
-almost all of them operate on the
-
-0:28:35.279,0:28:38.880
-current line and transform the current
-
-0:28:37.279,0:28:42.000
-line in certain way
-
-0:28:38.880,0:28:45.360
-for example this is a file name
-
-0:28:42.000,0:28:48.640
-and if I type meta uppercase f here
-
-0:28:45.360,0:28:50.000
-it becomes a link to that file this is
-
-0:28:48.640,0:28:53.600
-the name of a month page
-
-0:28:50.000,0:28:55.760
-and if I type meta uppercase m here
-
-0:28:53.600,0:28:58.080
-it converts that to the link to a month
-
-0:28:55.760,0:29:01.679
-page and this is a shell command
-
-0:28:58.080,0:29:04.960
-and if I type meta uppercase s here
-
-0:29:01.679,0:29:08.720
-it converts that to a link to a
-
-0:29:04.960,0:29:11.919
-to find fan shell
-
-0:29:08.720,0:29:12.960
-and until a few years ago these
-
-0:29:11.919,0:29:16.159
-functions
-
-0:29:12.960,0:29:18.080
-with matter uppercase letter were half
-
-0:29:16.159,0:29:18.880
-of my main ways of creating sex
-
-0:29:18.080,0:29:21.039
-hyperlinks
-
-0:29:18.880,0:29:22.399
-with few key strokes in the beginning of
-
-0:29:21.039,0:29:25.600
-course I had to create my
-
-0:29:22.399,0:29:28.640
-sex pipelines by typing each character
-
-0:29:25.600,0:29:31.520
-but uh after some time and decided that
-
-0:29:28.640,0:29:34.559
-I needed something more efficient
-
-0:29:31.520,0:29:34.960
-so this is end of part one of the two of
-
-0:29:34.559,0:29:37.760
-the
-
-0:29:34.960,0:29:37.760
-presentation
-
-0:29:38.480,0:29:41.760
-so this is part two of the presentation
-
-0:29:40.640,0:29:44.320
-and the main theme
-
-0:29:41.760,0:29:46.320
-here is the standard describe key
-
-0:29:44.320,0:29:49.200
-function that comes with the max
-
-0:29:46.320,0:29:50.960
-and my variant of it the thing is that
-
-0:29:49.200,0:29:53.120
-the standard described key in max
-
-0:29:50.960,0:29:55.600
-is user friendly but it is hacker
-
-0:29:53.120,0:29:58.559
-unfriendly well I felt so
-
-0:29:55.600,0:30:00.799
-and when I tried to complement it by by
-
-0:29:58.559,0:30:03.120
-writing a hacker friendly version of it
-
-0:30:00.799,0:30:03.919
-that produced the sex hyperlinks that I
-
-0:30:03.120,0:30:05.440
-needed
-
-0:30:03.919,0:30:07.039
-I got something that I found really
-
-0:30:05.440,0:30:09.679
-lovely and
-
-0:30:07.039,0:30:12.480
-several of the main designs design
-
-0:30:09.679,0:30:14.320
-decisions of eev can be seen there
-
-0:30:12.480,0:30:15.520
-but when I showed my variants to other
-
-0:30:14.320,0:30:17.760
-people they hated it
-
-0:30:15.520,0:30:19.360
-they felt that it was totally against
-
-0:30:17.760,0:30:23.440
-their notions of
-
-0:30:19.360,0:30:25.760
-user friendliness
-
-0:30:23.440,0:30:26.799
-okay so let's see the standard describe
-
-0:30:25.760,0:30:30.159
-key if I run
-
-0:30:26.799,0:30:32.399
-this hyperlink here I get
-
-0:30:30.159,0:30:34.399
-this the result of running the scribe
-
-0:30:32.399,0:30:36.399
-key on the key down
-
-0:30:34.399,0:30:38.080
-and this is a big buffer with some
-
-0:30:36.399,0:30:41.360
-things in italics
-
-0:30:38.080,0:30:43.120
-and some hyperlinks here these
-
-0:30:41.360,0:30:43.679
-hyperlinks are standard in the sense
-
-0:30:43.120,0:30:46.240
-that
-
-0:30:43.679,0:30:47.760
-the targets are not visible and they are
-
-0:30:46.240,0:30:50.799
-implemented using
-
-0:30:47.760,0:30:51.200
-buttons in a max lisp this section of
-
-0:30:50.799,0:30:53.919
-the
-
-0:30:51.200,0:30:56.240
-mx list manual describes how buttons
-
-0:30:53.919,0:30:56.240
-work
-
-0:30:56.799,0:31:03.440
-and the the source code is
-
-0:31:00.640,0:31:04.240
-quite difficult I mean when I was
-
-0:31:03.440,0:31:06.559
-starting to
-
-0:31:04.240,0:31:07.600
-to try to decipher this when I was a
-
-0:31:06.559,0:31:11.200
-beginner
-
-0:31:07.600,0:31:12.320
-using max 19.34 I felt that this
-
-0:31:11.200,0:31:15.519
-described key was
-
-0:31:12.320,0:31:20.080
-very difficult to understand uh
-
-0:31:15.519,0:31:22.640
-and I felt that the the designers the
-
-0:31:20.080,0:31:23.679
-the people who wrote it were sacrificing
-
-0:31:22.640,0:31:26.159
-too much of the
-
-0:31:23.679,0:31:30.000
-hacker friendliness that I was expecting
-
-0:31:26.159,0:31:30.000
-from it to make it beginner friendly
-
-0:31:31.279,0:31:34.799
-let me explain what are the the problems
-
-0:31:33.600,0:31:36.559
-with the standard
-
-0:31:34.799,0:31:38.640
-the describe key if we think that
-
-0:31:36.559,0:31:41.600
-hyperlinks are things like this
-
-0:31:38.640,0:31:43.600
-with the target and the text then in the
-
-0:31:41.600,0:31:47.120
-button hyperlinks of describe key
-
-0:31:43.600,0:31:49.120
-this three bad things happen first
-
-0:31:47.120,0:31:51.200
-it is hard to extract the target from
-
-0:31:49.120,0:31:52.000
-the hyperlink second it is hard to
-
-0:31:51.200,0:31:54.480
-recreate
-
-0:31:52.000,0:31:55.440
-a list of code that would go to that
-
-0:31:54.480,0:31:57.519
-target
-
-0:31:55.440,0:31:59.840
-and third it is hard to copy the full
-
-0:31:57.519,0:32:00.640
-hyperlink including the targets to other
-
-0:31:59.840,0:32:04.399
-buffers
-
-0:32:00.640,0:32:04.399
-I only knew how to copy the text
-
-0:32:04.960,0:32:09.039
-when I was trying to decipher what
-
-0:32:07.279,0:32:11.679
-described key was doing
-
-0:32:09.039,0:32:12.159
-I created lots of hyperlinks like this
-
-0:32:11.679,0:32:14.960
-to
-
-0:32:12.159,0:32:16.159
-inspect the text properties and things
-
-0:32:14.960,0:32:18.480
-like that
-
-0:32:16.159,0:32:20.000
-for example in the description of the
-
-0:32:18.480,0:32:23.600
-key down
-
-0:32:20.000,0:32:26.559
-here we have a button that points to
-
-0:32:23.600,0:32:26.559
-simple dotel
-
-0:32:26.799,0:32:31.600
-the text of that button is simple.l this
-
-0:32:29.679,0:32:34.320
-hyperlinks goes to the
-
-0:32:31.600,0:32:35.519
-to the middle of this button hyperlink
-
-0:32:34.320,0:32:39.120
-here
-
-0:32:35.519,0:32:41.919
-uh this hyperlink here
-
-0:32:39.120,0:32:43.279
-goes to the middle of the button of this
-
-0:32:41.919,0:32:46.240
-button hyperlink
-
-0:32:43.279,0:32:47.679
-and then inspects its text properties
-
-0:32:46.240,0:32:51.679
-and then goes to
-
-0:32:47.679,0:32:53.679
-this section here of the description
-
-0:32:51.679,0:32:56.159
-so this is a high level description of
-
-0:32:53.679,0:32:58.000
-the text properties
-
-0:32:56.159,0:33:00.000
-I mean the text properties that make it
-
-0:32:58.000,0:33:02.480
-a button and this is a
-
-0:33:00.000,0:33:04.320
-lower level description of the these
-
-0:33:02.480,0:33:08.000
-text properties
-
-0:33:04.320,0:33:11.440
-and the button that points to
-
-0:33:08.000,0:33:11.919
-forward line sorry the the button that
-
-0:33:11.440,0:33:14.399
-whose
-
-0:33:11.919,0:33:16.480
-text is forward line this one is
-
-0:33:14.399,0:33:19.039
-slightly different
-
-0:33:16.480,0:33:21.200
-this hyperlink here goes to the middle
-
-0:33:19.039,0:33:24.559
-of that button
-
-0:33:21.200,0:33:25.760
-and this hyperlink goes to the mid to
-
-0:33:24.559,0:33:28.559
-the middle of that button
-
-0:33:25.760,0:33:29.360
-inspects its text properties and go to
-
-0:33:28.559,0:33:32.559
-the section
-
-0:33:29.360,0:33:35.760
-of this button of this help
-
-0:33:32.559,0:33:36.399
-uh buffer here that describe the the
-
-0:33:35.760,0:33:39.120
-button
-
-0:33:36.399,0:33:41.679
-and the lower level view of the text
-
-0:33:39.120,0:33:45.519
-properties
-
-0:33:41.679,0:33:47.519
-so I started to with things like this
-
-0:33:45.519,0:33:50.159
-to understand what these buttons were
-
-0:33:47.519,0:33:50.960
-doing and I was able to figure out how
-
-0:33:50.159,0:33:53.120
-these things are
-
-0:33:50.960,0:33:55.519
-implemented and describe key and then
-
-0:33:53.120,0:33:57.760
-similar help functions in max
-
-0:33:55.519,0:34:00.000
-and I discovered that one of the main
-
-0:33:57.760,0:34:01.360
-lower level functions that a max used
-
-0:34:00.000,0:34:04.080
-for this
-
-0:34:01.360,0:34:05.279
-is a function called find function no
-
-0:34:04.080,0:34:08.240
-select
-
-0:34:05.279,0:34:09.929
-if I run find function no select on next
-
-0:34:08.240,0:34:11.200
-line
-
-0:34:09.929,0:34:14.240
-[Music]
-
-0:34:11.200,0:34:18.079
-it returns a pair
-
-0:34:14.240,0:34:20.560
-a cons made of a buffer and a position
-
-0:34:18.079,0:34:21.679
-so I created functions that would that
-
-0:34:20.560,0:34:24.320
-would
-
-0:34:21.679,0:34:25.119
-uh follow this that would open that
-
-0:34:24.320,0:34:28.320
-buffer
-
-0:34:25.119,0:34:29.679
-in that position and then this is a
-
-0:34:28.320,0:34:31.679
-postback list
-
-0:34:29.679,0:34:33.919
-so we could go to these positions and
-
-0:34:31.679,0:34:36.000
-then search for this string and another
-
-0:34:33.919,0:34:40.320
-string and another string and so on
-
-0:34:36.000,0:34:41.040
-so this goes to the definition of find a
-
-0:34:40.320,0:34:44.159
-function
-
-0:34:41.040,0:34:47.919
-and then to a to a string
-
-0:34:44.159,0:34:49.040
-after it and I use these things to
-
-0:34:47.919,0:34:51.839
-implement my own
-
-0:34:49.040,0:34:52.960
-functions that pointed to the same the
-
-0:34:51.839,0:34:55.440
-same targets
-
-0:34:52.960,0:34:57.679
-as the button hyperlinks and describe
-
-0:34:55.440,0:34:57.679
-key
-
-0:35:00.240,0:35:05.599
-again let me show the comparison this is
-
-0:35:03.200,0:35:10.480
-the standard describe key
-
-0:35:05.599,0:35:13.839
-here and this is my variant
-
-0:35:10.480,0:35:17.680
-uh it creates a buffer with links
-
-0:35:13.839,0:35:20.960
-with the list hyperlinks about this key
-
-0:35:17.680,0:35:22.960
-we get this so each one of these
-
-0:35:20.960,0:35:27.280
-functions is either a blank line
-
-0:35:22.960,0:35:27.280
-or a or an ellipse hyperlink
-
-0:35:28.720,0:35:32.880
-here is a slight variant of the of the
-
-0:35:31.760,0:35:35.920
-function
-
-0:35:32.880,0:35:38.079
-find e key links above in this variant
-
-0:35:35.920,0:35:39.280
-the argument is a string that has to be
-
-0:35:38.079,0:35:42.400
-processed by
-
-0:35:39.280,0:35:45.280
-read cbd macro to convert it to the
-
-0:35:42.400,0:35:48.160
-lower level format
-
-0:35:45.280,0:35:49.040
-and note that these functions here that
-
-0:35:48.160,0:35:51.440
-I wrote
-
-0:35:49.040,0:35:53.599
-they display temporary buffers with no
-
-0:35:51.440,0:35:57.359
-help at all
-
-0:35:53.599,0:35:58.560
-uh to be honest there's a link to a
-
-0:35:57.359,0:36:01.680
-tutorial here but
-
-0:35:58.560,0:36:03.200
-this is a recent edition so let's ignore
-
-0:36:01.680,0:36:06.640
-this
-
-0:36:03.200,0:36:08.320
-uh they they display temporary buffers
-
-0:36:06.640,0:36:09.520
-with no help at all just lots of
-
-0:36:08.320,0:36:11.599
-hyperlinks
-
-0:36:09.520,0:36:13.359
-and these hyperlinks can be they are
-
-0:36:11.599,0:36:15.040
-very hacker friendly in the sense that
-
-0:36:13.359,0:36:17.520
-they can be followed with
-
-0:36:15.040,0:36:19.920
-metae they can be copied to other
-
-0:36:17.520,0:36:23.680
-buffers because they are plain text
-
-0:36:19.920,0:36:26.240
-because they are just sex
-
-0:36:23.680,0:36:28.000
-and they can be inspected in the sense
-
-0:36:26.240,0:36:31.280
-that
-
-0:36:28.000,0:36:31.280
-for example here
-
-0:36:32.400,0:36:35.520
-we have a hyperlink to a function that
-
-0:36:34.079,0:36:37.599
-we
-
-0:36:35.520,0:36:39.200
-it may be difficult to figure out what
-
-0:36:37.599,0:36:42.320
-this function does
-
-0:36:39.200,0:36:45.839
-but we can go to that position and then
-
-0:36:42.320,0:36:48.240
-type ctrl h f to see the descript
-
-0:36:45.839,0:36:52.400
-description of this function
-
-0:36:48.240,0:36:53.890
-and here is a hyperlink to
-
-0:36:52.400,0:36:56.000
-the does that
-
-0:36:53.890,0:36:59.920
-[Music]
-
-0:36:56.000,0:36:59.920
-in my syntax say
-
-0:37:00.160,0:37:04.480
-and this list of hyperlinks were
-
-0:37:02.800,0:37:08.000
-generated by
-
-0:37:04.480,0:37:11.119
-this code here that just just uh
-
-0:37:08.000,0:37:14.320
-used a back quote to to generate
-
-0:37:11.119,0:37:14.320
-lists of sex
-
-0:37:14.640,0:37:21.040
-and I I felt that this function here
-
-0:37:18.240,0:37:22.160
-uh that just generated this list was
-
-0:37:21.040,0:37:24.960
-very easy to understand
-
-0:37:22.160,0:37:28.480
-and to modify so this was hacker
-
-0:37:24.960,0:37:31.599
-friendly in the way that I wanted
-
-0:37:28.480,0:37:34.079
-and so I started using this
-
-0:37:31.599,0:37:36.800
-and this idea of using buffers with sex
-
-0:37:34.079,0:37:38.720
-fiber links and no help violated
-
-0:37:36.800,0:37:40.079
-all the notions of user friendliness
-
-0:37:38.720,0:37:42.000
-that I knew so I was
-
-0:37:40.079,0:37:46.160
-exploring some something new at that
-
-0:37:42.000,0:37:49.359
-time and this is the end of part two
-
-0:37:46.160,0:37:52.240
-part three of this presentation is uh
-
-0:37:49.359,0:37:54.800
-about the killer features of ev or why
-
-0:37:52.240,0:37:57.920
-everybody should use av or at least have
-
-0:37:54.800,0:37:59.280
-eev installed even if they think the tv
-
-0:37:57.920,0:38:01.440
-is too weird
-
-0:37:59.280,0:38:03.440
-so this is a very quick listing eevee
-
-0:38:01.440,0:38:04.240
-has lease hyperlinks which are super
-
-0:38:03.440,0:38:06.560
-nice
-
-0:38:04.240,0:38:07.599
-it comes with lots of tutorials the main
-
-0:38:06.560,0:38:10.800
-one here
-
-0:38:07.599,0:38:14.079
-explains all the main features
-
-0:38:10.800,0:38:15.040
-uh there's also a tutorial with that's
-
-0:38:14.079,0:38:18.079
-an index of
-
-0:38:15.040,0:38:21.680
-all the other tutorials here
-
-0:38:18.079,0:38:24.079
-many many many tutorials uh if we forget
-
-0:38:21.680,0:38:27.280
-everything we can just type meta j
-
-0:38:24.079,0:38:28.880
-and remember that this this part here is
-
-0:38:27.280,0:38:30.839
-beginner friendly and the rest is
-
-0:38:28.880,0:38:32.960
-beginner
-
-0:38:30.839,0:38:38.079
-unfriendly
-
-0:38:32.960,0:38:38.079
-there's a tutorial on max list here
-
-0:38:38.320,0:38:44.640
-it mainly explains how to understand
-
-0:38:41.920,0:38:46.320
-a lisp code which is much easier than
-
-0:38:44.640,0:38:47.040
-it's much easier to understand the lisp
-
-0:38:46.320,0:38:48.800
-code and
-
-0:38:47.040,0:38:50.160
-then to understand how to program in a
-
-0:38:48.800,0:38:53.440
-lisp and
-
-0:38:50.160,0:38:55.920
-most people are only going to need this
-
-0:38:53.440,0:38:58.240
-uh ev is very easy to install it's in
-
-0:38:55.920,0:39:00.560
-helper so we just need to do
-
-0:38:58.240,0:39:03.440
-this thing here and it's very
-
-0:39:00.560,0:39:03.440
-non-invasive
-
-0:39:03.520,0:39:08.000
-uh years ago several years ago it was a
-
-0:39:06.079,0:39:08.960
-very invasive package but then I changed
-
-0:39:08.000,0:39:13.520
-everything
-
-0:39:08.960,0:39:16.640
-now uh if we toggle ev mode on and off
-
-0:39:13.520,0:39:20.000
-what's going to happen is just that the
-
-0:39:16.640,0:39:21.599
-evk map key map becomes activated or
-
-0:39:20.000,0:39:24.720
-deactivated
-
-0:39:21.599,0:39:28.320
-and when we install the evita
-
-0:39:24.720,0:39:28.640
-I mean when we require the only things
-
-0:39:28.320,0:39:32.640
-that
-
-0:39:28.640,0:39:34.480
-happens globally distance here
-
-0:39:32.640,0:39:36.240
-several functions and variables become
-
-0:39:34.480,0:39:40.079
-defined all of them have
-
-0:39:36.240,0:39:43.040
-standard prefixes except for one
-
-0:39:40.079,0:39:44.480
-three characters are changed in the
-
-0:39:43.040,0:39:48.640
-standard display table
-
-0:39:44.480,0:39:52.079
-to make them appear as colored glyphs
-
-0:39:48.640,0:39:54.160
-the red star and two and the open
-
-0:39:52.079,0:39:57.839
-double angle brackets and the closed
-
-0:39:54.160,0:39:57.839
-double angle brackets
-
-0:39:58.160,0:40:04.560
-and two environment variables are set
-
-0:40:01.359,0:40:07.599
-and this is a trivial technicality
-
-0:40:04.560,0:40:10.160
-we just run a def advice
-
-0:40:07.599,0:40:10.800
-around one function that that is used by
-
-0:40:10.160,0:40:14.240
-man
-
-0:40:10.800,0:40:16.720
-justice also
-
-0:40:14.240,0:40:18.400
-eevee has a very high discoverability
-
-0:40:16.720,0:40:21.839
-factor
-
-0:40:18.400,0:40:25.200
-and there's a way to create a very easy
-
-0:40:21.839,0:40:27.760
-way to create a hyperlink to here
-
-0:40:25.200,0:40:29.760
-uh I do not have time to show this now
-
-0:40:27.760,0:40:32.960
-but for example if I'm
-
-0:40:29.760,0:40:34.480
-here in a tutorial and I think that that
-
-0:40:32.960,0:40:36.240
-this
-
-0:40:34.480,0:40:39.520
-section is something interesting and I
-
-0:40:36.240,0:40:41.200
-want to create a hyperlink to it
-
-0:40:39.520,0:40:43.040
-I just have to type a certain key
-
-0:40:41.200,0:40:46.800
-sequence here
-
-0:40:43.040,0:40:50.400
-and here I got a hyperlink that I can
-
-0:40:46.800,0:40:52.260
-copy to my notes and this hyperlink goes
-
-0:40:50.400,0:40:58.240
-to that section
-
-0:40:52.260,0:41:00.720
-[Music]
-
-0:40:58.240,0:41:02.319
-we have hyperlinks that point to
-
-0:41:00.720,0:41:05.839
-specific positions in
-
-0:41:02.319,0:41:09.119
-pdf documents and nvidia files here
-
-0:41:05.839,0:41:09.680
-this one opens a pdf and displays it
-
-0:41:09.119,0:41:13.920
-this one
-
-0:41:09.680,0:41:16.720
-opens a pdf and converts it to text
-
-0:41:13.920,0:41:18.400
-and this one opens the video in a
-
-0:41:16.720,0:41:20.480
-certain position
-
-0:41:18.400,0:41:22.079
-and we also have a way to control
-
-0:41:20.480,0:41:25.280
-shell-like programs
-
-0:41:22.079,0:41:27.440
-uh in my presentation of the last year I
-
-0:41:25.280,0:41:29.520
-spent one third of the presentation
-
-0:41:27.440,0:41:31.839
-explaining this and I think that I gave
-
-0:41:29.520,0:41:35.680
-a very good demonstration there
-
-0:41:31.839,0:41:38.800
-the demonstration is here
-
-0:41:35.680,0:41:41.839
-we can go to the web page and go to
-
-0:41:38.800,0:41:45.440
-this section of the web page
-
-0:41:41.839,0:41:45.440
-and start by this point
-
-0:41:47.680,0:41:54.079
-and here we have an explanation and so
-
-0:41:51.440,0:41:54.079
-on whatever
-
-0:41:55.920,0:41:59.200
-and I've already mentioned this before
-
-0:41:58.720,0:42:01.119
-uh
-
-0:41:59.200,0:42:02.240
-eevee comes with a very nice elise
-
-0:42:01.119,0:42:04.240
-tutorial
-
-0:42:02.240,0:42:05.599
-so that's it this is the end of part
-
-0:42:04.240,0:42:07.359
-three
-
-0:42:05.599,0:42:09.839
-so this is the last part of my
-
-0:42:07.359,0:42:10.160
-presentation and it's about the title of
-
-0:42:09.839,0:42:11.839
-the
-
-0:42:10.160,0:42:13.599
-the presentation I called the
-
-0:42:11.839,0:42:16.560
-presentation why
-
-0:42:13.599,0:42:16.960
-most of the best features in eevee look
-
-0:42:16.560,0:42:20.480
-like
-
-0:42:16.960,0:42:20.960
-like five minute hacks uh I've already
-
-0:42:20.480,0:42:23.920
-run off
-
-0:42:20.960,0:42:24.800
-out of time so I have to to skip this
-
-0:42:23.920,0:42:28.720
-first
-
-0:42:24.800,0:42:31.280
-part here in which I describe how I
-
-0:42:28.720,0:42:33.440
-was exposed to several different notions
-
-0:42:31.280,0:42:35.920
-of user friendliness
-
-0:42:33.440,0:42:37.119
-and how the one that really blew my mind
-
-0:42:35.920,0:42:41.680
-was the one in
-
-0:42:37.119,0:42:44.160
-in a certain uh fought environment
-
-0:42:41.680,0:42:46.560
-uh and let me make the long long story
-
-0:42:44.160,0:42:49.280
-very very short
-
-0:42:46.560,0:42:49.680
-uh in all this process I switched from
-
-0:42:49.280,0:42:52.079
-from
-
-0:42:49.680,0:42:52.960
-the belief that the user was always
-
-0:42:52.079,0:42:55.359
-someone else
-
-0:42:52.960,0:42:57.040
-someone external and that that I always
-
-0:42:55.359,0:43:00.079
-had to write my programs for
-
-0:42:57.040,0:43:02.240
-this external user I switched
-
-0:43:00.079,0:43:03.200
-from from that to the belief that I am
-
-0:43:02.240,0:43:05.839
-the user
-
-0:43:03.200,0:43:07.040
-and I can play with the interface that I
-
-0:43:05.839,0:43:10.079
-want I can
-
-0:43:07.040,0:43:12.079
-write programs which that
-
-0:43:10.079,0:43:14.240
-that only I am going to understand I can
-
-0:43:12.079,0:43:16.079
-experiment with hundreds of interfaces
-
-0:43:14.240,0:43:18.720
-and then select the best ones
-
-0:43:16.079,0:43:20.960
-and document them and then share them
-
-0:43:18.720,0:43:23.520
-with other people
-
-0:43:20.960,0:43:24.720
-who are also experimenting with
-
-0:43:23.520,0:43:28.880
-interfaces in their
-
-0:43:24.720,0:43:31.119
-own ways and so eevee has
-
-0:43:28.880,0:43:33.440
-lots of things that are user-friendly in
-
-0:43:31.119,0:43:34.880
-these unusual ways that I've explained
-
-0:43:33.440,0:43:37.760
-before
-
-0:43:34.880,0:43:40.319
-and uh and if we disconsider that this
-
-0:43:37.760,0:43:44.079
-notion of user friendliness is valid
-
-0:43:40.319,0:43:45.119
-then this implement these things that av
-
-0:43:44.079,0:43:47.280
-implement they are
-
-0:43:45.119,0:43:48.800
-user friendly and hacker friendly at the
-
-0:43:47.280,0:43:51.119
-same time
-
-0:43:48.800,0:43:51.920
-and let me show one example this is one
-
-0:43:51.119,0:43:54.640
-this is
-
-0:43:51.920,0:43:56.640
-one that really took me one only five
-
-0:43:54.640,0:43:59.599
-minutes to implement
-
-0:43:56.640,0:44:00.640
-uh at one point a few months ago I
-
-0:43:59.599,0:44:04.240
-discovered
-
-0:44:00.640,0:44:05.599
-that sasha chewer's weekly posts about
-
-0:44:04.240,0:44:08.800
-the max news
-
-0:44:05.599,0:44:11.440
-had uh were also being posted to a
-
-0:44:08.800,0:44:14.800
-mailing list that is stored at
-
-0:44:11.440,0:44:16.319
-lists.we know.org and it's called max
-
-0:44:14.800,0:44:19.280
-dungeons
-
-0:44:16.319,0:44:19.760
-uh and I just and I found a way to
-
-0:44:19.280,0:44:25.440
-create
-
-0:44:19.760,0:44:28.400
-the links to to the posts in both places
-
-0:44:25.440,0:44:30.640
-but I had to use a template for that so
-
-0:44:28.400,0:44:32.560
-what we are seeing here now
-
-0:44:30.640,0:44:36.640
-is a template with the the default
-
-0:44:32.560,0:44:39.359
-values so this means that we have not uh
-
-0:44:36.640,0:44:40.720
-set the year correctly we have not set
-
-0:44:39.359,0:44:44.240
-the month correctly
-
-0:44:40.720,0:44:44.720
-or the day correctly but if we run this
-
-0:44:44.240,0:44:48.960
-text
-
-0:44:44.720,0:44:53.359
-here uh let me do something else before
-
-0:44:48.960,0:44:57.280
-if we run this text here
-
-0:44:53.359,0:45:00.240
-which we change some of these
-
-0:44:57.280,0:45:00.240
-entries in the
-
-0:45:00.880,0:45:05.200
-in the template and we get these links
-
-0:45:04.400,0:45:09.119
-here
-
-0:45:05.200,0:45:12.160
-they all work for example this one opens
-
-0:45:09.119,0:45:12.800
-uh the blog post in in session sasha
-
-0:45:12.160,0:45:16.000
-chewers
-
-0:45:12.800,0:45:21.280
-site and this one
-
-0:45:16.000,0:45:23.440
-opens it in the mailing list
-
-0:45:21.280,0:45:25.760
-and sometimes I want the org source of
-
-0:45:23.440,0:45:27.280
-that and the easiest way to get the word
-
-0:45:25.760,0:45:30.480
-source is to
-
-0:45:27.280,0:45:31.680
-look at this link here that has an
-
-0:45:30.480,0:45:35.040
-attachment
-
-0:45:31.680,0:45:38.560
-and if I take this
-
-0:45:35.040,0:45:42.319
-link here and I take this
-
-0:45:38.560,0:45:44.480
-stem that points to to the attachment
-
-0:45:42.319,0:45:45.440
-and I put it here and I generate this
-
-0:45:44.480,0:45:49.119
-page again
-
-0:45:45.440,0:45:50.000
-with all this data then I get a script
-
-0:45:49.119,0:45:53.359
-here
-
-0:45:50.000,0:45:54.640
-that downloads let me switch to a
-
-0:45:53.359,0:45:58.160
-smaller font
-
-0:45:54.640,0:46:00.960
-it downloads this attachment
-
-0:45:58.160,0:46:01.599
-and it renames that attachment to
-
-0:46:00.960,0:46:06.000
-something
-
-0:46:01.599,0:46:10.720
-dot slash nx news sorry some things
-
-0:46:06.000,0:46:15.119
-uh iphone mx news hyphen
-
-0:46:10.720,0:46:17.599
-something mxnews.org here
-
-0:46:15.119,0:46:18.400
-the file is already here already with
-
-0:46:17.599,0:46:21.359
-the right name
-
-0:46:18.400,0:46:22.079
-so I can open it with just this
-
-0:46:21.359,0:46:23.780
-hyperlink
-
-0:46:22.079,0:46:25.200
-let me go to the big font again
-
-0:46:23.780,0:46:28.079
-[Music]
-
-0:46:25.200,0:46:29.280
-and now I have the work source for that
-
-0:46:28.079,0:46:32.720
-hyperlink
-
-0:46:29.280,0:46:32.720
-sorry for that blog post
-
-0:46:33.839,0:46:40.960
-and so this one line thing
-
-0:46:37.040,0:46:43.920
-here is in a sense
-
-0:46:40.960,0:46:45.119
-a a to to this blog post in all its
-
-0:46:43.920,0:46:48.640
-formats
-
-0:46:45.119,0:46:52.000
-uh if I execute this I get links to
-
-0:46:48.640,0:46:54.400
-to all the places where it is posted
-
-0:46:52.000,0:46:56.000
-and I get a hype and I get a script to
-
-0:46:54.400,0:47:00.480
-download the local copy
-
-0:46:56.000,0:47:03.200
-of the org source of it and that's it
-
-0:47:00.480,0:47:04.480
-well I'm already out of time so let me
-
-0:47:03.200,0:47:10.079
-finish here
-
-0:47:04.480,0:47:10.079
-thanks bye
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--22-powering-up-special-blocks--musa-al-hassy-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--22-powering-up-special-blocks--musa-al-hassy-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 4ab5ce20..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--22-powering-up-special-blocks--musa-al-hassy-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2385 +0,0 @@
-0:00:01.680,0:00:07.359
-oh you are now muted
-
-0:00:04.080,0:00:09.840
-all right then well uh hello everyone
-
-0:00:07.359,0:00:11.519
-I hope uh you're all enjoying the Emacs
-
-0:00:09.840,0:00:14.480
-conf
-
-0:00:11.519,0:00:15.040
-my name is musa alhassi and I hope
-
-0:00:14.480,0:00:17.920
-you're
-
-0:00:15.040,0:00:19.840
-excited to learn about uh powering up
-
-0:00:17.920,0:00:22.880
-special blocks
-
-0:00:19.840,0:00:24.800
-um so let's let's first off uh find out
-
-0:00:22.880,0:00:27.920
-what these special blocks are and
-
-0:00:24.800,0:00:30.240
-and see what we can uh go from so
-
-0:00:27.920,0:00:32.719
-uh yesterday I saw a lot of cool talks
-
-0:00:30.240,0:00:33.200
-and uh people were chatting about how do
-
-0:00:32.719,0:00:35.520
-you
-
-0:00:33.200,0:00:37.200
-I know how should you present should you
-
-0:00:35.520,0:00:38.640
-do it this way or that way and
-
-0:00:37.200,0:00:41.120
-I thought maybe I should try a different
-
-0:00:38.640,0:00:42.239
-way uh but but I'm talking about special
-
-0:00:41.120,0:00:45.039
-blocks and if I
-
-0:00:42.239,0:00:47.039
-show you an emax then I have to export
-
-0:00:45.039,0:00:47.840
-the html so you can see what it looks
-
-0:00:47.039,0:00:50.800
-like
-
-0:00:47.840,0:00:51.920
-or export to a pdf so you can see what
-
-0:00:50.800,0:00:54.239
-it looks like
-
-0:00:51.920,0:00:56.399
-uh so I ended up writing an org reveal
-
-0:00:54.239,0:00:58.960
-and
-
-0:00:56.399,0:01:00.879
-joyously this this just works you can
-
-0:00:58.960,0:01:02.960
-you can just see things here
-
-0:01:00.879,0:01:04.559
-uh I was worried that I'd have to take
-
-0:01:02.960,0:01:07.600
-pictures and then you know
-
-0:01:04.559,0:01:09.760
-uh uh you know insert pings so that that
-
-0:01:07.600,0:01:12.159
-was a delight
-
-0:01:09.760,0:01:12.960
-okay uh so special blocks are these
-
-0:01:12.159,0:01:16.000
-things like
-
-0:01:12.960,0:01:17.280
-a center small quote uh that's what a
-
-0:01:16.000,0:01:19.360
-special block is
-
-0:01:17.280,0:01:20.720
-and with a bit of lisp we can we can
-
-0:01:19.360,0:01:23.200
-make special blocks
-
-0:01:20.720,0:01:24.799
-and link types right so uh using a
-
-0:01:23.200,0:01:26.720
-single interface
-
-0:01:24.799,0:01:27.840
-um and the interface is going to be
-
-0:01:26.720,0:01:29.439
-similar to one
-
-0:01:27.840,0:01:32.560
-many people are familiar with in
-
-0:01:29.439,0:01:35.840
-particular org babel's
-
-0:01:32.560,0:01:37.840
-source interface as well as using global
-
-0:01:35.840,0:01:39.680
-header arguments for link types
-
-0:01:37.840,0:01:41.200
-and the idea is to write it once and
-
-0:01:39.680,0:01:44.159
-generate many different kinds
-
-0:01:41.200,0:01:44.720
-right you write uh an org markup and you
-
-0:01:44.159,0:01:47.680
-can have
-
-0:01:44.720,0:01:48.560
-uh html you can have pdf and and
-
-0:01:47.680,0:01:51.840
-joyously
-
-0:01:48.560,0:01:53.600
-uh org reveal so that was uh that was an
-
-0:01:51.840,0:01:56.640
-unexpected delight
-
-0:01:53.600,0:01:57.840
-um so here is a few that you'll you'll
-
-0:01:56.640,0:02:01.759
-just see as we
-
-0:01:57.840,0:02:04.000
-uh in this presentation you know some uh
-
-0:02:01.759,0:02:05.040
-uh I won't show some of these uh link
-
-0:02:04.000,0:02:06.799
-only ones
-
-0:02:05.040,0:02:08.080
-but we'll see a few of these other ones
-
-0:02:06.799,0:02:09.920
-just to make the uh
-
-0:02:08.080,0:02:11.520
-presentation look nice so the
-
-0:02:09.920,0:02:14.000
-presentation is really going to
-
-0:02:11.520,0:02:15.120
-present these blocks and the mechanism
-
-0:02:14.000,0:02:18.400
-at the same time
-
-0:02:15.120,0:02:21.280
-so uh so this no no html was written
-
-0:02:18.400,0:02:22.000
-look ma no html just pure org mode and
-
-0:02:21.280,0:02:23.520
-and
-
-0:02:22.000,0:02:25.840
-you get all these beautiful boxes and
-
-0:02:23.520,0:02:27.680
-things okay
-
-0:02:25.840,0:02:29.120
-so the motivation for this is you know
-
-0:02:27.680,0:02:31.200
-what uh
-
-0:02:29.120,0:02:32.239
-you're you're online you run into a blog
-
-0:02:31.200,0:02:33.120
-and you see something you like and
-
-0:02:32.239,0:02:35.280
-you're like man
-
-0:02:33.120,0:02:36.640
-you know I wish I could uh you know
-
-0:02:35.280,0:02:39.519
-produce that
-
-0:02:36.640,0:02:40.160
-um uh but you you check in the author
-
-0:02:39.519,0:02:44.239
-wrote raw
-
-0:02:40.160,0:02:46.800
-html you know plus html everywhere
-
-0:02:44.239,0:02:47.840
-and uh that's that's you know gonna
-
-0:02:46.800,0:02:49.680
-obscure
-
-0:02:47.840,0:02:51.200
-your your real content it's going to be
-
-0:02:49.680,0:02:54.239
-surrounded by all this uh
-
-0:02:51.200,0:02:56.400
-styling information that's unfortunate
-
-0:02:54.239,0:02:58.959
-uh the author decides to use an org
-
-0:02:56.400,0:03:01.120
-macro all right a bit better
-
-0:02:58.959,0:03:03.360
-but then what if you decide hey I want
-
-0:03:01.120,0:03:06.000
-to make a
-
-0:03:03.360,0:03:07.840
-not pdf great and then the worst of all
-
-0:03:06.000,0:03:10.159
-the author doesn't give you the source
-
-0:03:07.840,0:03:10.879
-and then you have to view page source
-
-0:03:10.159,0:03:13.760
-and
-
-0:03:10.879,0:03:14.239
-learn cascading style sheets and and you
-
-0:03:13.760,0:03:16.159
-know
-
-0:03:14.239,0:03:18.080
-sit in a corner and cry decide to do
-
-0:03:16.159,0:03:20.959
-other things with your life
-
-0:03:18.080,0:03:22.640
-so uh we want to give you org users
-
-0:03:20.959,0:03:26.000
-numerous styles
-
-0:03:22.640,0:03:27.200
-and uh and an extensible mechanism to
-
-0:03:26.000,0:03:28.799
-add more of these
-
-0:03:27.200,0:03:31.200
-aesthetically pleasing styles you know
-
-0:03:28.799,0:03:34.720
-to have really nice things
-
-0:03:31.200,0:03:35.599
-look one way in the html and look almost
-
-0:03:34.720,0:03:39.120
-the same way
-
-0:03:35.599,0:03:41.680
-in the pdf and other uh back ends and
-
-0:03:39.120,0:03:42.159
-if by having these newer ones you know
-
-0:03:41.680,0:03:44.879
-people
-
-0:03:42.159,0:03:45.519
-might be encouraged to try making new
-
-0:03:44.879,0:03:47.920
-ones
-
-0:03:45.519,0:03:49.040
-especially when the interface is uh not
-
-0:03:47.920,0:03:54.080
-so difficult
-
-0:03:49.040,0:03:54.080
-uh that's the that's the aim okay
-
-0:03:54.159,0:03:59.120
-uh so let's let's have a a real story to
-
-0:03:57.360,0:04:02.319
-motivate this even more
-
-0:03:59.120,0:04:03.599
-um so here's three friends uh I hope I
-
-0:04:02.319,0:04:04.640
-don't butcher their names but these
-
-0:04:03.599,0:04:07.040
-friends are called
-
-0:04:04.640,0:04:08.720
-amin sasha and corwin and then they're
-
-0:04:07.040,0:04:12.080
-organizing a conference
-
-0:04:08.720,0:04:14.239
-uh EmacsConf 2020.
-
-0:04:12.080,0:04:16.479
-so sasha decides to write an org file
-
-0:04:14.239,0:04:19.199
-and and she would like some feedback
-
-0:04:16.479,0:04:19.840
-okay and and just uh make it clear
-
-0:04:19.199,0:04:22.960
-there's no
-
-0:04:19.840,0:04:27.199
-uh just how easy this looks
-
-0:04:22.960,0:04:27.199
-let's look at the source for this block
-
-0:04:27.280,0:04:30.720
-notice it's just the word green then a
-
-0:04:30.000,0:04:34.560
-colon
-
-0:04:30.720,0:04:37.759
-than amine uh so no
-
-0:04:34.560,0:04:38.479
-no div style coloring just just you know
-
-0:04:37.759,0:04:41.520
-green color
-
-0:04:38.479,0:04:43.600
-immune a very pleasant uh or markup
-
-0:04:41.520,0:04:44.960
-so that's that's quite nice put some
-
-0:04:43.600,0:04:47.840
-bold around it
-
-0:04:44.960,0:04:49.040
-not not too difficult so hopefully uh
-
-0:04:47.840,0:04:51.680
-this will be useful to
-
-0:04:49.040,0:04:52.240
-other people as well so what kind of
-
-0:04:51.680,0:04:56.639
-feedback
-
-0:04:52.240,0:04:59.120
-uh would sasha expect to get um so maybe
-
-0:04:56.639,0:04:59.680
-she would expect top level remarks
-
-0:04:59.120,0:05:01.759
-visible
-
-0:04:59.680,0:05:04.400
-in the export you know when she makes an
-
-0:05:01.759,0:05:07.840
-html she can see right there a big block
-
-0:05:04.400,0:05:09.840
-right maybe
-
-0:05:07.840,0:05:11.120
-amin will suggest to sasha please
-
-0:05:09.840,0:05:12.960
-replace this part
-
-0:05:11.120,0:05:14.639
-with this other part or replace this
-
-0:05:12.960,0:05:16.960
-word with this other word
-
-0:05:14.639,0:05:17.680
-right um this is not really possible
-
-0:05:16.960,0:05:21.919
-with raw
-
-0:05:17.680,0:05:24.000
-html or uh yeah or with even latex
-
-0:05:21.919,0:05:25.360
-you'd have to have multiple arguments
-
-0:05:24.000,0:05:27.840
-the first argument and then
-
-0:05:25.360,0:05:28.800
-the replacement argument and it's a bit
-
-0:05:27.840,0:05:30.960
-clunky
-
-0:05:28.800,0:05:32.080
-um but with our setup you just write
-
-0:05:30.960,0:05:34.479
-some text
-
-0:05:32.080,0:05:36.240
-write hashtag plus replace with and then
-
-0:05:34.479,0:05:39.440
-write more text and you're good to go
-
-0:05:36.240,0:05:40.720
-normal uh org markup um
-
-0:05:39.440,0:05:42.479
-everyone speaks different languages
-
-0:05:40.720,0:05:45.919
-maybe they want to use a
-
-0:05:42.479,0:05:48.000
-uh one word or they're arguing about
-
-0:05:45.919,0:05:49.759
-whether we talk about frames or windows
-
-0:05:48.000,0:05:50.560
-um so maybe they want to have some
-
-0:05:49.759,0:05:52.479
-translations
-
-0:05:50.560,0:05:55.360
-right so there's different kinds of
-
-0:05:52.479,0:05:59.360
-feedbacks uh let's let's take an example
-
-0:05:55.360,0:06:02.560
-uh look at what they are okay
-
-0:05:59.360,0:06:06.160
-uh so for example sasha might write
-
-0:06:02.560,0:06:08.319
-uh this org mode right here and uh
-
-0:06:06.160,0:06:09.759
-and then in her html exports you might
-
-0:06:08.319,0:06:12.080
-see this
-
-0:06:09.759,0:06:13.840
-and uh her feedback might look really
-
-0:06:12.080,0:06:14.560
-nicely from anyone who says you know
-
-0:06:13.840,0:06:16.639
-let's uh
-
-0:06:14.560,0:06:18.560
-let's do some lisp instead of uh
-
-0:06:16.639,0:06:20.960
-mathematics let's just do some list
-
-0:06:18.560,0:06:22.479
-and and corwin says you know let's let's
-
-0:06:20.960,0:06:25.120
-not be so silly
-
-0:06:22.479,0:06:27.360
-maybe let's just say 9 a.m and move on
-
-0:06:25.120,0:06:27.360
-okay
-
-0:06:28.080,0:06:33.039
-um so amin likes to export to pdf
-
-0:06:31.360,0:06:34.720
-and so he writes his top-level remarks
-
-0:06:33.039,0:06:37.600
-using latex that's how
-
-0:06:34.720,0:06:38.960
-so to get this uh square I mean please
-
-0:06:37.600,0:06:41.440
-change whatever
-
-0:06:38.960,0:06:43.120
-he might write like this hashtag you
-
-0:06:41.440,0:06:46.960
-know plus latex
-
-0:06:43.120,0:06:50.000
-hashtag plus latex right but then
-
-0:06:46.960,0:06:50.880
-sasha only exports to p to html uh for
-
-0:06:50.000,0:06:54.880
-example
-
-0:06:50.880,0:06:57.199
-um and uh so she doesn't look at the pdf
-
-0:06:54.880,0:06:58.560
-and she may not see his top-level
-
-0:06:57.199,0:06:59.440
-feedback you know with those nice
-
-0:06:58.560,0:07:02.160
-brackets and
-
-0:06:59.440,0:07:03.120
-and bold right and so she might think
-
-0:07:02.160,0:07:06.160
-everything's good
-
-0:07:03.120,0:07:09.039
-right and that can be a bit disastrous
-
-0:07:06.160,0:07:09.440
-um so maybe sasha will will then uh make
-
-0:07:09.039,0:07:13.199
-some
-
-0:07:09.440,0:07:16.160
-of her own feedback all right uh but
-
-0:07:13.199,0:07:16.560
-and to produce it she might write html
-
-0:07:16.160,0:07:20.639
-uh
-
-0:07:16.560,0:07:21.680
-um html commands hashtag plus html to
-
-0:07:20.639,0:07:24.240
-get that
-
-0:07:21.680,0:07:25.680
-uh but then amin will make a pdf and
-
-0:07:24.240,0:07:27.759
-this won't stick out
-
-0:07:25.680,0:07:30.160
-and then so he might think everything's
-
-0:07:27.759,0:07:33.520
-okay even even though it's not
-
-0:07:30.160,0:07:36.240
-um then corwin actually decides hey
-
-0:07:33.520,0:07:36.800
-uh let me read the exported result and
-
-0:07:36.240,0:07:38.319
-these
-
-0:07:36.800,0:07:39.919
-there's all those feedback from two
-
-0:07:38.319,0:07:42.080
-people who haven't uh
-
-0:07:39.919,0:07:43.840
-read anything because maybe they were in
-
-0:07:42.080,0:07:46.400
-a russian and didn't
-
-0:07:43.840,0:07:48.160
-see the top level feedback and so they
-
-0:07:46.400,0:07:50.000
-agree hey let's have a uniform org
-
-0:07:48.160,0:07:53.280
-interface that exports
-
-0:07:50.000,0:07:54.080
-to both html and pdf make both of us
-
-0:07:53.280,0:07:57.280
-happy
-
-0:07:54.080,0:07:58.160
-okay so they decide to use org special
-
-0:07:57.280,0:08:01.840
-blocks
-
-0:07:58.160,0:08:04.400
-right um and to set this up they need to
-
-0:08:01.840,0:08:04.879
-you know maybe read a little bit of lisp
-
-0:08:04.400,0:08:08.879
-hooks
-
-0:08:04.879,0:08:10.840
-advice macros to get all of this set up
-
-0:08:08.879,0:08:12.319
-and then they'll use org as the main
-
-0:08:10.840,0:08:14.400
-interface okay
-
-0:08:12.319,0:08:16.479
-it's a lot of work but it's worth it
-
-0:08:14.400,0:08:19.360
-right maybe
-
-0:08:16.479,0:08:19.759
-um but then corwin corbin's a bit tears
-
-0:08:19.360,0:08:22.960
-so
-
-0:08:19.759,0:08:24.800
-uh corwin maybe doesn't want to write
-
-0:08:22.960,0:08:26.080
-uh using blocks he thinks they're
-
-0:08:24.800,0:08:29.360
-overkill and
-
-0:08:26.080,0:08:31.840
-and sasha wants html and uh and
-
-0:08:29.360,0:08:32.560
-I mean wants pdf and corwin wants org
-
-0:08:31.840,0:08:34.240
-reveal
-
-0:08:32.560,0:08:36.320
-so now they have to reformat all their
-
-0:08:34.240,0:08:37.120
-code and then they need to use org link
-
-0:08:36.320,0:08:39.599
-types to
-
-0:08:37.120,0:08:41.519
-reduce the overkill all right so they
-
-0:08:39.599,0:08:44.000
-can try to avoid duplication by
-
-0:08:41.519,0:08:46.800
-factoring things out into self-contained
-
-0:08:44.000,0:08:50.320
-uh defined functions or defunds
-
-0:08:46.800,0:08:53.440
-um but now to set up or links
-
-0:08:50.320,0:08:54.399
-uh we'll have uh to learn a new
-
-0:08:53.440,0:08:57.040
-interface
-
-0:08:54.399,0:08:58.000
-org setup link um learn a little bit
-
-0:08:57.040,0:09:02.160
-about fonts
-
-0:08:58.000,0:09:05.040
-follow links exports handles
-
-0:09:02.160,0:09:06.800
-it's so much that's so much but but then
-
-0:09:05.040,0:09:08.399
-you know the friends they learn a lot
-
-0:09:06.800,0:09:11.120
-you know they learn about defund all
-
-0:09:08.399,0:09:12.480
-right so these these words are red
-
-0:09:11.120,0:09:14.320
-you get a little explanation I think
-
-0:09:12.480,0:09:16.720
-it's a bit too small for anyone to read
-
-0:09:14.320,0:09:18.000
-this is lisp documentation right for
-
-0:09:16.720,0:09:19.680
-defund
-
-0:09:18.000,0:09:21.600
-advice ad there's some list
-
-0:09:19.680,0:09:23.600
-documentation right
-
-0:09:21.600,0:09:25.279
-they learn about destructuring let's so
-
-0:09:23.600,0:09:26.959
-this is from the dash library
-
-0:09:25.279,0:09:28.800
-here's all that you know glorious
-
-0:09:26.959,0:09:29.360
-glorious documentation with examples
-
-0:09:28.800,0:09:31.680
-sorry
-
-0:09:29.360,0:09:33.760
-I like that they might make an ad-hoc
-
-0:09:31.680,0:09:36.000
-mechanism to simulate
-
-0:09:33.760,0:09:37.040
-arguments for special blocks so
-
-0:09:36.000,0:09:40.399
-something maybe called
-
-0:09:37.040,0:09:41.920
-extract arguments and then of course to
-
-0:09:40.399,0:09:42.480
-make new link types they have to learn
-
-0:09:41.920,0:09:45.120
-about
-
-0:09:42.480,0:09:46.480
-org link set parameters and then it's
-
-0:09:45.120,0:09:49.920
-numerous uh
-
-0:09:46.480,0:09:50.720
-bits and pieces all right so let's oh
-
-0:09:49.920,0:09:53.600
-let's uh
-
-0:09:50.720,0:09:55.040
-close all these ones down and and uh of
-
-0:09:53.600,0:09:56.080
-course they also need to be uh
-
-0:09:55.040,0:09:58.720
-comfortable with
-
-0:09:56.080,0:09:59.920
-uh loops and maps and matching and
-
-0:09:58.720,0:10:02.560
-string functions
-
-0:09:59.920,0:10:03.360
-so it's it's a bit of a pain it's a bit
-
-0:10:02.560,0:10:05.839
-of a pain
-
-0:10:03.360,0:10:06.560
-um so it's probably not worth it so
-
-0:10:05.839,0:10:09.360
-maybe I'll just
-
-0:10:06.560,0:10:10.320
-rush things quickly or do an ad hoc you
-
-0:10:09.360,0:10:13.680
-know
-
-0:10:10.320,0:10:15.920
-we have things to do right
-
-0:10:13.680,0:10:17.839
-so maybe maybe the squad wants to have a
-
-0:10:15.920,0:10:21.120
-modular
-
-0:10:17.839,0:10:23.040
-and unified interface so everyone's
-
-0:10:21.120,0:10:25.279
-comfortable with defunct to define a
-
-0:10:23.040,0:10:26.480
-function and they say you know what
-
-0:10:25.279,0:10:29.440
-it would be nice if we could just you
-
-0:10:26.480,0:10:32.959
-know define simultaneously
-
-0:10:29.440,0:10:34.880
-both a block and the link type right
-
-0:10:32.959,0:10:36.000
-and uh that way we have a single
-
-0:10:34.880,0:10:38.240
-interface
-
-0:10:36.000,0:10:39.040
-org mode for for these things and it
-
-0:10:38.240,0:10:42.079
-would be nice was
-
-0:10:39.040,0:10:43.680
-modular so if I defined a
-
-0:10:42.079,0:10:45.519
-one kind of block and you defined
-
-0:10:43.680,0:10:47.600
-another we could compose them
-
-0:10:45.519,0:10:49.360
-right and then get a you know a nice
-
-0:10:47.600,0:10:52.320
-bigger block like lego
-
-0:10:49.360,0:10:54.160
-that would be nice building box okay and
-
-0:10:52.320,0:10:56.240
-uh this is uh what we
-
-0:10:54.160,0:10:57.600
-have come up with called death block and
-
-0:10:56.240,0:11:00.240
-it also has a
-
-0:10:57.600,0:11:01.760
-long documentation string containing
-
-0:11:00.240,0:11:04.800
-examples and things
-
-0:11:01.760,0:11:08.320
-so that way you can try to be useful
-
-0:11:04.800,0:11:10.880
-okay um so let's let's look at a a
-
-0:11:08.320,0:11:12.800
-solution to these friends uh trilemma
-
-0:11:10.880,0:11:14.320
-all right so here's here's a way to
-
-0:11:12.800,0:11:17.040
-define a block
-
-0:11:14.320,0:11:19.200
-um it looks it's it doesn't look that
-
-0:11:17.040,0:11:22.320
-difficult but this is how they can
-
-0:11:19.200,0:11:25.920
-define a block for um
-
-0:11:22.320,0:11:27.680
-for uh their top-level feedback right
-
-0:11:25.920,0:11:28.959
-so let's let's look at the three main
-
-0:11:27.680,0:11:31.920
-parts together
-
-0:11:28.959,0:11:33.040
-it's not that uh difficult I hope just
-
-0:11:31.920,0:11:34.720
-six lines
-
-0:11:33.040,0:11:36.160
-and that's including a documentation
-
-0:11:34.720,0:11:39.440
-string and you know
-
-0:11:36.160,0:11:41.279
-uh new lines and things okay so in line
-
-0:11:39.440,0:11:42.000
-one we just define the block just like
-
-0:11:41.279,0:11:44.880
-you define
-
-0:11:42.000,0:11:46.399
-a function we define a block the flag
-
-0:11:44.880,0:11:49.680
-the block name is going to be called
-
-0:11:46.399,0:11:53.360
-feedback it has an author who
-
-0:11:49.680,0:11:56.160
-right the author has no default
-
-0:11:53.360,0:11:57.760
-value it has a color and the color has a
-
-0:11:56.160,0:12:00.560
-default value of red
-
-0:11:57.760,0:12:01.680
-okay so just just as when you define
-
-0:12:00.560,0:12:04.880
-functions they
-
-0:12:01.680,0:12:08.639
-they uh you start by uh define
-
-0:12:04.880,0:12:10.720
-or def block than the name some
-
-0:12:08.639,0:12:13.440
-mandatory argument and some optional
-
-0:12:10.720,0:12:15.760
-arguments okay
-
-0:12:13.440,0:12:18.480
-then the next stage is well and
-
-0:12:15.760,0:12:20.880
-definition a documentation you know
-
-0:12:18.480,0:12:22.880
-uh the people who use this which are
-
-0:12:20.880,0:12:25.519
-future you or future me you know
-
-0:12:22.880,0:12:27.839
-uh might want to know what this is all
-
-0:12:25.519,0:12:30.560
-right so let's get to document this
-
-0:12:27.839,0:12:32.079
-uh and uh for for corwin who might want
-
-0:12:30.560,0:12:34.560
-to use uh tooltips
-
-0:12:32.079,0:12:35.120
-uh when corwin writes feedback whatever
-
-0:12:34.560,0:12:37.120
-and
-
-0:12:35.120,0:12:38.639
-Emacs they'll see a nice little tooltip
-
-0:12:37.120,0:12:41.279
-and the tooltip will have
-
-0:12:38.639,0:12:43.279
-this uh documentation string right so
-
-0:12:41.279,0:12:45.200
-that'll be nice
-
-0:12:43.279,0:12:46.480
-okay and then here's the third part the
-
-0:12:45.200,0:12:49.440
-last three lines are
-
-0:12:46.480,0:12:49.680
-not not so difficult if the back end is
-
-0:12:49.440,0:12:52.800
-in
-
-0:12:49.680,0:12:55.360
-is html the backend is html
-
-0:12:52.800,0:12:57.440
-please use this template string
-
-0:12:55.360,0:13:00.639
-otherwise use the other string
-
-0:12:57.440,0:13:01.279
-okay and for each of these uh string
-
-0:13:00.639,0:13:03.600
-markers
-
-0:13:01.279,0:13:04.959
-please put in the color who wrote it and
-
-0:13:03.600,0:13:07.279
-then the contents
-
-0:13:04.959,0:13:08.160
-of the special block or the link type
-
-0:13:07.279,0:13:10.639
-okay
-
-0:13:08.160,0:13:11.600
-um so that's pretty neat not not so
-
-0:13:10.639,0:13:14.639
-difficult
-
-0:13:11.600,0:13:15.519
-so I thought that was kind of cool and
-
-0:13:14.639,0:13:18.480
-then notice it's
-
-0:13:15.519,0:13:19.519
-anaphoric it's it's a this this def
-
-0:13:18.480,0:13:21.760
-block
-
-0:13:19.519,0:13:22.560
-gives you two new names it gives you a
-
-0:13:21.760,0:13:25.120
-name called
-
-0:13:22.560,0:13:26.480
-uh contents and it gives you a name
-
-0:13:25.120,0:13:29.040
-called back end
-
-0:13:26.480,0:13:31.040
-right and so even if you're writing a
-
-0:13:29.040,0:13:32.560
-def block and you intend it to be used
-
-0:13:31.040,0:13:35.440
-only for links
-
-0:13:32.560,0:13:37.600
-uh like the uh these colors for example
-
-0:13:35.440,0:13:38.399
-uh these colors were defined using dev
-
-0:13:37.600,0:13:41.279
-block
-
-0:13:38.399,0:13:43.360
-uh and I used them as links right here
-
-0:13:41.279,0:13:44.880
-and you don't need to worry
-
-0:13:43.360,0:13:48.160
-where does the text come from in the
-
-0:13:44.880,0:13:48.959
-link you know if I say red colon bob uh
-
-0:13:48.160,0:13:50.720
-is it bob
-
-0:13:48.959,0:13:52.000
-or if I put a description is it the
-
-0:13:50.720,0:13:54.000
-description so
-
-0:13:52.000,0:13:56.720
-it's whatever is available will will
-
-0:13:54.000,0:13:59.199
-become uh the value of contents
-
-0:13:56.720,0:14:00.320
-and if you're really you know interested
-
-0:13:59.199,0:14:03.839
-and you want to do some
-
-0:14:00.320,0:14:04.959
-intricate stuff uh def block also gives
-
-0:14:03.839,0:14:08.160
-you something called
-
-0:14:04.959,0:14:09.360
-raw dash contents if you really want to
-
-0:14:08.160,0:14:11.920
-touch the raw
-
-0:14:09.360,0:14:12.639
-uh contents with all of the org markups
-
-0:14:11.920,0:14:16.000
-still there
-
-0:14:12.639,0:14:18.320
-okay so let's uh let's see
-
-0:14:16.000,0:14:19.440
-how uh everyone can uh communicate
-
-0:14:18.320,0:14:22.480
-amongst themselves
-
-0:14:19.440,0:14:26.000
-using this new interface okay so
-
-0:14:22.480,0:14:28.399
-uh uh sasha speculates and she how does
-
-0:14:26.000,0:14:31.440
-she speculate for her organ html
-
-0:14:28.399,0:14:34.800
-she might just write hey look at that no
-
-0:14:31.440,0:14:37.519
-no no html nice and and
-
-0:14:34.800,0:14:39.600
-amin wants to have some green and so he
-
-0:14:37.519,0:14:42.240
-just says hey here's some color green
-
-0:14:39.600,0:14:42.959
-and and uh there you go it looks almost
-
-0:14:42.240,0:14:46.560
-the same
-
-0:14:42.959,0:14:49.680
-right uh notice that the main argument
-
-0:14:46.560,0:14:52.480
-is right here def block took an author
-
-0:14:49.680,0:14:53.920
-and here's the author again and now the
-
-0:14:52.480,0:14:57.360
-optional argument
-
-0:14:53.920,0:14:58.000
-uses the org babel source interface you
-
-0:14:57.360,0:15:00.639
-just say
-
-0:14:58.000,0:15:01.440
-colon and then a key and then the
-
-0:15:00.639,0:15:05.040
-argument
-
-0:15:01.440,0:15:05.519
-quite quite nice and and corwin doesn't
-
-0:15:05.040,0:15:07.920
-want to
-
-0:15:05.519,0:15:09.760
-use blocks it's a bit of an overkill and
-
-0:15:07.920,0:15:12.959
-can just write a
-
-0:15:09.760,0:15:16.000
-a little um right
-
-0:15:12.959,0:15:17.440
-so the main argument is now the uh uh
-
-0:15:16.000,0:15:19.360
-the label of the link
-
-0:15:17.440,0:15:21.600
-all right and then the description of
-
-0:15:19.360,0:15:24.959
-the link is the contents
-
-0:15:21.600,0:15:25.680
-of uh of the feedback so that was quite
-
-0:15:24.959,0:15:28.079
-nice
-
-0:15:25.680,0:15:29.360
-so it looks like uh everyone uses the
-
-0:15:28.079,0:15:32.800
-same interface on the left
-
-0:15:29.360,0:15:34.480
-and can have varying uh outputs
-
-0:15:32.800,0:15:36.639
-and it looks I think it looks quite nice
-
-0:15:34.480,0:15:40.000
-and I hope you do too
-
-0:15:36.639,0:15:42.160
-um and there's a few more maybe
-
-0:15:40.000,0:15:43.920
-as you saw in some previous ones we had
-
-0:15:42.160,0:15:46.800
-text side beside side
-
-0:15:43.920,0:15:47.440
-right now um or we folded some regions
-
-0:15:46.800,0:15:49.360
-away
-
-0:15:47.440,0:15:50.959
-that was quite nice we put some things
-
-0:15:49.360,0:15:54.000
-in pretty boxes
-
-0:15:50.959,0:15:57.120
-um uh we had some spoilers at the very
-
-0:15:54.000,0:15:58.160
-beginning that we we uh hit some text uh
-
-0:15:57.120,0:15:59.600
-we demoed uh
-
-0:15:58.160,0:16:01.680
-some texts right you know here's some
-
-0:15:59.600,0:16:04.480
-org and here's what it looks like
-
-0:16:01.680,0:16:05.199
-um and and most importantly uh they they
-
-0:16:04.480,0:16:08.320
-compose
-
-0:16:05.199,0:16:12.639
-right there's uh uh there's a
-
-0:16:08.320,0:16:14.720
-a macro called uh uh thread block
-
-0:16:12.639,0:16:16.160
-uh thread block a thread block call and
-
-0:16:14.720,0:16:18.000
-it lets you thread the
-
-0:16:16.160,0:16:20.639
-the contents through a number of blocks
-
-0:16:18.000,0:16:22.480
-treating them as if they were functions
-
-0:16:20.639,0:16:23.680
-and so really you can think of a block
-
-0:16:22.480,0:16:26.560
-as a as a
-
-0:16:23.680,0:16:27.360
-as a string valued function so that's
-
-0:16:26.560,0:16:30.959
-pretty neat
-
-0:16:27.360,0:16:31.759
-I I think and uh thank you for listening
-
-0:16:30.959,0:16:34.320
-and uh
-
-0:16:31.759,0:16:34.880
-I I hope you've uh enjoyed this little
-
-0:16:34.320,0:16:37.600
-uh
-
-0:16:34.880,0:16:38.160
-happy fun time with uh with the Emacs
-
-0:16:37.600,0:16:40.720
-and friends
-
-0:16:38.160,0:16:41.759
-and uh I'll I'm I'll happy happily
-
-0:16:40.720,0:16:43.730
-answer questions
-
-0:16:41.759,0:16:45.360
-uh right now um
-
-0:16:43.730,0:16:48.160
-[Music]
-
-0:16:45.360,0:16:50.480
-so uh someone says why did you put
-
-0:16:48.160,0:16:53.600
-optional arguments in a separate list
-
-0:16:50.480,0:16:54.560
-rather than using cl style argument
-
-0:16:53.600,0:16:58.399
-lists
-
-0:16:54.560,0:17:01.680
-um so that's a very good question
-
-0:16:58.399,0:17:04.400
-and I will answer that by
-
-0:17:01.680,0:17:04.880
-showing you a more involved definition
-
-0:17:04.400,0:17:08.959
-of
-
-0:17:04.880,0:17:12.079
-feedback so let's look at a
-
-0:17:08.959,0:17:12.079
-a more involved one
-
-0:17:13.039,0:17:19.280
-right right here so for example
-
-0:17:16.079,0:17:21.760
-this one is called rural mark all right
-
-0:17:19.280,0:17:23.439
-and uh please let me know if my text is
-
-0:17:21.760,0:17:26.799
-not sufficiently big
-
-0:17:23.439,0:17:29.520
-so here is here is why uh we have
-
-0:17:26.799,0:17:30.720
-two arguments that takes two arguments
-
-0:17:29.520,0:17:33.360
-uh instead of one
-
-0:17:30.720,0:17:34.799
-for for its argument list right so you
-
-0:17:33.360,0:17:37.679
-you have def block
-
-0:17:34.799,0:17:38.400
-then you have the name right then you
-
-0:17:37.679,0:17:40.960
-have
-
-0:17:38.400,0:17:42.880
-the first uh argument list and the
-
-0:17:40.960,0:17:46.080
-second argument list
-
-0:17:42.880,0:17:49.280
-the first argument list uh takes the
-
-0:17:46.080,0:17:51.760
-takes the text right after the begin
-
-0:17:49.280,0:17:52.320
-right the text right after the begin is
-
-0:17:51.760,0:17:55.760
-the main
-
-0:17:52.320,0:17:57.039
-argument okay and then the remaining key
-
-0:17:55.760,0:18:00.320
-value pairs
-
-0:17:57.039,0:18:03.280
-are in the second argument list okay
-
-0:18:00.320,0:18:04.640
-now the reason we have two is because uh
-
-0:18:03.280,0:18:06.799
-in order to
-
-0:18:04.640,0:18:08.880
-streamline the interface to account for
-
-0:18:06.799,0:18:12.320
-both uh special blocks
-
-0:18:08.880,0:18:13.360
-and or link types uh what we do is we
-
-0:18:12.320,0:18:16.160
-say hey
-
-0:18:13.360,0:18:18.000
-uh in the first argument list uh you can
-
-0:18:16.160,0:18:21.039
-give a name to the first argument
-
-0:18:18.000,0:18:24.240
-give it a default value and anything
-
-0:18:21.039,0:18:27.760
-else you provide will become uh
-
-0:18:24.240,0:18:30.000
-uh part of the I'll co link
-
-0:18:27.760,0:18:32.000
-information so for example this link we
-
-0:18:30.000,0:18:34.799
-decided to make its face
-
-0:18:32.000,0:18:35.840
-angry red um you might want to give
-
-0:18:34.799,0:18:37.919
-other features to
-
-0:18:35.840,0:18:39.679
-links so we're trying to streamline the
-
-0:18:37.919,0:18:42.320
-interface for both
-
-0:18:39.679,0:18:42.880
-special blocks and org link types and we
-
-0:18:42.320,0:18:46.240
-thought
-
-0:18:42.880,0:18:49.840
-this way was quite nice um so
-
-0:18:46.240,0:18:52.480
-that was the main reason uh someone asks
-
-0:18:49.840,0:18:55.039
-uh so if if you uh if that's uh if you
-
-0:18:52.480,0:18:57.600
-need if you have follow-up please ask
-
-0:18:55.039,0:19:00.559
-someone asks do you intend to try to
-
-0:18:57.600,0:19:03.600
-upstream this amazing work into org
-
-0:19:00.559,0:19:04.559
-well I'm glad you like it I I don't know
-
-0:19:03.600,0:19:06.880
-how to upstream
-
-0:19:04.559,0:19:08.799
-but but I I will look into it and any
-
-0:19:06.880,0:19:11.840
-advice or guidance would be
-
-0:19:08.799,0:19:14.640
-much appreciated um you know
-
-0:19:11.840,0:19:17.120
-lisp is awesome and just as defunded as
-
-0:19:14.640,0:19:20.240
-a macro deathblock is a macro and then
-
-0:19:17.120,0:19:21.919
-source blocks are awesome and then now
-
-0:19:20.240,0:19:24.080
-maybe we can have arguments and special
-
-0:19:21.919,0:19:25.280
-blocks and motivate and encourage more
-
-0:19:24.080,0:19:28.799
-people to uh
-
-0:19:25.280,0:19:32.559
-to uh learn lisp right
-
-0:19:28.799,0:19:35.280
-so another person asks
-
-0:19:32.559,0:19:38.559
-um what is used to produce colorful
-
-0:19:35.280,0:19:40.400
-boxes around the cursor
-
-0:19:38.559,0:19:41.840
-I I'm not quite sure if you're asking
-
-0:19:40.400,0:19:42.559
-are you talking about my cursor right
-
-0:19:41.840,0:19:47.840
-here
-
-0:19:42.559,0:19:47.840
-or are you talking about in the slide um
-
-0:19:48.400,0:19:52.400
-so this this this cursor is some
-
-0:19:50.559,0:19:55.440
-application called
-
-0:19:52.400,0:19:57.679
-a stream brush that I had to purchase uh
-
-0:19:55.440,0:19:59.039
-unfortunately I could not find a a
-
-0:19:57.679,0:20:02.159
-suitable free one
-
-0:19:59.039,0:20:03.840
-um and the blocks I can demonstrate some
-
-0:20:02.159,0:20:05.679
-Emacs list but I can open up my Emacs if
-
-0:20:03.840,0:20:06.320
-people like and we can try some things
-
-0:20:05.679,0:20:09.440
-out
-
-0:20:06.320,0:20:12.480
-happy to do that uh
-
-0:20:09.440,0:20:14.880
-you're welcome uh someone asks
-
-0:20:12.480,0:20:15.520
-a side question about org reveal how do
-
-0:20:14.880,0:20:17.440
-you get
-
-0:20:15.520,0:20:19.120
-bespoke or multiple column layouts
-
-0:20:17.440,0:20:22.559
-without using html
-
-0:20:19.120,0:20:24.640
-ah excellent question that's what we do
-
-0:20:22.559,0:20:26.000
-that's that's what this uh project is
-
-0:20:24.640,0:20:28.960
-about so it's not
-
-0:20:26.000,0:20:29.440
-org reveal it's it's our fancy parallel
-
-0:20:28.960,0:20:32.240
-uh
-
-0:20:29.440,0:20:33.440
-uh block so we have this thing you say
-
-0:20:32.240,0:20:35.679
-begin parallel
-
-0:20:33.440,0:20:37.120
-you say how many columns you would like
-
-0:20:35.679,0:20:39.679
-uh do you want a bar
-
-0:20:37.120,0:20:40.960
-or not and then you write some text and
-
-0:20:39.679,0:20:42.480
-then you uh
-
-0:20:40.960,0:20:44.400
-you get some text and according with the
-
-0:20:42.480,0:20:47.520
-bar or not right so that's
-
-0:20:44.400,0:20:50.080
-that's how we achieve that in our slides
-
-0:20:47.520,0:20:52.559
-so I'm not uh I'm not quite sure where
-
-0:20:50.080,0:20:52.559
-this was
-
-0:20:52.880,0:20:55.919
-somewhere here I think
-
-0:20:59.520,0:21:03.840
-let me try to find this for you
-
-0:21:06.240,0:21:09.440
-I can't seem to find where the parallel
-
-0:21:08.320,0:21:12.159
-blocks were
-
-0:21:09.440,0:21:15.039
-apologies let's move on to the next
-
-0:21:12.159,0:21:17.760
-question I suppose
-
-0:21:15.039,0:21:18.400
-uh I'm pretty sure they're here ah there
-
-0:21:17.760,0:21:21.360
-they are
-
-0:21:18.400,0:21:22.640
-yes so these these uh were just
-
-0:21:21.360,0:21:25.440
-instances of using
-
-0:21:22.640,0:21:26.480
-uh the parallel block and it makes
-
-0:21:25.440,0:21:29.600
-things parallel
-
-0:21:26.480,0:21:33.360
-so that's quite nice um another person
-
-0:21:29.600,0:21:36.720
-asks uh yes
-
-0:21:33.360,0:21:37.840
-excellent um how does this relate to
-
-0:21:36.720,0:21:39.360
-banda pandoc
-
-0:21:37.840,0:21:40.960
-which is used for converting between
-
-0:21:39.360,0:21:43.919
-markup formats
-
-0:21:40.960,0:21:44.400
-so all we're doing is we're we're saying
-
-0:21:43.919,0:21:46.799
-hey
-
-0:21:44.400,0:21:47.679
-please write org because org is just
-
-0:21:46.799,0:21:50.400
-fantastic
-
-0:21:47.679,0:21:51.760
-and we love it and it's the dream and if
-
-0:21:50.400,0:21:55.039
-you would like to view things
-
-0:21:51.760,0:21:58.559
-in html or in org reveal or
-
-0:21:55.039,0:22:02.320
-in pdf that's up to the user so
-
-0:21:58.559,0:22:05.039
-here is a um oh
-
-0:22:02.320,0:22:06.080
-made it too small now so here is a an
-
-0:22:05.039,0:22:08.880
-example
-
-0:22:06.080,0:22:10.240
-so here's an uh how here's how parallel
-
-0:22:08.880,0:22:13.120
-is implemented
-
-0:22:10.240,0:22:14.320
-uh just as a quick example uh not too
-
-0:22:13.120,0:22:16.880
-long
-
-0:22:14.320,0:22:18.400
-uh about half of the implementation is
-
-0:22:16.880,0:22:20.720
-documentation so
-
-0:22:18.400,0:22:22.720
-uh hopefully that speaks for for how
-
-0:22:20.720,0:22:25.280
-useful this feature is
-
-0:22:22.720,0:22:28.080
-uh so we decide if there's a rule or not
-
-0:22:25.280,0:22:29.760
-um we look for the column break
-
-0:22:28.080,0:22:31.840
-and really here we're looking at the
-
-0:22:29.760,0:22:34.960
-back end if the back end is latex
-
-0:22:31.840,0:22:37.679
-uh please use this uh incantation with
-
-0:22:34.960,0:22:38.559
-multi columns mini pages what have you
-
-0:22:37.679,0:22:41.039
-and if the
-
-0:22:38.559,0:22:41.600
-back end is something else uh please uh
-
-0:22:41.039,0:22:44.960
-do this
-
-0:22:41.600,0:22:46.640
-uh div and style and uh other uh
-
-0:22:44.960,0:22:48.080
-gibberish that we don't really wanna
-
-0:22:46.640,0:22:51.760
-look at uh so
-
-0:22:48.080,0:22:55.280
-uh when you pandoc works from org
-
-0:22:51.760,0:22:58.080
-so it might not work directly since our
-
-0:22:55.280,0:22:59.679
-interface the way we set it up is when
-
-0:22:58.080,0:23:01.919
-you try to export
-
-0:22:59.679,0:23:03.039
-uh we hook in and we do a bunch of
-
-0:23:01.919,0:23:05.919
-pre-processing
-
-0:23:03.039,0:23:07.440
-so this this uh def block is a is a
-
-0:23:05.919,0:23:10.880
-string valued function
-
-0:23:07.440,0:23:13.919
-and so whenever we see these uh begin
-
-0:23:10.880,0:23:16.480
-parallel uh when you do an export
-
-0:23:13.919,0:23:16.960
-I tell Emacs hold up look for those
-
-0:23:16.480,0:23:19.360
-begin
-
-0:23:16.960,0:23:20.320
-parallels please oh you found them grab
-
-0:23:19.360,0:23:22.400
-that text
-
-0:23:20.320,0:23:24.080
-you grabbed it great now please apply
-
-0:23:22.400,0:23:27.120
-this person's uh function
-
-0:23:24.080,0:23:29.760
-onto that text and splice in the result
-
-0:23:27.120,0:23:30.400
-okay so so when you export uh we're
-
-0:23:29.760,0:23:33.600
-performing
-
-0:23:30.400,0:23:35.120
-arbitrary computations on your uh uh on
-
-0:23:33.600,0:23:38.799
-your text
-
-0:23:35.120,0:23:40.159
-so uh um some people might not find that
-
-0:23:38.799,0:23:43.039
-comforting to have
-
-0:23:40.159,0:23:45.039
-arbitrary uh computations happening so
-
-0:23:43.039,0:23:47.520
-in this article there's a few where
-
-0:23:45.039,0:23:48.320
-uh we change your text upon export we
-
-0:23:47.520,0:23:51.760
-translate it
-
-0:23:48.320,0:23:55.360
-we do other things to it um
-
-0:23:51.760,0:23:57.360
-so someone says uh if you export to
-
-0:23:55.360,0:23:58.640
-latex to pdf does that work well with
-
-0:23:57.360,0:24:00.320
-beamer as well
-
-0:23:58.640,0:24:02.080
-to create slides with columns for
-
-0:24:00.320,0:24:05.200
-example for uh
-
-0:24:02.080,0:24:08.000
-um so uh actually uh
-
-0:24:05.200,0:24:09.200
-so uh I I made a bunch of these changes
-
-0:24:08.000,0:24:12.320
-earlier this morning
-
-0:24:09.200,0:24:14.480
-and it just says latex right here um
-
-0:24:12.320,0:24:15.360
-so if you want to go to beamer I think
-
-0:24:14.480,0:24:18.240
-the back end for me
-
-0:24:15.360,0:24:18.960
-beamer is called well beamer so instead
-
-0:24:18.240,0:24:21.200
-of a
-
-0:24:18.960,0:24:22.000
-a p case what we would do is we would
-
-0:24:21.200,0:24:25.360
-say oh
-
-0:24:22.000,0:24:29.279
-if it's a latex or it's a beamer
-
-0:24:25.360,0:24:31.120
-then uh use this uh otherwise
-
-0:24:29.279,0:24:33.039
-it's not a latex it will simply default
-
-0:24:31.120,0:24:36.400
-to this one which could be
-
-0:24:33.039,0:24:39.679
-dangerous for your needs um I think it's
-
-0:24:36.400,0:24:41.279
-a bad practice to put a underscore but I
-
-0:24:39.679,0:24:43.679
-did it really quickly because I just
-
-0:24:41.279,0:24:46.559
-wanted to show you that it works fine in
-
-0:24:43.679,0:24:47.440
-org reveal contributions are more than
-
-0:24:46.559,0:24:51.039
-welcome
-
-0:24:47.440,0:24:52.240
-I I uh happily uh would love any
-
-0:24:51.039,0:24:56.080
-assistance
-
-0:24:52.240,0:24:58.640
-um and and I have a uh we have a
-
-0:24:56.080,0:25:00.159
-list a reference cheat sheet here to to
-
-0:24:58.640,0:25:02.000
-learn a little bit about lisp if you're
-
-0:25:00.159,0:25:04.640
-not comfortable or to
-
-0:25:02.000,0:25:06.400
-ask some questions lots of helpful
-
-0:25:04.640,0:25:09.440
-people
-
-0:25:06.400,0:25:11.679
-so there's another question that says uh
-
-0:25:09.440,0:25:13.120
-does typing in a block mess up with a
-
-0:25:11.679,0:25:15.679
-syntax highlighting
-
-0:25:13.120,0:25:17.279
-usually you use a single color inside an
-
-0:25:15.679,0:25:21.279
-example block for example
-
-0:25:17.279,0:25:25.279
-ah you found my crutch you found
-
-0:25:21.279,0:25:27.440
-my crutch um so I so there's
-
-0:25:25.279,0:25:29.760
-emax's is all encompassing and I'm not
-
-0:25:27.440,0:25:32.559
-quite sure how fonts work or are
-
-0:25:29.760,0:25:33.840
-you know I I learned enough to get by I
-
-0:25:32.559,0:25:37.440
-learned enough to get by
-
-0:25:33.840,0:25:39.760
-so let me um but here's
-
-0:25:37.440,0:25:40.799
-here's how links work they're they're a
-
-0:25:39.760,0:25:42.960
-bit complicated
-
-0:25:40.799,0:25:43.919
-this this is a bit scary I don't
-
-0:25:42.960,0:25:47.039
-recommend anyone
-
-0:25:43.919,0:25:49.840
-uh read it um
-
-0:25:47.039,0:25:50.559
-but uh actually let me open up an email
-
-0:25:49.840,0:25:53.600
-and you can
-
-0:25:50.559,0:25:54.799
-you can see what I see uh so here's an
-
-0:25:53.600,0:25:56.799
-Emacs
-
-0:25:54.799,0:25:58.400
-all right let's make that a bit bigger
-
-0:25:56.799,0:26:01.200
-uh let's change this
-
-0:25:58.400,0:26:01.919
-slightly nope that's worse there you go
-
-0:26:01.200,0:26:05.760
-so
-
-0:26:01.919,0:26:09.360
-here's here's some words um so here's
-
-0:26:05.760,0:26:12.000
-red hello um
-
-0:26:09.360,0:26:12.400
-but you're worried about uh preserving
-
-0:26:12.000,0:26:15.679
-uh
-
-0:26:12.400,0:26:18.480
-uh uh um quantification
-
-0:26:15.679,0:26:18.880
-so let's make an emax list block all
-
-0:26:18.480,0:26:22.840
-right
-
-0:26:18.880,0:26:27.520
-and let's say plus one two ah
-
-0:26:22.840,0:26:27.520
-where's the fun hello
-
-0:26:28.000,0:26:34.880
-um bye okay where's the coloring
-
-0:26:32.080,0:26:36.000
-if we if we zoom in on this on this
-
-0:26:34.880,0:26:39.200
-begin source block
-
-0:26:36.000,0:26:42.159
-if we zoom in you can see down here
-
-0:26:39.200,0:26:43.279
-uh we have our our coloring all right
-
-0:26:42.159,0:26:46.960
-when we zoom in
-
-0:26:43.279,0:26:50.080
-if we if we zoom out ah no coloring
-
-0:26:46.960,0:26:50.880
-zoom in coloring it's about ah no
-
-0:26:50.080,0:26:53.840
-coloring
-
-0:26:50.880,0:26:55.679
-let's take off these bad boys and oh
-
-0:26:53.840,0:26:59.360
-look my coloring's back
-
-0:26:55.679,0:27:02.320
-so um in a previous
-
-0:26:59.360,0:27:03.760
-uh iteration of the system I was able to
-
-0:27:02.320,0:27:06.400
-maintain coloring
-
-0:27:03.760,0:27:08.559
-uh in this new iteration I am not I
-
-0:27:06.400,0:27:11.039
-don't know how to do it I haven't uh
-
-0:27:08.559,0:27:13.279
-had the time to to implement it I spent
-
-0:27:11.039,0:27:17.279
-a lot of time writing this uh
-
-0:27:13.279,0:27:19.679
-48 page uh documentation uh with uh
-
-0:27:17.279,0:27:20.320
-with some fun examples to to to try to
-
-0:27:19.679,0:27:21.760
-help
-
-0:27:20.320,0:27:23.760
-people learn so but but I would
-
-0:27:21.760,0:27:26.240
-appreciate any help or guidance on
-
-0:27:23.760,0:27:28.000
-how to uh maintain the quantification I
-
-0:27:26.240,0:27:29.200
-I really would like to keep those colors
-
-0:27:28.000,0:27:31.840
-in
-
-0:27:29.200,0:27:32.640
-um musa we have time for maybe one more
-
-0:27:31.840,0:27:34.960
-question
-
-0:27:32.640,0:27:37.039
-um one or two more questions and then we
-
-0:27:34.960,0:27:39.120
-have to move on to the next talk
-
-0:27:37.039,0:27:40.799
-um but yeah you're more than welcome to
-
-0:27:39.120,0:27:42.559
-take continue taking the questions via
-
-0:27:40.799,0:27:45.760
-irc or the pad
-
-0:27:42.559,0:27:48.480
-okay thank you thank you
-
-0:27:45.760,0:27:48.880
-let's uh the final question we'll take
-
-0:27:48.480,0:27:52.320
-is
-
-0:27:48.880,0:27:54.399
-um should packages implement
-
-0:27:52.320,0:27:55.840
-interface to one specific format or
-
-0:27:54.399,0:27:57.279
-attempt to be conclusive to all the
-
-0:27:55.840,0:27:58.880
-potential output targets
-
-0:27:57.279,0:28:01.120
-I think you should just make them as you
-
-0:27:58.880,0:28:02.559
-go and you know add them as you need
-
-0:28:01.120,0:28:05.600
-them we'll make uh
-
-0:28:02.559,0:28:07.840
-help requests or things and uh
-
-0:28:05.600,0:28:09.279
-we can we can share recipes in this uh
-
-0:28:07.840,0:28:12.799
-document and then
-
-0:28:09.279,0:28:16.000
-try to add other uh techniques and then
-
-0:28:12.799,0:28:19.200
-and we can uh use these blocks as a
-
-0:28:16.000,0:28:22.240
-common uh interface for
-
-0:28:19.200,0:28:26.000
-for exporting to pdf and other things
-
-0:28:22.240,0:28:28.399
-and since someone asked here is a um
-
-0:28:26.000,0:28:30.159
-here is uh what a pdf looks like this is
-
-0:28:28.399,0:28:33.840
-the same pdf and
-
-0:28:30.159,0:28:34.960
-uh rendered uh just I made no effort to
-
-0:28:33.840,0:28:37.840
-make it look good
-
-0:28:34.960,0:28:38.559
-but it surprisingly does look good so so
-
-0:28:37.840,0:28:41.600
-uh that was
-
-0:28:38.559,0:28:44.320
-uh that was nice um that was a
-
-0:28:41.600,0:28:44.880
-terrible magenta but that is life uh
-
-0:28:44.320,0:28:47.279
-anyhow
-
-0:28:44.880,0:28:48.960
-I hope you all enjoyed this talk I hope
-
-0:28:47.279,0:28:51.679
-you will find um
-
-0:28:48.960,0:28:52.799
-death block uh useful to you it is
-
-0:28:51.679,0:28:54.960
-available on melbourne
-
-0:28:52.799,0:28:57.679
-uh in a rush to make it available for
-
-0:28:54.960,0:29:00.159
-EmacsConf 2020 some melba
-
-0:28:57.679,0:29:00.960
-guidelines may not have been in here too
-
-0:29:00.159,0:29:03.200
-please do not
-
-0:29:00.960,0:29:04.720
-hit me um and I hope everyone enjoys the
-
-0:29:03.200,0:29:08.559
-rest of the EmacsConf
-
-0:29:04.720,0:29:08.559
-2020 thank you
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--23-incremental-parsing-with-emacs-tree-sitter--questions--tuan-anh-nguyen-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--23-incremental-parsing-with-emacs-tree-sitter--questions--tuan-anh-nguyen-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 866a383f..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--23-incremental-parsing-with-emacs-tree-sitter--questions--tuan-anh-nguyen-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1086 +0,0 @@
-0:00:00.960,0:00:05.600
-uh okay so the first question is is uh
-
-0:00:03.679,0:00:08.000
-do you think that this package can be
-
-0:00:05.600,0:00:11.760
-included into Emacs or
-
-0:00:08.000,0:00:11.760
-uh empire uh
-
-0:00:12.320,0:00:18.560
-I think uh it most definitely can is
-
-0:00:15.360,0:00:21.760
-just a matter of paperwork but
-
-0:00:18.560,0:00:24.480
-the reason I initially wanted to make it
-
-0:00:21.760,0:00:25.039
-like a central package is that so that I
-
-0:00:24.480,0:00:28.720
-can
-
-0:00:25.039,0:00:31.920
-experiment with it more
-
-0:00:28.720,0:00:34.320
-like have more freedom to experiment but
-
-0:00:31.920,0:00:35.680
-eventually I think is a good candidate
-
-0:00:34.320,0:00:37.920
-for inclusion into
-
-0:00:35.680,0:00:37.920
-core
-
-0:00:38.800,0:00:42.640
-and because because currently not in
-
-0:00:41.200,0:00:44.480
-corey mass there are a couple of
-
-0:00:42.640,0:00:47.840
-problems with it
-
-0:00:44.480,0:00:50.960
-mostly in terms of performance
-
-0:00:47.840,0:00:53.280
-for example like anytime we want to
-
-0:00:50.960,0:00:54.160
-access the text in a buffer we need to
-
-0:00:53.280,0:00:57.360
-make
-
-0:00:54.160,0:01:00.480
-a copy of the text into a string
-
-0:00:57.360,0:01:03.520
-and then right after reading from that
-
-0:01:00.480,0:01:05.280
-text we need to free it right away and
-
-0:01:03.520,0:01:09.040
-that results in a lot of garbage
-
-0:01:05.280,0:01:11.920
-collection so it would be better
-
-0:01:09.040,0:01:12.240
-either the treasure could be included in
-
-0:01:11.920,0:01:15.680
-core
-
-0:01:12.240,0:01:16.799
-imax or dynamic dynamic model support
-
-0:01:15.680,0:01:19.439
-can be
-
-0:01:16.799,0:01:21.920
-augmented with direct text access
-
-0:01:19.439,0:01:21.920
-somehow
-
-0:01:24.080,0:01:27.200
-so the second question is will release
-
-0:01:26.400,0:01:30.320
-performance
-
-0:01:27.200,0:01:33.040
-be more competitive with cce max
-
-0:01:30.320,0:01:35.520
-enough so electricity in english is more
-
-0:01:33.040,0:01:35.520
-attractive
-
-0:01:35.670,0:01:43.439
-[Music]
-
-0:01:38.240,0:01:45.840
-I think it's possible but uh yeah
-
-0:01:43.439,0:01:46.799
-not sure about the amount of effort it
-
-0:01:45.840,0:01:52.000
-can be
-
-0:01:46.799,0:01:52.000
-multi-years effort and one thing that
-
-0:01:52.960,0:02:00.640
-even though gce max can make uh
-
-0:01:56.479,0:02:00.640
-it is fast enough there's
-
-0:02:00.719,0:02:05.280
-there's one thing that it uh cannot have
-
-0:02:03.119,0:02:09.679
-which is that because it's the lisp
-
-0:02:05.280,0:02:12.480
-it needs the garage collector so
-
-0:02:09.679,0:02:14.000
-we may experiment experience some kind
-
-0:02:12.480,0:02:17.360
-of
-
-0:02:14.000,0:02:19.920
-gcc post if we use live whereas the
-
-0:02:17.360,0:02:24.720
-currently transistor is written in c
-
-0:02:19.920,0:02:24.720
-so there's no such latency
-
-0:02:28.400,0:02:32.400
-the next question is do you think three
-
-0:02:31.040,0:02:36.080
-sister would be useful
-
-0:02:32.400,0:02:38.319
-for all buffers I can imagine it being
-
-0:02:36.080,0:02:39.599
-used to keep a post ast about an arc
-
-0:02:38.319,0:02:42.560
-buffer
-
-0:02:39.599,0:02:43.920
-light off element and update it in real
-
-0:02:42.560,0:02:46.239
-time
-
-0:02:43.920,0:02:47.760
-yeah actually this is a very interesting
-
-0:02:46.239,0:02:50.800
-idea
-
-0:02:47.760,0:02:53.760
-I saw someone started
-
-0:02:50.800,0:02:55.120
-resistor grammar for all already I don't
-
-0:02:53.760,0:02:58.159
-have a link right now but
-
-0:02:55.120,0:03:01.040
-I can look for it
-
-0:02:58.159,0:03:01.680
-I'll try looking for it and put the link
-
-0:03:01.040,0:03:05.840
-in
-
-0:03:01.680,0:03:05.840
-here later
-
-0:03:09.599,0:03:15.519
-yeah yes someone has written here the uh
-
-0:03:13.280,0:03:17.040
-and the biggest problem with uh right
-
-0:03:15.519,0:03:20.560
-now is that it doesn't have
-
-0:03:17.040,0:03:20.560
-formal grammar so
-
-0:03:21.360,0:03:24.400
-so the effort
-
-0:03:22.380,0:03:27.120
-[Applause]
-
-0:03:24.400,0:03:28.799
-be quite big I think but but once we
-
-0:03:27.120,0:03:31.519
-have that because the
-
-0:03:28.799,0:03:33.840
-tree sitter can be run on the web as
-
-0:03:31.519,0:03:33.840
-well
-
-0:03:34.239,0:03:38.080
-we can on the web and in many other
-
-0:03:37.440,0:03:40.720
-places
-
-0:03:38.080,0:03:41.840
-if we have a grammar for a traditional
-
-0:03:40.720,0:03:45.680
-grammar for all
-
-0:03:41.840,0:03:49.680
-we can bring off more
-
-0:03:45.680,0:03:52.000
-like everywhere that's a very cool
-
-0:03:49.680,0:03:52.000
-thought
-
-0:03:56.000,0:04:00.480
-next one is could this be used with
-
-0:03:58.080,0:04:03.200
-packages like smart parents that aim to
-
-0:04:00.480,0:04:07.120
-bring structural editing to
-
-0:04:03.200,0:04:11.360
-non-s expression based languages
-
-0:04:07.120,0:04:14.720
-yes that is actually one of the
-
-0:04:11.360,0:04:17.280
-intended use cases initially
-
-0:04:14.720,0:04:18.880
-it's definitely possible but it's just
-
-0:04:17.280,0:04:29.840
-that no one has
-
-0:04:18.880,0:04:29.840
-only started writing the integration yet
-
-0:04:37.199,0:04:41.919
-and next one
-
-0:04:40.639,0:04:45.040
-could you show the source that was
-
-0:04:41.919,0:04:48.479
-matched by the parser in the debug view
-
-0:04:45.040,0:04:53.440
-in addition to the grammar part matched
-
-0:04:48.479,0:04:53.440
-uh yeah that's actually um
-
-0:04:54.960,0:04:59.280
-on my to-do list but I haven't had time
-
-0:04:57.759,0:05:02.560
-for it yet
-
-0:04:59.280,0:05:06.560
-so uh if you go to the treesita
-
-0:05:02.560,0:05:08.800
-website it also has an
-
-0:05:06.560,0:05:11.840
-online playground where you can input
-
-0:05:08.800,0:05:11.840
-the code and see the
-
-0:05:12.000,0:05:16.000
-parse tree in real time and it's
-
-0:05:14.400,0:05:19.360
-actually
-
-0:05:16.000,0:05:22.840
-a lot more fancy than what we have in
-
-0:05:19.360,0:05:25.919
-imax currently so
-
-0:05:22.840,0:05:27.120
-yeah I just don't have time for it yes
-
-0:05:25.919,0:05:30.240
-so
-
-0:05:27.120,0:05:30.240
-some help here would be
-
-0:05:30.320,0:05:41.730
-very appreciated
-
-0:05:38.700,0:05:41.730
-[Music]
-
-0:05:49.919,0:05:54.240
-the next question is will it ever be
-
-0:05:52.000,0:05:55.280
-possible to write resetter grammars in a
-
-0:05:54.240,0:05:59.520
-lisp
-
-0:05:55.280,0:05:59.520
-or will javascript be required
-
-0:06:00.560,0:06:05.280
-yeah that is already answered in the
-
-0:06:02.800,0:06:07.600
-part so the
-
-0:06:05.280,0:06:08.639
-the transcript is actually just used as
-
-0:06:07.600,0:06:12.160
-a sort of
-
-0:06:08.639,0:06:14.639
-preprocessor so the
-
-0:06:12.160,0:06:15.680
-python generator actually works on the
-
-0:06:14.639,0:06:19.280
-on a json
-
-0:06:15.680,0:06:20.240
-structure so uh it's definitely possible
-
-0:06:19.280,0:06:24.240
-to replace
-
-0:06:20.240,0:06:24.240
-javascript with lists for this
-
-0:06:29.039,0:06:32.160
-how extensive will the compatibility
-
-0:06:31.280,0:06:35.360
-between
-
-0:06:32.160,0:06:35.840
-highlighting grammars for e-max and
-
-0:06:35.360,0:06:41.039
-those
-
-0:06:35.840,0:06:41.039
-for veeam nail view
-
-0:06:44.560,0:06:51.680
-so so right now the
-
-0:06:48.720,0:06:52.000
-nail vim and Emacs used a different set
-
-0:06:51.680,0:06:55.440
-of
-
-0:06:52.000,0:06:59.520
-the highlighting queries and
-
-0:06:55.440,0:07:03.039
-item probably uses another set of
-
-0:06:59.520,0:07:04.960
-patterns as well I think it makes sense
-
-0:07:03.039,0:07:07.680
-because
-
-0:07:04.960,0:07:08.479
-each editor has its own like existing
-
-0:07:07.680,0:07:11.919
-conventions
-
-0:07:08.479,0:07:15.599
-for syntax highlighting so
-
-0:07:11.919,0:07:18.560
-at least in the beginning I don't expect
-
-0:07:15.599,0:07:21.520
-there is any compatibility between
-
-0:07:18.560,0:07:21.520
-different editors
-
-0:07:21.599,0:07:26.639
-but I think in the long run it will be
-
-0:07:27.280,0:07:31.360
-would it better if there's some kind of
-
-0:07:29.520,0:07:34.880
-effort to
-
-0:07:31.360,0:07:37.440
-unify the at least provide the
-
-0:07:34.880,0:07:39.759
-most common patterns that should work
-
-0:07:37.440,0:07:39.759
-across
-
-0:07:42.840,0:07:45.840
-editors
-
-0:07:51.759,0:07:55.280
-next one is could there be a
-
-0:07:53.520,0:07:57.919
-standardized approach
-
-0:07:55.280,0:08:00.319
-to coding automatic refactoring in the
-
-0:07:57.919,0:08:00.319
-future
-
-0:08:01.039,0:08:04.160
-so that whichever language mode you're
-
-0:08:02.639,0:08:12.960
-using you could see many
-
-0:08:04.160,0:08:16.400
-available refactoring operations
-
-0:08:12.960,0:08:18.639
-I'm not sure about this because the
-
-0:08:16.400,0:08:18.639
-like
-
-0:08:19.919,0:08:23.840
-most of uh refactoring operations are
-
-0:08:22.240,0:08:26.960
-actually very
-
-0:08:23.840,0:08:28.720
-like highly specific to a language or at
-
-0:08:26.960,0:08:32.800
-least to class of
-
-0:08:28.720,0:08:32.800
-class of languages so
-
-0:08:33.599,0:08:40.719
-so so maybe it's not like uh one single
-
-0:08:37.839,0:08:41.519
-approach for all the languages but maybe
-
-0:08:40.719,0:08:43.760
-uh
-
-0:08:41.519,0:08:44.959
-one for object-oriented oriented
-
-0:08:43.760,0:08:49.920
-languages
-
-0:08:44.959,0:08:49.920
-one for lisp like language for example
-
-0:08:50.160,0:08:55.839
-maybe one for javascript and typestream
-
-0:09:02.959,0:09:07.519
-next question is uh I'm completely new
-
-0:09:05.360,0:09:10.160
-to trisita how do I use it
-
-0:09:07.519,0:09:11.519
-as an end user is there any easy example
-
-0:09:10.160,0:09:14.000
-config out there
-
-0:09:11.519,0:09:15.440
-the organizer otherwise that shows
-
-0:09:14.000,0:09:18.959
-standard usage
-
-0:09:15.440,0:09:18.959
-with whatever programming language
-
-0:09:18.960,0:09:23.920
-[Music]
-
-0:09:20.480,0:09:23.920
-yeah there's no um
-
-0:09:27.600,0:09:32.000
-uh actually that uh so the project has
-
-0:09:30.880,0:09:36.399
-the documentation
-
-0:09:32.000,0:09:40.720
-site but it's not very expensive yet
-
-0:09:36.399,0:09:44.000
-I think we need to add more examples
-
-0:09:40.720,0:09:44.000
-to the documentation
-
-0:09:48.720,0:09:53.519
-can language major mode authors start
-
-0:09:51.200,0:09:56.240
-taking advantage of this now
-
-0:09:53.519,0:09:57.279
-or is it intended to be used as a minor
-
-0:09:56.240,0:10:00.399
-mode
-
-0:09:57.279,0:10:01.600
-uh actually it's both so it's intended
-
-0:10:00.399,0:10:04.480
-to be used
-
-0:10:01.600,0:10:05.920
-as a minor mode but it's also intended
-
-0:10:04.480,0:10:09.839
-to
-
-0:10:05.920,0:10:13.519
-be depended on by the major mode
-
-0:10:09.839,0:10:13.920
-so basically it it wants to be a minor
-
-0:10:13.519,0:10:17.200
-mode
-
-0:10:13.920,0:10:19.839
-that is dependent on by the other
-
-0:10:17.200,0:10:19.839
-major modes
-
-0:10:21.839,0:10:29.279
-and by it here I mean the the base
-
-0:10:25.680,0:10:29.279
-minor mode tree system mode
-
-0:10:30.839,0:10:37.120
-so uh question
-
-0:10:34.079,0:10:40.160
-11 is it possible to use this
-
-0:10:37.120,0:10:43.360
-for refactoring tool
-
-0:10:40.160,0:10:46.720
-uh yeah but
-
-0:10:43.360,0:10:47.680
-um like for the kind of refactoring
-
-0:10:46.720,0:10:52.079
-inside uh
-
-0:10:47.680,0:10:52.079
-buffer it is uh
-
-0:10:52.640,0:10:57.040
-it's very doable right now but you need
-
-0:10:55.040,0:11:01.120
-to write some glue code
-
-0:10:57.040,0:11:04.000
-but for for the kind of more
-
-0:11:01.120,0:11:04.399
-extensive refactoring where you want to
-
-0:11:04.000,0:11:09.120
-touch
-
-0:11:04.399,0:11:09.120
-uh like all files in a project
-
-0:11:09.279,0:11:12.839
-there needs there needs to be some kind
-
-0:11:11.440,0:11:15.920
-of the project
-
-0:11:12.839,0:11:18.399
-and another project and uh
-
-0:11:15.920,0:11:19.200
-understanding of the language uh model
-
-0:11:18.399,0:11:21.120
-system
-
-0:11:19.200,0:11:22.560
-like how they are laid out in the file
-
-0:11:21.120,0:11:24.480
-system as well
-
-0:11:22.560,0:11:26.240
-and with that understanding that there
-
-0:11:24.480,0:11:29.920
-should be passing of
-
-0:11:26.240,0:11:30.480
-the files even files on the file system
-
-0:11:29.920,0:11:34.000
-that
-
-0:11:30.480,0:11:37.760
-are not yet loaded into Emacs
-
-0:11:34.000,0:11:40.320
-so that sounds like something more
-
-0:11:37.760,0:11:40.320
-a lot more
-
-0:11:41.040,0:11:44.560
-a lot more extensive
-
-0:11:46.320,0:11:50.000
-and it probably probably sounds like
-
-0:11:49.519,0:11:52.160
-something
-
-0:11:50.000,0:11:54.560
-something like an id in uh inside your
-
-0:11:52.160,0:11:57.839
-max already like a replacement for
-
-0:11:54.560,0:11:57.839
-for lsp
-
-0:12:07.360,0:12:11.440
-so next question is the that pop-up mx
-
-0:12:10.480,0:12:14.480
-window
-
-0:12:11.440,0:12:14.480
-how do you get that
-
-0:12:15.200,0:12:20.320
-is the custom hem code I wrote a long
-
-0:12:18.720,0:12:24.800
-time ago
-
-0:12:20.320,0:12:26.480
-but but right now the best way to
-
-0:12:24.800,0:12:29.440
-to have something like that is probably
-
-0:12:26.480,0:12:33.200
-the what is written here like uh
-
-0:12:29.440,0:12:39.839
-ham boss frame or iv spring
-
-0:12:33.200,0:12:43.680
-is a lot easier now
-
-0:12:39.839,0:12:46.320
-is there a folding mode for tree sitter
-
-0:12:43.680,0:12:48.079
-nowadays there's no folding mode for
-
-0:12:46.320,0:12:52.000
-three sitters yet
-
-0:12:48.079,0:12:54.880
-but uh
-
-0:12:52.000,0:12:58.720
-uh but I think it would better be better
-
-0:12:54.880,0:12:58.720
-if it's integrated with the
-
-0:12:59.440,0:13:03.120
-like current currently there are
-
-0:13:02.079,0:13:04.880
-multiple
-
-0:13:03.120,0:13:07.200
-I'm not sure they're moving forward
-
-0:13:04.880,0:13:10.240
-there are like code folding frameworks
-
-0:13:07.200,0:13:12.800
-inside imax already or some the
-
-0:13:10.240,0:13:13.920
-code showing packages like third party
-
-0:13:12.800,0:13:15.680
-packaging
-
-0:13:13.920,0:13:17.680
-and I think it's better to integrate
-
-0:13:15.680,0:13:20.000
-with these mods
-
-0:13:17.680,0:13:22.560
-rather than writing something new
-
-0:13:20.000,0:13:22.560
-entirely
-
-0:13:32.399,0:13:36.639
-are there any language major modes that
-
-0:13:34.800,0:13:40.079
-have integrated already
-
-0:13:36.639,0:13:42.800
-uh not yet
-
-0:13:40.079,0:13:43.440
-so the there was a proposed web assembly
-
-0:13:42.800,0:13:46.839
-mode
-
-0:13:43.440,0:13:50.000
-but it's a new major mode in terms of
-
-0:13:46.839,0:13:52.880
-existing major mode there is the
-
-0:13:50.000,0:13:52.880
-typescript mode
-
-0:13:53.279,0:13:57.519
-but they're only discussing about
-
-0:13:55.600,0:14:02.079
-integration
-
-0:13:57.519,0:14:04.639
-they're not integrated yet
-
-0:14:02.079,0:14:05.360
-I think I can try writing the
-
-0:14:04.639,0:14:09.199
-integration
-
-0:14:05.360,0:14:11.839
-sometimes next month
-
-0:14:09.199,0:14:12.720
-uh basically what they want right now is
-
-0:14:11.839,0:14:16.160
-the
-
-0:14:12.720,0:14:19.199
-syntax highlighting and handling
-
-0:14:16.160,0:14:22.959
-synthetic highlighting and
-
-0:14:19.199,0:14:27.760
-code indentation for tsx
-
-0:14:22.959,0:14:31.839
-which is the embedded react
-
-0:14:27.760,0:14:31.839
-syntax inside typescript
-
-0:14:32.160,0:14:40.000
-so it turns out passing these tests
-
-0:14:36.399,0:14:40.000
-is very troublesome so
-
-0:14:40.639,0:14:47.040
-so trees that would be a crystal would
-
-0:14:43.920,0:14:47.040
-be a lot of help there
-
-0:14:49.920,0:14:59.839
-is there any link to the slides yes
-
-0:14:53.279,0:14:59.839
-I'll post it in irc later
-
-0:14:59.920,0:15:04.240
-regarding imax integration we will
-
-0:15:01.920,0:15:05.440
-always need to be a foreign library or
-
-0:15:04.240,0:15:09.920
-can it be included
-
-0:15:05.440,0:15:09.920
-linked directly in compilation
-
-0:15:10.839,0:15:17.600
-uh if if this is about the
-
-0:15:14.480,0:15:21.839
-core library itself
-
-0:15:17.600,0:15:23.440
-then I think it's uh answered it in the
-
-0:15:21.839,0:15:27.440
-first question
-
-0:15:23.440,0:15:29.920
-right now is a right now it's a
-
-0:15:27.440,0:15:30.959
-dynamic model but in the long run it
-
-0:15:29.920,0:15:34.000
-will better if
-
-0:15:30.959,0:15:39.839
-it's included in core Emacs
-
-0:15:34.000,0:15:41.360
-for the language definitions themselves
-
-0:15:39.839,0:15:43.279
-it should be better if they are
-
-0:15:41.360,0:15:46.639
-distributed uh
-
-0:15:43.279,0:15:49.199
-separately like that right now so each
-
-0:15:46.639,0:15:49.680
-uh for each language there will be a
-
-0:15:49.199,0:15:52.639
-shared
-
-0:15:49.680,0:15:55.839
-library that will be loaded by the core
-
-0:15:52.639,0:15:55.839
-library at runtime
-
-0:16:00.480,0:16:04.240
-so the last question is the python mode
-
-0:16:02.480,0:16:06.160
-example is pretty good
-
-0:16:04.240,0:16:07.600
-is that something that one can use
-
-0:16:06.160,0:16:11.759
-already
-
-0:16:07.600,0:16:11.759
-yes I'm using it at work right now
-
-0:16:12.320,0:16:17.360
-I think that's all for that's all the
-
-0:16:14.639,0:16:17.360
-questions right
-
-0:16:19.199,0:16:27.839
-you are now unmuted yeah I think that's
-
-0:16:23.440,0:16:30.399
-all the questions on the pads so far um
-
-0:16:27.839,0:16:32.399
-so thank you but um there may be more
-
-0:16:30.399,0:16:36.639
-questions coming on irc
-
-0:16:32.399,0:16:39.680
-um I'll try to have a look
-
-0:16:36.639,0:16:40.560
-and we still have about 10 or 15 more
-
-0:16:39.680,0:16:43.600
-minutes so
-
-0:16:40.560,0:16:46.880
-um there's no rush to wrap up in case um
-
-0:16:43.600,0:16:46.880
-anyone has any more questions
-
-0:16:48.160,0:16:51.360
-uh yeah I just realized that uh I mixed
-
-0:16:50.880,0:16:54.959
-up the
-
-0:16:51.360,0:16:56.000
-video editing and I uh lost an entire
-
-0:16:54.959,0:17:00.880
-session on the
-
-0:16:56.000,0:17:00.880
-introduction to treesita oh
-
-0:17:01.120,0:17:05.839
-no worries
-
-0:17:06.640,0:17:20.079
-you are now muted
-
-0:17:18.079,0:17:21.679
-sounds like a perfect opportunity for
-
-0:17:20.079,0:17:24.000
-you to redo the introduction if you'd
-
-0:17:21.679,0:17:24.000
-like to
-
-0:17:24.640,0:17:30.000
-uh actually uh forgot a lot of that
-
-0:17:30.799,0:17:35.760
-and I'm with uh tired now so no I don't
-
-0:17:33.760,0:17:39.200
-think I can do it
-
-0:17:35.760,0:17:43.520
-it's uh 30 minutes until my bedtime
-
-0:17:39.200,0:17:46.640
-oh yeah yeah okay you are now unmuted
-
-0:17:43.520,0:17:50.480
-so in that case maybe we should
-
-0:17:46.640,0:17:54.240
-um we should let tona
-
-0:17:50.480,0:17:56.960
-get started going to bed and um and
-
-0:17:54.240,0:17:57.840
-I mean then I will figure out what to do
-
-0:17:56.960,0:17:59.360
-with the time
-
-0:17:57.840,0:18:02.160
-should we start the next talk early
-
-0:17:59.360,0:18:05.360
-since it's pre-recorded
-
-0:18:02.160,0:18:07.919
-um yeah we can do we can do that um
-
-0:18:05.360,0:18:09.919
-but um yeah tonight it you know right
-
-0:18:07.919,0:18:10.480
-now it's pretty late there um no worries
-
-0:18:09.919,0:18:12.720
-but
-
-0:18:10.480,0:18:13.520
-yeah if you know over the next few days
-
-0:18:12.720,0:18:16.559
-or weeks
-
-0:18:13.520,0:18:20.240
-if you would like to um you know
-
-0:18:16.559,0:18:22.080
-do a quick pre-recording or recording
-
-0:18:20.240,0:18:24.320
-to add the introduction and then stitch
-
-0:18:22.080,0:18:26.559
-it in with what you had already sent me
-
-0:18:24.320,0:18:30.160
-um by all means please do that and I
-
-0:18:26.559,0:18:33.760
-will upload the edited version
-
-0:18:30.160,0:18:33.760
-uh yeah yeah I'll try to do that
-
-0:18:34.880,0:18:39.760
-thank you yep thank you so much bye
-
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-hello everyone my name is toniang
-
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-I've been using amax for about 10 years
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-today I'm going to talk about 360
-
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-a new imax package that allows ems to
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-pass multiple programming languages
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-in real time
-
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-so what is the problem statement
-
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-in order to support programming
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-functionalities for a particular
-
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-language
-
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-a text editor needs to have some degree
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-of language understanding
-
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-traditionally text editors have relied
-
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-very heavily on regular expressions for
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-this
-
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-e-max is no different most language
-
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-major modes use
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-regular expressions for syntax
-
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-highlighting code navigation
-
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-folding indexing and so on regular
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-expressions are
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-problematic for a couple of reasons
-
-0:00:50.559,0:00:54.000
-they're slow and inaccurate they also
-
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-make
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-the code hard to read and write
-
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-sometimes
-
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-it's because the regular expressions
-
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-themselves are very hairy
-
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-and sometimes because they are just not
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-powerful enough
-
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-some helper code is usually needed to
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-pass more intricate language features
-
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-that also illustrates the core problem
-
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-with regular expressions
-
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-in that they are not powerful enough to
-
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-pass programming languages
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-an example feature that regular
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-expressions cannot handle very well
-
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-is string interpolation which is a very
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-common feature
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-in many modern programming languages
-
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-it would be much nicer if image somehow
-
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-had structural understanding of source
-
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-code
-
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-like ides do
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-there have been multiple efforts to
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-bring this kind of programming language
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-understanding into Emacs
-
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-there are language specific persons
-
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-written in elise
-
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-they can be thought of as the next
-
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-logical step of the glue code on top
-
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-of tribal expressions moving from
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-partial local
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-pattern recognition into a full-fledged
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-parser
-
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-the most prominent example of this
-
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-approach is probably the famous
-
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-js2 mode
-
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-however this approach has several issues
-
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-parsing is computationally expensive and
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-imagine
-
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-is not good at that kind of stuff
-
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-furthermore maintenance is very
-
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-troublesome in order to work on these
-
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-process
-
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-first you have to know at least well
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-enough and then you have to be
-
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-comfortable with writing a
-
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-recursive ascendant parser while
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-constantly keeping up with changes to
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-the language itself
-
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-which can be evolving very quickly like
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-javascript for example
-
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-together these constraints significantly
-
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-reduce the pull of potential maintenance
-
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-the biggest issue though in my opinion
-
-0:02:47.760,0:02:52.879
-is lack of the set of generic
-
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-and reusable apis this makes them very
-
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-hard to use
-
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-for minor modes that want to deal with
-
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-cross-cutting concerns across multiple
-
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-languages
-
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-the other approach which has been
-
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-gaining a lot of momentum in recent
-
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-years
-
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-is externalizing language understanding
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-to another process
-
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-also known as language server protocol
-
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-this second approach is actually a very
-
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-interesting one
-
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-my decoupling language understanding
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-from the editing facility itself
-
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-the usb servers can attract a lot more
-
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-contributors
-
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-which makes maintenance easier however
-
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-they also have several issues available
-
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-being a separate process they are
-
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-usually more resource
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-intensive and depending on the language
-
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-the usb server itself can bring with it
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-a host of additional dependencies
-
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-external to Emacs which may message to
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-install and manage
-
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-furthermore json over rpc has pretty
-
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-high latency
-
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-for one-off tasks like jumping to source
-
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-or on-demand completion is great
-
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-but for things like code highlighting
-
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-the latency is just too much
-
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-I was using rust and I was following the
-
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-community effort to improve its id
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-support
-
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-hoping to integrate some of that into
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-Emacs itself
-
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-then I heard someone from community
-
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-mention tree sitter
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-and I decided to check it out
-
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-basically trisita is an incremental
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-parsing library and a parser generator
-
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-it was introduced by the item editor in
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-2018
-
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-besides item is also being integrated
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-into the neo-vim
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-editor and github is using it to power
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-their source code analysis and
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-navigation features
-
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-it is written in c and can be compiled
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-for all
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-major platforms it can even be compiled
-
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-to web assembly to run on the web that's
-
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-how github is using it
-
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-on their website
-
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-so why is trisita an interesting
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-solution to this problem
-
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-there are multiple features that make it
-
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-an attractive option
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-it is designed to be fast by being
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-incremental
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-the initial parts of a typical big fight
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-can take tens of milliseconds
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-while subsequent incremental processes
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-are sub milliseconds
-
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-it achieves this by using structural
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-sharing
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-meaning replacing only affected nodes
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-in the old tree when it needs to
-
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-also unlike lsp being in the same
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-process
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-it has much lower latency
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-secondly it provides a uniform
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-programming interface
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-the same data structures and functions
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-work on parse trees of different
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-languages
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-syntax knows of different languages
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-differ only by their types
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-and their possible child nodes this
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-is a big advantage over language
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-specific parcels
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-thirdly it's written in self-contained
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-embeddable c
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-as I mentioned previously it can even be
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-compiled
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-to webassembly this makes integrating it
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-into various editors
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-quite easy without having to install
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-any external dependencies
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-one thing that is not mentioned here is
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-that being a parcel generator
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-scrummers are declarative
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-together with being editor independent
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-this makes the pool of potential
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-contributors
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-much larger so I was convinced
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-that trisito is a good fit for Emacs
-
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-last year I started writing the bindings
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-using
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-dynamic model support introduced in imax
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-25.
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-dynamic module means there is platform
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-specific native code involved
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-but since they are pre-compiled binaries
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-for the three major platforms
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-it should work in most places currently
-
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-the core functionalities are in a pretty
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-good shape
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-syntax highlighting is working nicely
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-the whole thing is split into three
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-packages
-
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-tree sitter is the main package that
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-other packages should depend on
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-tree system lens is the language bundle
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-that includes support
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-for most common languages
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-and finally the core apis are in the
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-package tsc
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-which stands for trees the core
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-it is the implicit dependency of the
-
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-three-seater package
-
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-the main package includes the miner mode
-
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-3-seater mode
-
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-this provides the base for other major
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-or minor modes to build on
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-using image change tracking hooks it
-
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-enables
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-incremental parsing and provides a
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-syntax tree that is always up to date
-
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-after any edits in a buffer
-
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-there is also a basic debug mode that
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-shows the parse tree in another buffer
-
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-here is a quick demo
-
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-here I mean an empty python buffer with
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-three seater enabled
-
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-I'm going to turn on the debug mode to
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-see the parse tree
-
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-since the buffer is empty there is only
-
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-one node in the syntax tree the top
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-level module node
-
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-let's try typing some code
-
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-as you can see as I type into the python
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-buffer
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-the syntax tree updates in real time
-
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-the other minor mode included in the
-
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-main package is 3-seater
-
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-hl mode it overrides font-lock mode and
-
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-provides its own set of phases
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-and customization options it is query
-
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-driven
-
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-that means instead of regular
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-expressions
-
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-it uses a list like query language to
-
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-map syntax notes
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-to highlighting phrases I'm going to
-
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-open a python file with small snippets
-
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-that showcase syntax highlighting
-
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-so this is the default highlighting
-
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-provided by python mode
-
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-this is the highlighting enabled by tree
-
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-sitter
-
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-as you can see string interpolation
-
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-and decorators are highlighted correctly
-
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-function calls are also highlighted
-
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-you can also note that property
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-assessors
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-and property assignments are highlighted
-
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-differently
-
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-what I like the most about this is that
-
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-new bindings are consistently
-
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-highlighted
-
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-this included local variable
-
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-function parameters and property
-
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-mutations
-
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-before going through the three queries
-
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-and the syntax highlighting
-
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-customization options
-
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-let's take a brief look at the core data
-
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-structures and functions
-
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-that tree sitter provides
-
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-so parsing is done with the help of a
-
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-generic parser object
-
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-a single parser object can be used to
-
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-pass different languages
-
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-by sending different language objects to
-
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-it
-
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-the language objects themselves are
-
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-loaded from shared libraries
-
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-since three seater mode already handles
-
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-the parsing part
-
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-we will instead focus on the functions
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-that inspect nodes
-
-0:11:20.800,0:11:24.720
-and in the resulting path tree
-
-0:11:25.279,0:11:43.839
-we can ask tree sitter what is the
-
-0:11:27.200,0:11:43.839
-syntax node at point
-
-0:11:44.240,0:11:48.480
-uh is it an opaque object so this is not
-
-0:11:47.200,0:11:57.839
-very useful
-
-0:11:48.480,0:11:57.839
-we can instead ask what is its type
-
-0:12:03.760,0:12:08.959
-so his type is the symbol comparison
-
-0:12:06.560,0:12:11.600
-operator
-
-0:12:08.959,0:12:13.680
-trees there are two kinds of nodes
-
-0:12:11.600,0:12:15.519
-anonymous nodes and named nodes
-
-0:12:13.680,0:12:17.040
-anonymous nodes correspond to simple
-
-0:12:15.519,0:12:19.839
-grammar elements
-
-0:12:17.040,0:12:21.279
-like keywords operators punctuations and
-
-0:12:19.839,0:12:24.160
-so on
-
-0:12:21.279,0:12:25.920
-name nodes on the other hand grammar
-
-0:12:24.160,0:12:26.639
-elements that are interesting enough for
-
-0:12:25.920,0:12:30.320
-their own
-
-0:12:26.639,0:12:31.839
-to have a name like an identifier an
-
-0:12:30.320,0:12:35.200
-expression
-
-0:12:31.839,0:12:35.200
-or a function definition
-
-0:12:35.440,0:12:41.519
-name node types are symbols while
-
-0:12:37.760,0:12:41.519
-anonymous node types are strings
-
-0:12:42.639,0:12:49.519
-for example if we are on this
-
-0:12:46.320,0:12:49.519
-comparison operator
-
-0:12:49.760,0:12:53.839
-the node type should be a string
-
-0:12:55.920,0:12:58.959
-we can also get other information about
-
-0:12:57.920,0:13:07.839
-the node
-
-0:12:58.959,0:13:07.839
-for example what is this text
-
-0:13:09.680,0:13:35.839
-or where it is in the buffer
-
-0:13:20.800,0:13:35.839
-or what is its parent
-
-0:13:43.199,0:13:46.839
-there are many other apis to query or
-
-0:13:46.160,0:13:49.839
-not
-
-0:13:46.839,0:13:49.839
-properties
-
-0:13:52.639,0:13:58.240
-tree sitter allows searching for
-
-0:13:54.399,0:14:01.440
-structural patterns within a parse tree
-
-0:13:58.240,0:14:03.519
-it does so through a list like language
-
-0:14:01.440,0:14:04.639
-this language supports by the matching
-
-0:14:03.519,0:14:07.760
-by node types
-
-0:14:04.639,0:14:10.079
-field names and predicates
-
-0:14:07.760,0:14:12.639
-it also allows capturing nodes for
-
-0:14:10.079,0:14:17.839
-further processing
-
-0:14:12.639,0:14:17.839
-let's try to see some examples
-
-0:14:37.680,0:14:43.839
-so in this very simple query we just
-
-0:14:41.040,0:14:46.399
-try to highlight all the identifiers in
-
-0:14:43.839,0:14:46.399
-the buffer
-
-0:14:49.040,0:14:53.120
-this s side tells trisito to capture a
-
-0:14:51.920,0:14:55.839
-node
-
-0:14:53.120,0:14:57.360
-in the context of the query builder it's
-
-0:14:55.839,0:15:00.320
-not very important
-
-0:14:57.360,0:15:01.760
-but in normal highlighting query this
-
-0:15:00.320,0:15:05.920
-will determine
-
-0:15:01.760,0:15:05.920
-the face used to highlight the note
-
-0:15:06.639,0:15:10.320
-suppose we want to capture all the
-
-0:15:08.800,0:15:13.519
-function names
-
-0:15:10.320,0:15:27.839
-instead of just any identifier
-
-0:15:13.519,0:15:27.839
-you can improve the query like this
-
-0:15:29.440,0:15:32.639
-uh this will highlight the whole
-
-0:15:31.600,0:15:35.519
-definition
-
-0:15:32.639,0:15:36.399
-but we only want to capture the function
-
-0:15:35.519,0:15:39.600
-name
-
-0:15:36.399,0:15:42.800
-which means the identifier
-
-0:15:39.600,0:15:46.320
-here so we
-
-0:15:42.800,0:15:48.639
-move the capture to after the identifier
-
-0:15:46.320,0:15:48.639
-node
-
-0:15:49.600,0:15:52.959
-if we want to capture the class names as
-
-0:15:51.759,0:16:09.839
-well
-
-0:15:52.959,0:16:09.839
-we just add another pattern
-
-0:16:10.079,0:16:14.399
-let's look at a more practical example
-
-0:16:20.320,0:16:23.759
-here we can see that single quotes
-
-0:16:22.959,0:16:25.600
-strings and
-
-0:16:23.759,0:16:27.279
-double quotes screens are highlighted
-
-0:16:25.600,0:16:30.399
-the same
-
-0:16:27.279,0:16:33.440
-but in some places
-
-0:16:30.399,0:16:35.440
-because of some coding conventions
-
-0:16:33.440,0:16:37.279
-it may be desirable to highlight them
-
-0:16:35.440,0:16:39.680
-differently for example if
-
-0:16:37.279,0:16:40.880
-the string is single quoted we may want
-
-0:16:39.680,0:16:43.759
-to highlight it
-
-0:16:40.880,0:16:43.759
-as a constant
-
-0:16:44.399,0:16:47.600
-let's try to see whether we can
-
-0:16:46.160,0:16:51.839
-distinguish these
-
-0:16:47.600,0:16:51.839
-two cases
-
-0:16:56.240,0:17:00.160
-so here we get all the strings
-
-0:17:00.639,0:17:04.559
-if we want to see if it's single quotes
-
-0:17:04.079,0:17:07.520
-or
-
-0:17:04.559,0:17:07.520
-double quote strings
-
-0:17:08.799,0:17:12.480
-we can try looking at the first
-
-0:17:11.039,0:17:15.280
-character
-
-0:17:12.480,0:17:16.720
-of the string I mean the first character
-
-0:17:15.280,0:17:19.360
-of the note
-
-0:17:16.720,0:17:33.600
-to check whether it's a single quote or
-
-0:17:19.360,0:17:36.080
-a double quote
-
-0:17:33.600,0:17:36.799
-yeah so for that we use the three
-
-0:17:36.080,0:17:40.160
-setters
-
-0:17:36.799,0:17:43.360
-support for predicate in this case
-
-0:17:40.160,0:17:46.080
-we use a match predicate
-
-0:17:43.360,0:17:46.799
-to check whether the string where the
-
-0:17:46.080,0:17:50.320
-note
-
-0:17:46.799,0:17:51.280
-starts with a single quote and with this
-
-0:17:50.320,0:17:55.520
-pattern
-
-0:17:51.280,0:17:55.520
-we only capture the single quotes
-
-0:17:58.840,0:18:03.760
-strings
-
-0:18:00.400,0:18:07.760
-let's try to give it a different face
-
-0:18:03.760,0:18:07.760
-so we copy the pattern
-
-0:18:13.039,0:18:16.640
-and we add this pattern
-
-0:18:18.640,0:18:21.760
-pop item only
-
-0:18:25.120,0:18:31.440
-but we also want to give the
-
-0:18:28.400,0:18:36.320
-capture a different name
-
-0:18:31.440,0:18:36.320
-let's say we want to highlight it as a
-
-0:18:40.840,0:18:43.840
-keyword
-
-0:18:46.559,0:18:57.840
-and now if we refresh the buffer
-
-0:19:06.320,0:19:10.320
-we see that single quote strings are
-
-0:19:08.799,0:19:12.880
-highlighted as
-
-0:19:10.320,0:19:12.880
-keywords
-
-0:19:14.400,0:19:19.200
-the highlighting patterns can also be
-
-0:19:16.400,0:19:23.280
-set for a single project
-
-0:19:19.200,0:19:23.280
-using directory local variable
-
-0:19:23.440,0:19:30.000
-for example let's take a look at
-
-0:19:26.880,0:19:30.000
-ems source code
-
-0:19:35.760,0:19:43.760
-so in image c source there are a lot of
-
-0:19:40.400,0:19:47.679
-uses of these different macros
-
-0:19:43.760,0:19:50.400
-to define functions
-
-0:19:47.679,0:19:50.400
-and you can see
-
-0:19:51.200,0:19:55.760
-this is actually the function name but
-
-0:19:53.520,0:19:59.120
-it's highlighted as the
-
-0:19:55.760,0:20:03.679
-string so what we want
-
-0:19:59.120,0:20:07.600
-is to somehow recognize this pattern
-
-0:20:03.679,0:20:11.280
-and highlight it
-
-0:20:07.600,0:20:14.559
-as highlight this part
-
-0:20:11.280,0:20:17.679
-with the function phase instead
-
-0:20:14.559,0:20:20.240
-in order to do that
-
-0:20:17.679,0:20:21.760
-we put a pattern in this project
-
-0:20:20.240,0:20:24.880
-directory local
-
-0:20:21.760,0:20:24.880
-settings file
-
-0:20:31.760,0:20:37.760
-so we can put this button in the c
-
-0:20:34.799,0:20:37.760
-mode section
-
-0:20:40.159,0:20:50.480
-and now if we enable tree sitter
-
-0:20:48.000,0:20:52.720
-you can see that this is the highlighted
-
-0:20:50.480,0:20:52.720
-uh
-
-0:20:53.200,0:20:56.559
-as a normal function definition so this
-
-0:20:55.520,0:21:00.400
-is the function
-
-0:20:56.559,0:21:00.400
-face like we wanted
-
-0:21:01.200,0:21:06.080
-the pattern for this is actually pretty
-
-0:21:03.760,0:21:06.080
-simple
-
-0:21:07.200,0:21:09.919
-it's only
-
-0:21:10.720,0:21:17.440
-only this part so
-
-0:21:14.720,0:21:19.679
-if it's a function call where the name
-
-0:21:17.440,0:21:21.600
-of the function is different
-
-0:21:19.679,0:21:24.159
-then we highlight the different as a
-
-0:21:21.600,0:21:24.159
-keyword
-
-0:21:24.240,0:21:28.159
-and then the first string element we
-
-0:21:27.360,0:21:31.840
-highlighted
-
-0:21:28.159,0:21:31.840
-as a function name
-
-0:21:35.360,0:21:39.280
-since the language objects are actually
-
-0:21:37.679,0:21:40.799
-native code
-
-0:21:39.280,0:21:43.440
-they have to be compiled for each
-
-0:21:40.799,0:21:45.600
-platform that we want to support
-
-0:21:43.440,0:21:48.159
-this will become a big obstacle for
-
-0:21:45.600,0:21:50.240
-3-seater adoption
-
-0:21:48.159,0:21:52.960
-therefore I've created a language window
-
-0:21:50.240,0:21:54.960
-package 3-seater length
-
-0:21:52.960,0:21:56.320
-that takes care of pre-compiling the
-
-0:21:54.960,0:21:59.679
-grammars the
-
-0:21:56.320,0:22:01.600
-most common grammars for all three major
-
-0:21:59.679,0:22:04.080
-platforms
-
-0:22:01.600,0:22:05.360
-it also takes care of distributing these
-
-0:22:04.080,0:22:08.080
-binaries
-
-0:22:05.360,0:22:11.280
-and provides some highlighting queries
-
-0:22:08.080,0:22:11.280
-for some of the languages
-
-0:22:11.440,0:22:15.919
-it should be noted that this package
-
-0:22:13.760,0:22:19.520
-should be treated as a temporary
-
-0:22:15.919,0:22:19.520
-distribution mechanism only
-
-0:22:19.919,0:22:24.720
-to help with bootstrapping three-seaters
-
-0:22:22.240,0:22:27.760
-adoption
-
-0:22:24.720,0:22:29.760
-the plan is that eventually these files
-
-0:22:27.760,0:22:32.480
-should be provided by the language major
-
-0:22:29.760,0:22:35.120
-modes themselves
-
-0:22:32.480,0:22:36.320
-but in order to do that we need better
-
-0:22:35.120,0:22:40.240
-tooling
-
-0:22:36.320,0:22:42.559
-so we're not there yet
-
-0:22:40.240,0:22:43.280
-since the call already works reasonably
-
-0:22:42.559,0:22:44.640
-well
-
-0:22:43.280,0:22:46.320
-there are several areas that would
-
-0:22:44.640,0:22:48.960
-benefit from the community's
-
-0:22:46.320,0:22:48.960
-contribution
-
-0:22:49.120,0:22:52.640
-so three seaters upstream language
-
-0:22:51.520,0:22:54.400
-prepositories
-
-0:22:52.640,0:22:55.679
-already contain highlighting queries on
-
-0:22:54.400,0:22:58.480
-their own
-
-0:22:55.679,0:23:00.480
-however they are pretty basic and they
-
-0:22:58.480,0:23:02.559
-may not fit well with existing emax
-
-0:23:00.480,0:23:04.320
-conventions
-
-0:23:02.559,0:23:07.120
-therefore the language bundle has its
-
-0:23:04.320,0:23:10.559
-own set of highlighting queries
-
-0:23:07.120,0:23:11.600
-this requires maintenance until language
-
-0:23:10.559,0:23:13.760
-measurements adopt
-
-0:23:11.600,0:23:16.240
-three sitter and maintain the queries on
-
-0:23:13.760,0:23:16.240
-their own
-
-0:23:16.640,0:23:22.000
-the queries are actually quite easy to
-
-0:23:18.480,0:23:24.240
-write as you've already seen
-
-0:23:22.000,0:23:25.360
-you just need to be familiar with the
-
-0:23:24.240,0:23:30.000
-language
-
-0:23:25.360,0:23:32.880
-familiar enough to come up with sensible
-
-0:23:30.000,0:23:32.880
-highlighting patterns
-
-0:23:35.200,0:23:39.679
-and if you are a maintainer of a
-
-0:23:37.600,0:23:42.320
-language major mode
-
-0:23:39.679,0:23:43.360
-you may want to consider integrating
-
-0:23:42.320,0:23:46.960
-tree sitter into
-
-0:23:43.360,0:23:50.080
-your mode initially maybe as an
-
-0:23:46.960,0:23:53.279
-optional feature the integration is
-
-0:23:50.080,0:23:56.640
-actually pretty straightforward
-
-0:23:53.279,0:24:00.880
-especially for syntax highlighting
-
-0:23:56.640,0:24:00.880
-or alternatively
-
-0:24:01.520,0:24:04.640
-you can also try writing a new major
-
-0:24:03.760,0:24:08.000
-mode
-
-0:24:04.640,0:24:11.360
-from scratch that relies on tree sitter
-
-0:24:08.000,0:24:11.360
-from the very beginning
-
-0:24:12.559,0:24:19.679
-the code for such a major mode is
-
-0:24:16.320,0:24:23.200
-quite simple for example
-
-0:24:19.679,0:24:26.240
-this is the proposed
-
-0:24:23.200,0:24:30.720
-what mode for web assembly
-
-0:24:26.240,0:24:30.720
-the code is just
-
-0:24:31.039,0:24:37.120
-like one page of code not
-
-0:24:34.559,0:24:37.120
-not a lot
-
-0:24:39.520,0:24:46.559
-you can also try writing new minor modes
-
-0:24:42.720,0:24:50.080
-or writing integration packages
-
-0:24:46.559,0:24:50.880
-for example a lot of package a lot of
-
-0:24:50.080,0:24:54.559
-packages
-
-0:24:50.880,0:24:58.840
-may benefit from tree sitter integration
-
-0:24:54.559,0:25:01.840
-but no one has written the integration
-
-0:24:58.840,0:25:01.840
-yet
-
-0:25:02.960,0:25:06.720
-if you are interested in 3-seater you
-
-0:25:05.039,0:25:10.320
-can use these links to
-
-0:25:06.720,0:25:11.440
-learn more about it I think that's it
-
-0:25:10.320,0:25:18.159
-for me today
-
-0:25:11.440,0:25:18.159
-I'm happy to answer any questions
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--25-traverse-complex-json-structures-with-live-feedback-counsel-jq--zen-monk-alain-m-lafon-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--25-traverse-complex-json-structures-with-live-feedback-counsel-jq--zen-monk-alain-m-lafon-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 1c88545f..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--25-traverse-complex-json-structures-with-live-feedback-counsel-jq--zen-monk-alain-m-lafon-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,756 +0,0 @@
-0:00:00.799,0:00:05.520
-hello everyone and welcome to this short
-
-0:00:04.000,0:00:08.160
-lightning talk
-
-0:00:05.520,0:00:09.519
-traverse complex json structures with
-
-0:00:08.160,0:00:13.040
-live feedback
-
-0:00:09.519,0:00:18.000
-this is a pre-recorded talk and part of
-
-0:00:13.040,0:00:19.920
-the e-max conf 2020 schedule
-
-0:00:18.000,0:00:21.840
-this is what we're going to do I'll make
-
-0:00:19.920,0:00:22.320
-a quick introduction to the topic at
-
-0:00:21.840,0:00:23.920
-hand
-
-0:00:22.320,0:00:25.760
-I'll give you a demonstration of some
-
-0:00:23.920,0:00:29.199
-tools and then we'll leave you
-
-0:00:25.760,0:00:31.920
-with the links to set tools
-
-0:00:29.199,0:00:32.399
-before that just a little bit about me I
-
-0:00:31.920,0:00:36.079
-am the
-
-0:00:32.399,0:00:39.520
-ceo and co-founder of a company
-
-0:00:36.079,0:00:40.399
-based in the swiss mountains called 200
-
-0:00:39.520,0:00:43.600
-okay
-
-0:00:40.399,0:00:46.160
-we are a product incubator and
-
-0:00:43.600,0:00:47.200
-service consultancy but we like to spend
-
-0:00:46.160,0:00:50.719
-most or at least
-
-0:00:47.200,0:00:52.719
-as much time as we can building free
-
-0:00:50.719,0:00:55.520
-software
-
-0:00:52.719,0:00:56.879
-I'm also an ordained zen monk and abbott
-
-0:00:55.520,0:01:00.160
-of the lambda zen temple
-
-0:00:56.879,0:01:01.359
-you can reach me anytime on questions
-
-0:01:00.160,0:01:05.860
-regarding Emacs
-
-0:01:01.359,0:01:07.200
-for example at ala at 200ok.ch
-
-0:01:05.860,0:01:09.600
-[Music]
-
-0:01:07.200,0:01:11.760
-but back to the topic at hand the
-
-0:01:09.600,0:01:13.680
-proposition is as following
-
-0:01:11.760,0:01:15.520
-most work on the computer is based on
-
-0:01:13.680,0:01:16.479
-either text processing or text
-
-0:01:15.520,0:01:19.920
-consumption
-
-0:01:16.479,0:01:20.880
-and very often the text which you need
-
-0:01:19.920,0:01:23.520
-to process
-
-0:01:20.880,0:01:24.560
-is in a structured format for example in
-
-0:01:23.520,0:01:26.640
-json
-
-0:01:24.560,0:01:28.560
-that might even be if your job is not
-
-0:01:26.640,0:01:30.400
-programming per se
-
-0:01:28.560,0:01:33.119
-and reading through such a bigger chunk
-
-0:01:30.400,0:01:36.479
-of json can be non-trivial however
-
-0:01:33.119,0:01:39.119
-while just reading and understanding it
-
-0:01:36.479,0:01:40.320
-will be essential to getting your job
-
-0:01:39.119,0:01:43.680
-done
-
-0:01:40.320,0:01:47.200
-so let's quickly check out an example
-
-0:01:43.680,0:01:50.560
-json file this is from the github api
-
-0:01:47.200,0:01:53.119
-where which is a request sorry the
-
-0:01:50.560,0:01:55.280
-response to a request for a specific
-
-0:01:53.119,0:01:58.560
-issue on the github api so let's
-
-0:01:55.280,0:01:58.560
-quickly check that one out
-
-0:01:58.799,0:02:03.280
-okay so here it is open and we can
-
-0:02:01.280,0:02:05.439
-already see that there is lots of stuff
-
-0:02:03.280,0:02:08.319
-going on here
-
-0:02:05.439,0:02:10.319
-it's uh 200 lines it's not going to be
-
-0:02:08.319,0:02:12.160
-very easy just just to find out what are
-
-0:02:10.319,0:02:13.920
-the top level things in here what are
-
-0:02:12.160,0:02:14.560
-the top level attributes of course I can
-
-0:02:13.920,0:02:16.480
-do this
-
-0:02:14.560,0:02:17.840
-and maybe it would by hand but that
-
-0:02:16.480,0:02:20.560
-doesn't scale
-
-0:02:17.840,0:02:22.560
-I can use cool Emacs facilities like the
-
-0:02:20.560,0:02:24.720
-height show mode and try to
-
-0:02:22.560,0:02:27.200
-fold all the things that are top level
-
-0:02:24.720,0:02:29.760
-but that also doesn't really scale
-
-0:02:27.200,0:02:32.000
-there must be a better way and of course
-
-0:02:29.760,0:02:34.959
-there is there is prior art
-
-0:02:32.000,0:02:36.080
-there is a tool called jq I'm going to
-
-0:02:34.959,0:02:39.120
-quote the usp
-
-0:02:36.080,0:02:42.959
-from their website jq is like
-
-0:02:39.120,0:02:44.720
-sed said for json data you can use it to
-
-0:02:42.959,0:02:46.720
-slice and filter and map
-
-0:02:44.720,0:02:47.840
-and transform structured data with the
-
-0:02:46.720,0:02:51.519
-same ease that
-
-0:02:47.840,0:02:53.920
-z awk grep and friends let you play with
-
-0:02:51.519,0:02:53.920
-text
-
-0:02:54.000,0:02:57.519
-let me give you a quick demonstration of
-
-0:02:56.160,0:02:59.680
-it by the way
-
-0:02:57.519,0:03:01.920
-it's written in portable c it has zero
-
-0:02:59.680,0:03:04.959
-runtime dependency so it's very easy
-
-0:03:01.920,0:03:09.040
-to get started with it and use it on
-
-0:03:04.959,0:03:12.800
-pretty much any unix-based
-
-0:03:09.040,0:03:16.159
-computer sorry no linux based computer
-
-0:03:12.800,0:03:19.599
-apologies okay so let's explore a
-
-0:03:16.159,0:03:21.120
-json file with it it's a command line
-
-0:03:19.599,0:03:24.640
-tool and it has a very
-
-0:03:21.120,0:03:26.799
-simple command line syntax so you
-
-0:03:24.640,0:03:27.840
-call the binary and then you give it a
-
-0:03:26.799,0:03:31.680
-query
-
-0:03:27.840,0:03:33.840
-and a file and then we'll return
-
-0:03:31.680,0:03:35.440
-its answer so for example if I want the
-
-0:03:33.840,0:03:38.319
-top level keys
-
-0:03:35.440,0:03:39.840
-I will just say jq keys the file and it
-
-0:03:38.319,0:03:42.319
-will return the keys
-
-0:03:39.840,0:03:43.519
-simple as that so let's check this out
-
-0:03:42.319,0:03:46.879
-in a real
-
-0:03:43.519,0:03:50.080
-shell here I am in eshel
-
-0:03:46.879,0:03:53.200
-let's run jq keys on the github
-
-0:03:50.080,0:03:56.959
-issue comment and we can see
-
-0:03:53.200,0:04:00.000
-that we have actually received a list
-
-0:03:56.959,0:04:02.000
-back here with the top level
-
-0:04:00.000,0:04:04.319
-things okay so this issue it looks very
-
-0:04:02.000,0:04:06.239
-very interesting so let's uh ask it to
-
-0:04:04.319,0:04:10.080
-give me more information on this
-
-0:04:06.239,0:04:11.360
-issue then it's hairy again that's a lot
-
-0:04:10.080,0:04:14.319
-of stuff
-
-0:04:11.360,0:04:17.759
-I mean lucky for for us we are in Emacs
-
-0:04:14.319,0:04:21.040
-here so we can use nice shortcuts we can
-
-0:04:17.759,0:04:22.000
-copy this we go can go in here just
-
-0:04:21.040,0:04:24.400
-select that
-
-0:04:22.000,0:04:25.600
-get that out or something like this but
-
-0:04:24.400,0:04:28.320
-still
-
-0:04:25.600,0:04:29.600
-this is not really it's not really the
-
-0:04:28.320,0:04:34.080
-best way
-
-0:04:29.600,0:04:36.639
-to do that right it gets kind of tedious
-
-0:04:34.080,0:04:37.680
-at this point the output can be
-
-0:04:36.639,0:04:39.360
-humongous
-
-0:04:37.680,0:04:42.479
-the shell is not really the best place
-
-0:04:39.360,0:04:43.600
-to read through such big output I mean e
-
-0:04:42.479,0:04:45.440
-shell is
-
-0:04:43.600,0:04:47.440
-probably one of the better shells for
-
-0:04:45.440,0:04:48.560
-this because it's just a regular Emacs
-
-0:04:47.440,0:04:51.199
-buffer but still
-
-0:04:48.560,0:04:52.720
-it's not really the best tool and I need
-
-0:04:51.199,0:04:55.280
-to repeat the command
-
-0:04:52.720,0:04:56.000
-all the time until I finally build the
-
-0:04:55.280,0:04:59.120
-right query
-
-0:04:56.000,0:05:02.080
-and all the time I use I lose my
-
-0:04:59.120,0:05:02.800
-focus I lose what I'm currently looking
-
-0:05:02.080,0:05:06.080
-at
-
-0:05:02.800,0:05:08.160
-I'm seeing the new result it would be so
-
-0:05:06.080,0:05:10.080
-much nicer to have live feedback
-
-0:05:08.160,0:05:11.600
-and when working with Emacs we're quite
-
-0:05:10.080,0:05:12.320
-used to that so there should be an
-
-0:05:11.600,0:05:15.120
-option
-
-0:05:12.320,0:05:17.759
-and of course there is it's Emacs right
-
-0:05:15.120,0:05:20.880
-so you can do anything
-
-0:05:17.759,0:05:22.960
-there is various good tools for
-
-0:05:20.880,0:05:26.000
-completion in Emacs
-
-0:05:22.960,0:05:29.039
-I used ivy for this
-
-0:05:26.000,0:05:31.840
-I'm going to code the usp for ivy
-
-0:05:29.039,0:05:32.639
-iv is a generic completion mechanism for
-
-0:05:31.840,0:05:34.639
-Emacs
-
-0:05:32.639,0:05:35.919
-while it operates similarly to other
-
-0:05:34.639,0:05:38.960
-completion schemes
-
-0:05:35.919,0:05:40.400
-such as icomplete mode iv aims to be
-
-0:05:38.960,0:05:43.120
-more efficient smaller
-
-0:05:40.400,0:05:45.199
-simpler and smoother to use yet highly
-
-0:05:43.120,0:05:47.840
-customizable
-
-0:05:45.199,0:05:49.440
-and that's true one of the cool things
-
-0:05:47.840,0:05:52.479
-of iv
-
-0:05:49.440,0:05:54.320
-compared to other completion mechanisms
-
-0:05:52.479,0:05:58.160
-in Emacs
-
-0:05:54.320,0:06:01.600
-is that it can be used on dynamic
-
-0:05:58.160,0:06:03.520
-data so usually completion works on a
-
-0:06:01.600,0:06:05.360
-static input for example you're in a
-
-0:06:03.520,0:06:08.800
-buffer a text buffer
-
-0:06:05.360,0:06:09.600
-and you use I search maybe with idle
-
-0:06:08.800,0:06:12.400
-mode
-
-0:06:09.600,0:06:13.360
-and you find your results that's all
-
-0:06:12.400,0:06:16.960
-nice
-
-0:06:13.360,0:06:19.840
-however if I
-
-0:06:16.960,0:06:20.720
-want to search on dynamic data that
-
-0:06:19.840,0:06:23.759
-doesn't work
-
-0:06:20.720,0:06:27.039
-so whenever I type in my query
-
-0:06:23.759,0:06:28.000
-for jq I actually need to call the jq
-
-0:06:27.039,0:06:30.160
-binary
-
-0:06:28.000,0:06:32.840
-and it will give a different result set
-
-0:06:30.160,0:06:36.319
-back so it's a really
-
-0:06:32.840,0:06:38.240
-dynamic mechanism that we need here it's
-
-0:06:36.319,0:06:41.440
-much more like a search engine
-
-0:06:38.240,0:06:42.560
-and ivy luckily has something built in
-
-0:06:41.440,0:06:46.000
-and it's called
-
-0:06:42.560,0:06:48.160
-console so I used council and jq
-
-0:06:46.000,0:06:49.199
-and combined them and build a new
-
-0:06:48.160,0:06:52.960
-package
-
-0:06:49.199,0:06:56.000
-with which we can use Emacs and jq
-
-0:06:52.960,0:06:58.800
-to have live feedback
-
-0:06:56.000,0:06:59.840
-it's very easy to use so you just call
-
-0:06:58.800,0:07:02.800
-console.jq
-
-0:06:59.840,0:07:04.319
-on a buffer containing json for example
-
-0:07:02.800,0:07:07.280
-the one we have here
-
-0:07:04.319,0:07:08.319
-let's call console.jq on it and we
-
-0:07:07.280,0:07:11.280
-already
-
-0:07:08.319,0:07:13.039
-get a default query the dot query which
-
-0:07:11.280,0:07:16.080
-just gives us
-
-0:07:13.039,0:07:17.280
-the same file but now we can change it
-
-0:07:16.080,0:07:19.039
-and for example
-
-0:07:17.280,0:07:21.039
-find all the keys in here and then we
-
-0:07:19.039,0:07:22.800
-see I had this issue this was the one
-
-0:07:21.039,0:07:24.639
-that we were interested in
-
-0:07:22.800,0:07:26.479
-so let's find more information on the
-
-0:07:24.639,0:07:28.800
-issue what
-
-0:07:26.479,0:07:31.680
-keys does it have actually have uh it
-
-0:07:28.800,0:07:34.800
-has assignees that that interests me
-
-0:07:31.680,0:07:37.039
-so let's check out the assignees in here
-
-0:07:34.800,0:07:39.759
-there's two of them but I'm only
-
-0:07:37.039,0:07:42.000
-interested in the first one
-
-0:07:39.759,0:07:43.599
-I'm making stuff up as I go here of
-
-0:07:42.000,0:07:46.000
-course
-
-0:07:43.599,0:07:47.039
-and whenever I hit enter I get a new
-
-0:07:46.000,0:07:50.160
-buffer
-
-0:07:47.039,0:07:53.520
-which just shows me this
-
-0:07:50.160,0:07:55.599
-particular result for the particular
-
-0:07:53.520,0:07:59.199
-query that I entered
-
-0:07:55.599,0:08:03.199
-so let me do that again we are in here
-
-0:07:59.199,0:08:05.840
-we are looking at a
-
-0:08:03.199,0:08:07.520
-json file this can be very very big
-
-0:08:05.840,0:08:09.520
-doesn't also need to be a file just
-
-0:08:07.520,0:08:12.160
-needs to be a buffer
-
-0:08:09.520,0:08:13.599
-you call console.jq on it and you can do
-
-0:08:12.160,0:08:16.479
-any kind of
-
-0:08:13.599,0:08:18.080
-query on it for example let's see if
-
-0:08:16.479,0:08:20.319
-there is a url here
-
-0:08:18.080,0:08:23.759
-yes there's a url let's see if there's a
-
-0:08:20.319,0:08:26.879
-repository here repository
-
-0:08:23.759,0:08:33.360
-no there isn't what was it called issue
-
-0:08:26.879,0:08:33.360
-keys repository url it was called okay
-
-0:08:33.440,0:08:40.240
-so let's see issue pause
-
-0:08:36.640,0:08:42.959
-url and then we see so
-
-0:08:40.240,0:08:44.159
-apparently this issue command is for a
-
-0:08:42.959,0:08:47.839
-repository called
-
-0:08:44.159,0:08:50.320
-organize I wonder what that might be
-
-0:08:47.839,0:08:52.640
-okay so that was a very short
-
-0:08:50.320,0:08:54.800
-introduction to console jq
-
-0:08:52.640,0:08:56.800
-you can see the timer here I only have
-
-0:08:54.800,0:08:57.440
-one minute left to go so I'm going to
-
-0:08:56.800,0:08:59.760
-leave
-
-0:08:57.440,0:09:01.519
-with a very very short introduction to
-
-0:08:59.760,0:09:05.040
-the console gq
-
-0:09:01.519,0:09:07.519
-code it's not even 60 lines
-
-0:09:05.040,0:09:09.600
-of e-lisp so building something like
-
-0:09:07.519,0:09:12.800
-this is very very easy
-
-0:09:09.600,0:09:14.560
-I would encourage you to go and read
-
-0:09:12.800,0:09:16.160
-through the code in your own time
-
-0:09:14.560,0:09:18.320
-if you're interested in building
-
-0:09:16.160,0:09:19.600
-something like this if you're interested
-
-0:09:18.320,0:09:22.720
-in just using
-
-0:09:19.600,0:09:24.320
-jq or you're done
-
-0:09:22.720,0:09:25.839
-these are the links to all the tools
-
-0:09:24.320,0:09:28.800
-console.jq of course
-
-0:09:25.839,0:09:29.519
-is readily available on melpah also
-
-0:09:28.800,0:09:32.959
-developed
-
-0:09:29.519,0:09:36.080
-under the agpl license on github
-
-0:09:32.959,0:09:37.839
-and disorganized thing by the way it's
-
-0:09:36.080,0:09:39.839
-orig mode for mobile and desktop
-
-0:09:37.839,0:09:42.399
-browsers also a great
-
-0:09:39.839,0:09:43.120
-free software tool maybe that interests
-
-0:09:42.399,0:09:46.240
-you
-
-0:09:43.120,0:09:48.800
-thank you for listening have great time
-
-0:09:46.240,0:09:49.360
-10 seconds left I am going to stop this
-
-0:09:48.800,0:09:53.920
-now
-
-0:09:49.360,0:09:53.920
-enjoy EmacsConf have a great day
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--26-emacs-as-a-highschooler-how-it-changed-my-life--pierce-wang-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--26-emacs-as-a-highschooler-how-it-changed-my-life--pierce-wang-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index eb7d745f..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--26-emacs-as-a-highschooler-how-it-changed-my-life--pierce-wang-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,768 +0,0 @@
-0:00:01.360,0:00:05.520
-hello and welcome to my
-
-0:00:03.040,0:00:07.120
-Emacs conference lightning talk today
-
-0:00:05.520,0:00:09.840
-I'll be talking about
-
-0:00:07.120,0:00:13.360
-my journey into Emacs as a high schooler
-
-0:00:09.840,0:00:13.360
-and how it has changed my life
-
-0:00:14.400,0:00:19.520
-right so who am I I am a senior at
-
-0:00:17.359,0:00:22.800
-stanford online high school
-
-0:00:19.520,0:00:24.320
-and I am also a violinist
-
-0:00:22.800,0:00:26.960
-I started violin when I was two and a
-
-0:00:24.320,0:00:29.119
-half and I have been
-
-0:00:26.960,0:00:30.240
-keeping it up ever since violin is a
-
-0:00:29.119,0:00:33.360
-huge part of my life
-
-0:00:30.240,0:00:36.239
-and I am very much a musician at heart
-
-0:00:33.360,0:00:37.840
-I am also a somewhat capable programmer
-
-0:00:36.239,0:00:39.280
-I've done a lot of informal programming
-
-0:00:37.840,0:00:42.559
-in the past
-
-0:00:39.280,0:00:44.079
-and this year I'm taking my first ap
-
-0:00:42.559,0:00:47.440
-compsci course
-
-0:00:44.079,0:00:51.039
-in my high school and so
-
-0:00:47.440,0:00:54.239
-I've done a lot of side projects
-
-0:00:51.039,0:00:56.800
-mainly in python and some very short
-
-0:00:54.239,0:00:59.840
-scripts in e-lisp
-
-0:00:56.800,0:01:02.879
-and last but not least I am a tinker
-
-0:00:59.840,0:01:06.720
-I love to play around with things and
-
-0:01:02.879,0:01:10.240
-see what I can do better and just
-
-0:01:06.720,0:01:10.240
-have as much fun as possible
-
-0:01:10.880,0:01:14.479
-so how did I find Emacs
-
-0:01:15.040,0:01:18.880
-I discovered it actually through a talk
-
-0:01:17.600,0:01:21.360
-funnily enough
-
-0:01:18.880,0:01:23.520
-at a vim conference given by aaron
-
-0:01:21.360,0:01:25.840
-bieber
-
-0:01:23.520,0:01:28.320
-titled evil mode or how I learned to
-
-0:01:25.840,0:01:31.439
-stop worrying and love Emacs
-
-0:01:28.320,0:01:33.360
-I watched that talk a couple times over
-
-0:01:31.439,0:01:35.759
-just marveling at all the wonderful
-
-0:01:33.360,0:01:38.799
-things that he could do in Emacs
-
-0:01:35.759,0:01:41.680
-and being a previous vim user myself
-
-0:01:38.799,0:01:42.399
-I found it very enticing to be able to
-
-0:01:41.680,0:01:44.960
-have
-
-0:01:42.399,0:01:47.040
-the evil mode package and very quickly
-
-0:01:44.960,0:01:48.799
-switch to Emacs
-
-0:01:47.040,0:01:51.040
-at the time I was also in my sophomore
-
-0:01:48.799,0:01:54.640
-year and so
-
-0:01:51.040,0:01:56.320
-I had had sort of a note-taking system
-
-0:01:54.640,0:01:59.360
-in the past
-
-0:01:56.320,0:02:01.680
-but it was not good um and I needed a
-
-0:01:59.360,0:02:03.759
-more organized note-taking system
-
-0:02:01.680,0:02:04.960
-my parents had suggested paper for a
-
-0:02:03.759,0:02:08.160
-while and
-
-0:02:04.960,0:02:10.959
-there was the whole organization
-
-0:02:08.160,0:02:12.080
-part of that but that did not really
-
-0:02:10.959,0:02:14.000
-work out for me
-
-0:02:12.080,0:02:16.239
-and so I was trying to find this better
-
-0:02:14.000,0:02:19.440
-note-taking system
-
-0:02:16.239,0:02:22.239
-and it was very hard
-
-0:02:19.440,0:02:23.520
-I had two main criteria which I did not
-
-0:02:22.239,0:02:25.360
-define at the time
-
-0:02:23.520,0:02:26.640
-but I realized was really what I was
-
-0:02:25.360,0:02:28.720
-looking for
-
-0:02:26.640,0:02:30.959
-first of all it had to be flexible
-
-0:02:28.720,0:02:33.920
-enough and second of all it had
-
-0:02:30.959,0:02:34.959
-I had to have control over the data and
-
-0:02:33.920,0:02:37.519
-so
-
-0:02:34.959,0:02:39.680
-through this process I actually went
-
-0:02:37.519,0:02:42.640
-through a bunch of note-taking softwares
-
-0:02:39.680,0:02:44.080
-rather systematically I went through
-
-0:02:42.640,0:02:47.519
-google docs
-
-0:02:44.080,0:02:49.840
-which very much did not work out
-
-0:02:47.519,0:02:50.640
-I also went through evernote which also
-
-0:02:49.840,0:02:53.200
-was not
-
-0:02:50.640,0:02:55.200
-great for me and one note which I
-
-0:02:53.200,0:02:58.800
-settled on for a little while
-
-0:02:55.200,0:03:01.519
-but it did not meet these criteria
-
-0:02:58.800,0:03:02.159
-particularly the second one I had taken
-
-0:03:01.519,0:03:05.280
-some notes
-
-0:03:02.159,0:03:07.519
-and I wanted to export it and onenote
-
-0:03:05.280,0:03:12.000
-did not let me do that
-
-0:03:07.519,0:03:14.879
-it was pdf horribly organized pdf
-
-0:03:12.000,0:03:17.200
-and that's when I knew I needed some
-
-0:03:14.879,0:03:17.200
-change
-
-0:03:17.440,0:03:24.080
-so I discovered Emacs through this talk
-
-0:03:21.519,0:03:26.640
-and through the wonderful features of
-
-0:03:24.080,0:03:26.640
-org mode
-
-0:03:27.040,0:03:34.000
-this is my first journal entry in Emacs
-
-0:03:30.080,0:03:36.159
-I had been playing with it for one day
-
-0:03:34.000,0:03:38.159
-and I was on the org agenda and I
-
-0:03:36.159,0:03:40.720
-happened to press I
-
-0:03:38.159,0:03:41.599
-which for the Emacs combined is the
-
-0:03:40.720,0:03:45.440
-default for
-
-0:03:41.599,0:03:48.720
-diary entry and so I was very excited
-
-0:03:45.440,0:03:50.239
-um and I shouldn't stay on the slide too
-
-0:03:48.720,0:03:53.760
-long unless you read it
-
-0:03:50.239,0:03:57.200
-um so let's move on to the next one
-
-0:03:53.760,0:04:00.480
-um so the learning curve for me I think
-
-0:03:57.200,0:04:03.760
-particularly being an xbm user
-
-0:04:00.480,0:04:06.080
-evil mode made it very easy to switch
-
-0:04:03.760,0:04:07.439
-thankfully I there was the emax
-
-0:04:06.080,0:04:10.799
-reference sheet
-
-0:04:07.439,0:04:14.080
-and having evil mode to
-
-0:04:10.799,0:04:17.440
-switch between um
-
-0:04:14.080,0:04:17.919
-texts and whether it be editing a text
-
-0:04:17.440,0:04:20.560
-file
-
-0:04:17.919,0:04:21.600
-or going to other parts of just Emacs in
-
-0:04:20.560,0:04:24.800
-general
-
-0:04:21.600,0:04:26.840
-I think vim really helped with making me
-
-0:04:24.800,0:04:28.000
-feel comfortable within this new
-
-0:04:26.840,0:04:31.440
-environment
-
-0:04:28.000,0:04:31.919
-and so having that experience I also
-
-0:04:31.440,0:04:34.240
-wasn't
-
-0:04:31.919,0:04:36.320
-new to the keybind-based world I have
-
-0:04:34.240,0:04:40.160
-been very comfortable with computer
-
-0:04:36.320,0:04:43.520
-and the keyboard for most of my life
-
-0:04:40.160,0:04:45.520
-and so it was not a totally new
-
-0:04:43.520,0:04:47.440
-environment for me
-
-0:04:45.520,0:04:49.360
-I also spent a lot of time looking at
-
-0:04:47.440,0:04:53.040
-the Emacs reference sheet
-
-0:04:49.360,0:04:55.040
-just thinking about trying to find
-
-0:04:53.040,0:04:56.639
-all of the different functions if I
-
-0:04:55.040,0:04:59.680
-didn't know what something was
-
-0:04:56.639,0:05:01.199
-then I queried it in Emacs and then I
-
-0:04:59.680,0:05:03.759
-figured out what it was
-
-0:05:01.199,0:05:05.600
-and that was one of the best ways for me
-
-0:05:03.759,0:05:09.280
-to discover
-
-0:05:05.600,0:05:09.280
-all of the capabilities of Emacs
-
-0:05:09.360,0:05:12.800
-thirdly of course the self-documenting
-
-0:05:11.440,0:05:15.199
-feature
-
-0:05:12.800,0:05:17.120
-or nature of Emacs and narrowing
-
-0:05:15.199,0:05:20.479
-frameworks such as helm
-
-0:05:17.120,0:05:21.360
-really helped find things especially for
-
-0:05:20.479,0:05:25.919
-mx
-
-0:05:21.360,0:05:28.160
-for a while I was just
-
-0:05:25.919,0:05:29.520
-I would go about my day and if I pressed
-
-0:05:28.160,0:05:30.720
-to keep mine that I didn't know what it
-
-0:05:29.520,0:05:34.560
-did
-
-0:05:30.720,0:05:36.240
-I would do the losses and
-
-0:05:34.560,0:05:37.600
-see the list of key binds that I had
-
-0:05:36.240,0:05:40.400
-pressed and
-
-0:05:37.600,0:05:41.280
-tried to find that one and query the
-
-0:05:40.400,0:05:45.199
-function
-
-0:05:41.280,0:05:45.199
-and what not so
-
-0:05:45.280,0:05:51.759
-yeah and now we jump to now so
-
-0:05:49.120,0:05:53.280
-there there is at least one moment in
-
-0:05:51.759,0:05:55.600
-each day when I think
-
-0:05:53.280,0:05:57.680
-how would I live without umax
-
-0:05:55.600,0:05:59.120
-particularly now during my senior year
-
-0:05:57.680,0:06:02.720
-in high school
-
-0:05:59.120,0:06:05.520
-things are very busy with school violin
-
-0:06:02.720,0:06:06.400
-and other side projects it's pretty
-
-0:06:05.520,0:06:09.680
-crazy
-
-0:06:06.400,0:06:12.720
-and so Emacs
-
-0:06:09.680,0:06:14.479
-and org mode has really helped me stay
-
-0:06:12.720,0:06:16.960
-on track with everything
-
-0:06:14.479,0:06:18.840
-and the flexibility of these software is
-
-0:06:16.960,0:06:21.600
-being able to have things in different
-
-0:06:18.840,0:06:24.639
-files notes within the tasks
-
-0:06:21.600,0:06:25.840
-all of that stuff has been truly a
-
-0:06:24.639,0:06:28.400
-lifesaver
-
-0:06:25.840,0:06:31.199
-and so I think I can confidently say
-
-0:06:28.400,0:06:34.560
-that I have found Emacs to be
-
-0:06:31.199,0:06:34.560
-the perfect software for me
-
-0:06:35.280,0:06:42.240
-over the past two years of using Emacs
-
-0:06:38.639,0:06:45.039
-now it is about two years and two months
-
-0:06:42.240,0:06:46.160
-I have built a fairly well organized
-
-0:06:45.039,0:06:49.520
-2000
-
-0:06:46.160,0:06:52.160
-plus line org literate config
-
-0:06:49.520,0:06:53.840
-and so I actually I started with an
-
-0:06:52.160,0:06:56.800
-e-lisp config
-
-0:06:53.840,0:06:57.919
-just the vanilla e-max with evil mode
-
-0:06:56.800,0:07:00.319
-and I built it up
-
-0:06:57.919,0:07:02.400
-from there eventually I switched to org
-
-0:07:00.319,0:07:05.840
-literate configs
-
-0:07:02.400,0:07:10.080
-and used that to organize the snippets
-
-0:07:05.840,0:07:14.000
-that I was putting in there and so
-
-0:07:10.080,0:07:16.639
-yeah this is really my workflow now
-
-0:07:14.000,0:07:18.960
-currently about 90 of everything I do on
-
-0:07:16.639,0:07:21.520
-my computer is in Emacs
-
-0:07:18.960,0:07:22.319
-the most notable things of course the
-
-0:07:21.520,0:07:26.000
-list is far
-
-0:07:22.319,0:07:28.160
-too long to put on one slide but I do a
-
-0:07:26.000,0:07:31.280
-lot of my programming in Emacs
-
-0:07:28.160,0:07:33.759
-mainly python and e-lisp
-
-0:07:31.280,0:07:35.199
-because of my ap comp sci class I have
-
-0:07:33.759,0:07:38.720
-to do java as well
-
-0:07:35.199,0:07:41.759
-and thank goodness Emacs has wonderful
-
-0:07:38.720,0:07:41.759
-support for that as well
-
-0:07:41.840,0:07:48.800
-also I do all of my school assignments
-
-0:07:45.840,0:07:50.400
-more or less in Emacs essay writing I do
-
-0:07:48.800,0:07:51.919
-an org mode and I have some template
-
-0:07:50.400,0:07:53.919
-files
-
-0:07:51.919,0:07:55.039
-template org files which I just include
-
-0:07:53.919,0:07:58.160
-at the top
-
-0:07:55.039,0:08:01.440
-and then I can export easily to latex
-
-0:07:58.160,0:08:04.400
-and a beautiful pdf
-
-0:08:01.440,0:08:05.840
-math physics same thing latex fragments
-
-0:08:04.400,0:08:09.599
-are a lifesaver
-
-0:08:05.840,0:08:13.199
-and also really pretty
-
-0:08:09.599,0:08:15.520
-and I take notes on basically everything
-
-0:08:13.199,0:08:16.319
-at first I had things separate and then
-
-0:08:15.520,0:08:19.360
-I started
-
-0:08:16.319,0:08:21.360
-sort of putting it all into onenotes.org
-
-0:08:19.360,0:08:24.000
-file or most of it into one
-
-0:08:21.360,0:08:24.960
-file and that has actually worked out
-
-0:08:24.000,0:08:26.479
-surprisingly well
-
-0:08:24.960,0:08:28.879
-especially with all the searching
-
-0:08:26.479,0:08:33.440
-features of agenda
-
-0:08:28.879,0:08:35.680
-and whatnot um and I also use mail
-
-0:08:33.440,0:08:37.680
-I recently made the switch probably
-
-0:08:35.680,0:08:40.479
-about one or two months ago
-
-0:08:37.680,0:08:40.959
-and it has been one of the best switches
-
-0:08:40.479,0:08:44.480
-I've
-
-0:08:40.959,0:08:46.320
-I've ever had especially given
-
-0:08:44.480,0:08:47.839
-connecting to tasks all of this
-
-0:08:46.320,0:08:50.640
-wonderful stuff
-
-0:08:47.839,0:08:54.160
-just putting even more in Emacs is
-
-0:08:50.640,0:08:57.680
-always a good thing I found
-
-0:08:54.160,0:08:59.760
-so reflecting back on my journey I think
-
-0:08:57.680,0:09:01.440
-one of the most important things was
-
-0:08:59.760,0:09:04.480
-just having a reason to use it
-
-0:09:01.440,0:09:06.080
-when I came to Emacs I had something
-
-0:09:04.480,0:09:09.600
-that I was looking for
-
-0:09:06.080,0:09:09.839
-and as soon as I found it I delved right
-
-0:09:09.600,0:09:12.720
-in
-
-0:09:09.839,0:09:14.480
-and I I started using it for that thing
-
-0:09:12.720,0:09:16.959
-and so I was sort of forced to
-
-0:09:14.480,0:09:19.279
-take the time to read the docs and
-
-0:09:16.959,0:09:22.399
-figure out what functions I needed
-
-0:09:19.279,0:09:25.839
-to function and how
-
-0:09:22.399,0:09:29.519
-I was going to put my workflow
-
-0:09:25.839,0:09:29.519
-and also of course the desire to tinker
-
-0:09:30.399,0:09:36.800
-and yeah so really what's next for me
-
-0:09:33.519,0:09:38.640
-is just wanting to become a more active
-
-0:09:36.800,0:09:40.640
-member of the Emacs community
-
-0:09:38.640,0:09:43.760
-I want to give back and I think this
-
-0:09:40.640,0:09:45.920
-talk is sort of the first step to that
-
-0:09:43.760,0:09:48.000
-being a more active part of this
-
-0:09:45.920,0:09:51.040
-community that has
-
-0:09:48.000,0:09:54.000
-indirectly perhaps um but just like
-
-0:09:51.040,0:09:55.839
-really helped me become a better and
-
-0:09:54.000,0:09:58.880
-more organized human being
-
-0:09:55.839,0:10:01.920
-um I have some package ideas that I'm
-
-0:09:58.880,0:10:05.839
-slowly working on and yeah I just hope
-
-0:10:01.920,0:10:05.839
-to spread the word
-
-0:10:05.920,0:10:09.360
-so thank you very much for listening to
-
-0:10:08.000,0:10:11.360
-my lightning talk
-
-0:10:09.360,0:10:12.480
-if you'd like to contact me here are
-
-0:10:11.360,0:10:15.279
-three modes of
-
-0:10:12.480,0:10:17.120
-or two modes of communication I will be
-
-0:10:15.279,0:10:20.079
-on irc more
-
-0:10:17.120,0:10:20.560
-soon and you can always email me if you
-
-0:10:20.079,0:10:23.200
-have
-
-0:10:20.560,0:10:23.680
-any questions you can also search me on
-
-0:10:23.200,0:10:26.399
-youtube
-
-0:10:23.680,0:10:26.800
-pierce wong violin thank you very much
-
-0:10:26.399,0:10:30.000
-and
-
-0:10:26.800,0:10:30.000
-I hope you enjoy the rest of the
-
-0:10:30.040,0:10:33.040
-conference
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--26-emacs-as-a-highschooler-how-it-changed-my-life--questions--pierce-wang-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--26-emacs-as-a-highschooler-how-it-changed-my-life--questions--pierce-wang-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index eb7d745f..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--26-emacs-as-a-highschooler-how-it-changed-my-life--questions--pierce-wang-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,768 +0,0 @@
-0:00:01.360,0:00:05.520
-hello and welcome to my
-
-0:00:03.040,0:00:07.120
-Emacs conference lightning talk today
-
-0:00:05.520,0:00:09.840
-I'll be talking about
-
-0:00:07.120,0:00:13.360
-my journey into Emacs as a high schooler
-
-0:00:09.840,0:00:13.360
-and how it has changed my life
-
-0:00:14.400,0:00:19.520
-right so who am I I am a senior at
-
-0:00:17.359,0:00:22.800
-stanford online high school
-
-0:00:19.520,0:00:24.320
-and I am also a violinist
-
-0:00:22.800,0:00:26.960
-I started violin when I was two and a
-
-0:00:24.320,0:00:29.119
-half and I have been
-
-0:00:26.960,0:00:30.240
-keeping it up ever since violin is a
-
-0:00:29.119,0:00:33.360
-huge part of my life
-
-0:00:30.240,0:00:36.239
-and I am very much a musician at heart
-
-0:00:33.360,0:00:37.840
-I am also a somewhat capable programmer
-
-0:00:36.239,0:00:39.280
-I've done a lot of informal programming
-
-0:00:37.840,0:00:42.559
-in the past
-
-0:00:39.280,0:00:44.079
-and this year I'm taking my first ap
-
-0:00:42.559,0:00:47.440
-compsci course
-
-0:00:44.079,0:00:51.039
-in my high school and so
-
-0:00:47.440,0:00:54.239
-I've done a lot of side projects
-
-0:00:51.039,0:00:56.800
-mainly in python and some very short
-
-0:00:54.239,0:00:59.840
-scripts in e-lisp
-
-0:00:56.800,0:01:02.879
-and last but not least I am a tinker
-
-0:00:59.840,0:01:06.720
-I love to play around with things and
-
-0:01:02.879,0:01:10.240
-see what I can do better and just
-
-0:01:06.720,0:01:10.240
-have as much fun as possible
-
-0:01:10.880,0:01:14.479
-so how did I find Emacs
-
-0:01:15.040,0:01:18.880
-I discovered it actually through a talk
-
-0:01:17.600,0:01:21.360
-funnily enough
-
-0:01:18.880,0:01:23.520
-at a vim conference given by aaron
-
-0:01:21.360,0:01:25.840
-bieber
-
-0:01:23.520,0:01:28.320
-titled evil mode or how I learned to
-
-0:01:25.840,0:01:31.439
-stop worrying and love Emacs
-
-0:01:28.320,0:01:33.360
-I watched that talk a couple times over
-
-0:01:31.439,0:01:35.759
-just marveling at all the wonderful
-
-0:01:33.360,0:01:38.799
-things that he could do in Emacs
-
-0:01:35.759,0:01:41.680
-and being a previous vim user myself
-
-0:01:38.799,0:01:42.399
-I found it very enticing to be able to
-
-0:01:41.680,0:01:44.960
-have
-
-0:01:42.399,0:01:47.040
-the evil mode package and very quickly
-
-0:01:44.960,0:01:48.799
-switch to Emacs
-
-0:01:47.040,0:01:51.040
-at the time I was also in my sophomore
-
-0:01:48.799,0:01:54.640
-year and so
-
-0:01:51.040,0:01:56.320
-I had had sort of a note-taking system
-
-0:01:54.640,0:01:59.360
-in the past
-
-0:01:56.320,0:02:01.680
-but it was not good um and I needed a
-
-0:01:59.360,0:02:03.759
-more organized note-taking system
-
-0:02:01.680,0:02:04.960
-my parents had suggested paper for a
-
-0:02:03.759,0:02:08.160
-while and
-
-0:02:04.960,0:02:10.959
-there was the whole organization
-
-0:02:08.160,0:02:12.080
-part of that but that did not really
-
-0:02:10.959,0:02:14.000
-work out for me
-
-0:02:12.080,0:02:16.239
-and so I was trying to find this better
-
-0:02:14.000,0:02:19.440
-note-taking system
-
-0:02:16.239,0:02:22.239
-and it was very hard
-
-0:02:19.440,0:02:23.520
-I had two main criteria which I did not
-
-0:02:22.239,0:02:25.360
-define at the time
-
-0:02:23.520,0:02:26.640
-but I realized was really what I was
-
-0:02:25.360,0:02:28.720
-looking for
-
-0:02:26.640,0:02:30.959
-first of all it had to be flexible
-
-0:02:28.720,0:02:33.920
-enough and second of all it had
-
-0:02:30.959,0:02:34.959
-I had to have control over the data and
-
-0:02:33.920,0:02:37.519
-so
-
-0:02:34.959,0:02:39.680
-through this process I actually went
-
-0:02:37.519,0:02:42.640
-through a bunch of note-taking softwares
-
-0:02:39.680,0:02:44.080
-rather systematically I went through
-
-0:02:42.640,0:02:47.519
-google docs
-
-0:02:44.080,0:02:49.840
-which very much did not work out
-
-0:02:47.519,0:02:50.640
-I also went through evernote which also
-
-0:02:49.840,0:02:53.200
-was not
-
-0:02:50.640,0:02:55.200
-great for me and one note which I
-
-0:02:53.200,0:02:58.800
-settled on for a little while
-
-0:02:55.200,0:03:01.519
-but it did not meet these criteria
-
-0:02:58.800,0:03:02.159
-particularly the second one I had taken
-
-0:03:01.519,0:03:05.280
-some notes
-
-0:03:02.159,0:03:07.519
-and I wanted to export it and onenote
-
-0:03:05.280,0:03:12.000
-did not let me do that
-
-0:03:07.519,0:03:14.879
-it was pdf horribly organized pdf
-
-0:03:12.000,0:03:17.200
-and that's when I knew I needed some
-
-0:03:14.879,0:03:17.200
-change
-
-0:03:17.440,0:03:24.080
-so I discovered Emacs through this talk
-
-0:03:21.519,0:03:26.640
-and through the wonderful features of
-
-0:03:24.080,0:03:26.640
-org mode
-
-0:03:27.040,0:03:34.000
-this is my first journal entry in Emacs
-
-0:03:30.080,0:03:36.159
-I had been playing with it for one day
-
-0:03:34.000,0:03:38.159
-and I was on the org agenda and I
-
-0:03:36.159,0:03:40.720
-happened to press I
-
-0:03:38.159,0:03:41.599
-which for the Emacs combined is the
-
-0:03:40.720,0:03:45.440
-default for
-
-0:03:41.599,0:03:48.720
-diary entry and so I was very excited
-
-0:03:45.440,0:03:50.239
-um and I shouldn't stay on the slide too
-
-0:03:48.720,0:03:53.760
-long unless you read it
-
-0:03:50.239,0:03:57.200
-um so let's move on to the next one
-
-0:03:53.760,0:04:00.480
-um so the learning curve for me I think
-
-0:03:57.200,0:04:03.760
-particularly being an xbm user
-
-0:04:00.480,0:04:06.080
-evil mode made it very easy to switch
-
-0:04:03.760,0:04:07.439
-thankfully I there was the emax
-
-0:04:06.080,0:04:10.799
-reference sheet
-
-0:04:07.439,0:04:14.080
-and having evil mode to
-
-0:04:10.799,0:04:17.440
-switch between um
-
-0:04:14.080,0:04:17.919
-texts and whether it be editing a text
-
-0:04:17.440,0:04:20.560
-file
-
-0:04:17.919,0:04:21.600
-or going to other parts of just Emacs in
-
-0:04:20.560,0:04:24.800
-general
-
-0:04:21.600,0:04:26.840
-I think vim really helped with making me
-
-0:04:24.800,0:04:28.000
-feel comfortable within this new
-
-0:04:26.840,0:04:31.440
-environment
-
-0:04:28.000,0:04:31.919
-and so having that experience I also
-
-0:04:31.440,0:04:34.240
-wasn't
-
-0:04:31.919,0:04:36.320
-new to the keybind-based world I have
-
-0:04:34.240,0:04:40.160
-been very comfortable with computer
-
-0:04:36.320,0:04:43.520
-and the keyboard for most of my life
-
-0:04:40.160,0:04:45.520
-and so it was not a totally new
-
-0:04:43.520,0:04:47.440
-environment for me
-
-0:04:45.520,0:04:49.360
-I also spent a lot of time looking at
-
-0:04:47.440,0:04:53.040
-the Emacs reference sheet
-
-0:04:49.360,0:04:55.040
-just thinking about trying to find
-
-0:04:53.040,0:04:56.639
-all of the different functions if I
-
-0:04:55.040,0:04:59.680
-didn't know what something was
-
-0:04:56.639,0:05:01.199
-then I queried it in Emacs and then I
-
-0:04:59.680,0:05:03.759
-figured out what it was
-
-0:05:01.199,0:05:05.600
-and that was one of the best ways for me
-
-0:05:03.759,0:05:09.280
-to discover
-
-0:05:05.600,0:05:09.280
-all of the capabilities of Emacs
-
-0:05:09.360,0:05:12.800
-thirdly of course the self-documenting
-
-0:05:11.440,0:05:15.199
-feature
-
-0:05:12.800,0:05:17.120
-or nature of Emacs and narrowing
-
-0:05:15.199,0:05:20.479
-frameworks such as helm
-
-0:05:17.120,0:05:21.360
-really helped find things especially for
-
-0:05:20.479,0:05:25.919
-mx
-
-0:05:21.360,0:05:28.160
-for a while I was just
-
-0:05:25.919,0:05:29.520
-I would go about my day and if I pressed
-
-0:05:28.160,0:05:30.720
-to keep mine that I didn't know what it
-
-0:05:29.520,0:05:34.560
-did
-
-0:05:30.720,0:05:36.240
-I would do the losses and
-
-0:05:34.560,0:05:37.600
-see the list of key binds that I had
-
-0:05:36.240,0:05:40.400
-pressed and
-
-0:05:37.600,0:05:41.280
-tried to find that one and query the
-
-0:05:40.400,0:05:45.199
-function
-
-0:05:41.280,0:05:45.199
-and what not so
-
-0:05:45.280,0:05:51.759
-yeah and now we jump to now so
-
-0:05:49.120,0:05:53.280
-there there is at least one moment in
-
-0:05:51.759,0:05:55.600
-each day when I think
-
-0:05:53.280,0:05:57.680
-how would I live without umax
-
-0:05:55.600,0:05:59.120
-particularly now during my senior year
-
-0:05:57.680,0:06:02.720
-in high school
-
-0:05:59.120,0:06:05.520
-things are very busy with school violin
-
-0:06:02.720,0:06:06.400
-and other side projects it's pretty
-
-0:06:05.520,0:06:09.680
-crazy
-
-0:06:06.400,0:06:12.720
-and so Emacs
-
-0:06:09.680,0:06:14.479
-and org mode has really helped me stay
-
-0:06:12.720,0:06:16.960
-on track with everything
-
-0:06:14.479,0:06:18.840
-and the flexibility of these software is
-
-0:06:16.960,0:06:21.600
-being able to have things in different
-
-0:06:18.840,0:06:24.639
-files notes within the tasks
-
-0:06:21.600,0:06:25.840
-all of that stuff has been truly a
-
-0:06:24.639,0:06:28.400
-lifesaver
-
-0:06:25.840,0:06:31.199
-and so I think I can confidently say
-
-0:06:28.400,0:06:34.560
-that I have found Emacs to be
-
-0:06:31.199,0:06:34.560
-the perfect software for me
-
-0:06:35.280,0:06:42.240
-over the past two years of using Emacs
-
-0:06:38.639,0:06:45.039
-now it is about two years and two months
-
-0:06:42.240,0:06:46.160
-I have built a fairly well organized
-
-0:06:45.039,0:06:49.520
-2000
-
-0:06:46.160,0:06:52.160
-plus line org literate config
-
-0:06:49.520,0:06:53.840
-and so I actually I started with an
-
-0:06:52.160,0:06:56.800
-e-lisp config
-
-0:06:53.840,0:06:57.919
-just the vanilla e-max with evil mode
-
-0:06:56.800,0:07:00.319
-and I built it up
-
-0:06:57.919,0:07:02.400
-from there eventually I switched to org
-
-0:07:00.319,0:07:05.840
-literate configs
-
-0:07:02.400,0:07:10.080
-and used that to organize the snippets
-
-0:07:05.840,0:07:14.000
-that I was putting in there and so
-
-0:07:10.080,0:07:16.639
-yeah this is really my workflow now
-
-0:07:14.000,0:07:18.960
-currently about 90 of everything I do on
-
-0:07:16.639,0:07:21.520
-my computer is in Emacs
-
-0:07:18.960,0:07:22.319
-the most notable things of course the
-
-0:07:21.520,0:07:26.000
-list is far
-
-0:07:22.319,0:07:28.160
-too long to put on one slide but I do a
-
-0:07:26.000,0:07:31.280
-lot of my programming in Emacs
-
-0:07:28.160,0:07:33.759
-mainly python and e-lisp
-
-0:07:31.280,0:07:35.199
-because of my ap comp sci class I have
-
-0:07:33.759,0:07:38.720
-to do java as well
-
-0:07:35.199,0:07:41.759
-and thank goodness Emacs has wonderful
-
-0:07:38.720,0:07:41.759
-support for that as well
-
-0:07:41.840,0:07:48.800
-also I do all of my school assignments
-
-0:07:45.840,0:07:50.400
-more or less in Emacs essay writing I do
-
-0:07:48.800,0:07:51.919
-an org mode and I have some template
-
-0:07:50.400,0:07:53.919
-files
-
-0:07:51.919,0:07:55.039
-template org files which I just include
-
-0:07:53.919,0:07:58.160
-at the top
-
-0:07:55.039,0:08:01.440
-and then I can export easily to latex
-
-0:07:58.160,0:08:04.400
-and a beautiful pdf
-
-0:08:01.440,0:08:05.840
-math physics same thing latex fragments
-
-0:08:04.400,0:08:09.599
-are a lifesaver
-
-0:08:05.840,0:08:13.199
-and also really pretty
-
-0:08:09.599,0:08:15.520
-and I take notes on basically everything
-
-0:08:13.199,0:08:16.319
-at first I had things separate and then
-
-0:08:15.520,0:08:19.360
-I started
-
-0:08:16.319,0:08:21.360
-sort of putting it all into onenotes.org
-
-0:08:19.360,0:08:24.000
-file or most of it into one
-
-0:08:21.360,0:08:24.960
-file and that has actually worked out
-
-0:08:24.000,0:08:26.479
-surprisingly well
-
-0:08:24.960,0:08:28.879
-especially with all the searching
-
-0:08:26.479,0:08:33.440
-features of agenda
-
-0:08:28.879,0:08:35.680
-and whatnot um and I also use mail
-
-0:08:33.440,0:08:37.680
-I recently made the switch probably
-
-0:08:35.680,0:08:40.479
-about one or two months ago
-
-0:08:37.680,0:08:40.959
-and it has been one of the best switches
-
-0:08:40.479,0:08:44.480
-I've
-
-0:08:40.959,0:08:46.320
-I've ever had especially given
-
-0:08:44.480,0:08:47.839
-connecting to tasks all of this
-
-0:08:46.320,0:08:50.640
-wonderful stuff
-
-0:08:47.839,0:08:54.160
-just putting even more in Emacs is
-
-0:08:50.640,0:08:57.680
-always a good thing I found
-
-0:08:54.160,0:08:59.760
-so reflecting back on my journey I think
-
-0:08:57.680,0:09:01.440
-one of the most important things was
-
-0:08:59.760,0:09:04.480
-just having a reason to use it
-
-0:09:01.440,0:09:06.080
-when I came to Emacs I had something
-
-0:09:04.480,0:09:09.600
-that I was looking for
-
-0:09:06.080,0:09:09.839
-and as soon as I found it I delved right
-
-0:09:09.600,0:09:12.720
-in
-
-0:09:09.839,0:09:14.480
-and I I started using it for that thing
-
-0:09:12.720,0:09:16.959
-and so I was sort of forced to
-
-0:09:14.480,0:09:19.279
-take the time to read the docs and
-
-0:09:16.959,0:09:22.399
-figure out what functions I needed
-
-0:09:19.279,0:09:25.839
-to function and how
-
-0:09:22.399,0:09:29.519
-I was going to put my workflow
-
-0:09:25.839,0:09:29.519
-and also of course the desire to tinker
-
-0:09:30.399,0:09:36.800
-and yeah so really what's next for me
-
-0:09:33.519,0:09:38.640
-is just wanting to become a more active
-
-0:09:36.800,0:09:40.640
-member of the Emacs community
-
-0:09:38.640,0:09:43.760
-I want to give back and I think this
-
-0:09:40.640,0:09:45.920
-talk is sort of the first step to that
-
-0:09:43.760,0:09:48.000
-being a more active part of this
-
-0:09:45.920,0:09:51.040
-community that has
-
-0:09:48.000,0:09:54.000
-indirectly perhaps um but just like
-
-0:09:51.040,0:09:55.839
-really helped me become a better and
-
-0:09:54.000,0:09:58.880
-more organized human being
-
-0:09:55.839,0:10:01.920
-um I have some package ideas that I'm
-
-0:09:58.880,0:10:05.839
-slowly working on and yeah I just hope
-
-0:10:01.920,0:10:05.839
-to spread the word
-
-0:10:05.920,0:10:09.360
-so thank you very much for listening to
-
-0:10:08.000,0:10:11.360
-my lightning talk
-
-0:10:09.360,0:10:12.480
-if you'd like to contact me here are
-
-0:10:11.360,0:10:15.279
-three modes of
-
-0:10:12.480,0:10:17.120
-or two modes of communication I will be
-
-0:10:15.279,0:10:20.079
-on irc more
-
-0:10:17.120,0:10:20.560
-soon and you can always email me if you
-
-0:10:20.079,0:10:23.200
-have
-
-0:10:20.560,0:10:23.680
-any questions you can also search me on
-
-0:10:23.200,0:10:26.399
-youtube
-
-0:10:23.680,0:10:26.800
-pierce wong violin thank you very much
-
-0:10:26.399,0:10:30.000
-and
-
-0:10:26.800,0:10:30.000
-I hope you enjoy the rest of the
-
-0:10:30.040,0:10:33.040
-conference
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--27-state-of-retro-gaming-in-emacs-chip8--vasilij-wasamasa-schneidermann-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--27-state-of-retro-gaming-in-emacs-chip8--vasilij-wasamasa-schneidermann-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index c88c3ded..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--27-state-of-retro-gaming-in-emacs-chip8--vasilij-wasamasa-schneidermann-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,912 +0,0 @@
-0:00:00.880,0:00:04.520
-hello everyone and welcome to my talk
-
-0:00:02.879,0:00:06.960
-state of retrogaming and Emacs
-
-0:00:04.520,0:00:08.639
-[Music]
-
-0:00:06.960,0:00:12.000
-first of all a little bit about myself
-
-0:00:08.639,0:00:13.599
-my name is neilman I'm 28 years old
-
-0:00:12.000,0:00:15.200
-I work as a cyber security consultant
-
-0:00:13.599,0:00:17.440
-msg systems and
-
-0:00:15.200,0:00:19.359
-test other people's web applications and
-
-0:00:17.440,0:00:20.160
-review the source code for security
-
-0:00:19.359,0:00:22.960
-problems
-
-0:00:20.160,0:00:25.039
-you can reach me by email I have my own
-
-0:00:22.960,0:00:26.480
-self-hosted git repositories
-
-0:00:25.039,0:00:28.480
-and I have a blog where you can
-
-0:00:26.480,0:00:32.160
-occasionally find new posts by me on all
-
-0:00:28.480,0:00:34.800
-kinds of things not just emix things
-
-0:00:32.160,0:00:36.480
-so but the motivation about this one I
-
-0:00:34.800,0:00:38.079
-found that Emacs is the ultimate
-
-0:00:36.480,0:00:40.160
-procrastination machine and there are
-
-0:00:38.079,0:00:41.200
-lots of fun demonstrations I'll go over
-
-0:00:40.160,0:00:44.160
-a few of them
-
-0:00:41.200,0:00:46.079
-for example someone made a thing to
-
-0:00:44.160,0:00:48.239
-order sell it for himself online so it
-
-0:00:46.079,0:00:50.879
-doesn't have to walk over to the shop
-
-0:00:48.239,0:00:51.760
-there's plenty rc bots there's some game
-
-0:00:50.879,0:00:53.520
-things
-
-0:00:51.760,0:00:55.600
-there's an emulator for the z machine
-
-0:00:53.520,0:00:57.600
-which you can use to play zorg
-
-0:00:55.600,0:00:59.039
-and so I asked myself at this point can
-
-0:00:57.600,0:01:01.039
-you actually emulate retro games at
-
-0:00:59.039,0:01:02.800
-60fps and it looked around a bit
-
-0:01:01.039,0:01:04.479
-and found some projects but none that
-
-0:01:02.800,0:01:07.360
-were actually able to
-
-0:01:04.479,0:01:08.000
-do it at 60fps so I set out to do my own
-
-0:01:07.360,0:01:09.439
-one
-
-0:01:08.000,0:01:11.119
-and looked out for a console that you
-
-0:01:09.439,0:01:13.439
-can actually emulate at that speed
-
-0:01:11.119,0:01:14.690
-using emax with its very very limited
-
-0:01:13.439,0:01:16.320
-rendering
-
-0:01:14.690,0:01:19.520
-[Music]
-
-0:01:16.320,0:01:20.560
-and here's the project chip8.el it's
-
-0:01:19.520,0:01:22.880
-pretty much finished
-
-0:01:20.560,0:01:24.000
-it clocks into under 1000 sourced lines
-
-0:01:22.880,0:01:26.159
-of code
-
-0:01:24.000,0:01:28.080
-it supports the superchip 8 extensions
-
-0:01:26.159,0:01:30.159
-it runs at full speed all games behave
-
-0:01:28.080,0:01:32.320
-okay as far as I'm concerned and
-
-0:01:30.159,0:01:34.479
-yeah I'm pretty happy with it it's very
-
-0:01:32.320,0:01:37.040
-much the hell world of emulation
-
-0:01:34.479,0:01:40.880
-and I might maybe do some other
-
-0:01:37.040,0:01:43.360
-emulation projects in the future
-
-0:01:40.880,0:01:45.439
-now for the section which is the longest
-
-0:01:43.360,0:01:46.320
-bunch of fun facts about ship a dot el
-
-0:01:45.439,0:01:49.759
-which I've learned
-
-0:01:46.320,0:01:52.240
-during this project so
-
-0:01:49.759,0:01:54.640
-what the hell is debate anyway first of
-
-0:01:52.240,0:01:56.799
-all unlike many other emulation game
-
-0:01:54.640,0:01:58.560
-things it's not a console but a vm
-
-0:01:56.799,0:02:00.000
-it was designed for easy parting of home
-
-0:01:58.560,0:02:02.560
-computer games
-
-0:02:00.000,0:02:03.680
-it wasn't terribly successful and but
-
-0:02:02.560,0:02:04.320
-there's still a small community of
-
-0:02:03.680,0:02:06.079
-enthusiasts
-
-0:02:04.320,0:02:09.119
-writing games for it and there are even
-
-0:02:06.079,0:02:11.920
-a few demos
-
-0:02:09.119,0:02:14.720
-this vm has system specs it has a very
-
-0:02:11.920,0:02:14.959
-very simple 8-bit cpu with 16 registers
-
-0:02:14.720,0:02:17.760
-and
-
-0:02:14.959,0:02:18.160
-36 fixed size instructions you have a
-
-0:02:17.760,0:02:20.560
-whole
-
-0:02:18.160,0:02:22.080
-4 kilobyte of ram you have a stack with
-
-0:02:20.560,0:02:24.480
-16 return addresses
-
-0:02:22.080,0:02:25.760
-the resolution is 64 by 32 black white
-
-0:02:24.480,0:02:28.000
-pixels
-
-0:02:25.760,0:02:29.440
-rendering is done by drawing sprites
-
-0:02:28.000,0:02:30.160
-these are drawn in excel mode meaning
-
-0:02:29.440,0:02:32.239
-that if you
-
-0:02:30.160,0:02:33.840
-draw a sprite and set a bit it just
-
-0:02:32.239,0:02:35.040
-flips over from black to white or white
-
-0:02:33.840,0:02:36.560
-to black
-
-0:02:35.040,0:02:38.239
-first one you have a modern buzz that
-
-0:02:36.560,0:02:40.640
-can just beep at one
-
-0:02:38.239,0:02:43.120
-frequency and most unusually there's a
-
-0:02:40.640,0:02:45.360
-hexadecimal keypad as input
-
-0:02:43.120,0:02:48.160
-so the keys are basically zero to nine
-
-0:02:45.360,0:02:48.160
-and a to f
-
-0:02:48.480,0:02:52.400
-so how does this whole thing work it
-
-0:02:50.879,0:02:53.599
-runs an unspecified speed
-
-0:02:52.400,0:02:54.879
-you'll probably have to do some fine
-
-0:02:53.599,0:02:56.080
-tune you find the speed you're happy
-
-0:02:54.879,0:02:58.560
-with
-
-0:02:56.080,0:03:01.120
-sound and delay timers exist they count
-
-0:02:58.560,0:03:02.879
-down at 60fps down to zero
-
-0:03:01.120,0:03:05.120
-this is done so that you can play a
-
-0:03:02.879,0:03:06.640
-sound at some specific time
-
-0:03:05.120,0:03:08.640
-the game itself is loaded with a fixed
-
-0:03:06.640,0:03:10.480
-offset into ram the program account is
-
-0:03:08.640,0:03:11.920
-set to exactly that offset
-
-0:03:10.480,0:03:13.840
-and from there it enters the game loop
-
-0:03:11.920,0:03:15.519
-where decodes and instruction executes
-
-0:03:13.840,0:03:18.130
-it for the side effects and just
-
-0:03:15.519,0:03:19.599
-loops and does this at infinitum
-
-0:03:18.130,0:03:21.920
-[Music]
-
-0:03:19.599,0:03:23.920
-so the game was the first thing where
-
-0:03:21.920,0:03:24.239
-into problems the usual game approach is
-
-0:03:23.920,0:03:26.640
-to
-
-0:03:24.239,0:03:28.239
-do stuff figure out how long to eight
-
-0:03:26.640,0:03:30.640
-wait for exactly that much and
-
-0:03:28.239,0:03:31.680
-repeat this doesn't work well in imax at
-
-0:03:30.640,0:03:34.959
-all because well
-
-0:03:31.680,0:03:37.280
-user input basically and
-
-0:03:34.959,0:03:39.040
-Emacs is designed to just do whatever it
-
-0:03:37.280,0:03:40.080
-needs to do whenever you enter use input
-
-0:03:39.040,0:03:42.799
-instead of
-
-0:03:40.080,0:03:43.440
-doing things at one specific time if you
-
-0:03:42.799,0:03:45.040
-try to do
-
-0:03:43.440,0:03:46.640
-interruptable sleep well you get
-
-0:03:45.040,0:03:49.440
-unpredictable behavior
-
-0:03:46.640,0:03:50.959
-for example can be the timer doesn't run
-
-0:03:49.440,0:03:52.560
-at all at next time because you've
-
-0:03:50.959,0:03:54.400
-accidentally cancelled it
-
-0:03:52.560,0:03:55.760
-if you do uninterruptable sleep it's
-
-0:03:54.400,0:03:56.720
-freezes instead which isn't what you
-
-0:03:55.760,0:03:59.360
-want either
-
-0:03:56.720,0:04:00.560
-so I went for timers which forced me to
-
-0:03:59.360,0:04:02.159
-do inversion of control
-
-0:04:00.560,0:04:04.080
-meaning that I have to write code in the
-
-0:04:02.159,0:04:06.159
-style where it's just call it
-
-0:04:04.080,0:04:07.200
-time and this allows this input to
-
-0:04:06.159,0:04:09.120
-happen and to
-
-0:04:07.200,0:04:11.040
-for things to progress at roughly the
-
-0:04:09.120,0:04:12.879
-speed I want to
-
-0:04:11.040,0:04:14.159
-so there's the skydiver function which
-
-0:04:12.879,0:04:16.000
-is called a 60fps
-
-0:04:14.159,0:04:17.359
-and I have to be very careful to not do
-
-0:04:16.000,0:04:20.479
-too much in it
-
-0:04:17.359,0:04:22.960
-and say this function execute cpu cycles
-
-0:04:20.479,0:04:23.680
-decrypt the sound delay registers and
-
-0:04:22.960,0:04:27.759
-redraw
-
-0:04:23.680,0:04:28.800
-the screen so to map this whole system
-
-0:04:27.759,0:04:31.199
-to mx lisp
-
-0:04:28.800,0:04:33.120
-I've used just integers and vectors
-
-0:04:31.199,0:04:35.040
-which contain even more integers
-
-0:04:33.120,0:04:37.759
-this is used for the ram registers
-
-0:04:35.040,0:04:39.120
-return stack key state screen and so on
-
-0:04:37.759,0:04:41.520
-and so forth basically
-
-0:04:39.120,0:04:42.800
-what you would do if you were writing c
-
-0:04:41.520,0:04:44.560
-all of this is stored in global
-
-0:04:42.800,0:04:46.479
-variables I'm not using any
-
-0:04:44.560,0:04:48.400
-lists at all and as a side effect
-
-0:04:46.479,0:04:50.320
-there's no constant going on at all
-
-0:04:48.400,0:04:51.120
-there are no extra objects created which
-
-0:04:50.320,0:04:53.919
-would trigger
-
-0:04:51.120,0:04:55.840
-garbage collection pulses this getting
-
-0:04:53.919,0:04:56.720
-this red was rather tricky actually and
-
-0:04:55.840,0:04:58.560
-there were some
-
-0:04:56.720,0:05:01.680
-in garbage collection problems which I
-
-0:04:58.560,0:05:01.680
-had to resolve over time
-
-0:05:01.759,0:05:05.520
-so the coding instructions for this you
-
-0:05:04.320,0:05:06.800
-have to know that all instructions are
-
-0:05:05.520,0:05:08.880
-two bytes long
-
-0:05:06.800,0:05:10.240
-and the arguments encoded inside them
-
-0:05:08.880,0:05:11.440
-for example the jump to address
-
-0:05:10.240,0:05:15.120
-instruction
-
-0:05:11.440,0:05:18.400
-is encoded as one and three hex digits
-
-0:05:15.120,0:05:20.800
-the type is extracted masking with f000
-
-0:05:18.400,0:05:21.680
-and then shifting it by 12 bits mask
-
-0:05:20.800,0:05:24.000
-means the hd
-
-0:05:21.680,0:05:25.440
-performance binary end you can do the
-
-0:05:24.000,0:05:26.639
-same with the argument basement with
-
-0:05:25.440,0:05:29.520
-zero fff
-
-0:05:26.639,0:05:31.039
-and no shift if you do this long enough
-
-0:05:29.520,0:05:32.639
-you'll find common patterns for example
-
-0:05:31.039,0:05:35.280
-addresses are always encoded like this
-
-0:05:32.639,0:05:36.880
-using the last three nibbles in the code
-
-0:05:35.280,0:05:38.400
-you'll find a big count which dispatches
-
-0:05:36.880,0:05:40.070
-on the type and executes it for the side
-
-0:05:38.400,0:05:41.440
-effects
-
-0:05:40.070,0:05:43.440
-[Music]
-
-0:05:41.440,0:05:45.919
-for testing I've initially just accused
-
-0:05:43.440,0:05:47.280
-the rom until I fit ctrl g
-
-0:05:45.919,0:05:49.039
-and then use the debug command to run
-
-0:05:47.280,0:05:51.360
-the screen to a buffer
-
-0:05:49.039,0:05:52.320
-later on I found tiny roms that just
-
-0:05:51.360,0:05:55.680
-display a static
-
-0:05:52.320,0:05:57.280
-test screen for example logo and looked
-
-0:05:55.680,0:05:59.199
-whether it looked right
-
-0:05:57.280,0:06:00.960
-I added instructions as needed and went
-
-0:05:59.199,0:06:03.360
-through more and more and more roms and
-
-0:06:00.960,0:06:05.199
-later I wrote in unit test suite as a
-
-0:06:03.360,0:06:06.000
-safety net and this unit test suite it
-
-0:06:05.199,0:06:08.400
-just
-
-0:06:06.000,0:06:10.080
-sets up an empty emulator state executes
-
-0:06:08.400,0:06:10.400
-some instructions and then looks whether
-
-0:06:10.080,0:06:13.840
-the
-
-0:06:10.400,0:06:13.840
-expected side effects have happened
-
-0:06:14.880,0:06:19.120
-for debugging I usually use e-debug but
-
-0:06:17.120,0:06:20.880
-this was super ineffective because well
-
-0:06:19.120,0:06:22.960
-you don't really want to step through
-
-0:06:20.880,0:06:24.960
-big cons doing side effects for every
-
-0:06:22.960,0:06:26.880
-single cycle when it can take like 100
-
-0:06:24.960,0:06:29.680
-cycles for things to happen
-
-0:06:26.880,0:06:31.360
-therefore I've set up logging and
-
-0:06:29.680,0:06:32.720
-whenever I locked something
-
-0:06:31.360,0:06:33.919
-and couldn't figure out the error I
-
-0:06:32.720,0:06:37.039
-compared my lock output with
-
-0:06:33.919,0:06:39.199
-instrumented version of another emulator
-
-0:06:37.039,0:06:40.880
-and if the locks diverge then I have
-
-0:06:39.199,0:06:42.720
-figured out where the bug lies and could
-
-0:06:40.880,0:06:44.479
-look deeper into it
-
-0:06:42.720,0:06:46.639
-future project idea might be a chip 8
-
-0:06:44.479,0:06:50.720
-debugger but I doubt I'll ever
-
-0:06:46.639,0:06:52.639
-go into it for analysis I initially
-
-0:06:50.720,0:06:54.400
-wrote a disassembler which is a very
-
-0:06:52.639,0:06:56.160
-simple thing but super tedious
-
-0:06:54.400,0:06:57.599
-especially if you wanted to add advanced
-
-0:06:56.160,0:06:59.120
-functionality for example analysis or
-
-0:06:57.599,0:07:00.000
-thinking of what part is data what had
-
-0:06:59.120,0:07:01.840
-this code
-
-0:07:00.000,0:07:03.360
-and I had this great idea for using the
-
-0:07:01.840,0:07:05.120
-radari 2 framework
-
-0:07:03.360,0:07:06.479
-and adding analysis and disassembly
-
-0:07:05.120,0:07:08.400
-plug-in for it
-
-0:07:06.479,0:07:10.319
-so I looked into this found okay here
-
-0:07:08.400,0:07:12.160
-where you can write plugins in c
-
-0:07:10.319,0:07:13.520
-but also in python so I wrote one in
-
-0:07:12.160,0:07:15.039
-python and then the scout there's
-
-0:07:13.520,0:07:17.440
-actually existing one in core which you
-
-0:07:15.039,0:07:19.599
-have to enable explicitly by passing its
-
-0:07:17.440,0:07:21.840
-argument so I've tried it and found it's
-
-0:07:19.599,0:07:23.680
-not exactly as good as my own one so
-
-0:07:21.840,0:07:26.610
-improved this one and submitted pull
-
-0:07:23.680,0:07:28.080
-requests until it was at the same level
-
-0:07:26.610,0:07:30.160
-[Music]
-
-0:07:28.080,0:07:31.360
-rendering was the trickiest part of this
-
-0:07:30.160,0:07:34.319
-whole thing because
-
-0:07:31.360,0:07:35.759
-well I decided against using a library
-
-0:07:34.319,0:07:37.120
-not like there would have been any
-
-0:07:35.759,0:07:39.599
-usable library for this
-
-0:07:37.120,0:07:41.680
-my usual approach of accelerating svg
-
-0:07:39.599,0:07:45.120
-file was too expensive it just created
-
-0:07:41.680,0:07:47.360
-too much garbage and took too long time
-
-0:07:45.120,0:07:49.599
-I then tried creating mutating strings
-
-0:07:47.360,0:07:52.639
-this was either either too expensive
-
-0:07:49.599,0:07:55.039
-just like svgs or too complicated I
-
-0:07:52.639,0:07:57.280
-tried changing svg tiles which created
-
-0:07:55.039,0:07:59.520
-gaps between the lines
-
-0:07:57.280,0:08:00.720
-then I tried to create an xpm file which
-
-0:07:59.520,0:08:02.400
-was backed by a bull vector
-
-0:08:00.720,0:08:04.400
-administrating this bull vector
-
-0:08:02.400,0:08:06.879
-but the image caching effect made it
-
-0:08:04.400,0:08:10.000
-just every nth frame to appear which
-
-0:08:06.879,0:08:11.440
-wasn't good either then I had the idea
-
-0:08:10.000,0:08:13.280
-to just use plain text
-
-0:08:11.440,0:08:14.800
-and paint the individual characters with
-
-0:08:13.280,0:08:17.120
-a different background color this
-
-0:08:14.800,0:08:18.479
-this had perfect perfect performance
-
-0:08:17.120,0:08:20.000
-there were many optimization attempts
-
-0:08:18.479,0:08:21.840
-until I got there and it was
-
-0:08:20.000,0:08:23.199
-very very stressful I wasn't sure
-
-0:08:21.840,0:08:26.160
-whether I would ever get to accept the
-
-0:08:23.199,0:08:28.560
-performance at all
-
-0:08:26.160,0:08:30.319
-for sound you only need to a single beep
-
-0:08:28.560,0:08:31.280
-so technically it shouldn't be difficult
-
-0:08:30.319,0:08:33.519
-to emulate it
-
-0:08:31.280,0:08:34.880
-however doing this is hard because Emacs
-
-0:08:33.519,0:08:37.200
-officially only supports synchronous
-
-0:08:34.880,0:08:39.039
-playback of sounds
-
-0:08:37.200,0:08:41.360
-but there's also emax process which you
-
-0:08:39.039,0:08:43.519
-can launch in asynchronous way
-
-0:08:41.360,0:08:45.279
-so I looked into it and found that
-
-0:08:43.519,0:08:46.640
-employee has a slave mode and mpv
-
-0:08:45.279,0:08:50.880
-supports listing on the
-
-0:08:46.640,0:08:54.000
-fifo for commands so I've created a pipe
-
-0:08:50.880,0:08:55.519
-started a past mpv in loop mode and
-
-0:08:54.000,0:08:58.000
-always send in pause and pause command
-
-0:08:55.519,0:09:01.839
-to the fifo and that way I could control
-
-0:08:58.000,0:09:01.839
-when to start beeping and stop beeping
-
-0:09:02.640,0:09:07.200
-so yeah that's it so far was a very
-
-0:09:05.760,0:09:09.279
-educational experience
-
-0:09:07.200,0:09:10.320
-I have tried out a bunch of games which
-
-0:09:09.279,0:09:12.640
-were
-
-0:09:10.320,0:09:14.320
-well I almost say the worst ports of
-
-0:09:12.640,0:09:15.839
-classic games I've ever tried
-
-0:09:14.320,0:09:18.320
-it wasn't terribly fun to play them but
-
-0:09:15.839,0:09:21.760
-was fun to improve the emulator until
-
-0:09:18.320,0:09:23.279
-well things worked good enough
-
-0:09:21.760,0:09:25.120
-and I've learned a lot about how
-
-0:09:23.279,0:09:27.760
-computers work at this level
-
-0:09:25.120,0:09:28.880
-so maybe maybe I'll in the future make
-
-0:09:27.760,0:09:31.920
-another emulator
-
-0:09:28.880,0:09:34.000
-but uh I'm not sure whether anything
-
-0:09:31.920,0:09:36.560
-more advanced like intel 8080 emulator
-
-0:09:34.000,0:09:37.839
-will actually run mix fast enough
-
-0:09:36.560,0:09:39.200
-but it's still an interesting idea
-
-0:09:37.839,0:09:39.600
-because then you could actually have an
-
-0:09:39.200,0:09:41.680
-os
-
-0:09:39.600,0:09:43.120
-inside Emacs and fulfill that one
-
-0:09:41.680,0:09:45.440
-specific meme
-
-0:09:43.120,0:09:47.279
-but if I try to do most serious stuff
-
-0:09:45.440,0:09:48.000
-I'll probably use chicken scheme which
-
-0:09:47.279,0:09:49.920
-is my
-
-0:09:48.000,0:09:53.279
-preferred language for serious projects
-
-0:09:49.920,0:09:57.839
-and writing neso gamer emulator
-
-0:09:53.279,0:09:57.839
-and that's it thank you
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--28-welcome-to-the-dungeon--erik-elmshauser-corwin-brust-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--28-welcome-to-the-dungeon--erik-elmshauser-corwin-brust-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index eafeb121..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--28-welcome-to-the-dungeon--erik-elmshauser-corwin-brust-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,4992 +0,0 @@
-0:00:08.559,0:00:10.880
-okay
-
-0:00:12.960,0:00:18.000
-so I'm gonna start with my just my demo
-
-0:00:14.960,0:00:31.840
-Emacs here eric we're ready
-
-0:00:18.000,0:00:35.440
-oh we are live
-
-0:00:31.840,0:00:39.200
-okay so you're starting then
-
-0:00:35.440,0:00:41.760
-I guess I'll start right now here we go
-
-0:00:39.200,0:00:43.440
-so I'm a windows user as we talked about
-
-0:00:41.760,0:00:46.719
-yesterday
-
-0:00:43.440,0:00:47.440
-I'm gonna try to uh start Emacs for you
-
-0:00:46.719,0:00:48.960
-now
-
-0:00:47.440,0:00:52.879
-and I've kind of got it pinned to this
-
-0:00:48.960,0:00:55.760
-thing but mostly what I actually do
-
-0:00:52.879,0:01:00.160
-is grab a file explorer and head to my
-
-0:00:55.760,0:01:00.160
-desktop where I have all sorts of Emacs
-
-0:01:00.559,0:01:04.160
-eric can you make sure that your vlc is
-
-0:01:05.960,0:01:08.960
-muted
-
-0:01:10.840,0:01:13.840
-okay
-
-0:01:21.840,0:01:27.840
-give me a second please
-
-0:01:39.360,0:01:44.000
-I do okay all right we should be we
-
-0:01:42.079,0:01:44.560
-should be working again now my apologies
-
-0:01:44.000,0:01:46.560
-for that
-
-0:01:44.560,0:01:47.759
-all right handling technical problems in
-
-0:01:46.560,0:01:50.079
-real time is
-
-0:01:47.759,0:01:52.079
-uh what Emacs is all about as we're
-
-0:01:50.079,0:01:53.360
-coding we're constantly making errors
-
-0:01:52.079,0:01:54.560
-and fixing them and
-
-0:01:53.360,0:01:56.159
-learning from the kinds of errors that
-
-0:01:54.560,0:01:57.759
-we make and adjusting the editor to be
-
-0:01:56.159,0:02:00.719
-easier to use
-
-0:01:57.759,0:02:02.640
-so today we'll try to build on uh some
-
-0:02:00.719,0:02:05.600
-of the ideas we introduced yesterday
-
-0:02:02.640,0:02:07.280
-around how a community can help us learn
-
-0:02:05.600,0:02:10.479
-Emacs faster
-
-0:02:07.280,0:02:13.040
-and how we can think broadly
-
-0:02:10.479,0:02:14.160
-about the people in our team when we
-
-0:02:13.040,0:02:16.080
-decide how
-
-0:02:14.160,0:02:18.000
-what kind of Emacs configuration we're
-
-0:02:16.080,0:02:19.680
-going to have going for our project
-
-0:02:18.000,0:02:22.239
-so I'm just going to fire up my normal
-
-0:02:19.680,0:02:25.440
-Emacs config now so that we get
-
-0:02:22.239,0:02:29.120
-uh hopefully a nice pretty demo or uh
-
-0:02:25.440,0:02:30.959
-at least some slides and for safety
-
-0:02:29.120,0:02:33.360
-we're going to avoid the server because
-
-0:02:30.959,0:02:35.280
-I hate it when it crashes
-
-0:02:33.360,0:02:37.840
-it's a little less stable under windows
-
-0:02:35.280,0:02:37.840
-I think
-
-0:02:41.120,0:02:44.800
-and well uh while this starts up I'll
-
-0:02:43.360,0:02:47.200
-just briefly introduce
-
-0:02:44.800,0:02:49.519
-my lifelong friend and eric uh elm
-
-0:02:47.200,0:02:51.120
-salzer who's hanging in the wings and
-
-0:02:49.519,0:02:53.840
-waiting impatiently for us to be able to
-
-0:02:51.120,0:02:53.840
-start our slides
-
-0:02:54.400,0:02:57.280
-hello everybody
-
-0:02:58.560,0:03:02.000
-so you've heard plenty from me already
-
-0:03:00.720,0:03:05.760
-this conference
-
-0:03:02.000,0:03:09.120
-um I suppose
-
-0:03:05.760,0:03:10.720
-uh so I'm just gonna uh
-
-0:03:09.120,0:03:12.400
-so eric and I have worked things out so
-
-0:03:10.720,0:03:14.159
-that he'll do most of the talking today
-
-0:03:12.400,0:03:14.879
-I'll drive us through some code parts
-
-0:03:14.159,0:03:16.239
-but
-
-0:03:14.879,0:03:18.000
-the hope is that we'll just focus a
-
-0:03:16.239,0:03:20.000
-little more on the game and if you have
-
-0:03:18.000,0:03:21.840
-questions about the game at all please
-
-0:03:20.000,0:03:24.879
-don't hesitate to ask those as well as
-
-0:03:21.840,0:03:24.879
-your Emacs questions
-
-0:03:28.480,0:03:33.840
-and I think we're starting out welcome
-
-0:03:34.959,0:03:40.400
-and let's cut away here so we can show
-
-0:03:37.680,0:03:40.400
-some faces
-
-0:03:41.200,0:03:47.840
-I lost you eric why would you do that
-
-0:03:45.040,0:03:47.840
-there he is
-
-0:03:48.319,0:03:53.280
-and let's just do one more thing because
-
-0:03:50.239,0:03:55.439
-that's just kind of offensive
-
-0:03:53.280,0:03:59.360
-I'm gonna kill off that cute wallpaper
-
-0:03:55.439,0:04:02.640
-we all were playing with yesterday
-
-0:03:59.360,0:04:04.480
-although that's not so bad anymore
-
-0:04:02.640,0:04:07.360
-oh that's terrible it's got to come back
-
-0:04:04.480,0:04:07.360
-I'm sorry everybody
-
-0:04:11.120,0:04:15.840
-oh my dear all right
-
-0:04:16.720,0:04:22.400
-and we just opened Emacs so I have to
-
-0:04:19.040,0:04:22.400
-open my slideshow
-
-0:04:25.040,0:04:30.320
-and there we are
-
-0:04:28.479,0:04:32.560
-okay eric I think I'm about as ready as
-
-0:04:30.320,0:04:35.520
-I get
-
-0:04:32.560,0:04:37.840
-cool well uh let's begin here welcome to
-
-0:04:35.520,0:04:40.560
-the dungeon everybody
-
-0:04:37.840,0:04:40.560
-I'm eric and this
-
-0:04:41.199,0:04:45.120
-london is that we've been working on for
-
-0:04:43.199,0:04:48.240
-about a year now
-
-0:04:45.120,0:04:52.000
-um the dungeon
-
-0:04:48.240,0:04:54.000
-game is based on
-
-0:04:52.000,0:04:56.160
-a tradition of gaming that came out of
-
-0:04:54.000,0:04:57.520
-the university of minnesota back in like
-
-0:04:56.160,0:05:00.639
-the 1950s
-
-0:04:57.520,0:05:03.680
-as far as we can tell and it
-
-0:05:00.639,0:05:05.199
-is a predecessor an ancestor of most of
-
-0:05:03.680,0:05:07.680
-the commercial role-playing games
-
-0:05:05.199,0:05:08.720
-that you have heard of or maybe tried
-
-0:05:07.680,0:05:10.800
-out from
-
-0:05:08.720,0:05:11.919
-various stores and friends when I have
-
-0:05:10.800,0:05:14.240
-you
-
-0:05:11.919,0:05:15.759
-so one of the first things we want to
-
-0:05:14.240,0:05:17.039
-talk about is what is it that sets
-
-0:05:15.759,0:05:19.440
-dungeon apart
-
-0:05:17.039,0:05:20.800
-why is it you know what is it about this
-
-0:05:19.440,0:05:22.880
-game that makes us want to
-
-0:05:20.800,0:05:25.039
-continue bringing it forward when there
-
-0:05:22.880,0:05:26.800
-are so many games
-
-0:05:25.039,0:05:28.479
-already commercially available that are
-
-0:05:26.800,0:05:32.400
-descended from it
-
-0:05:28.479,0:05:36.479
-um dungeon is kind of a
-
-0:05:32.400,0:05:39.280
-simpler game like we
-
-0:05:36.479,0:05:40.400
-don't a lot of the mechanics that you
-
-0:05:39.280,0:05:42.240
-think of about like
-
-0:05:40.400,0:05:44.560
-what is it that defines your character
-
-0:05:42.240,0:05:48.080
-stats and skills and attributes
-
-0:05:44.560,0:05:51.199
-we just don't deal with in dungeon um
-
-0:05:48.080,0:05:54.720
-but dungeon
-
-0:05:51.199,0:05:59.560
-the simplicity of it allows it um
-
-0:05:54.720,0:06:01.840
-to be a view over creativity more than
-
-0:05:59.560,0:06:04.720
-um
-
-0:06:01.840,0:06:07.039
-so that's kind of why we like it but
-
-0:06:04.720,0:06:07.039
-also
-
-0:06:16.639,0:06:24.000
-so when we look at it as kind of like
-
-0:06:20.800,0:06:26.880
-uh a technology problem whoops
-
-0:06:24.000,0:06:27.919
-when we try to hey home uh I'm sorry I
-
-0:06:26.880,0:06:30.560
-got ahead of us I'll
-
-0:06:27.919,0:06:30.560
-I'll cut back
-
-0:06:32.160,0:06:37.600
-I I thought we were doing fine
-
-0:06:35.520,0:06:40.000
-okay well then I'll I'll just yeah
-
-0:06:37.600,0:06:40.000
-either way
-
-0:06:40.319,0:06:46.479
-so we've been friends since um
-
-0:06:43.360,0:06:49.840
-it was our parents basically
-
-0:06:46.479,0:06:53.120
-um our parents are friends uh and
-
-0:06:49.840,0:07:02.479
-we learn this game from our parents
-
-0:06:53.120,0:07:04.560
-um specifically um
-
-0:07:02.479,0:07:06.400
-uh yeah that's where that's that's
-
-0:07:04.560,0:07:09.599
-that's my q in right
-
-0:07:06.400,0:07:13.759
-so um yeah my my
-
-0:07:09.599,0:07:15.120
-my folks uh and and eric's folks were
-
-0:07:13.759,0:07:17.360
-were really tight they used to run
-
-0:07:15.120,0:07:20.400
-science fiction conventions together
-
-0:07:17.360,0:07:21.840
-and yeah we our play
-
-0:07:20.400,0:07:23.520
-featured you know imaginative
-
-0:07:21.840,0:07:25.360
-role-playing usually we would find ways
-
-0:07:23.520,0:07:28.639
-to work the computers in
-
-0:07:25.360,0:07:30.479
-to things and uh uh
-
-0:07:28.639,0:07:34.160
-I don't I don't know I I hardly have
-
-0:07:30.479,0:07:34.160
-memories uh that proceed eric
-
-0:07:35.000,0:07:44.240
-um also it turns out we're both
-
-0:07:37.840,0:07:47.280
-kind of nervous uh we've been um
-
-0:07:44.240,0:07:49.039
-back in the early 80s and
-
-0:07:47.280,0:07:51.360
-for as long as we've been friends
-
-0:07:49.039,0:07:52.800
-basically we've also been into playing
-
-0:07:51.360,0:07:55.440
-with computers
-
-0:07:52.800,0:07:55.840
-um over the years we've worked with many
-
-0:07:55.440,0:07:59.120
-many
-
-0:07:55.840,0:07:59.120
-different systems we've played
-
-0:08:11.360,0:08:17.919
-like um so we
-
-0:08:14.560,0:08:20.800
-also always thought like
-
-0:08:17.919,0:08:22.639
-how is it that we can use these cool
-
-0:08:20.800,0:08:27.840
-computers
-
-0:08:22.639,0:08:27.840
-to build this dungeons
-
-0:08:28.319,0:08:35.039
-right that's certainly what we did um
-
-0:08:32.080,0:08:35.839
-so after some decades of bike shedding
-
-0:08:35.039,0:08:37.360
-where we saw
-
-0:08:35.839,0:08:39.039
-really a lot of changes in the
-
-0:08:37.360,0:08:40.800
-technology field
-
-0:08:39.039,0:08:42.880
-cell phones were invented smartphones
-
-0:08:40.800,0:08:44.720
-were invented text messaging in
-
-0:08:42.880,0:08:47.120
-particular had a dramatic
-
-0:08:44.720,0:08:48.640
-impact on on what we thought dungeon
-
-0:08:47.120,0:08:49.519
-would have to be able to do to be more
-
-0:08:48.640,0:08:54.720
-fun
-
-0:08:49.519,0:08:58.480
-than scribbling in in graph paper
-
-0:08:54.720,0:09:01.519
-um yeah either way
-
-0:08:58.480,0:09:04.399
-we've been using linux since the mid 90s
-
-0:09:01.519,0:09:06.160
-um I don't remember exactly when I did
-
-0:09:04.399,0:09:09.279
-my first linux install
-
-0:09:06.160,0:09:12.560
-but uh I really
-
-0:09:09.279,0:09:13.279
-liked it from the get-go and um I think
-
-0:09:12.560,0:09:23.360
-it was
-
-0:09:13.279,0:09:26.320
-you know um
-
-0:09:23.360,0:09:28.800
-uh and I'll add I remember the day that
-
-0:09:26.320,0:09:32.560
-I learned about the formation of gnu
-
-0:09:28.800,0:09:33.440
-it um it had a life I I mean I read lots
-
-0:09:32.560,0:09:36.880
-of licenses I
-
-0:09:33.440,0:09:38.480
-I think a lot of us have written our own
-
-0:09:36.880,0:09:41.600
-swag license code
-
-0:09:38.480,0:09:42.800
-and uh I definitely credit the formation
-
-0:09:41.600,0:09:46.240
-of gnu to my
-
-0:09:42.800,0:09:46.240
-being interested in thinking about that
-
-0:09:48.640,0:09:53.040
-right I am working the slides here okay
-
-0:09:50.720,0:09:55.200
-well um
-
-0:09:53.040,0:09:56.080
-so yeah this is your turn I already
-
-0:09:55.200,0:09:58.720
-mentioned uh
-
-0:09:56.080,0:10:00.399
-jeff yesterday so you're turning to take
-
-0:09:58.720,0:10:03.519
-it for a few slides
-
-0:10:00.399,0:10:04.240
-okay well I mean you know along the
-
-0:10:03.519,0:10:07.200
-learning
-
-0:10:04.240,0:10:08.560
-linux we started learning the various
-
-0:10:07.200,0:10:11.680
-tools that were available
-
-0:10:08.560,0:10:14.000
-through the new free software movement
-
-0:10:11.680,0:10:14.720
-and um it didn't take very long before
-
-0:10:14.000,0:10:18.240
-we got
-
-0:10:14.720,0:10:21.040
-into using Emacs um and when we were
-
-0:10:18.240,0:10:24.000
-working as software developers um back
-
-0:10:21.040,0:10:25.680
-in the 90s we both were using Emacs in
-
-0:10:24.000,0:10:28.959
-an office environment with
-
-0:10:25.680,0:10:33.360
-some other developers and it I mean
-
-0:10:28.959,0:10:33.360
-it was obviously a very powerful
-
-0:10:40.560,0:10:48.000
-um yeah I'm not going to go on at length
-
-0:10:43.120,0:10:48.000
-about my love for Emacs here so um
-
-0:10:48.880,0:10:52.480
-so we yeah so we put together a project
-
-0:10:52.000,0:10:54.240
-and
-
-0:10:52.480,0:10:56.320
-and each time we rehearse this eric
-
-0:10:54.240,0:10:58.000
-introduces it with it's my story to tell
-
-0:10:56.320,0:10:59.360
-but since our flow is already to hell
-
-0:10:58.000,0:11:00.880
-and we're just having a conversation
-
-0:10:59.360,0:11:03.920
-with you today
-
-0:11:00.880,0:11:06.399
-um I'll just jump in and say
-
-0:11:03.920,0:11:08.160
-from a project standpoint the the
-
-0:11:06.399,0:11:09.839
-project owes its inception
-
-0:11:08.160,0:11:12.079
-to a tremendous number of people in
-
-0:11:09.839,0:11:14.000
-fandom that you know
-
-0:11:12.079,0:11:15.680
-uh encouraged us to just do crazy
-
-0:11:14.000,0:11:18.160
-projects and
-
-0:11:15.680,0:11:18.800
-in this case to our friends that were
-
-0:11:18.160,0:11:21.360
-hanging out
-
-0:11:18.800,0:11:22.560
-with us on discord all the time while we
-
-0:11:21.360,0:11:25.200
-played different games
-
-0:11:22.560,0:11:26.640
-and uh through that and while I was
-
-0:11:25.200,0:11:31.839
-fooling with Emacs is
-
-0:11:26.640,0:11:31.839
-generally other people played games uh
-
-0:11:34.000,0:11:37.200
-kind of the pieces fell into place and
-
-0:11:35.680,0:11:38.320
-we were all there so we could talk about
-
-0:11:37.200,0:11:41.040
-it and the idea got
-
-0:11:38.320,0:11:42.800
-exciting again and we started going back
-
-0:11:41.040,0:11:44.480
-to all the places that we had
-
-0:11:42.800,0:11:46.640
-had trouble with it in the past and it
-
-0:11:44.480,0:11:48.000
-really did seem to add up we built proof
-
-0:11:46.640,0:11:50.240
-of concepts to do
-
-0:11:48.000,0:11:51.440
-hard stuff quickly and I guess we'll
-
-0:11:50.240,0:11:54.320
-probably head into that
-
-0:11:51.440,0:11:54.320
-that area now
-
-0:11:54.880,0:11:57.040
-so
-
-0:12:03.360,0:12:11.839
-and there was a slide about all of
-
-0:12:06.800,0:12:11.839
-the problems
-
-0:12:31.360,0:12:37.279
-hey there hey
-
-0:12:34.959,0:12:38.800
-um yeah go ahead and continue I just got
-
-0:12:37.279,0:12:40.639
-a phone call I think from leo so I'm
-
-0:12:38.800,0:12:44.480
-gonna mute
-
-0:12:40.639,0:12:47.600
-okay so um what we did in
-
-0:12:44.480,0:12:49.680
-in the project was basically come up
-
-0:12:47.600,0:12:51.440
-with our minimum play testable candidate
-
-0:12:49.680,0:12:52.000
-we listed all of the things that we need
-
-0:12:51.440,0:12:56.240
-to be able
-
-0:12:52.000,0:12:59.040
-to make the project do in order to
-
-0:12:56.240,0:12:59.519
-recreate the dungeon experience that we
-
-0:12:59.040,0:13:01.279
-had
-
-0:12:59.519,0:13:04.720
-with paper and dice sitting around a
-
-0:13:01.279,0:13:04.720
-table when we were kids
-
-0:13:05.600,0:13:07.839
-and
-
-0:13:09.680,0:13:13.839
-I mean we you know it took a while for
-
-0:13:12.079,0:13:16.079
-us to kind of
-
-0:13:13.839,0:13:18.000
-tease apart the problem in a way where
-
-0:13:16.079,0:13:19.120
-we could actually list out all of the
-
-0:13:18.000,0:13:20.959
-features like
-
-0:13:19.120,0:13:23.920
-what are the problems we have to solve
-
-0:13:20.959,0:13:23.920
-and how do we solve them
-
-0:13:27.760,0:13:33.040
-so creating any free software any
-
-0:13:30.959,0:13:36.000
-self-organizing free software project
-
-0:13:33.040,0:13:37.200
-is is challenging to start with and
-
-0:13:36.000,0:13:38.480
-we're generally
-
-0:13:37.200,0:13:40.320
-people with a bunch of other
-
-0:13:38.480,0:13:40.560
-responsibilities by the time we get to
-
-0:13:40.320,0:13:44.000
-it
-
-0:13:40.560,0:13:47.040
-so it's it's not just hey
-
-0:13:44.000,0:13:47.680
-you know the general herding cats it's
-
-0:13:47.040,0:13:49.120
-it's
-
-0:13:47.680,0:13:51.040
-you know trying to make it a part of
-
-0:13:49.120,0:13:54.399
-your life to
-
-0:13:51.040,0:13:57.680
-uh that being kind of a
-
-0:13:54.399,0:14:00.480
-you know challenging battle we we
-
-0:13:57.680,0:14:02.639
-kind of aligned on some some principles
-
-0:14:00.480,0:14:04.079
-that we wanted to adhere to
-
-0:14:02.639,0:14:05.680
-once we started taking the project
-
-0:14:04.079,0:14:09.519
-seriously
-
-0:14:05.680,0:14:12.720
-like pre you know particularly
-
-0:14:09.519,0:14:15.199
-recognizing gnu in specific as we focus
-
-0:14:12.720,0:14:16.480
-on giving back to the community
-
-0:14:15.199,0:14:18.240
-taking what we learned as pearl
-
-0:14:16.480,0:14:22.079
-programmers and
-
-0:14:18.240,0:14:24.320
-uh you know bringing that spirit forward
-
-0:14:22.079,0:14:26.399
-into into our work and maybe
-
-0:14:24.320,0:14:27.120
-specifically support making sure that we
-
-0:14:26.399,0:14:30.639
-can
-
-0:14:27.120,0:14:31.760
-um you know write uh functions for the
-
-0:14:30.639,0:14:35.199
-game
-
-0:14:31.760,0:14:38.079
-um in pearl if we want to
-
-0:14:35.199,0:14:40.320
-and then to use the game as a vehicle to
-
-0:14:38.079,0:14:42.560
-make people look beyond
-
-0:14:40.320,0:14:42.560
-the
-
-0:14:43.360,0:14:49.600
-typically open source or sorry typically
-
-0:14:46.800,0:14:52.160
-uh nominally open source at best
-
-0:14:49.600,0:14:54.160
-generally pretty closed world of
-
-0:14:52.160,0:14:55.440
-computer gaming a lot of windows users
-
-0:14:54.160,0:14:57.519
-out there a lot of free
-
-0:14:55.440,0:14:59.760
-non-free communication tools and a lot
-
-0:14:57.519,0:15:01.839
-of uh
-
-0:14:59.760,0:15:03.360
-you know a lot of ground to cover from a
-
-0:15:01.839,0:15:05.920
-free software perspective
-
-0:15:03.360,0:15:07.360
-so what can Emacs do from a gaming
-
-0:15:05.920,0:15:12.160
-standpoint to
-
-0:15:07.360,0:15:14.880
-to open that up
-
-0:15:12.160,0:15:16.720
-and not to mention the hubris of the you
-
-0:15:14.880,0:15:18.399
-know the two of us with a few friends
-
-0:15:16.720,0:15:19.440
-basically deciding to take on what
-
-0:15:18.399,0:15:21.839
-amounts to a
-
-0:15:19.440,0:15:24.720
-huge project um you know we're
-
-0:15:21.839,0:15:27.839
-essentially a year in now and we haven't
-
-0:15:24.720,0:15:30.000
-really gotten over halfway to our
-
-0:15:27.839,0:15:32.880
-minimum playtestable candidate
-
-0:15:30.000,0:15:34.320
-um it's a it's a work in progress we've
-
-0:15:32.880,0:15:36.800
-got a long row to go
-
-0:15:34.320,0:15:38.399
-there's at least 50 items on the things
-
-0:15:36.800,0:15:40.320
-that we think are critical to
-
-0:15:38.399,0:15:43.279
-to be able to introduce it to my younger
-
-0:15:40.320,0:15:43.279
-kids for example
-
-0:15:44.720,0:15:49.279
-um okay so we're in the accomplishments
-
-0:15:48.399,0:15:50.959
-section
-
-0:15:49.279,0:15:52.639
-so we're supposed to be talking about
-
-0:15:50.959,0:15:55.920
-the things that we have
-
-0:15:52.639,0:15:58.880
-succeeded in doing in our first year um
-
-0:15:55.920,0:16:01.199
-we have succeeded in working with data
-
-0:15:58.880,0:16:04.480
-in org documents using org mode
-
-0:16:01.199,0:16:05.360
-tables to store the data that we're
-
-0:16:04.480,0:16:09.279
-going to use
-
-0:16:05.360,0:16:12.519
-in the various parts of our game
-
-0:16:09.279,0:16:14.160
-um and we've had a lot of success with
-
-0:16:12.519,0:16:16.639
-svg.el
-
-0:16:14.160,0:16:17.279
-uh it started withdrawing maps and we
-
-0:16:16.639,0:16:19.440
-have
-
-0:16:17.279,0:16:21.440
-another talk about our mapping
-
-0:16:19.440,0:16:23.759
-specifically coming up next so we'll
-
-0:16:21.440,0:16:25.199
-put off some of that discussion for a
-
-0:16:23.759,0:16:28.720
-separate talk
-
-0:16:25.199,0:16:32.320
-um but we've also succeeded in
-
-0:16:28.720,0:16:35.680
-um getting into a bunch of different
-
-0:16:32.320,0:16:38.160
-elements of the game where uh
-
-0:16:35.680,0:16:38.959
-we're you know making a lot of progress
-
-0:16:38.160,0:16:41.920
-using this
-
-0:16:38.959,0:16:43.759
-drawing engine we developed to also draw
-
-0:16:41.920,0:16:45.279
-this other thing and also draw this
-
-0:16:43.759,0:16:46.079
-other thing and also draw this other
-
-0:16:45.279,0:16:49.519
-thing and it's
-
-0:16:46.079,0:16:52.560
-um you know we kind of backed into
-
-0:16:49.519,0:16:54.720
-we've got this aesthetic and we're
-
-0:16:52.560,0:16:57.839
-using it to draw interfaces for all of
-
-0:16:54.720,0:16:57.839
-the different parts of the game
-
-0:17:03.120,0:17:06.959
-so let's talk let's talk a little bit
-
-0:17:05.600,0:17:10.880
-about what
-
-0:17:06.959,0:17:13.360
-uh what works now um
-
-0:17:10.880,0:17:14.640
-first of all there's the mapping part
-
-0:17:13.360,0:17:18.480
-that eric mentioned
-
-0:17:14.640,0:17:20.880
-and we'll jump here into um we'll start
-
-0:17:18.480,0:17:22.160
-opening up some files and looking around
-
-0:17:20.880,0:17:25.520
-um but then
-
-0:17:22.160,0:17:26.959
-also later uh we'll we'll fire up an eye
-
-0:17:25.520,0:17:28.400
-elm and look at some of the
-
-0:17:26.959,0:17:30.240
-some of the other proofs of concept so
-
-0:17:28.400,0:17:32.240
-hopefully we can
-
-0:17:30.240,0:17:34.320
-pivot the second talk more toward the
-
-0:17:32.240,0:17:35.520
-demos as as we skip some of the
-
-0:17:34.320,0:17:39.120
-interactive stuff that might be
-
-0:17:35.520,0:17:39.120
-mentioned in the slides that we go by
-
-0:17:43.200,0:17:50.080
-so maps
-
-0:17:46.880,0:17:53.120
-visual battle board um
-
-0:17:50.080,0:17:54.160
-the battle board I'm just gonna I'm just
-
-0:17:53.120,0:18:01.840
-gonna skip it eric
-
-0:17:54.160,0:18:01.840
-we'll hit it in the next one okay
-
-0:18:02.000,0:18:04.480
-hang on
-
-0:18:08.480,0:18:11.840
-okay so I'm just going to go ahead and
-
-0:18:09.919,0:18:13.760
-open up uh maps and
-
-0:18:11.840,0:18:15.039
-let you talk from the from the svg
-
-0:18:13.760,0:18:16.480
-process itself
-
-0:18:15.039,0:18:20.080
-because that's the interesting part to
-
-0:18:16.480,0:18:20.080
-me that uh to me
-
-0:18:22.240,0:18:28.640
-okay talk about the svg
-
-0:18:26.080,0:18:30.640
-process like what what are you thinking
-
-0:18:28.640,0:18:33.760
-exactly we want to talk about how
-
-0:18:30.640,0:18:37.919
-we turn our data into an image or
-
-0:18:33.760,0:18:39.760
-what what are you hoping for yeah so
-
-0:18:37.919,0:18:41.200
-I mean did you did you want to talk more
-
-0:18:39.760,0:18:45.679
-from from the
-
-0:18:41.200,0:18:47.039
-svg the hand-drawn svg graphics at all
-
-0:18:45.679,0:18:49.760
-I thought we were going to save that
-
-0:18:47.039,0:18:52.000
-stuff for the passing talk okay
-
-0:18:49.760,0:18:53.440
-right now if you want yeah I mean so
-
-0:18:52.000,0:18:56.559
-we've got about
-
-0:18:53.440,0:18:58.400
-uh 10 minutes before the turn where we
-
-0:18:56.559,0:19:00.400
-thought we would first take any
-
-0:18:58.400,0:19:02.320
-questions that are hanging out there
-
-0:19:00.400,0:19:04.799
-I unfortunately closed the ether pad but
-
-0:19:02.320,0:19:08.480
-I can open it again real quick
-
-0:19:04.799,0:19:11.440
-and or you can jump
-
-0:19:08.480,0:19:12.320
-jump into the to the pathing stuff now
-
-0:19:11.440,0:19:13.760
-or I can just
-
-0:19:12.320,0:19:15.440
-throw up an animal and we can start the
-
-0:19:13.760,0:19:18.880
-demos so
-
-0:19:15.440,0:19:19.840
-let me invite uh almond or sasha back in
-
-0:19:18.880,0:19:22.160
-if you guys
-
-0:19:19.840,0:19:22.960
-or leo if any of you want to join the
-
-0:19:22.160,0:19:25.840
-conversation
-
-0:19:22.960,0:19:27.120
-make a suggestion as to how we balance
-
-0:19:25.840,0:19:29.840
-between the remaining time
-
-0:19:27.120,0:19:32.480
-the rest of what we have left starts in
-
-0:19:29.840,0:19:35.120
-on toward the technical so especially
-
-0:19:32.480,0:19:36.840
-if there would be questions uh questions
-
-0:19:35.120,0:19:39.840
-about the game right now that would be
-
-0:19:36.840,0:19:39.840
-awesome
-
-0:19:40.160,0:19:43.600
-and I'm gonna get seated again
-
-0:19:48.720,0:19:53.200
-I'm not sure if I talk over the stream
-
-0:19:51.200,0:19:54.720
-um if you'll hear it because I'm just
-
-0:19:53.200,0:19:59.520
-watching your stream
-
-0:19:54.720,0:19:59.520
-but I can try writing an irc um
-
-0:20:01.200,0:20:07.360
-sure yeah questions would be cool um or
-
-0:20:04.640,0:20:08.559
-um yeah well eric why don't you just go
-
-0:20:07.360,0:20:09.120
-ahead and start walking us through the
-
-0:20:08.559,0:20:11.440
-hand
-
-0:20:09.120,0:20:12.960
-hand-drawn svg stuff just a little bit
-
-0:20:11.440,0:20:14.640
-because I think
-
-0:20:12.960,0:20:17.120
-if that isn't interesting to people we
-
-0:20:14.640,0:20:21.120
-can just preempt for a question
-
-0:20:17.120,0:20:24.080
-okay so historically when we
-
-0:20:21.120,0:20:25.840
-um decided to actually start writing
-
-0:20:24.080,0:20:26.720
-code one of the very first things we
-
-0:20:25.840,0:20:30.080
-wanted to do
-
-0:20:26.720,0:20:31.919
-was the maps because initially it seemed
-
-0:20:30.080,0:20:33.840
-like the maps were going to be one of
-
-0:20:31.919,0:20:35.760
-the biggest challenges
-
-0:20:33.840,0:20:38.000
-in terms of how do we get a text editor
-
-0:20:35.760,0:20:42.159
-to draw pictures for us
-
-0:20:38.000,0:20:45.280
-um we pretty quickly decided we wanted
-
-0:20:42.159,0:20:48.559
-to work with svgs because it allowed us
-
-0:20:45.280,0:20:52.159
-to leverage the power of Emacs as a text
-
-0:20:48.559,0:20:56.080
-editor and a text manipulator to write
-
-0:20:52.159,0:20:59.520
-text graphics with the svg format
-
-0:20:56.080,0:21:01.440
-so we did some svg graphics by hand
-
-0:20:59.520,0:21:02.640
-we went in and just started hand coding
-
-0:21:01.440,0:21:05.440
-things that looked
-
-0:21:02.640,0:21:07.440
-visually like the maps we used to draw
-
-0:21:05.440,0:21:08.960
-by hand on graph paper when
-
-0:21:07.440,0:21:11.280
-we were you know sitting around the
-
-0:21:08.960,0:21:11.280
-table
-
-0:21:11.360,0:21:17.840
-yep absolutely what emerged from that
-
-0:21:14.559,0:21:20.400
-is as we started working on um some of
-
-0:21:17.840,0:21:24.000
-these files this particular image is a
-
-0:21:20.400,0:21:26.240
-test of some 20 wide water
-
-0:21:24.000,0:21:28.000
-with some beaches around it and a
-
-0:21:26.240,0:21:29.679
-special chamber kind of off to the side
-
-0:21:28.000,0:21:33.760
-called a clapper
-
-0:21:29.679,0:21:36.559
-and this was the way we would code is by
-
-0:21:33.760,0:21:37.600
-sketching by hand all of these things to
-
-0:21:36.559,0:21:39.440
-look right
-
-0:21:37.600,0:21:42.080
-and then we would take that code and we
-
-0:21:39.440,0:21:43.919
-noticed um it became real repetitive
-
-0:21:42.080,0:21:45.440
-as we would go like chunk of water chunk
-
-0:21:43.919,0:21:46.880
-of water chunk of water
-
-0:21:45.440,0:21:48.559
-and we're like okay so what we really
-
-0:21:46.880,0:21:52.000
-need is to define a
-
-0:21:48.559,0:21:53.600
-set of um we called it tiles um but like
-
-0:21:52.000,0:21:55.760
-you could think of it as rubber stamps
-
-0:21:53.600,0:21:57.440
-where we write this graphics code
-
-0:21:55.760,0:22:00.400
-and then we're able to repeat it in
-
-0:21:57.440,0:22:03.039
-different places around the map
-
-0:22:00.400,0:22:06.880
-um you want to flip over to code view
-
-0:22:03.039,0:22:06.880
-and show that or do we want to move into
-
-0:22:07.120,0:22:12.720
-tiles code
-
-0:22:10.240,0:22:14.320
-so you know you can see just really
-
-0:22:12.720,0:22:15.200
-obviously here the only thing that's
-
-0:22:14.320,0:22:18.240
-changing from
-
-0:22:15.200,0:22:21.600
-chunk of water to chunk of water is the
-
-0:22:18.240,0:22:24.640
-x and y coordinates um
-
-0:22:21.600,0:22:26.000
-we're you know we can skip getting into
-
-0:22:24.640,0:22:29.360
-the svg directives
-
-0:22:26.000,0:22:30.640
-and how all of the path statements
-
-0:22:29.360,0:22:33.679
-actually work
-
-0:22:30.640,0:22:36.480
-but you can trust us
-
-0:22:33.679,0:22:39.039
-all of these d equals and there's m's
-
-0:22:36.480,0:22:41.039
-and h's and v's that turns out to be
-
-0:22:39.039,0:22:42.480
-horizontal lines and vertical lines and
-
-0:22:41.039,0:22:44.159
-cursor moves and it's kind of like
-
-0:22:42.480,0:22:46.640
-turtle graphics if anyone
-
-0:22:44.159,0:22:48.720
-remembers that far back and we're
-
-0:22:46.640,0:22:54.720
-picking up our pen and dropping it and
-
-0:22:48.720,0:22:56.240
-drawing lines around on our map
-
-0:22:54.720,0:22:58.000
-so we do have a few questions if you
-
-0:22:56.240,0:23:01.200
-want to take them now otherwise
-
-0:22:58.000,0:23:03.120
-um we can also jump in
-
-0:23:01.200,0:23:04.559
-let's get them while they're fresh okay
-
-0:23:03.120,0:23:07.520
-sounds good
-
-0:23:04.559,0:23:08.000
-um so we'll probably shift to question
-
-0:23:07.520,0:23:10.799
-and answer
-
-0:23:08.000,0:23:11.919
-mode for up to 15 minutes here so if you
-
-0:23:10.799,0:23:14.480
-do have questions
-
-0:23:11.919,0:23:15.679
-um maybe stack rank go ahead and sort
-
-0:23:14.480,0:23:17.600
-the questions
-
-0:23:15.679,0:23:18.960
-a little for us or comment on them to
-
-0:23:17.600,0:23:19.760
-let us know which ones you want to see
-
-0:23:18.960,0:23:21.280
-us get here
-
-0:23:19.760,0:23:23.600
-if we start getting a little long-winded
-
-0:23:21.280,0:23:26.960
-or nudges along we'll take direction
-
-0:23:23.600,0:23:28.799
-but thanks for your questions um I'd
-
-0:23:26.960,0:23:30.720
-like to see a demo as well we'll look at
-
-0:23:28.799,0:23:32.159
-that with the remaining time after this
-
-0:23:30.720,0:23:35.200
-question block
-
-0:23:32.159,0:23:38.720
-um more about what the game is
-
-0:23:35.200,0:23:40.720
-okay sure so let's let's take our
-
-0:23:38.720,0:23:42.799
-uh one minute each swing at what the
-
-0:23:40.720,0:23:45.120
-game is you wanna go first I called
-
-0:23:42.799,0:23:48.840
-weapons
-
-0:23:45.120,0:23:52.720
-okay um dungeon
-
-0:23:48.840,0:23:55.440
-is like role-playing games
-
-0:23:52.720,0:23:56.159
-but you don't really do role-playing
-
-0:23:55.440,0:23:57.919
-like the
-
-0:23:56.159,0:23:59.520
-for me the thing the core of being a
-
-0:23:57.919,0:24:02.080
-role-playing game is you
-
-0:23:59.520,0:24:03.039
-take on the role of being your character
-
-0:24:02.080,0:24:06.000
-and you play
-
-0:24:03.039,0:24:06.400
-your character and dungeon's not like
-
-0:24:06.000,0:24:10.320
-that
-
-0:24:06.400,0:24:12.640
-dungeon um you can play
-
-0:24:10.320,0:24:13.840
-so the dungeon party always has eight
-
-0:24:12.640,0:24:15.840
-characters in it
-
-0:24:13.840,0:24:17.679
-there's four in the front row and four
-
-0:24:15.840,0:24:18.720
-in the back row and you march through
-
-0:24:17.679,0:24:22.159
-the dungeon
-
-0:24:18.720,0:24:24.000
-fighting whatever you encounter and if
-
-0:24:22.159,0:24:25.200
-there's one player you play all eight
-
-0:24:24.000,0:24:27.120
-characters
-
-0:24:25.200,0:24:28.720
-and depending on how many players you
-
-0:24:27.120,0:24:30.799
-have you split up the party
-
-0:24:28.720,0:24:32.960
-in whatever way seems fair and equitable
-
-0:24:30.799,0:24:34.880
-to everybody
-
-0:24:32.960,0:24:36.720
-similarly I said the dungeon is kind of
-
-0:24:34.880,0:24:38.320
-a simple game like there's only
-
-0:24:36.720,0:24:40.080
-three races and there's only three
-
-0:24:38.320,0:24:41.760
-classes all of your characters are
-
-0:24:40.080,0:24:44.080
-either human elf dwarf
-
-0:24:41.760,0:24:44.880
-they're all a warrior a priest or a
-
-0:24:44.080,0:24:46.640
-wizard
-
-0:24:44.880,0:24:48.320
-and all of these characters have you
-
-0:24:46.640,0:24:51.279
-know special properties
-
-0:24:48.320,0:24:53.760
-and special talents that is why they
-
-0:24:51.279,0:24:56.240
-come together in this party of eight
-
-0:24:53.760,0:24:57.600
-but essentially dungeon is a game about
-
-0:24:56.240,0:25:00.000
-making up all of these
-
-0:24:57.600,0:25:01.679
-um eight characters and stomping through
-
-0:25:00.000,0:25:03.840
-the dungeon killing things taking their
-
-0:25:01.679,0:25:05.120
-stuff
-
-0:25:03.840,0:25:06.960
-well you're way over but I don't know
-
-0:25:05.120,0:25:10.080
-how much I have to add to that
-
-0:25:06.960,0:25:14.159
-I will just add that if if you're
-
-0:25:10.080,0:25:16.559
-uh if if one's passion as a dungeon
-
-0:25:14.159,0:25:17.120
-master is killing player characters this
-
-0:25:16.559,0:25:19.600
-game
-
-0:25:17.120,0:25:21.039
-is meant for you you don't have to build
-
-0:25:19.600,0:25:22.559
-your game like that
-
-0:25:21.039,0:25:24.400
-but that's definitely a thing that
-
-0:25:22.559,0:25:27.360
-people do with this game
-
-0:25:24.400,0:25:28.960
-um and then as eric said it just
-
-0:25:27.360,0:25:30.320
-encourages you to put your creativity on
-
-0:25:28.960,0:25:31.039
-the table to bring all the different
-
-0:25:30.320,0:25:33.760
-elements
-
-0:25:31.039,0:25:35.039
-um and this hopefully this may be clear
-
-0:25:33.760,0:25:36.400
-in our slides since we were a little
-
-0:25:35.039,0:25:36.960
-fumbling for the first few minutes of
-
-0:25:36.400,0:25:40.480
-the talk
-
-0:25:36.960,0:25:41.200
-but um there's also a kind of a player's
-
-0:25:40.480,0:25:43.760
-guide
-
-0:25:41.200,0:25:45.919
-that that I started a few years ago um
-
-0:25:43.760,0:25:48.400
-that's that's not super complete
-
-0:25:45.919,0:25:50.159
-but um but does cover some of the high
-
-0:25:48.400,0:25:52.320
-level basics of the game that eric's
-
-0:25:50.159,0:25:55.679
-been talking from
-
-0:25:52.320,0:25:56.960
-and I would add that some of the things
-
-0:25:55.679,0:25:58.480
-you know some of what makes dungeon
-
-0:25:56.960,0:25:59.360
-great is that there's a lot of mystery
-
-0:25:58.480,0:26:01.120
-about it
-
-0:25:59.360,0:26:02.880
-like the player's handbook doesn't tell
-
-0:26:01.120,0:26:06.080
-you all of the rules
-
-0:26:02.880,0:26:08.080
-um or like really mystery
-
-0:26:06.080,0:26:09.679
-and like there's mazes and there's
-
-0:26:08.080,0:26:12.240
-puzzles and
-
-0:26:09.679,0:26:12.799
-you have to figure out how things work
-
-0:26:12.240,0:26:14.559
-and like
-
-0:26:12.799,0:26:16.640
-we've got all of these treasure items in
-
-0:26:14.559,0:26:18.480
-there that could help you deal with a
-
-0:26:16.640,0:26:19.919
-particular monster if it occurs to you
-
-0:26:18.480,0:26:22.720
-to use it
-
-0:26:19.919,0:26:23.360
-and um you know like that there's a lot
-
-0:26:22.720,0:26:25.279
-of
-
-0:26:23.360,0:26:27.039
-um you don't know what's going on you're
-
-0:26:25.279,0:26:28.559
-dropped in the middle of this situation
-
-0:26:27.039,0:26:31.919
-and you have to try and survive
-
-0:26:28.559,0:26:33.840
-and level up and figure it out and
-
-0:26:31.919,0:26:35.520
-if you succeed in doing that for long
-
-0:26:33.840,0:26:37.520
-enough eventually you start realizing
-
-0:26:35.520,0:26:40.000
-that there are big picture puzzles
-
-0:26:37.520,0:26:41.760
-that there are you know there is more to
-
-0:26:40.000,0:26:43.360
-this than just killing things and taking
-
-0:26:41.760,0:26:46.000
-their stuff
-
-0:26:43.360,0:26:47.279
-and that's where the joy of designing
-
-0:26:46.000,0:26:49.679
-these games comes in
-
-0:26:47.279,0:26:51.679
-for me is like designing the mazes and
-
-0:26:49.679,0:26:53.200
-designing the puzzles and like
-
-0:26:51.679,0:26:54.240
-oh yeah and then they're going to come
-
-0:26:53.200,0:26:55.919
-out of this room and you know what
-
-0:26:54.240,0:26:58.240
-they're going to do they want to
-
-0:26:55.919,0:26:59.600
-go that way so I'm going to put the trap
-
-0:26:58.240,0:27:01.360
-right there
-
-0:26:59.600,0:27:03.840
-and they'll walk right into it every
-
-0:27:01.360,0:27:05.440
-time and then when the party does get in
-
-0:27:03.840,0:27:07.200
-your map and they do exactly what you
-
-0:27:05.440,0:27:09.279
-thought and they hit the trap it's just
-
-0:27:07.200,0:27:10.960
-really satisfying to watch the look on
-
-0:27:09.279,0:27:12.320
-their little faces as they squirm and
-
-0:27:10.960,0:27:13.760
-struggle to stay alive
-
-0:27:12.320,0:27:15.520
-yeah that's that's what I was trying to
-
-0:27:13.760,0:27:16.320
-get at thanks all right that was perfect
-
-0:27:15.520,0:27:19.200
-for me
-
-0:27:16.320,0:27:20.320
-all right um so so highlight your
-
-0:27:19.200,0:27:21.840
-question for me if you think it's
-
-0:27:20.320,0:27:22.960
-important we grab it here before we jump
-
-0:27:21.840,0:27:25.039
-into demos
-
-0:27:22.960,0:27:27.760
-but otherwise I think it's time to try
-
-0:27:25.039,0:27:27.760
-running some code
-
-0:27:27.919,0:27:33.840
-what say okay I say do it
-
-0:27:31.279,0:27:36.480
-okay so you less less camera more more
-
-0:27:33.840,0:27:39.120
-Emacs now
-
-0:27:36.480,0:27:39.840
-and hopefully I could find the right e
-
-0:27:39.120,0:27:42.960
-max
-
-0:27:39.840,0:27:48.799
-the right desktop all right there we are
-
-0:27:42.960,0:27:54.000
-so we'll try to fire up uh
-
-0:27:48.799,0:27:58.799
-and right now and I usually like to do
-
-0:27:54.000,0:27:58.799
-the full path to emax
-
-0:27:59.120,0:28:03.840
-when I'm gonna run it under minus q
-
-0:28:07.279,0:28:10.000
-all right
-
-0:28:13.120,0:28:19.360
-let's have some iom
-
-0:28:16.720,0:28:20.000
-all right and then I'm also going to do
-
-0:28:19.360,0:28:24.000
-a
-
-0:28:20.000,0:28:25.840
-load file on the init script that you
-
-0:28:24.000,0:28:30.480
-can find in the repository
-
-0:28:25.840,0:28:33.279
-in the Emacs user and it's uh
-
-0:28:30.480,0:28:33.279
-init scripts
-
-0:28:34.960,0:28:38.159
-uh users folder
-
-0:28:40.159,0:28:45.840
-user folder nice
-
-0:28:48.080,0:28:51.840
-and it's called init dm because that
-
-0:28:49.919,0:28:55.360
-happened to fit with my naming scheme
-
-0:28:51.840,0:28:56.320
-potentially terrible all right and with
-
-0:28:55.360,0:28:58.320
-that loaded
-
-0:28:56.320,0:29:00.159
-in theory some very basic stuff will
-
-0:28:58.320,0:29:02.159
-work even without us doing anything in
-
-0:29:00.159,0:29:04.399
-iom so I think the the last thing eric
-
-0:29:02.159,0:29:06.000
-was talking about was the svg code
-
-0:29:04.399,0:29:10.720
-behind the maps
-
-0:29:06.000,0:29:13.760
-um there as kind of the technical thread
-
-0:29:10.720,0:29:15.440
-so we'll just fire open the maps pick a
-
-0:29:13.760,0:29:18.480
-dungeon level
-
-0:29:15.440,0:29:19.840
-let's pick a pretty one okay if I show
-
-0:29:18.480,0:29:22.480
-this
-
-0:29:19.840,0:29:22.480
-yeah whatever
-
-0:29:23.440,0:29:30.799
-is that the surface yeah
-
-0:29:27.679,0:29:32.159
-and let's scale it here I think if I
-
-0:29:30.799,0:29:34.960
-wrap
-
-0:29:32.159,0:29:36.399
-like once once we got the engine up and
-
-0:29:34.960,0:29:39.120
-running a little bit
-
-0:29:36.399,0:29:42.480
-we decided to do some experimentation
-
-0:29:39.120,0:29:46.080
-about seeing what we could do to push
-
-0:29:42.480,0:29:49.360
-the limits of our tile
-
-0:29:46.080,0:29:50.080
-and gender so we more or less on the
-
-0:29:49.360,0:29:52.799
-surface
-
-0:29:50.080,0:29:52.799
-map I
-
-0:29:53.120,0:29:58.399
-basically started with almost no
-
-0:29:56.399,0:30:00.240
-tiles from below like the water and the
-
-0:29:58.399,0:30:01.279
-beaches and the general store and the
-
-0:30:00.240,0:30:03.679
-stairs
-
-0:30:01.279,0:30:05.200
-were existing tiles but then we were
-
-0:30:03.679,0:30:07.279
-like this is going to be a surface map
-
-0:30:05.200,0:30:08.399
-so we're outdoors so I want hills and I
-
-0:30:07.279,0:30:11.760
-want trees
-
-0:30:08.399,0:30:12.399
-and I want grass and um it took a little
-
-0:30:11.760,0:30:15.039
-while
-
-0:30:12.399,0:30:16.320
-playing with svg to come up with some
-
-0:30:15.039,0:30:18.480
-acceptable code
-
-0:30:16.320,0:30:19.840
-but once the like the grass gets tiled
-
-0:30:18.480,0:30:21.600
-out it
-
-0:30:19.840,0:30:23.039
-kind of you know gives the illusion of
-
-0:30:21.600,0:30:24.880
-grass and
-
-0:30:23.039,0:30:26.399
-you know these are all in my estimation
-
-0:30:24.880,0:30:28.640
-kind of crude graphics
-
-0:30:26.399,0:30:30.399
-but we're at the proof of concept stage
-
-0:30:28.640,0:30:31.679
-and it definitely proves that we can use
-
-0:30:30.399,0:30:34.640
-our graphics engine
-
-0:30:31.679,0:30:35.279
-to decide what we want our maps to look
-
-0:30:34.640,0:30:39.440
-like
-
-0:30:35.279,0:30:44.240
-and real quickly compose new map tiles
-
-0:30:39.440,0:30:46.880
-and uh stamp out a bunch of new maps
-
-0:30:44.240,0:30:48.640
-so now I'll uh show off one of the other
-
-0:30:46.880,0:30:50.559
-things so the next thing we did once we
-
-0:30:48.640,0:30:51.919
-once we had the maps doing
-
-0:30:50.559,0:30:53.600
-and we haven't gotten into the features
-
-0:30:51.919,0:30:54.960
-of the maps we can we can appoint time
-
-0:30:53.600,0:30:58.960
-to that or not
-
-0:30:54.960,0:31:00.720
-but um there are a number of
-
-0:30:58.960,0:31:02.840
-uh featured features there that we can
-
-0:31:00.720,0:31:05.760
-look at the
-
-0:31:02.840,0:31:08.640
-uh we then wanted to
-
-0:31:05.760,0:31:10.399
-try to see if that could make other
-
-0:31:08.640,0:31:11.360
-interfaces more appealing so we built
-
-0:31:10.399,0:31:14.320
-stuff like
-
-0:31:11.360,0:31:15.919
-oop that's gonna be the map again um
-
-0:31:14.320,0:31:18.320
-I'll just run it here through I
-
-0:31:15.919,0:31:20.080
-am so it's more obvious what I'm doing
-
-0:31:18.320,0:31:21.679
-um
-
-0:31:20.080,0:31:25.360
-so let's look next to the character
-
-0:31:21.679,0:31:25.360
-sheet oops
-
-0:31:26.080,0:31:35.840
-back and alt p doesn't work okay
-
-0:31:32.880,0:31:38.240
-that's a bummer uh that is not
-
-0:31:35.840,0:31:40.559
-autoloaded
-
-0:31:38.240,0:31:41.600
-so this this project is a bit of a mess
-
-0:31:40.559,0:31:43.120
-right now y'all
-
-0:31:41.600,0:31:45.120
-it does some stuff that's really
-
-0:31:43.120,0:31:47.039
-exciting to us but the code is terrible
-
-0:31:45.120,0:31:48.399
-and we need all the help we can get uh
-
-0:31:47.039,0:31:49.279
-being told what our problems are and how
-
-0:31:48.399,0:31:51.360
-to fix them
-
-0:31:49.279,0:31:52.559
-so that is if you take nothing away from
-
-0:31:51.360,0:31:54.799
-this talk
-
-0:31:52.559,0:32:00.480
-uh take away from it that we could use
-
-0:31:54.799,0:32:02.399
-your help
-
-0:32:00.480,0:32:04.640
-yeah that doubles back to uh when we
-
-0:32:02.399,0:32:06.320
-were talking about larry wall's cardinal
-
-0:32:04.640,0:32:07.440
-virtues of programming like we
-
-0:32:06.320,0:32:09.760
-definitely
-
-0:32:07.440,0:32:10.640
-took on some hubris thinking we could do
-
-0:32:09.760,0:32:13.519
-this
-
-0:32:10.640,0:32:14.799
-and we might not be wrong but um we
-
-0:32:13.519,0:32:16.799
-could do it easier with
-
-0:32:14.799,0:32:18.240
-more hands you know many hands make
-
-0:32:16.799,0:32:21.760
-light work all right
-
-0:32:18.240,0:32:23.360
-I'll bite yeah
-
-0:32:21.760,0:32:24.799
-and the character she won't load for us
-
-0:32:23.360,0:32:26.960
-today I had some problems with my
-
-0:32:24.799,0:32:29.360
-version control I had to revert my thing
-
-0:32:26.960,0:32:31.200
-I threw all my local changes in a stash
-
-0:32:29.360,0:32:32.080
-and it's it's a terrible mess let's look
-
-0:32:31.200,0:32:37.519
-at stuff I
-
-0:32:32.080,0:32:40.559
-tested already today uh before
-
-0:32:37.519,0:32:43.760
-you got the battle board available
-
-0:32:40.559,0:32:45.760
-let's find out first we'll load library
-
-0:32:43.760,0:32:48.000
-it
-
-0:32:45.760,0:32:57.440
-uh in fact actually your basic require
-
-0:32:48.000,0:33:00.480
-should work
-
-0:32:57.440,0:33:02.640
-no uh I can try load library
-
-0:33:00.480,0:33:03.760
-uh you know what let's forg I'm just
-
-0:33:02.640,0:33:04.960
-gonna go ahead and give it to you as a
-
-0:33:03.760,0:33:09.919
-lab beast
-
-0:33:04.960,0:33:11.600
-since that's probably more fun to watch
-
-0:33:09.919,0:33:15.919
-we'll take it from my own inet
-
-0:33:11.600,0:33:15.919
-this is more likely to be healthy
-
-0:33:16.640,0:33:20.880
-since only some of the time uh first we
-
-0:33:19.840,0:33:24.799
-have to
-
-0:33:20.880,0:33:28.559
-uh ctrl x alt I d m
-
-0:33:24.799,0:33:31.760
-all right and having then loaded
-
-0:33:28.559,0:33:34.080
-the init control u f9
-
-0:33:31.760,0:33:35.200
-should give me the maps and we can
-
-0:33:34.080,0:33:37.200
-verify
-
-0:33:35.200,0:33:38.640
-things work in a basic way just by
-
-0:33:37.200,0:33:41.679
-changing level
-
-0:33:38.640,0:33:41.679
-let's look at something else
-
-0:33:43.200,0:33:47.360
-um I mentioned there were a number of
-
-0:33:46.399,0:33:51.600
-bindings
-
-0:33:47.360,0:33:54.080
-show them briefly we wrote our own
-
-0:33:51.600,0:33:56.640
-functions to handle movement some of
-
-0:33:54.080,0:33:59.679
-those in svg.el the left
-
-0:33:56.640,0:34:02.640
-uh left and right movements didn't
-
-0:33:59.679,0:34:03.120
-didn't seem to work quite quite likely
-
-0:34:02.640,0:34:06.720
-coding
-
-0:34:03.120,0:34:09.760
-of course
-
-0:34:06.720,0:34:11.760
-um all right enough
-
-0:34:09.760,0:34:13.040
-so let's let's see if battleboard works
-
-0:34:11.760,0:34:15.760
-now
-
-0:34:13.040,0:34:17.040
-I really thought that was on f7 up
-
-0:34:15.760,0:34:19.679
-that's the character sheet
-
-0:34:17.040,0:34:22.159
-sweet that's why you stay out of user
-
-0:34:19.679,0:34:22.159
-bindings
-
-0:34:24.879,0:34:33.919
-so that looks a little better
-
-0:34:28.079,0:34:35.919
-so let's talk about the character sheet
-
-0:34:33.919,0:34:38.000
-yeah
-
-0:34:35.919,0:34:39.839
-so the character sheet was our first big
-
-0:34:38.000,0:34:42.560
-uh repurposing
-
-0:34:39.839,0:34:44.159
-of the engine that we couldn't do uh the
-
-0:34:42.560,0:34:49.839
-battle board program
-
-0:34:44.159,0:34:49.839
-that uh let's see if that runs now too
-
-0:34:53.599,0:34:57.359
-uh it's not interactive if it does
-
-0:35:00.880,0:35:03.839
-good
-
-0:35:04.960,0:35:07.119
-no
-
-0:35:08.480,0:35:13.040
-try let cemex guess no joy all right I'm
-
-0:35:11.760,0:35:14.079
-not sure what's up with the battle board
-
-0:35:13.040,0:35:15.280
-eric
-
-0:35:14.079,0:35:17.119
-we haven't messed with that one for a
-
-0:35:15.280,0:35:18.880
-while in fact um
-
-0:35:17.119,0:35:21.040
-we had discussed using its code as an
-
-0:35:18.880,0:35:22.640
-example so maybe we'll debug it with you
-
-0:35:21.040,0:35:25.359
-um I'll certainly check for questions
-
-0:35:22.640,0:35:28.079
-first um
-
-0:35:25.359,0:35:31.280
-the uh so the character sheet which is
-
-0:35:28.079,0:35:34.800
-not scaling ideally here
-
-0:35:31.280,0:35:34.800
-see if reloading it does anything
-
-0:35:35.680,0:35:40.960
-nope not as far as I can tell assuming
-
-0:35:39.440,0:35:42.800
-you don't have this scale implemented
-
-0:35:40.960,0:35:44.960
-for character sheet
-
-0:35:42.800,0:35:46.800
-that's right there's everything in scale
-
-0:35:44.960,0:35:49.599
-it take in order to get what you were
-
-0:35:46.800,0:35:49.599
-looking at there
-
-0:35:54.079,0:36:02.240
-all right this uh
-
-0:35:58.640,0:36:05.440
-this whole thing is hard-coded
-
-0:36:02.240,0:36:09.040
-basically to the gills except
-
-0:36:05.440,0:36:10.640
-for things like this this program
-
-0:36:09.040,0:36:11.040
-represents a re-implementation of the
-
-0:36:10.640,0:36:14.880
-draw
-
-0:36:11.040,0:36:18.640
-engine using um all of the same things
-
-0:36:14.880,0:36:18.640
-let's see that's selected so
-
-0:36:19.599,0:36:23.119
-uh we'll just try bringing up a map
-
-0:36:21.680,0:36:26.320
-again
-
-0:36:23.119,0:36:28.560
-there's one and you'll notice um dm
-
-0:36:26.320,0:36:29.839
-map doesn't know anything about the new
-
-0:36:28.560,0:36:31.599
-draw engine
-
-0:36:29.839,0:36:33.520
-and there are a couple of places where
-
-0:36:31.599,0:36:36.480
-the new draw engine is still
-
-0:36:33.520,0:36:37.440
-hooked in to the s for example
-
-0:36:36.480,0:36:39.680
-particularly
-
-0:36:37.440,0:36:41.119
-the sizing of the graph paper background
-
-0:36:39.680,0:36:44.240
-so I've started the work
-
-0:36:41.119,0:36:47.040
-in dmdraw.el
-
-0:36:44.240,0:36:47.440
-of trying to show how exactly we did
-
-0:36:47.040,0:36:50.160
-this
-
-0:36:47.440,0:36:51.760
-removing the how did we get data out of
-
-0:36:50.160,0:36:53.280
-org mode that I talked about yesterday
-
-0:36:51.760,0:36:56.480
-with our etl flows
-
-0:36:53.280,0:36:58.960
-and just focusing on
-
-0:36:56.480,0:37:00.160
-how did we solve the problem of
-
-0:36:58.960,0:37:01.839
-predicated drawing
-
-0:37:00.160,0:37:05.200
-which I realized we didn't really talk
-
-0:37:01.839,0:37:07.760
-about so should I jump into that
-
-0:37:05.200,0:37:09.280
-yeah I guess uh how are we on time we
-
-0:37:07.760,0:37:11.359
-have time for detours
-
-0:37:09.280,0:37:12.800
-um yeah it looks like we could spend two
-
-0:37:11.359,0:37:15.599
-or three minutes on that and then
-
-0:37:12.800,0:37:17.680
-uh come back for the questions cool do
-
-0:37:15.599,0:37:20.480
-it
-
-0:37:17.680,0:37:20.800
-and I'm just gonna peek into my org mode
-
-0:37:20.480,0:37:23.200
-by
-
-0:37:20.800,0:37:24.960
-into my chat conference and I don't see
-
-0:37:23.200,0:37:25.520
-anybody talking to me from the organizer
-
-0:37:24.960,0:37:26.560
-channel
-
-0:37:25.520,0:37:28.800
-so I'm going to assume that's a good
-
-0:37:26.560,0:37:32.079
-guess
-
-0:37:28.800,0:37:34.160
-um all right so let's let's go ahead and
-
-0:37:32.079,0:37:37.760
-play with the map a little then that is
-
-0:37:34.160,0:37:39.440
-uh pretty fun and and uh so much fun
-
-0:37:37.760,0:37:41.760
-that we had to curtail play sessions in
-
-0:37:39.440,0:37:44.000
-order to keep working on the project
-
-0:37:41.760,0:37:44.000
-um
-
-0:37:45.119,0:37:51.839
-so uh I'll
-
-0:37:48.480,0:37:55.920
-I'll do the
-
-0:37:51.839,0:37:59.839
-um we'll try to find something different
-
-0:37:55.920,0:37:59.839
-from any gif I've shared here right
-
-0:38:01.040,0:38:05.760
-so here we are in a random go ahead eric
-
-0:38:03.359,0:38:08.240
-you phil
-
-0:38:05.760,0:38:10.000
-oh okay so what what what corwin is
-
-0:38:08.240,0:38:13.359
-doing here is he's about to put the
-
-0:38:10.000,0:38:16.800
-the map into play mode um
-
-0:38:13.359,0:38:19.920
-which is going to turn on the fog of war
-
-0:38:16.800,0:38:23.040
-and then we're gonna use
-
-0:38:19.920,0:38:24.560
-the fog of war and the the play mode to
-
-0:38:23.040,0:38:26.240
-kind of reveal the map
-
-0:38:24.560,0:38:28.160
-one square at a time like we would
-
-0:38:26.240,0:38:29.920
-during a play session
-
-0:38:28.160,0:38:31.280
-so we'll just drop the party randomly
-
-0:38:29.920,0:38:33.839
-somewhere onto this map
-
-0:38:31.280,0:38:36.079
-looks like we're on alpha maze level
-
-0:38:33.839,0:38:38.800
-three here
-
-0:38:36.079,0:38:38.800
-and um
-
-0:38:40.800,0:38:50.480
-uh-oh then we'll walk around a little
-
-0:38:46.320,0:38:52.160
-okay there we go we're halfway there
-
-0:38:50.480,0:38:53.520
-I'll have to I'll have to do a full
-
-0:38:52.160,0:38:55.920
-redraw
-
-0:38:53.520,0:38:58.480
-uh the sketch the sketching stuff has
-
-0:38:55.920,0:39:00.240
-has has broken things here like I said
-
-0:38:58.480,0:39:01.599
-the two aren't separated once I run them
-
-0:39:00.240,0:39:03.520
-in the same instance they're not
-
-0:39:01.599,0:39:05.359
-predictable
-
-0:39:03.520,0:39:07.040
-okay so let me elaborate here when he
-
-0:39:05.359,0:39:10.560
-says the sketching stuff
-
-0:39:07.040,0:39:13.520
-the current um focus of our work is to
-
-0:39:10.560,0:39:14.320
-turn all of this map stuff we've got
-
-0:39:13.520,0:39:17.920
-into
-
-0:39:14.320,0:39:20.880
-a basically a wysiwyg map editor
-
-0:39:17.920,0:39:22.160
-where we can get into the tiles and
-
-0:39:20.880,0:39:24.480
-we'll be able to
-
-0:39:22.160,0:39:26.560
-select the tile and basically rubber
-
-0:39:24.480,0:39:29.680
-stamp it into a map
-
-0:39:26.560,0:39:30.000
-graphically and then save the map file
-
-0:39:29.680,0:39:33.280
-out
-
-0:39:30.000,0:39:36.720
-and load it back in later so that um
-
-0:39:33.280,0:39:38.480
-we're able to you know just pound out
-
-0:39:36.720,0:39:42.000
-these maps real fast
-
-0:39:38.480,0:39:43.200
-um using a graphical editor rather than
-
-0:39:42.000,0:39:45.440
-having to hand code
-
-0:39:43.200,0:39:47.839
-every symbol and every square of the
-
-0:39:45.440,0:39:47.839
-tables
-
-0:39:48.000,0:39:51.839
-so the process of doing that um
-
-0:39:52.960,0:39:56.720
-things are a mess we've got covers off
-
-0:39:54.800,0:39:58.720
-there's wires hanging out
-
-0:39:56.720,0:40:01.040
-um different stuff works on different
-
-0:39:58.720,0:40:01.040
-days
-
-0:40:03.119,0:40:07.119
-well I will say in our defense this is
-
-0:40:05.200,0:40:07.520
-exactly why we staged a complicated
-
-0:40:07.119,0:40:09.680
-thing
-
-0:40:07.520,0:40:11.119
-and uh probably we should have just gone
-
-0:40:09.680,0:40:14.160
-with that instead of
-
-0:40:11.119,0:40:17.760
-trying to give you uh the experience
-
-0:40:14.160,0:40:19.200
-of of of what it's like uh to use Emacs
-
-0:40:17.760,0:40:21.359
-to do this which is
-
-0:40:19.200,0:40:23.280
-which is sort of the last minute thought
-
-0:40:21.359,0:40:25.119
-there and my apologies for that
-
-0:40:23.280,0:40:27.200
-if that's made it harder to follow the
-
-0:40:25.119,0:40:28.240
-thread let's check back now for
-
-0:40:27.200,0:40:30.000
-questions
-
-0:40:28.240,0:40:32.079
-and see if anybody wants to redirect at
-
-0:40:30.000,0:40:32.079
-all
-
-0:40:36.640,0:40:40.800
-so yep this so what you're looking at
-
-0:40:39.599,0:40:44.880
-all uses prog
-
-0:40:40.800,0:40:47.760
-pragmatic svg uh
-
-0:40:44.880,0:40:49.119
-svg generation uh for question number
-
-0:40:47.760,0:40:52.000
-four there have you played with
-
-0:40:49.119,0:40:55.119
-generating svgs pragmatically in Emacs
-
-0:40:52.000,0:40:55.680
-that is what the maps are doing um in
-
-0:40:55.119,0:40:58.480
-terms
-
-0:40:55.680,0:41:00.400
-of uh uh we should have been maybe more
-
-0:40:58.480,0:41:01.680
-explicit about that we started hand
-
-0:41:00.400,0:41:05.119
-coding things and
-
-0:41:01.680,0:41:06.400
-once we got the idea of what the code
-
-0:41:05.119,0:41:09.359
-was going to look like
-
-0:41:06.400,0:41:10.000
-we switched to doing it programmatically
-
-0:41:09.359,0:41:12.880
-so
-
-0:41:10.000,0:41:14.640
-um we were going to open up maybe now if
-
-0:41:12.880,0:41:15.839
-we've got time we can get into the tile
-
-0:41:14.640,0:41:18.640
-set real quick
-
-0:41:15.839,0:41:20.560
-sure we definitely didn't do any of the
-
-0:41:18.640,0:41:23.040
-pathing slides and so now we've skipped
-
-0:41:20.560,0:41:25.040
-over some stuff we were going to present
-
-0:41:23.040,0:41:26.880
-yeah that's right we skipped a whole
-
-0:41:25.040,0:41:28.160
-bunch of slides and I can certainly uh
-
-0:41:26.880,0:41:30.640
-go back to them they're open here
-
-0:41:28.160,0:41:30.640
-obviously
-
-0:41:31.040,0:41:34.480
-um right I was just showing off the
-
-0:41:33.599,0:41:36.880
-sketching
-
-0:41:34.480,0:41:38.000
-tool uh briefly in that context but I
-
-0:41:36.880,0:41:40.000
-think you're right let's
-
-0:41:38.000,0:41:41.280
-we can jump over to the actually I
-
-0:41:40.000,0:41:42.000
-should finish with this now having
-
-0:41:41.280,0:41:45.119
-teased it
-
-0:41:42.000,0:41:47.119
-so let's do the same thing here ctrl h m
-
-0:41:45.119,0:41:48.560
-and you'll see in this case there are
-
-0:41:47.119,0:41:52.160
-very few keyboard
-
-0:41:48.560,0:41:55.359
-key bindings that are set up um even
-
-0:41:52.160,0:41:59.280
-this uh shift delete has a tera uh
-
-0:41:55.359,0:42:02.560
-or shift with uh
-
-0:41:59.280,0:42:05.680
-yeah control delete it would seem to be
-
-0:42:02.560,0:42:07.119
-so that has couple obvious bugs with it
-
-0:42:05.680,0:42:09.280
-right didn't pick it didn't pick up
-
-0:42:07.119,0:42:11.280
-those control points until I reused them
-
-0:42:09.280,0:42:13.760
-not clearing that stack
-
-0:42:11.280,0:42:14.480
-um and also should probably think about
-
-0:42:13.760,0:42:16.720
-whether
-
-0:42:14.480,0:42:18.400
-the origin should return and hey marking
-
-0:42:16.720,0:42:19.839
-that origin would be nice
-
-0:42:18.400,0:42:21.680
-so there's a tremendous amount to do
-
-0:42:19.839,0:42:24.400
-here this is just uh
-
-0:42:21.680,0:42:26.079
-showing that it is possible to use
-
-0:42:24.400,0:42:31.680
-essentially like a touch input
-
-0:42:26.079,0:42:35.119
-to um uh
-
-0:42:31.680,0:42:35.760
-yeah and then also we can switch over to
-
-0:42:35.119,0:42:39.040
-our place
-
-0:42:35.760,0:42:43.040
-tool and
-
-0:42:39.040,0:42:45.040
-um hopefully we can get a nice big menu
-
-0:42:43.040,0:42:48.000
-of all the tiles that eric prepared for
-
-0:42:45.040,0:42:48.000
-the game maps
-
-0:42:49.440,0:42:53.119
-uh that was probably a terrible choice
-
-0:42:51.680,0:42:55.839
-but there you have just a bit of
-
-0:42:53.119,0:42:55.839
-corridor right
-
-0:42:56.800,0:42:59.839
-that looks
-
-0:43:00.480,0:43:06.160
-uh and even the click yep and this this
-
-0:43:04.560,0:43:07.280
-glitch action here is the last thing I
-
-0:43:06.160,0:43:08.079
-was working on before I dropped
-
-0:43:07.280,0:43:10.079
-everything to
-
-0:43:08.079,0:43:13.839
-to build the decks that uh we will soon
-
-0:43:10.079,0:43:13.839
-share for this conference
-
-0:43:14.240,0:43:18.240
-so okay back to the tile sets
-
-0:43:19.680,0:43:23.440
-right so the way we approached drawing
-
-0:43:22.160,0:43:25.200
-it programmatically
-
-0:43:23.440,0:43:27.280
-is we broke our code up into little
-
-0:43:25.200,0:43:29.280
-snippets we called tiles
-
-0:43:27.280,0:43:32.160
-um corman's going to open up the tile
-
-0:43:29.280,0:43:35.280
-set here basically each tile has a name
-
-0:43:32.160,0:43:37.920
-and then with that name we place data
-
-0:43:35.280,0:43:40.640
-into different layers of the image
-
-0:43:37.920,0:43:41.280
-some of the layers are just svg paths
-
-0:43:40.640,0:43:44.880
-and
-
-0:43:41.280,0:43:47.920
-the data is just svg commands
-
-0:43:44.880,0:43:50.960
-like we saw in that handwritten code and
-
-0:43:47.920,0:43:54.160
-some of it is compositions of other
-
-0:43:50.960,0:43:56.160
-tiles so a tile can be made up of other
-
-0:43:54.160,0:43:58.000
-tiles
-
-0:43:56.160,0:43:59.599
-furthermore some of these tiles have
-
-0:43:58.000,0:44:02.319
-conditional code in it
-
-0:43:59.599,0:44:02.720
-where like some of this stuff is talking
-
-0:44:02.319,0:44:06.560
-about
-
-0:44:02.720,0:44:08.079
-elf and bang elf so the map is going to
-
-0:44:06.560,0:44:09.440
-be drawn differently depending
-
-0:44:08.079,0:44:11.200
-on whether or not there's elves in the
-
-0:44:09.440,0:44:16.880
-party
-
-0:44:11.200,0:44:18.240
-um so and that's the demo they broke
-
-0:44:16.880,0:44:20.000
-the engine has to make all those
-
-0:44:18.240,0:44:21.599
-decisions um
-
-0:44:20.000,0:44:23.280
-and that's what we're calling predicated
-
-0:44:21.599,0:44:25.200
-drawing oh there's a
-
-0:44:23.280,0:44:26.480
-special room here do you have any elves
-
-0:44:25.200,0:44:31.440
-you do so I draw
-
-0:44:26.480,0:44:31.440
-there is elf's way um
-
-0:44:32.880,0:44:36.319
-yeah so we built up the set of tiles and
-
-0:44:35.839,0:44:39.920
-then
-
-0:44:36.319,0:44:43.760
-um we basically made map files which
-
-0:44:39.920,0:44:47.839
-take um our map and break it up into xy
-
-0:44:43.760,0:44:50.240
-grids and then we drop these tiles into
-
-0:44:47.839,0:44:52.000
-positions on the map so we can use the
-
-0:44:50.240,0:44:52.480
-same tile square after square after
-
-0:44:52.000,0:44:54.720
-square
-
-0:44:52.480,0:44:55.680
-when there's a corridor north south it's
-
-0:44:54.720,0:44:59.119
-the same tile
-
-0:44:55.680,0:45:02.400
-over and over again and that makes it
-
-0:44:59.119,0:45:05.839
-easy to reuse the code and then also
-
-0:45:02.400,0:45:05.839
-when uh
-
-0:45:05.920,0:45:10.319
-when we go to present um the
-
-0:45:10.560,0:45:15.839
-what am I trying to say the the drawing
-
-0:45:13.520,0:45:18.000
-in in fog of war mode as we move down
-
-0:45:15.839,0:45:20.640
-the corridor we can just add the
-
-0:45:18.000,0:45:23.440
-necessary code one bit at a time to the
-
-0:45:20.640,0:45:24.960
-visible image so that what we're
-
-0:45:23.440,0:45:27.359
-displaying doesn't contain
-
-0:45:24.960,0:45:30.160
-any data except what the party has
-
-0:45:27.359,0:45:30.160
-already discovered
-
-0:45:30.240,0:45:34.400
-and thus we have kind of spoiler rich
-
-0:45:32.319,0:45:37.359
-documents sitting on the gm
-
-0:45:34.400,0:45:38.400
-server and then less you know and
-
-0:45:37.359,0:45:41.440
-spoiler-free
-
-0:45:38.400,0:45:44.000
-data that flows down to the org mode uh
-
-0:45:41.440,0:45:47.040
-files on the player system and the only
-
-0:45:44.000,0:45:50.160
-real challenge is making sure that the
-
-0:45:47.040,0:45:50.960
-the nothing that the game does can mess
-
-0:45:50.160,0:45:54.480
-with the
-
-0:45:50.960,0:45:55.280
-the the users the the players data file
-
-0:45:54.480,0:45:57.680
-in case they
-
-0:45:55.280,0:46:00.160
-might have their own notes and things in
-
-0:45:57.680,0:46:05.359
-it that that would be the one
-
-0:46:00.160,0:46:05.359
-uh you know number one thing to avoid
-
-0:46:06.160,0:46:09.680
-another thing we can talk about here is
-
-0:46:08.000,0:46:11.839
-that there are layers
-
-0:46:09.680,0:46:13.520
-you can see this table at the bottom has
-
-0:46:11.839,0:46:15.119
-tile and overlay
-
-0:46:13.520,0:46:17.040
-the overlay column is just going to
-
-0:46:15.119,0:46:20.800
-contain some actual svg
-
-0:46:17.040,0:46:21.599
-xml style tags um so that's where we can
-
-0:46:20.800,0:46:25.359
-add whatever
-
-0:46:21.599,0:46:26.720
-text elements or other svg like raw svg
-
-0:46:25.359,0:46:28.880
-tags we want
-
-0:46:26.720,0:46:30.560
-whereas a lot of the other layers are
-
-0:46:28.880,0:46:32.960
-going to be like path layers we've got
-
-0:46:30.560,0:46:35.359
-water layers and beach layers
-
-0:46:32.960,0:46:37.680
-and our plan was to have a style sheet
-
-0:46:35.359,0:46:38.720
-that defines how each of those layers
-
-0:46:37.680,0:46:40.720
-are represented
-
-0:46:38.720,0:46:42.160
-so like when the water gets drawn blue
-
-0:46:40.720,0:46:45.520
-and it's got arrows on it
-
-0:46:42.160,0:46:47.680
-giving it direction um all of that
-
-0:46:45.520,0:46:49.200
-can be customized with a style sheet to
-
-0:46:47.680,0:46:51.200
-change the water to be
-
-0:46:49.200,0:46:52.960
-whatever you want and like we have
-
-0:46:51.200,0:46:54.319
-beaches as yellow but maybe you like
-
-0:46:52.960,0:46:57.359
-beaches as red or
-
-0:46:54.319,0:47:01.200
-you know whatever so we also built
-
-0:46:57.359,0:47:04.079
-some test programs um
-
-0:47:01.200,0:47:05.359
-and various of the I'm not not sure what
-
-0:47:04.079,0:47:07.040
-kind of shape we're gonna find these in
-
-0:47:05.359,0:47:10.640
-but we can try running them
-
-0:47:07.040,0:47:12.960
-um here for example is just a
-
-0:47:10.640,0:47:15.119
-very basic all of using a saint using
-
-0:47:12.960,0:47:18.560
-the same file to define
-
-0:47:15.119,0:47:24.880
-the tiles and and then
-
-0:47:18.560,0:47:26.640
-the layout so to speak oh look at that
-
-0:47:24.880,0:47:28.960
-uh there's the layout okay so that
-
-0:47:26.640,0:47:30.960
-actually looks fine tile
-
-0:47:28.960,0:47:32.400
-and it's pat so this is defining a tile
-
-0:47:30.960,0:47:35.440
-named seas
-
-0:47:32.400,0:47:38.720
-and uh it's gonna have a list of tiles
-
-0:47:35.440,0:47:41.839
-defined above um and you'll notice also
-
-0:47:38.720,0:47:44.559
-that we can just sort of freely define
-
-0:47:41.839,0:47:46.160
-and redefine and it sort of figures out
-
-0:47:44.559,0:47:50.839
-oh this must still be part of the b
-
-0:47:46.160,0:47:53.839
-row um we could also have done
-
-0:47:50.839,0:47:53.839
-this
-
-0:48:00.000,0:48:07.839
-okay so this would this would work as
-
-0:48:02.160,0:48:07.839
-would this
-
-0:48:08.480,0:48:12.720
-one of uh early on in development when
-
-0:48:11.599,0:48:14.400
-we were talking about
-
-0:48:12.720,0:48:15.839
-getting data in and out of these org
-
-0:48:14.400,0:48:19.440
-tables it
-
-0:48:15.839,0:48:22.319
-was kind of a priority to us to
-
-0:48:19.440,0:48:23.040
-leave the way the data is organized open
-
-0:48:22.319,0:48:26.960
-to
-
-0:48:23.040,0:48:30.720
-the users and to the dungeon masters so
-
-0:48:26.960,0:48:32.559
-while we set our tile set apart from our
-
-0:48:30.720,0:48:35.440
-map sets
-
-0:48:32.559,0:48:38.319
-this clearly shows that you can cram a
-
-0:48:35.440,0:48:41.040
-tile set and a map into a single file
-
-0:48:38.319,0:48:43.040
-so in situations like the surface where
-
-0:48:41.040,0:48:43.760
-we're using different tiles from other
-
-0:48:43.040,0:48:46.559
-maps
-
-0:48:43.760,0:48:48.079
-maybe it makes sense to move you know
-
-0:48:46.559,0:48:50.559
-those tiles just into the file
-
-0:48:48.079,0:48:52.400
-with your map or like it's hard for us
-
-0:48:50.559,0:48:54.319
-to predict how other people are going to
-
-0:48:52.400,0:48:55.119
-want to use this when they design their
-
-0:48:54.319,0:48:57.359
-games
-
-0:48:55.119,0:48:58.160
-so we wanted to leave it as versatile as
-
-0:48:57.359,0:49:01.599
-possible
-
-0:48:58.160,0:49:02.640
-about how you can use it where it
-
-0:49:01.599,0:49:04.319
-matters right
-
-0:49:02.640,0:49:05.920
-not support every feature in the world I
-
-0:49:04.319,0:49:07.280
-can't count the number of times I said
-
-0:49:05.920,0:49:09.200
-eric eric eric
-
-0:49:07.280,0:49:10.800
-hey if we do it like this people will be
-
-0:49:09.200,0:49:14.000
-able and he just like
-
-0:49:10.800,0:49:14.480
-does it have to do that do we do we does
-
-0:49:14.000,0:49:17.920
-it like
-
-0:49:14.480,0:49:19.599
-do we need it right away uh
-
-0:49:17.920,0:49:21.040
-do you have to really rewrite everything
-
-0:49:19.599,0:49:24.160
-so it can all do that
-
-0:49:21.040,0:49:26.880
-and uh a lot of those
-
-0:49:24.160,0:49:28.240
-a lot of those conversations too but the
-
-0:49:26.880,0:49:31.200
-the key flexibilities
-
-0:49:28.240,0:49:32.559
-are really there people might want to
-
-0:49:31.200,0:49:34.160
-use a lot of different files they might
-
-0:49:32.559,0:49:35.760
-want to lay the tables out however they
-
-0:49:34.160,0:49:37.440
-want they have to be able to say hey
-
-0:49:35.760,0:49:39.440
-this is a table that has
-
-0:49:37.440,0:49:40.720
-data that's controlled by the game and
-
-0:49:39.440,0:49:44.079
-everything else in the file
-
-0:49:40.720,0:49:45.920
-is not the game's problem
-
-0:49:44.079,0:49:47.440
-on our table some of our tables started
-
-0:49:45.920,0:49:48.960
-getting really wide so we started
-
-0:49:47.440,0:49:51.119
-striping the tables
-
-0:49:48.960,0:49:52.640
-where we'll repeat the same table over
-
-0:49:51.119,0:49:56.400
-and over and over again to
-
-0:49:52.640,0:49:59.119
-get all of the columns in there without
-
-0:49:56.400,0:49:59.599
-making it you know a million miles wide
-
-0:49:59.119,0:50:01.040
-yeah
-
-0:49:59.599,0:50:02.640
-do you want to should I go ahead and
-
-0:50:01.040,0:50:06.079
-pull open like a level here
-
-0:50:02.640,0:50:08.319
-do you think sure just to have shown it
-
-0:50:06.079,0:50:09.680
-the aisle set's a great example of
-
-0:50:08.319,0:50:11.119
-striped tables if you
-
-0:50:09.680,0:50:13.839
-look down like in the level change
-
-0:50:11.119,0:50:13.839
-feature oh sure
-
-0:50:18.800,0:50:22.400
-sorry I'm not quite sitting well to my
-
-0:50:20.240,0:50:27.839
-keyboard here I can just readjust things
-
-0:50:22.400,0:50:27.839
-real quick
-
-0:50:30.079,0:50:35.200
-so what you know you can see here
-
-0:50:33.280,0:50:36.800
-like some of these tables got real wide
-
-0:50:35.200,0:50:40.559
-when we're stuffing svg
-
-0:50:36.800,0:50:44.160
-tags into them and what we
-
-0:50:40.559,0:50:49.359
-oh maybe it's not in these
-
-0:50:44.160,0:50:49.359
-I thought it was
-
-0:50:50.079,0:50:54.240
-special probably yeah no there it is
-
-0:50:52.960,0:50:56.000
-yeah
-
-0:50:54.240,0:50:58.720
-it was in level change it does the table
-
-0:50:56.000,0:51:00.640
-can you repeat okay great
-
-0:50:58.720,0:51:01.920
-up and down so fast I didn't realize so
-
-0:51:00.640,0:51:05.680
-this first table
-
-0:51:01.920,0:51:08.800
-we've got path and what is that stairs
-
-0:51:05.680,0:51:10.079
-so the stairs level is one that draws in
-
-0:51:08.800,0:51:11.920
-like a pink color
-
-0:51:10.079,0:51:13.440
-to highlight the places where you can
-
-0:51:11.920,0:51:15.200
-change level
-
-0:51:13.440,0:51:17.200
-and then if we scroll down to the second
-
-0:51:15.200,0:51:19.359
-half of this section
-
-0:51:17.200,0:51:20.960
-the second table is going to have all of
-
-0:51:19.359,0:51:22.800
-these same tiles in it but
-
-0:51:20.960,0:51:24.720
-instead of path and stairs we're going
-
-0:51:22.800,0:51:27.920
-to have other
-
-0:51:24.720,0:51:31.200
-columns can we
-
-0:51:27.920,0:51:31.200
-see the next table
-
-0:51:31.680,0:51:35.359
-there we go so the same tiles only here
-
-0:51:33.839,0:51:38.720
-we've got overlay
-
-0:51:35.359,0:51:40.319
-documentation and behavior and I guess
-
-0:51:38.720,0:51:41.839
-we haven't talked about this at all the
-
-0:51:40.319,0:51:44.880
-behavior column
-
-0:51:41.839,0:51:47.359
-was our concept of a way that we could
-
-0:51:44.880,0:51:47.359
-attach
-
-0:51:47.520,0:51:51.359
-functions basically to these different
-
-0:51:49.680,0:51:54.720
-areas of the map
-
-0:51:51.359,0:51:57.760
-because sometimes when you enter an area
-
-0:51:54.720,0:51:59.920
-we want it to do something like
-
-0:51:57.760,0:52:02.319
-when you enter a stairs down maybe we
-
-0:51:59.920,0:52:04.559
-want it to change to the next level
-
-0:52:02.319,0:52:06.160
-and draw the stairs up behind you and
-
-0:52:04.559,0:52:09.200
-draw you where you are
-
-0:52:06.160,0:52:11.040
-on the next level so
-
-0:52:09.200,0:52:12.240
-these are like hooks where we could
-
-0:52:11.040,0:52:16.400
-attach functions
-
-0:52:12.240,0:52:18.480
-or you know macros or whatever to
-
-0:52:16.400,0:52:22.079
-make the map have these behaviors as we
-
-0:52:18.480,0:52:22.079
-get further towards automation
-
-0:52:23.440,0:52:30.839
-cool um so that's that
-
-0:52:26.559,0:52:33.920
-should be pretty close to our time
-
-0:52:30.839,0:52:36.880
-um questions or just say goodbye
-
-0:52:33.920,0:52:38.559
-um yeah so there's the I'm sorry we
-
-0:52:36.880,0:52:40.000
-couldn't show it earlier there is the
-
-0:52:38.559,0:52:44.240
-battle board
-
-0:52:40.000,0:52:48.079
-um and so this is used just to keep
-
-0:52:44.240,0:52:49.319
-track of hit points so with this example
-
-0:52:48.079,0:52:51.680
-battle board
-
-0:52:49.319,0:52:53.760
-dmbattleboard.el there's there's a
-
-0:52:51.680,0:52:57.200
-complete example of not only
-
-0:52:53.760,0:53:00.480
-in a single file repub filling out the
-
-0:52:57.200,0:53:00.960
-the cells and the tiles but then coming
-
-0:53:00.480,0:53:04.640
-in
-
-0:53:00.960,0:53:05.280
-and keeping the org mode file in sync
-
-0:53:04.640,0:53:09.040
-with
-
-0:53:05.280,0:53:12.319
-with clicks so and I can press the star
-
-0:53:09.040,0:53:15.359
-key and set my damage to -1 and
-
-0:53:12.319,0:53:16.400
-take the damage back off I just haven't
-
-0:53:15.359,0:53:18.079
-spent a lot of time
-
-0:53:16.400,0:53:20.800
-building up fancy bindings for this
-
-0:53:18.079,0:53:23.119
-you'll also find that the crew
-
-0:53:20.800,0:53:23.839
-probably find how I figure out what was
-
-0:53:23.119,0:53:26.880
-clicked on
-
-0:53:23.839,0:53:28.000
-in the code hard but if I just assign
-
-0:53:26.880,0:53:32.960
-something recognizable
-
-0:53:28.000,0:53:32.960
-for damage and then come into
-
-0:53:33.520,0:53:37.040
-it will now have opened the org mode
-
-0:53:35.440,0:53:39.680
-file behind the scenes because it's
-
-0:53:37.040,0:53:39.680
-changing it
-
-0:53:41.280,0:53:47.599
-and we can then look at that file a
-
-0:53:44.640,0:53:51.040
-little bit and hopefully
-
-0:53:47.599,0:53:53.440
-that is un
-
-0:53:51.040,0:53:55.520
-uh large enough you can kind of see
-
-0:53:53.440,0:53:59.119
-there's our 17 damage landed
-
-0:53:55.520,0:54:01.200
-in armor the logic that sits behind that
-
-0:53:59.119,0:54:06.240
-to figure out the part of the screen
-
-0:54:01.200,0:54:06.240
-is not necessarily our finest work
-
-0:54:08.880,0:54:12.319
-uh uh but it but it does work and it's
-
-0:54:11.839,0:54:14.000
-one for
-
-0:54:12.319,0:54:15.920
-the stuff was used on the map a little
-
-0:54:14.000,0:54:17.520
-bit too we didn't really need to show
-
-0:54:15.920,0:54:19.680
-that in the demo but as you're scrolling
-
-0:54:17.520,0:54:22.960
-around there's like a highlighter
-
-0:54:19.680,0:54:24.720
-um that that you know we were drawing on
-
-0:54:22.960,0:54:26.160
-shaft to show you which square you've
-
-0:54:24.720,0:54:28.800
-got selected
-
-0:54:26.160,0:54:29.839
-um because we were having trouble with
-
-0:54:28.800,0:54:31.280
-that code
-
-0:54:29.839,0:54:34.160
-initially and we were sometimes
-
-0:54:31.280,0:54:34.160
-revealing the wrong
-
-0:54:36.839,0:54:40.480
-okay
-
-0:54:38.720,0:54:42.160
-and I don't know how we're set for time
-
-0:54:40.480,0:54:44.400
-but I just saw a message
-
-0:54:42.160,0:54:46.480
-um from trixie that she could jump on if
-
-0:54:44.400,0:54:47.920
-we want her oh that would be amazing
-
-0:54:46.480,0:54:51.520
-yeah go ahead and invite her in I'll
-
-0:54:47.920,0:54:51.520
-just cut to the scene as soon as she's
-
-0:54:51.680,0:54:56.799
-I in uh yeah so we're reaching the ask
-
-0:54:56.160,0:54:58.960
-me any
-
-0:54:56.799,0:55:01.200
-anything uh portion of the program here
-
-0:54:58.960,0:55:02.559
-with what uh with what time we have left
-
-0:55:01.200,0:55:05.200
-for your questions
-
-0:55:02.559,0:55:06.160
-um please correct me if we're still like
-
-0:55:05.200,0:55:08.799
-10 minutes
-
-0:55:06.160,0:55:10.000
-you know if we're if we're more than
-
-0:55:08.799,0:55:12.640
-like
-
-0:55:10.000,0:55:13.760
-15 to 20 minutes from our time but I I
-
-0:55:12.640,0:55:16.640
-suspect we've less weight
-
-0:55:13.760,0:55:17.440
-left way less than that and out of
-
-0:55:16.640,0:55:21.839
-respect for
-
-0:55:17.440,0:55:21.839
-all the other presenters um
-
-0:55:24.319,0:55:30.640
-oh I don't want to close that actually
-
-0:55:28.720,0:55:32.839
-I think I may have found an old version
-
-0:55:30.640,0:55:35.200
-of my slides that could have some good
-
-0:55:32.839,0:55:36.799
-stuff
-
-0:55:35.200,0:55:38.799
-it's been an event for a couple of weeks
-
-0:55:36.799,0:55:41.359
-here I had a break in and uh
-
-0:55:38.799,0:55:43.599
-my somebody got into our bank accounts
-
-0:55:41.359,0:55:46.880
-and
-
-0:55:43.599,0:55:50.079
-nasty business just a lot going on over
-
-0:55:46.880,0:55:50.079
-over this whole year I think
-
-0:55:50.720,0:55:53.839
-do we have more questions to shag or
-
-0:55:53.040,0:55:56.960
-where
-
-0:55:53.839,0:55:58.799
-sure so I think
-
-0:55:56.960,0:56:01.040
-there was at least one we deferred a
-
-0:55:58.799,0:56:03.839
-little bit uh what the game
-
-0:56:01.040,0:56:03.839
-is
-
-0:56:05.040,0:56:08.400
-uh always eight characters that can be
-
-0:56:06.799,0:56:10.000
-divided right that's so always eight
-
-0:56:08.400,0:56:12.160
-characters that can be divided between
-
-0:56:10.000,0:56:14.319
-the party is the classic formula
-
-0:56:12.160,0:56:16.240
-it actually works pretty well for a
-
-0:56:14.319,0:56:17.760
-conversational group remember that
-
-0:56:16.240,0:56:18.480
-role-playing games are about talking to
-
-0:56:17.760,0:56:20.000
-each other
-
-0:56:18.480,0:56:22.079
-and being good at them is about taking
-
-0:56:20.000,0:56:23.200
-excellent notes so
-
-0:56:22.079,0:56:24.559
-when you're sitting around with a group
-
-0:56:23.200,0:56:25.920
-of people and you're going to have to
-
-0:56:24.559,0:56:26.880
-wait for them while they dig through
-
-0:56:25.920,0:56:28.720
-their notes
-
-0:56:26.880,0:56:30.319
-and listen to all of the things they
-
-0:56:28.720,0:56:32.240
-find interesting to say
-
-0:56:30.319,0:56:34.160
-and try to reach an imaginative place
-
-0:56:32.240,0:56:36.160
-that you can stay together
-
-0:56:34.160,0:56:38.319
-while you're doing all that and working
-
-0:56:36.160,0:56:40.880
-in dice and remembering the rules
-
-0:56:38.319,0:56:43.200
-it's actually a complicated activity I
-
-0:56:40.880,0:56:46.240
-liken it more to a bridge game
-
-0:56:43.200,0:56:48.960
-than to like uh
-
-0:56:46.240,0:56:51.359
-you know parcheesi or perhaps even like
-
-0:56:48.960,0:56:52.160
-risk or access and allies or other games
-
-0:56:51.359,0:56:54.319
-that
-
-0:56:52.160,0:56:56.160
-have have definitely the strategy to
-
-0:56:54.319,0:56:59.839
-them but
-
-0:56:56.160,0:56:59.839
-I don't eric your thoughts
-
-0:57:00.160,0:57:06.640
-yeah I mean I think that's fair um
-
-0:57:03.920,0:57:08.160
-you know yes definitely the the
-
-0:57:06.640,0:57:09.440
-tradition is to always have eight
-
-0:57:08.160,0:57:12.079
-characters in the party
-
-0:57:09.440,0:57:13.760
-and you know one of the great things
-
-0:57:12.079,0:57:15.200
-about dungeon is that everybody who
-
-0:57:13.760,0:57:18.000
-writes their own dungeon
-
-0:57:15.200,0:57:19.440
-gets to write their own rules and is
-
-0:57:18.000,0:57:21.760
-free to change whatever
-
-0:57:19.440,0:57:22.720
-you want and that being said I've
-
-0:57:21.760,0:57:25.839
-certainly seen
-
-0:57:22.720,0:57:28.079
-people try to take on challenging that
-
-0:57:25.839,0:57:30.640
-always eight characters in a party
-
-0:57:28.079,0:57:32.640
-thing um I've seen people take
-
-0:57:30.640,0:57:34.640
-approaches like every player gets two
-
-0:57:32.640,0:57:36.319
-characters and then you can have a party
-
-0:57:34.640,0:57:38.079
-ranging from two to ten
-
-0:57:36.319,0:57:40.000
-or there's always going to be ten or
-
-0:57:38.079,0:57:43.200
-there's you know this or that or people
-
-0:57:40.000,0:57:45.280
-have um tried stuff and none of it has
-
-0:57:43.200,0:57:45.839
-really worked out very satisfactorily we
-
-0:57:45.280,0:57:48.319
-always
-
-0:57:45.839,0:57:49.680
-seem to keep coming back to our um party
-
-0:57:48.319,0:57:54.160
-of eight
-
-0:57:49.680,0:57:55.839
-yeah it's I I I I it's one of the things
-
-0:57:54.160,0:57:57.359
-dungeon that you can't change when you
-
-0:57:55.839,0:57:58.720
-write your own dungeon
-
-0:57:57.359,0:58:00.960
-and that's the reason it's so
-
-0:57:58.720,0:58:03.119
-complicated as a as a software
-
-0:58:00.960,0:58:04.559
-project why it's taken us decades
-
-0:58:03.119,0:58:08.000
-because
-
-0:58:04.559,0:58:11.280
-trying to model the data for example or
-
-0:58:08.000,0:58:14.160
-really any attempt to
-
-0:58:11.280,0:58:15.680
-quantify it in specific terms always
-
-0:58:14.160,0:58:18.880
-falls to examples
-
-0:58:15.680,0:58:22.079
-well you know dungeons usually have
-
-0:58:18.880,0:58:25.280
-elves dwarves and humans they have uh
-
-0:58:22.079,0:58:27.599
-priests wizards and warriors uh they
-
-0:58:25.280,0:58:30.000
-have eight characters in the party
-
-0:58:27.599,0:58:31.680
-the bell rocks are particularly nasty
-
-0:58:30.000,0:58:35.119
-and live in a room of some
-
-0:58:31.680,0:58:38.319
-specific shape um spoilers
-
-0:58:35.119,0:58:39.520
-uh right and we don't tell you the rules
-
-0:58:38.319,0:58:40.960
-and that's what you know
-
-0:58:39.520,0:58:42.640
-and you sit down at the table and you
-
-0:58:40.960,0:58:44.480
-say what's your character name and
-
-0:58:42.640,0:58:48.400
-what's your special power
-
-0:58:44.480,0:58:51.599
-and and then I say uh I
-
-0:58:48.400,0:58:53.839
-I I'm zelda and uh
-
-0:58:51.599,0:58:56.000
-I I have this bridge that I can put down
-
-0:58:53.839,0:58:59.040
-that always gets me across the river
-
-0:58:56.000,0:58:59.359
-um so let's touch on special power real
-
-0:58:59.040,0:59:01.119
-quick
-
-0:58:59.359,0:59:03.280
-since that's one of the things that is
-
-0:59:01.119,0:59:06.160
-kind of unique to dungeon
-
-0:59:03.280,0:59:06.720
-and one of the things that is the
-
-0:59:06.160,0:59:08.960
-biggest
-
-0:59:06.720,0:59:10.240
-challenge to us in trying to code a
-
-0:59:08.960,0:59:13.200
-system like this for
-
-0:59:10.240,0:59:14.319
-automated play and that's that every
-
-0:59:13.200,0:59:17.119
-character gets a
-
-0:59:14.319,0:59:18.000
-unique special power and traditionally
-
-0:59:17.119,0:59:19.520
-you negotiate
-
-0:59:18.000,0:59:21.839
-your special power with the dungeon
-
-0:59:19.520,0:59:24.079
-master when you create your character
-
-0:59:21.839,0:59:25.839
-and occasionally throughout the course
-
-0:59:24.079,0:59:27.359
-of the character's life their special
-
-0:59:25.839,0:59:29.920
-power might change
-
-0:59:27.359,0:59:33.280
-due to game circumstances usually it
-
-0:59:29.920,0:59:34.960
-improves but sometimes not
-
-0:59:33.280,0:59:36.960
-uh and that's those are the most fun
-
-0:59:34.960,0:59:39.440
-conversations right sometimes we have
-
-0:59:36.960,0:59:41.760
-fun gaming sessions where we barely get
-
-0:59:39.440,0:59:43.680
-all the characters created and started
-
-0:59:41.760,0:59:45.440
-because we get off into arguing about
-
-0:59:43.680,0:59:48.319
-the special powers no zelda special
-
-0:59:45.440,0:59:52.079
-powers obviously the candle come on
-
-0:59:48.319,0:59:52.079
-also that was link not zelda
-
-0:59:53.359,1:00:01.440
-I still have my t-shirt hey there she is
-
-0:59:56.240,1:00:05.839
-let's cut scene
-
-1:00:01.440,1:00:07.359
-you get video fun filters today because
-
-1:00:05.839,1:00:08.799
-that's what we got going on over here
-
-1:00:07.359,1:00:15.839
-today all right I'm gonna recut
-
-1:00:08.799,1:00:15.839
-everybody hang on tight
-
-1:00:18.079,1:00:23.200
-all right there's eric this is gonna be
-
-1:00:20.799,1:00:25.200
-eric for a second hope
-
-1:00:23.200,1:00:27.440
-no worries and welcome to the welcome to
-
-1:00:25.200,1:00:30.960
-the stream uh trixie horror
-
-1:00:27.440,1:00:32.720
-uh who is
-
-1:00:30.960,1:00:34.559
-uh one of our project team members
-
-1:00:32.720,1:00:35.440
-somebody who's learning Emacs as part of
-
-1:00:34.559,1:00:38.480
-the project
-
-1:00:35.440,1:00:40.720
-and um yeah I
-
-1:00:38.480,1:00:42.160
-I I particularly wanted to invite you on
-
-1:00:40.720,1:00:44.319
-to talk about your experience learning
-
-1:00:42.160,1:00:46.079
-Emacs I think you have run into
-
-1:00:44.319,1:00:47.839
-places where it's a pain in the butt to
-
-1:00:46.079,1:00:56.000
-learn Emacs and that this is a safe
-
-1:00:47.839,1:00:58.960
-space to talk about that
-
-1:00:56.000,1:01:00.640
-jump into that by saying um the Emacs
-
-1:00:58.960,1:01:02.880
-cheat sheet
-
-1:01:00.640,1:01:03.680
-um I think it's the one that canoe puts
-
-1:01:02.880,1:01:07.680
-out
-
-1:01:03.680,1:01:09.440
-is a lifesaver um a little bit of a
-
-1:01:07.680,1:01:12.480
-vocabulary disconnect
-
-1:01:09.440,1:01:13.359
-like and this actually kind of comes up
-
-1:01:12.480,1:01:15.200
-a lot
-
-1:01:13.359,1:01:18.000
-in conversation with corona and eric and
-
-1:01:15.200,1:01:21.920
-I but copy paste versus
-
-1:01:18.000,1:01:24.480
-what yank and w
-
-1:01:21.920,1:01:24.480
-whatever w
-
-1:01:27.920,1:01:31.200
-why would you even do that to us right
-
-1:01:30.000,1:01:33.359
-where where were you
-
-1:01:31.200,1:01:38.480
-when zero's park happened no I I
-
-1:01:33.359,1:01:39.520
-understand that makes sense what else
-
-1:01:38.480,1:01:41.440
-I mean you don't have to sit here and
-
-1:01:39.520,1:01:43.119
-rag on Emacs but we're here for that
-
-1:01:41.440,1:01:44.400
-that's all I'm saying
-
-1:01:43.119,1:01:46.799
-no I'm like that's been the biggest
-
-1:01:44.400,1:01:49.920
-thing like I'm
-
-1:01:46.799,1:01:52.319
-I'm used to like just kind of the
-
-1:01:49.920,1:01:53.839
-very binary nature like nope that didn't
-
-1:01:52.319,1:01:57.119
-work try something else
-
-1:01:53.839,1:01:59.200
-so as long as you're like willing to try
-
-1:01:57.119,1:02:02.880
-other stuff
-
-1:01:59.200,1:02:06.559
-like Emacs will be fine so
-
-1:02:02.880,1:02:08.960
-it's a tough cookie I can take it
-
-1:02:06.559,1:02:11.119
-worst thing that happens is you have to
-
-1:02:08.960,1:02:13.520
-really install it
-
-1:02:11.119,1:02:16.799
-throw your ignite file that you
-
-1:02:13.520,1:02:16.799
-hopefully have a backup of
-
-1:02:19.920,1:02:24.640
-all right fine um are there more
-
-1:02:22.079,1:02:26.480
-questions in the hopper
-
-1:02:24.640,1:02:27.680
-yeah if anybody does have any questions
-
-1:02:26.480,1:02:29.839
-up there uh
-
-1:02:27.680,1:02:32.000
-for hope for eric or I so just to
-
-1:02:29.839,1:02:34.240
-summarize I've known eric
-
-1:02:32.000,1:02:36.160
-I've known eric my whole life I've known
-
-1:02:34.240,1:02:39.599
-hope around a decade we
-
-1:02:36.160,1:02:44.480
-worked together on a project for
-
-1:02:39.599,1:02:44.480
-uh for a science fiction convention yeah
-
-1:02:44.559,1:02:48.960
-we got conventions and then I also
-
-1:02:46.880,1:02:50.799
-helped with I just wrote a bio
-
-1:02:48.960,1:02:53.520
-so this should like all theoretically be
-
-1:02:50.799,1:02:53.520
-in my head right
-
-1:02:53.599,1:03:00.160
-I want I refer to my own bio
-
-1:02:58.079,1:03:02.640
-I'm the project coordinator for dungeon
-
-1:03:00.160,1:03:02.640
-mode
-
-1:03:10.799,1:03:16.400
-um that's nice
-
-1:03:14.000,1:03:18.000
-we've gotten a ton of support from a lot
-
-1:03:16.400,1:03:20.480
-of our lifelong friends people
-
-1:03:18.000,1:03:22.319
-and also people that we just met maybe
-
-1:03:20.480,1:03:25.039
-that's a that's a great segue
-
-1:03:22.319,1:03:26.400
-um do throw your questions in there I'm
-
-1:03:25.039,1:03:27.839
-gonna fill for just a second and then
-
-1:03:26.400,1:03:31.920
-we'll probably cut away
-
-1:03:27.839,1:03:31.920
-um but uh
-
-1:03:32.319,1:03:36.319
-uh I mean thematically actually that's
-
-1:03:34.960,1:03:37.200
-that's too abrupt so we need to go
-
-1:03:36.319,1:03:39.119
-around the room
-
-1:03:37.200,1:03:40.720
-eric you had hours and hours to rehearse
-
-1:03:39.119,1:03:41.359
-hope kind of jumped in on the last
-
-1:03:40.720,1:03:43.520
-minute
-
-1:03:41.359,1:03:46.319
-so let's let's is it okay to pick on you
-
-1:03:43.520,1:03:48.880
-or do you want me to give mine
-
-1:03:46.319,1:03:50.000
-uh to what are you asking me to do what
-
-1:03:48.880,1:03:51.359
-do you what do you want people to take
-
-1:03:50.000,1:03:54.240
-away from this talk
-
-1:03:51.359,1:03:55.280
-you know as we think about dungeon and
-
-1:03:54.240,1:03:57.520
-sharing it's
-
-1:03:55.280,1:03:58.799
-sharing its tradition as we think about
-
-1:03:57.520,1:04:02.799
-learning Emacs
-
-1:03:58.799,1:04:04.880
-and like making that awesome um
-
-1:04:02.799,1:04:07.599
-and just you know generally what's up
-
-1:04:04.880,1:04:12.480
-with free software and trying to make
-
-1:04:07.599,1:04:15.200
-computers a tool to make people freer
-
-1:04:12.480,1:04:15.920
-wow that's like five questions yeah so
-
-1:04:15.200,1:04:18.960
-I'm gonna start
-
-1:04:15.920,1:04:22.240
-with jumping um I think
-
-1:04:18.960,1:04:25.359
-that dungeon is a lot of fun and
-
-1:04:22.240,1:04:27.599
-you know I'm I've played many
-
-1:04:25.359,1:04:28.480
-commercial role-playing games over the
-
-1:04:27.599,1:04:31.680
-years
-
-1:04:28.480,1:04:32.000
-and I've enjoyed all of them and there
-
-1:04:31.680,1:04:34.720
-are
-
-1:04:32.000,1:04:36.319
-very few of them that I've had as many
-
-1:04:34.720,1:04:40.160
-belly laughs and as much
-
-1:04:36.319,1:04:42.799
-just joy playing as from dungeon
-
-1:04:40.160,1:04:43.280
-and I think you know the magic of it is
-
-1:04:42.799,1:04:45.520
-you know
-
-1:04:43.280,1:04:47.200
-like any game like the real magic is the
-
-1:04:45.520,1:04:49.599
-people you play with and having fun with
-
-1:04:47.200,1:04:51.280
-your friends
-
-1:04:49.599,1:04:53.440
-and what I would hope that people can
-
-1:04:51.280,1:04:55.920
-take away from is that dungeon has the
-
-1:04:53.440,1:04:59.280
-ability to be that magical thing
-
-1:04:55.920,1:05:00.000
-and hopefully we can get our project to
-
-1:04:59.280,1:05:02.160
-the point
-
-1:05:00.000,1:05:04.960
-where it gets out of the way and lets
-
-1:05:02.160,1:05:07.200
-you have that fun with your friends
-
-1:05:04.960,1:05:08.240
-um but there's a lot of work to do we
-
-1:05:07.200,1:05:10.880
-could use some help
-
-1:05:08.240,1:05:14.480
-so if you're interested in having fun
-
-1:05:10.880,1:05:14.480
-come help us build this fun tool
-
-1:05:20.960,1:05:24.079
-all right so I just got the call that
-
-1:05:22.319,1:05:25.039
-we've got just about two to three
-
-1:05:24.079,1:05:28.160
-minutes left
-
-1:05:25.039,1:05:31.440
-and we should start our wrap-up
-
-1:05:28.160,1:05:34.240
-okay wrap up so
-
-1:05:31.440,1:05:35.920
-yeah um so I'll I'll see if I can charge
-
-1:05:34.240,1:05:38.480
-the room with some energy unless you're
-
-1:05:35.920,1:05:40.720
-ready to have at it hope
-
-1:05:38.480,1:05:42.799
-here here's here's what I want people to
-
-1:05:40.720,1:05:46.720
-take away
-
-1:05:42.799,1:05:46.720
-were you like no okay
-
-1:05:47.039,1:05:51.839
-I'm not getting your audio hope
-
-1:05:53.599,1:05:57.359
-it's okay on my end maybe I just need to
-
-1:05:55.839,1:05:58.880
-speak up
-
-1:05:57.359,1:06:00.640
-is this better let me know when I'm
-
-1:05:58.880,1:06:01.680
-coming through yeah you're coming
-
-1:06:00.640,1:06:05.359
-through now
-
-1:06:01.680,1:06:08.799
-okay cool oh no I
-
-1:06:05.359,1:06:10.559
-was gonna say go ahead I didn't okay
-
-1:06:08.799,1:06:12.880
-I mean I I don't know that I know what I
-
-1:06:10.559,1:06:13.599
-want to say either except a whole ton of
-
-1:06:12.880,1:06:16.480
-thank yous
-
-1:06:13.599,1:06:17.200
-so I will I will save those for the for
-
-1:06:16.480,1:06:20.880
-the literal
-
-1:06:17.200,1:06:24.160
-end here and instead
-
-1:06:20.880,1:06:27.839
-what I would say is as we build
-
-1:06:24.160,1:06:32.160
-our amazing innovations and
-
-1:06:27.839,1:06:35.119
-explore our ideas in Emacs
-
-1:06:32.160,1:06:36.079
-we are fighting our own ego for the will
-
-1:06:35.119,1:06:37.680
-to get them done
-
-1:06:36.079,1:06:38.960
-it's hard and we're not sure if they're
-
-1:06:37.680,1:06:40.000
-going to be a good idea and will it
-
-1:06:38.960,1:06:41.680
-excite people and part of our
-
-1:06:40.000,1:06:43.440
-responsibility is to excite people so
-
-1:06:41.680,1:06:44.240
-that they can feel good about liking
-
-1:06:43.440,1:06:45.680
-them
-
-1:06:44.240,1:06:47.359
-if you come off and you're like hey this
-
-1:06:45.680,1:06:47.920
-is a terrible idea it's really hard to
-
-1:06:47.359,1:06:49.760
-be like
-
-1:06:47.920,1:06:51.200
-no I love that idea it works
-
-1:06:49.760,1:06:55.520
-theatrically but
-
-1:06:51.200,1:06:55.520
-in larger groups may not scale
-
-1:06:55.680,1:07:00.400
-so that's a crucible for ideas and a
-
-1:06:58.400,1:07:03.280
-crucible for teams
-
-1:07:00.400,1:07:04.240
-the first part is definitely healthy the
-
-1:07:03.280,1:07:07.440
-second part
-
-1:07:04.240,1:07:08.640
-there's a lot we can we can do you know
-
-1:07:07.440,1:07:10.880
-having upfront
-
-1:07:08.640,1:07:15.440
-and and and good faith conversations on
-
-1:07:10.880,1:07:17.520
-that subject
-
-1:07:15.440,1:07:19.119
-anybody else wanted I want to weigh it
-
-1:07:17.520,1:07:22.960
-in after that sorry that that was more
-
-1:07:19.119,1:07:22.960
-of a calm down than a then a fire out
-
-1:07:23.200,1:07:26.000
-oh that's okay
-
-1:07:27.280,1:07:30.960
-I mean um the first part of this but I
-
-1:07:29.280,1:07:32.960
-think um
-
-1:07:30.960,1:07:34.880
-we would be remiss not to highlight org
-
-1:07:32.960,1:07:37.839
-mode a little bit
-
-1:07:34.880,1:07:38.480
-yeah like that's that's our bread and
-
-1:07:37.839,1:07:40.240
-butter
-
-1:07:38.480,1:07:42.720
-yeah our whole project is built on org
-
-1:07:40.240,1:07:46.240
-mode right and I'm just really excited
-
-1:07:42.720,1:07:49.680
-because like I have I don't have adhd
-
-1:07:46.240,1:07:51.119
-but I have like something similar and so
-
-1:07:49.680,1:07:54.880
-like to know that there's something that
-
-1:07:51.119,1:07:57.760
-exists that is like purely hierarchical
-
-1:07:54.880,1:07:58.559
-is incredible like I can just run a
-
-1:07:57.760,1:08:01.839
-report
-
-1:07:58.559,1:08:03.839
-basically and get all of my like
-
-1:08:01.839,1:08:05.760
-to-do lists that I didn't have to put in
-
-1:08:03.839,1:08:10.240
-one specific place
-
-1:08:05.760,1:08:10.240
-um and like that's kind of been
-
-1:08:10.559,1:08:16.480
-a complex issue for me of like
-
-1:08:14.559,1:08:18.080
-okay I have all these to-do lists like
-
-1:08:16.480,1:08:18.319
-in google keep or whatever like what do
-
-1:08:18.080,1:08:20.719
-I
-
-1:08:18.319,1:08:21.359
-do with them now so being able to like
-
-1:08:20.719,1:08:24.400
-pull them
-
-1:08:21.359,1:08:26.640
-into one list and then just cycle
-
-1:08:24.400,1:08:30.239
-through them is really incredible
-
-1:08:26.640,1:08:34.480
-and I think taking a dungeon and
-
-1:08:30.239,1:08:35.839
-like using it to
-
-1:08:34.480,1:08:37.759
-like combining it with org mode
-
-1:08:35.839,1:08:41.040
-basically um
-
-1:08:37.759,1:08:42.560
-really yeah I'm excited about it I'm
-
-1:08:41.040,1:08:44.159
-excited to see like what it can do for
-
-1:08:42.560,1:08:47.759
-player groups
-
-1:08:44.159,1:08:50.319
-um yeah especially
-
-1:08:47.759,1:08:52.319
-like I was excited about dungeon mode um
-
-1:08:50.319,1:08:53.920
-before the pandemic and now like I'm
-
-1:08:52.319,1:08:57.120
-only more enthusiastic
-
-1:08:53.920,1:08:58.400
-so yeah uh definitely the pandemic has
-
-1:08:57.120,1:08:59.120
-been the greatest thing that happened to
-
-1:08:58.400,1:09:02.080
-this game
-
-1:08:59.120,1:09:02.640
-terrible terrible as it is to say that
-
-1:09:02.080,1:09:05.120
-it
-
-1:09:02.640,1:09:06.719
-if we uh needed a hobby and it turns out
-
-1:09:05.120,1:09:09.839
-role-playing games are
-
-1:09:06.719,1:09:09.839
-a really good fit
-
-1:09:11.279,1:09:14.799
-so um so I think that's probably about
-
-1:09:13.839,1:09:18.560
-our time
-
-1:09:14.799,1:09:21.759
-um I'm guessing that's my call and
-
-1:09:18.560,1:09:23.120
-uh thank you very much thank you
-
-1:09:21.759,1:09:25.679
-everybody
-
-1:09:23.120,1:09:31.759
-we'll be around for discord and stuff
-
-1:09:25.679,1:09:31.759
-later come catch us if you want to talk
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--30-a-tour-of-vterm--gabriele-bozzola-sbozzolo-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--30-a-tour-of-vterm--gabriele-bozzola-sbozzolo-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 761568a6..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--30-a-tour-of-vterm--gabriele-bozzola-sbozzolo-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,633 +0,0 @@
-0:00:00.880,0:00:06.080
-hello and welcome to the stock
-
-0:00:03.760,0:00:07.919
-the title of the stock is a tour feature
-
-0:00:06.080,0:00:08.559
-a fast and fully featured terminal
-
-0:00:07.919,0:00:11.840
-emulator
-
-0:00:08.559,0:00:13.360
-inside new e-max so let's try to
-
-0:00:11.840,0:00:14.559
-understand what we mean with the pass
-
-0:00:13.360,0:00:17.520
-and fully featured
-
-0:00:14.559,0:00:18.320
-and to do that we'll compare v term with
-
-0:00:17.520,0:00:20.640
-the
-
-0:00:18.320,0:00:22.400
-packages which are built in Emacs mean
-
-0:00:20.640,0:00:25.199
-the term
-
-0:00:22.400,0:00:26.720
-so let's let's jump into the v term so
-
-0:00:25.199,0:00:29.679
-this is a feature buffer
-
-0:00:26.720,0:00:31.519
-and this is a ansi term buffer what I'm
-
-0:00:29.679,0:00:32.160
-going to do now is first I'm going to
-
-0:00:31.519,0:00:35.760
-prove you
-
-0:00:32.160,0:00:37.520
-what we move fast so to do that let me
-
-0:00:35.760,0:00:39.280
-open a large file display on screen or
-
-0:00:37.520,0:00:40.239
-large file this is about one megabyte of
-
-0:00:39.280,0:00:43.520
-data
-
-0:00:40.239,0:00:44.160
-and let me time that it takes about 0.6
-
-0:00:43.520,0:00:47.200
-seconds
-
-0:00:44.160,0:00:49.760
-with feature let's do the same with
-
-0:00:47.200,0:00:51.520
-with ancient term well we already
-
-0:00:49.760,0:00:53.039
-already see the difference
-
-0:00:51.520,0:00:54.559
-so I will use this time to tell you
-
-0:00:53.039,0:00:57.360
-what's different and
-
-0:00:54.559,0:00:58.879
-what is v term exactly so v term is a
-
-0:00:57.360,0:01:01.120
-terminal emulator built
-
-0:00:58.879,0:01:02.719
-on top of an external library the
-
-0:01:01.120,0:01:05.519
-library is called libvi term
-
-0:01:02.719,0:01:07.200
-and is the same library used by newton
-
-0:01:05.519,0:01:10.000
-for their own terminal emulator
-
-0:01:07.200,0:01:10.799
-it's a c library and this is what gives
-
-0:01:10.000,0:01:15.119
-us
-
-0:01:10.799,0:01:17.280
-a lot of good features first the speed
-
-0:01:15.119,0:01:18.479
-time spent here 0.6 is essentially the
-
-0:01:17.280,0:01:21.520
-time that it takes to
-
-0:01:18.479,0:01:22.240
-one convert the emax representation of
-
-0:01:21.520,0:01:23.840
-like text
-
-0:01:22.240,0:01:26.400
-into the visa and representation of what
-
-0:01:23.840,0:01:28.479
-was a string and two into
-
-0:01:26.400,0:01:29.520
-actually displaying that and that can
-
-0:01:28.479,0:01:31.840
-take time
-
-0:01:29.520,0:01:33.680
-if there's a if there's quantification
-
-0:01:31.840,0:01:34.240
-involved so these are the 0.6 seconds
-
-0:01:33.680,0:01:36.960
-there
-
-0:01:34.240,0:01:37.920
-as we say in the in ancestor that's much
-
-0:01:36.960,0:01:39.920
-much
-
-0:01:37.920,0:01:41.680
-more time it's much slower so the
-
-0:01:39.920,0:01:42.880
-terminal will feel much snappier much
-
-0:01:41.680,0:01:46.079
-faster
-
-0:01:42.880,0:01:47.840
-but that's not the main benefit or the
-
-0:01:46.079,0:01:48.799
-only benefit of using this external
-
-0:01:47.840,0:01:52.320
-library
-
-0:01:48.799,0:01:55.439
-feature the second big benefit
-
-0:01:52.320,0:01:56.560
-is that v term has support for all the
-
-0:01:55.439,0:01:59.200
-escape codes
-
-0:01:56.560,0:02:01.119
-that exterm has support for so v term is
-
-0:01:59.200,0:02:03.600
-essentially as running x term
-
-0:02:01.119,0:02:04.799
-inside an imax buffer so let's see that
-
-0:02:03.600,0:02:07.119
-this for example
-
-0:02:04.799,0:02:08.239
-let's start by looking at the support
-
-0:02:07.119,0:02:09.920
-for colors
-
-0:02:08.239,0:02:11.840
-we have support for all the colors out
-
-0:02:09.920,0:02:15.040
-of the box we don't have to do anything
-
-0:02:11.840,0:02:15.680
-and if we did the same here well we have
-
-0:02:15.040,0:02:17.920
-only
-
-0:02:15.680,0:02:19.680
-20 colors there's a way to get all the
-
-0:02:17.920,0:02:23.040
-colors but it's much more involved
-
-0:02:19.680,0:02:26.000
-but this is not where v term shines
-
-0:02:23.040,0:02:27.200
-uh we can run all the commands that we
-
-0:02:26.000,0:02:30.480
-want
-
-0:02:27.200,0:02:33.040
-h top and cdu
-
-0:02:30.480,0:02:33.840
-everything runs here also this title
-
-0:02:33.040,0:02:36.400
-it's a
-
-0:02:33.840,0:02:37.040
-it's a fairly complicated manipulation
-
-0:02:36.400,0:02:40.879
-of
-
-0:02:37.040,0:02:42.319
-the window and it will not work here
-
-0:02:40.879,0:02:44.640
-it just doesn't work actually now the
-
-0:02:42.319,0:02:48.400
-terminal is probably messed up
-
-0:02:44.640,0:02:50.959
-yes so using this external library
-
-0:02:48.400,0:02:52.000
-removes the burden from the developers
-
-0:02:50.959,0:02:54.000
-of having to implement
-
-0:02:52.000,0:02:55.360
-support for all these cape codes we just
-
-0:02:54.000,0:02:58.480
-use those
-
-0:02:55.360,0:03:01.760
-so in many ways running veteran
-
-0:02:58.480,0:03:04.400
-is us running extern inside a max
-
-0:03:01.760,0:03:05.840
-but it's better than that because since
-
-0:03:04.400,0:03:08.879
-this is an e-max buffer
-
-0:03:05.840,0:03:09.760
-we can enjoy a lot of features from
-
-0:03:08.879,0:03:11.920
-Emacs
-
-0:03:09.760,0:03:13.200
-as well as a tighter integration with
-
-0:03:11.920,0:03:16.560
-e-max itself
-
-0:03:13.200,0:03:17.599
-for example as you see here the title of
-
-0:03:16.560,0:03:20.720
-my buffer
-
-0:03:17.599,0:03:21.760
-is from the director I'm in so let's go
-
-0:03:20.720,0:03:24.799
-to my tmp
-
-0:03:21.760,0:03:26.560
-the title will change so there's
-
-0:03:24.799,0:03:28.000
-information being exchanged between v
-
-0:03:26.560,0:03:29.760
-term and index
-
-0:03:28.000,0:03:32.000
-and of course the title is not the only
-
-0:03:29.760,0:03:34.799
-place where information is exchanged
-
-0:03:32.000,0:03:35.920
-I can find a file and I will be in the
-
-0:03:34.799,0:03:38.239
-directory
-
-0:03:35.920,0:03:40.000
-where my terminal is this feature is
-
-0:03:38.239,0:03:41.680
-also available in nc term
-
-0:03:40.000,0:03:43.840
-and it works also on b term and it
-
-0:03:41.680,0:03:44.720
-follows me so if I go to tmp I'll get
-
-0:03:43.840,0:03:48.000
-the tmp
-
-0:03:44.720,0:03:48.640
-if I ssh to a remote server it will work
-
-0:03:48.000,0:03:51.120
-also
-
-0:03:48.640,0:03:53.920
-on remote servers as well which is a
-
-0:03:51.120,0:03:55.760
-very nice way to edit files remotely
-
-0:03:53.920,0:03:57.360
-while we're working on a shelf and
-
-0:03:55.760,0:03:59.599
-second while vterm
-
-0:03:57.360,0:04:02.159
-is not an e-lisp interpreter like
-
-0:03:59.599,0:04:06.080
-initial what we can do is we can
-
-0:04:02.159,0:04:08.319
-still run inbox functions so for example
-
-0:04:06.080,0:04:10.159
-that requires some configuration the
-
-0:04:08.319,0:04:12.480
-term
-
-0:04:10.159,0:04:14.000
-command message I as you see there's a
-
-0:04:12.480,0:04:16.239
-higher so what I'm doing
-
-0:04:14.000,0:04:17.199
-is I'm executing the eagles function I
-
-0:04:16.239,0:04:19.840
-and I can drop that
-
-0:04:17.199,0:04:20.320
-and turn it around uh hash function to
-
-0:04:19.840,0:04:24.880
-run
-
-0:04:20.320,0:04:27.600
-a-list functions or another one file see
-
-0:04:24.880,0:04:28.800
-we call this feature message passing and
-
-0:04:27.600,0:04:30.880
-it requires
-
-0:04:28.800,0:04:32.000
-some configuration on the emac side as
-
-0:04:30.880,0:04:34.000
-well as in the shell side
-
-0:04:32.000,0:04:35.360
-it's important to stress what's the
-
-0:04:34.000,0:04:37.360
-nature of feature
-
-0:04:35.360,0:04:39.120
-for instance every time I'm sending a
-
-0:04:37.360,0:04:40.800
-key binding it's not immediately clear
-
-0:04:39.120,0:04:42.720
-if my intention is to send it to the
-
-0:04:40.800,0:04:44.320
-shell or to imax so v term implements
-
-0:04:42.720,0:04:46.800
-some reasonable defaults
-
-0:04:44.320,0:04:49.120
-but at the moment it's mainly packaged
-
-0:04:46.800,0:04:51.199
-to display characters on a screen
-
-0:04:49.120,0:04:53.600
-so for example if you're using evil the
-
-0:04:51.199,0:04:55.759
-editing commands in evil will not work
-
-0:04:53.600,0:04:57.840
-immediately there's some work to be done
-
-0:04:55.759,0:04:58.479
-and integration can be improved on that
-
-0:04:57.840,0:05:00.240
-side but
-
-0:04:58.479,0:05:02.240
-sometimes we really want this to behave
-
-0:05:00.240,0:05:05.440
-exactly like a imax buffer
-
-0:05:02.240,0:05:07.039
-we want to be able to search if
-
-0:05:05.440,0:05:08.880
-if I try to get it to search it will not
-
-0:05:07.039,0:05:09.360
-work I will send it to the shop so to do
-
-0:05:08.880,0:05:12.400
-that
-
-0:05:09.360,0:05:12.800
-we enabled the term copy mode so as you
-
-0:05:12.400,0:05:15.280
-see
-
-0:05:12.800,0:05:17.039
-copy mode and now this buffer is
-
-0:05:15.280,0:05:21.120
-essentially a fundamental buffer
-
-0:05:17.039,0:05:24.400
-I can move around as I can search
-
-0:05:21.120,0:05:25.840
-uh so it must have I
-
-0:05:24.400,0:05:27.120
-can do everything I want and there are
-
-0:05:25.840,0:05:29.600
-additional features for example I can
-
-0:05:27.120,0:05:31.440
-jump around
-
-0:05:29.600,0:05:32.639
-all the prompts and I find this
-
-0:05:31.440,0:05:34.400
-extremely useful
-
-0:05:32.639,0:05:35.919
-because I can copy update from my
-
-0:05:34.400,0:05:39.199
-programs or
-
-0:05:35.919,0:05:42.400
-what I always have to do is I have to
-
-0:05:39.199,0:05:43.120
-google some errors so what I do is I
-
-0:05:42.400,0:05:45.919
-select that
-
-0:05:43.120,0:05:46.880
-and I have my keybinding in maksakov and
-
-0:05:45.919,0:05:49.199
-I'm googling
-
-0:05:46.880,0:05:50.400
-what I have to google so this is very
-
-0:05:49.199,0:05:52.800
-nice and
-
-0:05:50.400,0:05:54.400
-if I now that have selected something if
-
-0:05:52.800,0:05:57.120
-I just press return I will
-
-0:05:54.400,0:05:57.440
-go back to my normal editing mode with
-
-0:05:57.120,0:06:00.400
-the
-
-0:05:57.440,0:06:01.600
-text copied so I can paste it back so
-
-0:06:00.400,0:06:04.160
-it's a quick way to
-
-0:06:01.600,0:06:06.400
-interact with copy and interact with uh
-
-0:06:04.160,0:06:07.840
-with the output of a buffer so finally
-
-0:06:06.400,0:06:10.560
-let's discuss how to actually
-
-0:06:07.840,0:06:12.400
-use beta let's circle back and let's go
-
-0:06:10.560,0:06:14.400
-and let's look at the github repo
-
-0:06:12.400,0:06:15.520
-where development is happening v term is
-
-0:06:14.400,0:06:17.919
-available in velpa
-
-0:06:15.520,0:06:18.960
-but since it's leveraging the power of
-
-0:06:17.919,0:06:20.639
-an external module
-
-0:06:18.960,0:06:22.000
-you must have Emacs compiled with
-
-0:06:20.639,0:06:25.600
-support for modules
-
-0:06:22.000,0:06:27.199
-and many distros like ubuntu debian
-
-0:06:25.600,0:06:29.840
-that's not there so you have to get
-
-0:06:27.199,0:06:30.160
-Emacs with support for modules compiling
-
-0:06:29.840,0:06:32.000
-or
-
-0:06:30.160,0:06:33.840
-getting images somewhere else and also
-
-0:06:32.000,0:06:34.400
-the first time you are going to use this
-
-0:06:33.840,0:06:37.440
-which
-
-0:06:34.400,0:06:40.319
-works only on mac or
-
-0:06:37.440,0:06:41.759
-new linux systems Emacs will try to find
-
-0:06:40.319,0:06:43.680
-and compile this module
-
-0:06:41.759,0:06:45.440
-so it's important this requirement is
-
-0:06:43.680,0:06:47.600
-important if you're using windows
-
-0:06:45.440,0:06:49.199
-well that's not it's not available and
-
-0:06:47.600,0:06:52.560
-will not work
-
-0:06:49.199,0:06:53.440
-so to conclude I want to just advertise
-
-0:06:52.560,0:06:56.240
-this page
-
-0:06:53.440,0:06:57.120
-if you have problems look at the issues
-
-0:06:56.240,0:06:59.039
-and
-
-0:06:57.120,0:07:00.800
-open unusual in case we'll try to help
-
-0:06:59.039,0:07:02.639
-you we are very excited about feature
-
-0:07:00.800,0:07:10.319
-and I think it's a transformative
-
-0:07:02.639,0:07:10.319
-terminal experience inside glue imax
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--30-a-tour-of-vterm--questions--gabriele-bozzola-sbozzolo-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--30-a-tour-of-vterm--questions--gabriele-bozzola-sbozzolo-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 50e8e376..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--30-a-tour-of-vterm--questions--gabriele-bozzola-sbozzolo-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,384 +0,0 @@
-0:00:01.520,0:00:05.279
-okay I mean can you hear me yep I can
-
-0:00:03.360,0:00:07.200
-hear you can you hear me
-
-0:00:05.279,0:00:08.480
-yes perfect so gabrielle uh if you want
-
-0:00:07.200,0:00:09.280
-to start answering questions and by the
-
-0:00:08.480,0:00:10.880
-way people for the
-
-0:00:09.280,0:00:12.400
-for the stream I'm actually on a phone
-
-0:00:10.880,0:00:13.360
-call right now so the quality might be a
-
-0:00:12.400,0:00:17.199
-little bad
-
-0:00:13.360,0:00:20.480
-but we're trying our best
-
-0:00:17.199,0:00:22.800
-hello uh thanks for attending my talk
-
-0:00:20.480,0:00:24.000
-I see four questions on the user product
-
-0:00:22.800,0:00:27.039
-I'm going to answer
-
-0:00:24.000,0:00:29.039
-them okay so the first one is
-
-0:00:27.039,0:00:31.119
-can you put your test space from up
-
-0:00:29.039,0:00:31.840
-somewhere uh yes they're very simple
-
-0:00:31.119,0:00:33.680
-skips
-
-0:00:31.840,0:00:35.520
-uh I'll find a way to distribute them
-
-0:00:33.680,0:00:37.600
-somehow
-
-0:00:35.520,0:00:38.800
-that's so that's an easy one the second
-
-0:00:37.600,0:00:40.559
-one is more difficult it's more
-
-0:00:38.800,0:00:44.320
-difficult it's the differences between
-
-0:00:40.559,0:00:47.360
-e shell and v term so I did very basic
-
-0:00:44.320,0:00:50.399
-level the main difference is that v
-
-0:00:47.360,0:00:52.800
-term is implemented with
-
-0:00:50.399,0:00:53.840
-as a bridge between Emacs and an
-
-0:00:52.800,0:00:56.079
-external library
-
-0:00:53.840,0:00:57.039
-which means that most of the code base
-
-0:00:56.079,0:01:00.320
-is actually c
-
-0:00:57.039,0:01:01.280
-it's not easy uh this is is a critical
-
-0:01:00.320,0:01:03.760
-difference
-
-0:01:01.280,0:01:04.320
-uh in terms of performance in terms of
-
-0:01:03.760,0:01:06.960
-speed
-
-0:01:04.320,0:01:07.360
-and all the other uh features that we
-
-0:01:06.960,0:01:10.400
-can
-
-0:01:07.360,0:01:13.119
-inherit from this library so vterm
-
-0:01:10.400,0:01:13.600
-is similar to a real terminal it's not
-
-0:01:13.119,0:01:15.840
-as
-
-0:01:13.600,0:01:17.040
-uh it's not like a shell it's a real
-
-0:01:15.840,0:01:19.600
-terminal emulator
-
-0:01:17.040,0:01:20.479
-that can actually uh display but
-
-0:01:19.600,0:01:22.960
-manipulate the
-
-0:01:20.479,0:01:23.520
-terminal in pretty much any way whereas
-
-0:01:22.960,0:01:25.759
-isha
-
-0:01:23.520,0:01:26.640
-is simply a way to interact with your
-
-0:01:25.759,0:01:29.680
-system
-
-0:01:26.640,0:01:31.840
-in the data page we have a more
-
-0:01:29.680,0:01:33.520
-complete discussion about this topic and
-
-0:01:31.840,0:01:34.799
-where we compare v-terms with e-shell
-
-0:01:33.520,0:01:38.720
-with shell with nc
-
-0:01:34.799,0:01:40.640
-term as well I think so
-
-0:01:38.720,0:01:42.000
-I think just to conclude this I think
-
-0:01:40.640,0:01:44.079
-eshell and v term
-
-0:01:42.000,0:01:45.280
-are somehow orthogonal in the sense that
-
-0:01:44.079,0:01:46.880
-v3 is before a
-
-0:01:45.280,0:01:49.439
-full complete terminal experience
-
-0:01:46.880,0:01:50.240
-whereas isil is more for specific tasks
-
-0:01:49.439,0:01:53.280
-of this
-
-0:01:50.240,0:01:55.759
-uh which are not like terminal uh
-
-0:01:53.280,0:01:56.799
-interfaces you know like page stock this
-
-0:01:55.759,0:01:59.759
-kind of stuff
-
-0:01:56.799,0:02:01.200
-uh the next question is uh is there a
-
-0:01:59.759,0:02:02.560
-plan to avoid compilation of the initial
-
-0:02:01.200,0:02:05.759
-completion steps
-
-0:02:02.560,0:02:08.000
-so since the term is based on again
-
-0:02:05.759,0:02:08.800
-on an external module we need to combine
-
-0:02:08.000,0:02:10.800
-this module
-
-0:02:08.800,0:02:11.920
-and we're using the dynamic module
-
-0:02:10.800,0:02:13.920
-system to
-
-0:02:11.920,0:02:16.239
-be able to interface with this module
-
-0:02:13.920,0:02:18.879
-and this requires
-
-0:02:16.239,0:02:20.160
-us to compile the module at least the
-
-0:02:18.879,0:02:23.920
-very first time you start
-
-0:02:20.160,0:02:26.720
-the I don't think we can do
-
-0:02:23.920,0:02:28.480
-without that in the near future we need
-
-0:02:26.720,0:02:31.599
-to compile this
-
-0:02:28.480,0:02:33.360
-and we must there's no way around
-
-0:02:31.599,0:02:36.720
-if we cannot simply distribute the
-
-0:02:33.360,0:02:36.720
-module um
-
-0:02:37.440,0:02:40.480
-if you want to think very long term
-
-0:02:39.519,0:02:42.959
-maybe
-
-0:02:40.480,0:02:43.599
-uh but I think there's no current plan
-
-0:02:42.959,0:02:45.760
-to
-
-0:02:43.599,0:02:47.280
-avoid the compilation as the very first
-
-0:02:45.760,0:02:50.400
-step the first time you
-
-0:02:47.280,0:02:50.959
-uh run vtor however all the subsequent
-
-0:02:50.400,0:02:54.720
-times
-
-0:02:50.959,0:02:57.840
-you will not have to compile peter um
-
-0:02:54.720,0:02:58.720
-so for question four it's uh I have a
-
-0:02:57.840,0:03:01.920
-nice looking problem
-
-0:02:58.720,0:03:04.159
-thanks uh and if
-
-0:03:01.920,0:03:05.599
-there's a git repo where you can see it
-
-0:03:04.159,0:03:08.560
-or something like that
-
-0:03:05.599,0:03:09.760
-so if you go to my github repo I have
-
-0:03:08.560,0:03:12.560
-adobe files
-
-0:03:09.760,0:03:13.840
-repo but look at that it's terrible it's
-
-0:03:12.560,0:03:16.800
-super updated
-
-0:03:13.840,0:03:17.519
-so I've been meaning to polish it for
-
-0:03:16.800,0:03:20.080
-like years
-
-0:03:17.519,0:03:21.760
-and I haven't got it so don't look at it
-
-0:03:20.080,0:03:25.200
-my font is actually extremely simple
-
-0:03:21.760,0:03:26.640
-I think it's the pure prompt from uh zsh
-
-0:03:25.200,0:03:28.799
-or fish depending
-
-0:03:26.640,0:03:30.640
-uh and I think I didn't do anything but
-
-0:03:28.799,0:03:31.360
-like maybe tweaking the colors a little
-
-0:03:30.640,0:03:33.280
-bit
-
-0:03:31.360,0:03:35.519
-okay gabriel just sorry to interject if
-
-0:03:33.280,0:03:37.120
-you could just take one more question
-
-0:03:35.519,0:03:39.440
-yes the last question is already the
-
-0:03:37.120,0:03:42.480
-answer which is uh will it work with
-
-0:03:39.440,0:03:44.480
-e max terminal so minus and w and answer
-
-0:03:42.480,0:03:46.239
-yes it works without any problem with
-
-0:03:44.480,0:03:47.760
-imax terminal so you can run a terminal
-
-0:03:46.239,0:03:49.680
-inside image inside of terminal
-
-0:03:47.760,0:03:51.200
-and you can continue paying up as much
-
-0:03:49.680,0:03:53.920
-as you want okay
-
-0:03:51.200,0:03:56.239
-I think that's it explain the question
-
-0:03:53.920,0:03:59.760
-oh sorry thank you
-
-0:03:56.239,0:04:01.519
-thanks for attending this talk
-
-0:03:59.760,0:04:03.360
-well thank you so much for giving it so
-
-0:04:01.519,0:04:07.280
-I'm in back to you
-
-0:04:03.360,0:04:09.519
-you are now unmuted thank you very much
-
-0:04:07.280,0:04:11.200
-to gabrielle for the awesome talk and
-
-0:04:09.519,0:04:14.319
-for taking live questions
-
-0:04:11.200,0:04:15.200
-and also many thanks to leo for getting
-
-0:04:14.319,0:04:18.720
-through to gabriel
-
-0:04:15.200,0:04:20.720
-via phone in the face of gabriel having
-
-0:04:18.720,0:04:24.160
-technical difficulties
-
-0:04:20.720,0:04:24.160
-with using big blue button
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--31-lakota-language-and-emacs--grant-shangreaux-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--31-lakota-language-and-emacs--grant-shangreaux-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 8b6fdc13..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--31-lakota-language-and-emacs--grant-shangreaux-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,858 +0,0 @@
-0:00:10.480,0:00:15.040
-hello relatives
-
-0:00:11.519,0:00:18.960
-grant shangri is what they call me
-
-0:00:15.040,0:00:22.160
-and all of you I gladly take your hand
-
-0:00:18.960,0:00:25.199
-and shake it um
-
-0:00:22.160,0:00:25.199
-greetings everyone
-
-0:00:26.240,0:00:30.480
-today I'm going to talk about lakota
-
-0:00:28.560,0:00:33.680
-language and Emacs and how
-
-0:00:30.480,0:00:36.000
-free software and Emacs empowered me to
-
-0:00:33.680,0:00:38.960
-write on the computer in the language of
-
-0:00:36.000,0:00:38.960
-my ancestors
-
-0:00:39.520,0:00:45.760
-um start off the look with the story of
-
-0:00:42.640,0:00:48.800
-lakotiappi the lakota language
-
-0:00:45.760,0:00:52.160
-the lakota dakota dialect area
-
-0:00:48.800,0:00:55.600
-for those of you who you don't know
-
-0:00:52.160,0:00:56.840
-the lakota dakota people are also known
-
-0:00:55.600,0:00:59.760
-as the sioux
-
-0:00:56.840,0:01:03.120
-and the tribes cover an
-
-0:00:59.760,0:01:05.199
-area of roughly 10 us states and parts
-
-0:01:03.120,0:01:08.479
-of canada and so this language is
-
-0:01:05.199,0:01:10.880
-spoken over a wide range of of
-
-0:01:08.479,0:01:10.880
-area
-
-0:01:11.520,0:01:16.640
-however the us government policy
-
-0:01:14.400,0:01:18.640
-directly tried to silence this language
-
-0:01:16.640,0:01:20.960
-my father was taken to a boarding school
-
-0:01:18.640,0:01:23.280
-and was punished for speaking
-
-0:01:20.960,0:01:25.119
-his native language and so he didn't
-
-0:01:23.280,0:01:28.880
-teach it to his children
-
-0:01:25.119,0:01:29.600
-several generations of lakota and dakota
-
-0:01:28.880,0:01:31.600
-people
-
-0:01:29.600,0:01:32.640
-and other tribes all over the country
-
-0:01:31.600,0:01:34.560
-lost
-
-0:01:32.640,0:01:38.320
-lost their first language their native
-
-0:01:34.560,0:01:41.040
-language so today only around 2000
-
-0:01:38.320,0:01:43.119
-first first language native speakers are
-
-0:01:41.040,0:01:44.960
-speaking lakota
-
-0:01:43.119,0:01:47.600
-however there's language recovery
-
-0:01:44.960,0:01:49.759
-projects that are empowering
-
-0:01:47.600,0:01:51.720
-second language learners like myself to
-
-0:01:49.759,0:01:54.479
-teach it to the new generation of
-
-0:01:51.720,0:01:57.119
-children um
-
-0:01:54.479,0:01:58.000
-which brings me to my story um I grew up
-
-0:01:57.119,0:02:00.880
-without knowing
-
-0:01:58.000,0:02:01.520
-my heritage um I didn't know who my
-
-0:02:00.880,0:02:04.719
-father was
-
-0:02:01.520,0:02:07.119
-both my parents were white um
-
-0:02:04.719,0:02:08.720
-I discovered my biological family in
-
-0:02:07.119,0:02:12.160
-around 2015
-
-0:02:08.720,0:02:13.840
-was kind of a shock to me up until that
-
-0:02:12.160,0:02:15.520
-point probably the only time I'd heard
-
-0:02:13.840,0:02:18.720
-the lakota language was in
-
-0:02:15.520,0:02:20.720
-the movie dances with wolves possibly
-
-0:02:18.720,0:02:24.160
-some other times
-
-0:02:20.720,0:02:27.200
-around nebraska I'd heard it um but
-
-0:02:24.160,0:02:28.319
-even myself growing up you know pretty
-
-0:02:27.200,0:02:30.560
-close to
-
-0:02:28.319,0:02:32.239
-to lakota people and other native
-
-0:02:30.560,0:02:34.560
-american people
-
-0:02:32.239,0:02:36.640
-american indian people I kind of thought
-
-0:02:34.560,0:02:39.760
-it was just dead I thought the language
-
-0:02:36.640,0:02:42.000
-was not alive anymore um
-
-0:02:39.760,0:02:43.920
-but in 2016 my daughter began her
-
-0:02:42.000,0:02:46.720
-journey into this world and I
-
-0:02:43.920,0:02:48.239
-I was doing a lot of searching to find
-
-0:02:46.720,0:02:50.560
-out like what could I do
-
-0:02:48.239,0:02:51.920
-you know not knowing my family not
-
-0:02:50.560,0:02:54.080
-knowing my culture
-
-0:02:51.920,0:02:55.280
-what could I do to try to bring that
-
-0:02:54.080,0:02:58.640
-into our life
-
-0:02:55.280,0:03:00.720
-um and so I found out about these
-
-0:02:58.640,0:03:02.720
-lakota classes that were happening I
-
-0:03:00.720,0:03:04.560
-went up to standing rock
-
-0:03:02.720,0:03:06.640
-in north dakota and attended the lakota
-
-0:03:04.560,0:03:08.480
-summer institute for three weeks
-
-0:03:06.640,0:03:09.680
-and began my journey to learn the
-
-0:03:08.480,0:03:13.120
-language so I can
-
-0:03:09.680,0:03:16.400
-try to pass it on so
-
-0:03:13.120,0:03:16.400
-this brings us to Emacs
-
-0:03:16.560,0:03:20.959
-I could talk a lot more about my story
-
-0:03:19.200,0:03:24.640
-I'm sure there's a lot to say
-
-0:03:20.959,0:03:26.319
-but we're here to talk about Emacs um
-
-0:03:24.640,0:03:29.040
-I was already a free software user at
-
-0:03:26.319,0:03:31.440
-the time and at the lakota language
-
-0:03:29.040,0:03:33.280
-uh institute they they were they're
-
-0:03:31.440,0:03:34.879
-giving us software there's a dictionary
-
-0:03:33.280,0:03:37.360
-you could get on android
-
-0:03:34.879,0:03:38.560
-um there was a keyboard for android that
-
-0:03:37.360,0:03:41.760
-you could type with
-
-0:03:38.560,0:03:44.959
-they had keyboard input methods for mac
-
-0:03:41.760,0:03:46.720
-and windows but I'm a linux user free
-
-0:03:44.959,0:03:49.280
-software user
-
-0:03:46.720,0:03:49.760
-so I didn't have access to those things
-
-0:03:49.280,0:03:53.120
-as
-
-0:03:49.760,0:03:55.280
-as easily as I could and I do a lot of
-
-0:03:53.120,0:03:57.280
-my thinking and note taking in Emacs and
-
-0:03:55.280,0:04:01.200
-in org mode
-
-0:03:57.280,0:04:04.640
-and so being able to to write this
-
-0:04:01.200,0:04:07.680
-to to um to write things down to type
-
-0:04:04.640,0:04:08.720
-on my own computer uh was was pretty
-
-0:04:07.680,0:04:11.360
-important to me
-
-0:04:08.720,0:04:12.799
-and I wasn't much of an emax hacker yet
-
-0:04:11.360,0:04:15.519
-at the time I had
-
-0:04:12.799,0:04:16.720
-barely done anything mostly just you
-
-0:04:15.519,0:04:20.479
-know hacked on my
-
-0:04:16.720,0:04:23.600
-config file but this was a real
-
-0:04:20.479,0:04:27.280
-chance for me to experience
-
-0:04:23.600,0:04:30.400
-the the benefits of free software first
-
-0:04:27.280,0:04:33.680
-hand and not just to benefit myself but
-
-0:04:30.400,0:04:33.680
-to potentially benefit
-
-0:04:34.080,0:04:38.800
-everyone anyone interested in learning
-
-0:04:36.080,0:04:38.800
-this language
-
-0:04:39.120,0:04:44.880
-so Emacs and
-
-0:04:42.880,0:04:47.520
-that free software philosophy really
-
-0:04:44.880,0:04:49.840
-empowered me so I began digging in
-
-0:04:47.520,0:04:51.520
-um I looked I began reading the the
-
-0:04:49.840,0:04:53.680
-manual more closely
-
-0:04:51.520,0:04:55.440
-as an american I'm I'm sad to say
-
-0:04:53.680,0:04:58.479
-there's not a lot of
-
-0:04:55.440,0:05:00.160
-other languages spoken or written where
-
-0:04:58.479,0:05:02.240
-I'm from
-
-0:05:00.160,0:05:04.720
-so it's not common that I that I have to
-
-0:05:02.240,0:05:07.600
-think about this with computers
-
-0:05:04.720,0:05:09.120
-I know international people you know
-
-0:05:07.600,0:05:11.280
-have had to come up with
-
-0:05:09.120,0:05:12.160
-with interesting ways to to enter their
-
-0:05:11.280,0:05:14.800
-text
-
-0:05:12.160,0:05:16.320
-and Emacs is probably a pioneer in that
-
-0:05:14.800,0:05:17.520
-I I'd like to know more about the
-
-0:05:16.320,0:05:19.840
-history of this but
-
-0:05:17.520,0:05:22.160
-there's a whole section in the manual on
-
-0:05:19.840,0:05:23.840
-international Emacs
-
-0:05:22.160,0:05:25.440
-and I began reading this and I was
-
-0:05:23.840,0:05:28.000
-talking about
-
-0:05:25.440,0:05:29.759
-different input methods and and how many
-
-0:05:28.000,0:05:31.680
-different languages were supported and
-
-0:05:29.759,0:05:33.680
-how you could enter the text and how it
-
-0:05:31.680,0:05:34.560
-supports the different characters and so
-
-0:05:33.680,0:05:36.639
-on
-
-0:05:34.560,0:05:38.880
-um I even noticed a few languages
-
-0:05:36.639,0:05:41.840
-support several input methods
-
-0:05:38.880,0:05:43.440
-that became important for me later on as
-
-0:05:41.840,0:05:45.280
-I was working on this
-
-0:05:43.440,0:05:46.720
-many many languages are already
-
-0:05:45.280,0:05:48.479
-supported so
-
-0:05:46.720,0:05:50.080
-those of you who haven't looked into
-
-0:05:48.479,0:05:52.639
-this yet if you press
-
-0:05:50.080,0:05:53.680
-control backslash it will open up a
-
-0:05:52.639,0:05:57.039
-selection menu
-
-0:05:53.680,0:05:59.120
-for you to to select um
-
-0:05:57.039,0:06:01.440
-your input method and you can there's
-
-0:05:59.120,0:06:03.120
-207 listed here
-
-0:06:01.440,0:06:04.639
-that's including the two that I've
-
-0:06:03.120,0:06:09.199
-contributed
-
-0:06:04.639,0:06:11.120
-um so 205 on on a vanilla Emacs
-
-0:06:09.199,0:06:13.840
-so that's a lot of languages supported
-
-0:06:11.120,0:06:17.440
-by emac Emacs but there's so many more
-
-0:06:13.840,0:06:19.280
-that could be um and since Emacs is free
-
-0:06:17.440,0:06:20.000
-software and it is what it is I knew
-
-0:06:19.280,0:06:22.639
-that defining
-
-0:06:20.000,0:06:23.039
-a new input method was surely possible
-
-0:06:22.639,0:06:25.440
-um
-
-0:06:23.039,0:06:27.120
-unfortunately the the manual didn't
-
-0:06:25.440,0:06:28.800
-describe it directly or at least I
-
-0:06:27.120,0:06:30.960
-didn't pick it up so
-
-0:06:28.800,0:06:32.319
-um you know the new emax hacker that I
-
-0:06:30.960,0:06:34.880
-was I
-
-0:06:32.319,0:06:37.360
-I timidly dove down into the source code
-
-0:06:34.880,0:06:40.479
-and discovered the quail package
-
-0:06:37.360,0:06:40.960
-um so back in the day apparently there
-
-0:06:40.479,0:06:44.240
-was
-
-0:06:40.960,0:06:44.240
-mule which is like the
-
-0:06:44.560,0:06:48.000
-multi I don't I don't know it stood for
-
-0:06:47.360,0:06:50.160
-something about
-
-0:06:48.000,0:06:51.759
-language environments and and it has
-
-0:06:50.160,0:06:54.960
-evolved
-
-0:06:51.759,0:06:58.000
-and at some point um some japanese
-
-0:06:54.960,0:06:59.039
-uh coders created an input method called
-
-0:06:58.000,0:07:03.599
-tamago
-
-0:06:59.039,0:07:06.720
-which means egg in japanese and uh
-
-0:07:03.599,0:07:08.800
-tamago evolved into quail and they
-
-0:07:06.720,0:07:10.720
-in the comments you can see they talk
-
-0:07:08.800,0:07:12.800
-about how the quail egg is eaten in
-
-0:07:10.720,0:07:15.280
-japan it's a smaller thing and
-
-0:07:12.800,0:07:16.960
-the quail mode is like a nicer version
-
-0:07:15.280,0:07:19.039
-of tamago I guess and
-
-0:07:16.960,0:07:22.639
-there's a pun saying they hoped it would
-
-0:07:19.039,0:07:26.240
-egg people on to create more input modes
-
-0:07:22.639,0:07:28.479
-and quail is quite nice I looked into it
-
-0:07:26.240,0:07:30.720
-and there's basically two things you use
-
-0:07:28.479,0:07:32.240
-quail defined package and quail define
-
-0:07:30.720,0:07:35.759
-rules
-
-0:07:32.240,0:07:35.759
-so quail defined package
-
-0:07:36.080,0:07:41.759
-you can see here is a function it's
-
-0:07:38.960,0:07:43.599
-probably a macro that takes a name
-
-0:07:41.759,0:07:44.879
-a language a title and some optional
-
-0:07:43.599,0:07:48.080
-stuff which
-
-0:07:44.879,0:07:48.080
-I didn't really have to deal with
-
-0:07:48.319,0:07:52.400
-define name is a new quail package for
-
-0:07:50.479,0:07:52.879
-input language title is a string to be
-
-0:07:52.400,0:07:54.400
-split
-
-0:07:52.879,0:07:56.800
-at the mode line to indicate this
-
-0:07:54.400,0:07:56.800
-package
-
-0:07:57.120,0:08:03.039
-so I began trying to do lakota input now
-
-0:08:00.879,0:08:04.240
-this is a whole thing on its own because
-
-0:08:03.039,0:08:07.680
-the lakota language
-
-0:08:04.240,0:08:10.800
-was never written um
-
-0:08:07.680,0:08:12.879
-pre-contact and post contact
-
-0:08:10.800,0:08:14.800
-like there's several attempts at writing
-
-0:08:12.879,0:08:16.960
-it and different orthographies
-
-0:08:14.800,0:08:19.199
-and there's drama around all of this
-
-0:08:16.960,0:08:19.199
-stuff
-
-0:08:19.360,0:08:24.160
-it's pretty common to have drama going
-
-0:08:21.120,0:08:26.560
-on in any american indian stuff
-
-0:08:24.160,0:08:28.479
-going on so as I was doing this I
-
-0:08:26.560,0:08:29.680
-started with the suggested lakota
-
-0:08:28.479,0:08:32.880
-orthography which
-
-0:08:29.680,0:08:35.680
-is actually called by its authors the
-
-0:08:32.880,0:08:36.959
-the standard lakota orthography but its
-
-0:08:35.680,0:08:40.880
-authors are
-
-0:08:36.959,0:08:43.039
-um are european
-
-0:08:40.880,0:08:45.040
-um the main author is a man named jan
-
-0:08:43.039,0:08:46.160
-ulrich and I appreciate all his work and
-
-0:08:45.040,0:08:49.360
-I'm grateful for
-
-0:08:46.160,0:08:51.040
-the materials he's made available but um
-
-0:08:49.360,0:08:54.160
-it's a little bit problematic because
-
-0:08:51.040,0:08:56.720
-it's not an orthography created by
-
-0:08:54.160,0:08:57.920
-our people by lakota people so there's
-
-0:08:56.720,0:09:00.080
-another one called the white hat
-
-0:08:57.920,0:09:01.839
-orthography which is created by albert
-
-0:09:00.080,0:09:04.480
-whitehat who's a teacher
-
-0:09:01.839,0:09:05.360
-um from the chichanguk tribe so I
-
-0:09:04.480,0:09:08.640
-created two
-
-0:09:05.360,0:09:10.720
-and thankfully emax lets me do that so
-
-0:09:08.640,0:09:11.680
-it's pretty simple quail defined package
-
-0:09:10.720,0:09:13.279
-I just
-
-0:09:11.680,0:09:15.360
-say the package I want and then all
-
-0:09:13.279,0:09:16.480
-these nils and t's for options I don't
-
-0:09:15.360,0:09:18.240
-actually know what they mean but it
-
-0:09:16.480,0:09:20.240
-works
-
-0:09:18.240,0:09:22.640
-I could look it up and then quail define
-
-0:09:20.240,0:09:23.600
-rules just defines mappings from ascii
-
-0:09:22.640,0:09:26.640
-keys to
-
-0:09:23.600,0:09:29.680
-the the text you want to put in so
-
-0:09:26.640,0:09:33.600
-for this one there's a nasal n and then
-
-0:09:29.680,0:09:36.640
-a dot and a macron like a wedge shape
-
-0:09:33.600,0:09:39.839
-for marking up the consonants
-
-0:09:36.640,0:09:41.760
-so that one's pretty easy and then the
-
-0:09:39.839,0:09:43.040
-suggested lakota orthography is a little
-
-0:09:41.760,0:09:45.600
-bit more difficult
-
-0:09:43.040,0:09:46.800
-but still pretty easy I just map a
-
-0:09:45.600,0:09:49.760
-sequence of keys
-
-0:09:46.800,0:09:51.760
-a followed by the apostrophe makes the
-
-0:09:49.760,0:09:53.519
-accented vowels so all of those
-
-0:09:51.760,0:09:55.839
-and then again we have the hot checks
-
-0:09:53.519,0:09:58.399
-for the guttural sounds of the language
-
-0:09:55.839,0:09:59.120
-and the nasal end so that's it basically
-
-0:09:58.399,0:10:02.480
-these two
-
-0:09:59.120,0:10:06.560
-definitions allow me to type
-
-0:10:02.480,0:10:09.279
-lakota language in Emacs um
-
-0:10:06.560,0:10:09.920
-and it's great it works great publishing
-
-0:10:09.279,0:10:11.760
-it
-
-0:10:09.920,0:10:13.839
-is another problematic thing I wanted to
-
-0:10:11.760,0:10:16.079
-use free software to do that
-
-0:10:13.839,0:10:17.600
-so the first thing I did was I I posted
-
-0:10:16.079,0:10:19.440
-on sourcehut
-
-0:10:17.600,0:10:20.959
-which is great it's a good alternative
-
-0:10:19.440,0:10:22.880
-for a git forge
-
-0:10:20.959,0:10:24.000
-and I got it published on melba so the
-
-0:10:22.880,0:10:25.760
-lakota input
-
-0:10:24.000,0:10:27.760
-package is available if you'd like to
-
-0:10:25.760,0:10:29.839
-try it out
-
-0:10:27.760,0:10:31.680
-and bandali one of our hosts for the
-
-0:10:29.839,0:10:33.200
-conference is helping me now
-
-0:10:31.680,0:10:35.279
-through the process of committing the
-
-0:10:33.200,0:10:37.120
-code to Emacs
-
-0:10:35.279,0:10:39.279
-because I would like to do that I would
-
-0:10:37.120,0:10:41.680
-like it to be available to everyone
-
-0:10:39.279,0:10:43.279
-through Emacs itself so that anyone who
-
-0:10:41.680,0:10:43.920
-wants to use it just has to download
-
-0:10:43.279,0:10:46.240
-Emacs
-
-0:10:43.920,0:10:47.120
-and there you go you can type lakota
-
-0:10:46.240,0:10:50.160
-language
-
-0:10:47.120,0:10:53.279
-so uh pila maya thank you
-
-0:10:50.160,0:10:55.920
-all for listening and
-
-0:10:53.279,0:10:58.320
-I hope to see you around in our Emacs
-
-0:10:55.920,0:11:04.720
-community
-
-0:10:58.320,0:11:04.720
-uh day
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--31-lakota-language-and-emacs--questions--grant-shangreaux-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--31-lakota-language-and-emacs--questions--grant-shangreaux-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 864a92c1..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--31-lakota-language-and-emacs--questions--grant-shangreaux-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,411 +0,0 @@
-0:00:05.120,0:00:10.080
-hello
-
-0:00:05.680,0:00:12.400
-can you hear me yes I can awesome
-
-0:00:10.080,0:00:13.200
-all right so we have a couple minutes
-
-0:00:12.400,0:00:15.200
-and
-
-0:00:13.200,0:00:17.680
-uh it seems a couple questions as well
-
-0:00:15.200,0:00:20.000
-so take it away
-
-0:00:17.680,0:00:22.640
-okay I won't share my screen unless
-
-0:00:20.000,0:00:25.439
-needed um
-
-0:00:22.640,0:00:27.599
-looks like question one advantages
-
-0:00:25.439,0:00:31.119
-advantages of using Emacs input methods
-
-0:00:27.599,0:00:32.559
-over something like x compose
-
-0:00:31.119,0:00:34.320
-well there's a there's a couple things
-
-0:00:32.559,0:00:37.360
-there one is
-
-0:00:34.320,0:00:39.520
-um Emacs is cross platform so
-
-0:00:37.360,0:00:41.520
-writing this input mode for Emacs means
-
-0:00:39.520,0:00:44.559
-if I do end up using
-
-0:00:41.520,0:00:46.480
-a non-free operating system I can still
-
-0:00:44.559,0:00:49.920
-use Emacs I can still type
-
-0:00:46.480,0:00:52.800
-in the way that I would like to um
-
-0:00:49.920,0:00:54.640
-I did look in I don't I actually don't
-
-0:00:52.800,0:00:56.719
-know what x compose is
-
-0:00:54.640,0:00:59.680
-I tried looking for it on my system I
-
-0:00:56.719,0:01:02.399
-could not find it anywhere
-
-0:00:59.680,0:01:02.879
-I did actually go and figure out how to
-
-0:01:02.399,0:01:06.080
-write a
-
-0:01:02.879,0:01:07.040
-x11 keyboard layout so that's also
-
-0:01:06.080,0:01:09.840
-available
-
-0:01:07.040,0:01:11.920
-in the repository that has the Emacs
-
-0:01:09.840,0:01:14.720
-package as well
-
-0:01:11.920,0:01:15.920
-and it is handy to be able to have that
-
-0:01:14.720,0:01:20.000
-so I can type in
-
-0:01:15.920,0:01:20.000
-other applications besides Emacs
-
-0:01:21.200,0:01:25.119
-but the main advantages for Emacs was it
-
-0:01:24.479,0:01:27.439
-was actually
-
-0:01:25.119,0:01:28.560
-much easier to discover and much easier
-
-0:01:27.439,0:01:31.439
-to
-
-0:01:28.560,0:01:33.040
-manipulate and get feedback you know as
-
-0:01:31.439,0:01:35.360
-I was developing it like I could just
-
-0:01:33.040,0:01:37.200
-evaluate the coil package
-
-0:01:35.360,0:01:39.680
-try it out and see if it works when I
-
-0:01:37.200,0:01:40.560
-was trying to do the x11 inputs I'd have
-
-0:01:39.680,0:01:42.799
-to log out
-
-0:01:40.560,0:01:43.759
-read and and relog in again to get
-
-0:01:42.799,0:01:46.240
-things read and
-
-0:01:43.759,0:01:46.799
-it was you know it doesn't have that
-
-0:01:46.240,0:01:50.560
-beautiful
-
-0:01:46.799,0:01:53.040
-interactivity the way that Emacs does so
-
-0:01:50.560,0:01:54.960
-for me it was a good place to start um
-
-0:01:53.040,0:01:56.640
-especially because
-
-0:01:54.960,0:01:58.079
-I had never done anything like this
-
-0:01:56.640,0:02:00.079
-before like developing
-
-0:01:58.079,0:02:03.200
-something that felt low level you know
-
-0:02:00.079,0:02:03.200
-like a keyboard input
-
-0:02:04.320,0:02:08.479
-I hope that answers your question
-
-0:02:06.399,0:02:09.280
-question two can you give us a demo of
-
-0:02:08.479,0:02:12.400
-you typing in
-
-0:02:09.280,0:02:17.200
-either lakota and input method sure
-
-0:02:12.400,0:02:17.200
-um share my screen now
-
-0:02:19.599,0:02:23.840
-of course I always have to select which
-
-0:02:21.520,0:02:23.840
-one
-
-0:02:32.239,0:02:37.840
-okay so control backslash opens the
-
-0:02:36.560,0:02:40.000
-input modes
-
-0:02:37.840,0:02:41.920
-although when you've selected one you
-
-0:02:40.000,0:02:45.680
-have it already so
-
-0:02:41.920,0:02:48.319
-uh yeah wash day
-
-0:02:45.680,0:02:50.000
-that's it is good washed it so this is
-
-0:02:48.319,0:02:53.360
-the suggested lakota
-
-0:02:50.000,0:02:56.560
-orthography or otherwise known as the
-
-0:02:53.360,0:02:58.800
-standard lakota orthography
-
-0:02:56.560,0:03:00.640
-another benefit of doing it in Emacs is
-
-0:02:58.800,0:03:05.840
-that I now get
-
-0:03:00.640,0:03:05.840
-completion on lakota words so
-
-0:03:06.800,0:03:10.560
-so I'm you know it's a second language
-
-0:03:08.800,0:03:11.440
-for me and as I'm trying to learn it
-
-0:03:10.560,0:03:13.760
-it's actually
-
-0:03:11.440,0:03:15.599
-quite useful to have company mode as a
-
-0:03:13.760,0:03:19.200
-bonus um
-
-0:03:15.599,0:03:19.200
-for typing things
-
-0:03:19.680,0:03:23.599
-I can show the other orthography so to
-
-0:03:22.239,0:03:27.200
-to get another one you do
-
-0:03:23.599,0:03:30.560
-the universal input control u backslash
-
-0:03:27.200,0:03:33.280
-and I can try the white hat orthography
-
-0:03:30.560,0:03:33.280
-oh yeah lost
-
-0:03:36.239,0:03:41.440
-what's the command for that you are now
-
-0:03:39.760,0:03:44.720
-unmuted
-
-0:03:41.440,0:03:47.840
-yeah okay you are now muted
-
-0:03:44.720,0:03:47.840
-thank you
-
-0:03:48.000,0:03:55.680
-you are now unmuted you are now muted
-
-0:03:52.080,0:03:58.879
-oops not quite as slick as that other
-
-0:03:55.680,0:04:02.799
-demo we saw the other day
-
-0:03:58.879,0:04:04.239
-okay so control u control backslash I
-
-0:04:02.799,0:04:07.200
-can select a different
-
-0:04:04.239,0:04:10.560
-input method um from the default so if I
-
-0:04:07.200,0:04:14.480
-select white hat I can type
-
-0:04:10.560,0:04:18.000
-wash day like that
-
-0:04:14.480,0:04:19.919
-so it's a different orthography here um
-
-0:04:18.000,0:04:21.440
-I won't go too deeply into that it's
-
-0:04:19.919,0:04:23.120
-hard to think and talk and type all at
-
-0:04:21.440,0:04:26.320
-the same time
-
-0:04:23.120,0:04:28.560
-um I hope that's good
-
-0:04:26.320,0:04:31.840
-I'm happy to do more maybe I'll put up a
-
-0:04:28.560,0:04:35.840
-video of of demonstrating that sometimes
-
-0:04:31.840,0:04:35.840
-why did I just go ahead
-
-0:04:36.479,0:04:42.880
-um time about for like one more question
-
-0:04:39.520,0:04:45.280
-okay on live yeah thank you
-
-0:04:42.880,0:04:46.240
-um well real quick did I write the
-
-0:04:45.280,0:04:48.880
-company back end
-
-0:04:46.240,0:04:50.639
-no that's just the automatic company
-
-0:04:48.880,0:04:51.280
-completion based on other things I've
-
-0:04:50.639,0:04:55.440
-typed
-
-0:04:51.280,0:04:58.080
-why did I decide on the the input method
-
-0:04:55.440,0:04:58.880
-that's a good question um I just did it
-
-0:04:58.080,0:05:03.120
-based on
-
-0:04:58.880,0:05:04.000
-my experience um in the x input mode you
-
-0:05:03.120,0:05:06.160
-type it first
-
-0:05:04.000,0:05:07.120
-and honestly I would love any input on
-
-0:05:06.160,0:05:09.280
-what's more
-
-0:05:07.120,0:05:10.960
-usual for these type of combining
-
-0:05:09.280,0:05:13.919
-letters
-
-0:05:10.960,0:05:15.360
-and really what I would like to do is
-
-0:05:13.919,0:05:17.600
-kind of confer with other
-
-0:05:15.360,0:05:19.440
-people from the tribe and talk to elders
-
-0:05:17.600,0:05:21.440
-and see
-
-0:05:19.440,0:05:23.600
-what feels right what what is the best
-
-0:05:21.440,0:05:24.800
-way to go about this
-
-0:05:23.600,0:05:26.960
-I don't think that it should be an
-
-0:05:24.800,0:05:27.919
-individual decision and in this case it
-
-0:05:26.960,0:05:30.880
-is because
-
-0:05:27.919,0:05:32.320
-I created it for myself but now that
-
-0:05:30.880,0:05:34.639
-I've released it to the world I think
-
-0:05:32.320,0:05:37.680
-there's more to think about
-
-0:05:34.639,0:05:38.800
-okay I guess I have to go now so we can
-
-0:05:37.680,0:05:42.320
-get to the next talk
-
-0:05:38.800,0:05:44.320
-thank you for listening okay
-
-0:05:42.320,0:05:45.759
-thank you very much grant for your
-
-0:05:44.320,0:05:50.720
-awesome talk and for
-
-0:05:45.759,0:05:50.720
-the questions and answers
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--32-object-oriented-code-in-the-gnus-newsreader--eric-abrahamsen-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--32-object-oriented-code-in-the-gnus-newsreader--eric-abrahamsen-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 814b5e8a..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--32-object-oriented-code-in-the-gnus-newsreader--eric-abrahamsen-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2214 +0,0 @@
-0:00:01.839,0:00:05.759
-hello EmacsConf
-
-0:00:04.160,0:00:07.200
-thanks very much first of all to the
-
-0:00:05.759,0:00:09.440
-organizers of the conference
-
-0:00:07.200,0:00:10.480
-and to the audience who I hope is out
-
-0:00:09.440,0:00:12.080
-there somewhere
-
-0:00:10.480,0:00:14.240
-uh for giving me this chance to talk
-
-0:00:12.080,0:00:16.560
-about Emacs and some of my uh
-
-0:00:14.240,0:00:18.480
-my poking around with Emacs lisp my name
-
-0:00:16.560,0:00:20.960
-is eric abrahamson I'm not
-
-0:00:18.480,0:00:21.920
-a professional programmer but I use
-
-0:00:20.960,0:00:24.800
-Emacs all day
-
-0:00:21.920,0:00:26.160
-every day for writing for translating
-
-0:00:24.800,0:00:28.160
-for project management
-
-0:00:26.160,0:00:29.199
-and most importantly for email which
-
-0:00:28.160,0:00:32.480
-will be the
-
-0:00:29.199,0:00:35.440
-subject of my talk today so I'm talking
-
-0:00:32.480,0:00:38.320
-about object-oriented code in Emacs
-
-0:00:35.440,0:00:40.160
-uh most famous possibly oldest
-
-0:00:38.320,0:00:41.760
-definitely most notorious news reader
-
-0:00:40.160,0:00:44.320
-slash Emacs client
-
-0:00:41.760,0:00:45.440
-email client so in particular object
-
-0:00:44.320,0:00:49.520
-oriented code
-
-0:00:45.440,0:00:49.520
-in news why object-oriented code
-
-0:00:50.239,0:00:53.600
-the way news works is it started off as
-
-0:00:51.920,0:00:57.039
-a news reader so for access
-
-0:00:53.600,0:00:59.120
-accessing nntp servers and later on grew
-
-0:00:57.039,0:01:01.039
-a whole bunch of new functionality as a
-
-0:00:59.120,0:01:02.079
-mail client so it can talk to imap
-
-0:01:01.039,0:01:04.799
-servers
-
-0:01:02.079,0:01:06.640
-mail dealer directories uh folders on
-
-0:01:04.799,0:01:08.400
-your file system all kinds of stuff
-
-0:01:06.640,0:01:09.760
-but it presents a unified interface to
-
-0:01:08.400,0:01:11.040
-all those things so it's basically
-
-0:01:09.760,0:01:14.000
-polymorphism
-
-0:01:11.040,0:01:16.400
-one of the the basic fundamental
-
-0:01:14.000,0:01:18.720
-principles of object oriented code so
-
-0:01:16.400,0:01:19.920
-it's a good fit second reason is it
-
-0:01:18.720,0:01:22.880
-already is
-
-0:01:19.920,0:01:23.759
-object oriented and I'll get into what
-
-0:01:22.880,0:01:27.280
-that means
-
-0:01:23.759,0:01:28.640
-in a second so
-
-0:01:27.280,0:01:30.640
-the background that you should know is
-
-0:01:28.640,0:01:32.560
-that most of this code was written in
-
-0:01:30.640,0:01:34.880
-the 90s
-
-0:01:32.560,0:01:36.159
-Emacs lisp has only grown sort of
-
-0:01:34.880,0:01:38.640
-official
-
-0:01:36.159,0:01:41.200
-object orientation support libraries
-
-0:01:38.640,0:01:43.840
-over the past 10 years or so
-
-0:01:41.200,0:01:44.799
-from about 2010 to the present so what
-
-0:01:43.840,0:01:48.640
-does
-
-0:01:44.799,0:01:50.560
-news do so the basics of
-
-0:01:48.640,0:01:52.240
-object orientation in most languages are
-
-0:01:50.560,0:01:53.759
-you you define
-
-0:01:52.240,0:01:55.840
-a class of some sort and then you
-
-0:01:53.759,0:01:58.079
-instantiate that class and these
-
-0:01:55.840,0:02:00.320
-class instances have two things they
-
-0:01:58.079,0:02:01.759
-have data attributes or
-
-0:02:00.320,0:02:04.799
-slots or members or whatever you're
-
-0:02:01.759,0:02:07.280
-going to call them and they have
-
-0:02:04.799,0:02:08.399
-methods which operate on individual
-
-0:02:07.280,0:02:11.120
-instances
-
-0:02:08.399,0:02:12.879
-so you could say that you create or
-
-0:02:11.120,0:02:13.920
-instantiate an instance of a class in
-
-0:02:12.879,0:02:16.239
-that instance
-
-0:02:13.920,0:02:17.120
-owns two things that owns its set of
-
-0:02:16.239,0:02:20.239
-attributes
-
-0:02:17.120,0:02:23.280
-and it owns some methods which
-
-0:02:20.239,0:02:26.720
-also work on the on the instance
-
-0:02:23.280,0:02:29.040
-so both in nurse's existing code and in
-
-0:02:26.720,0:02:30.080
-the more standard object oriented Emacs
-
-0:02:29.040,0:02:32.480
-lisp libraries
-
-0:02:30.080,0:02:34.080
-this relationship is turned on its head
-
-0:02:32.480,0:02:37.599
-a little bit
-
-0:02:34.080,0:02:40.239
-in that data slots and
-
-0:02:37.599,0:02:41.360
-uh and instance methods are defined
-
-0:02:40.239,0:02:42.959
-outside of the
-
-0:02:41.360,0:02:45.040
-class or the instances themselves so
-
-0:02:42.959,0:02:46.879
-they are top level definitions
-
-0:02:45.040,0:02:48.319
-so we'll get to what that means in the
-
-0:02:46.879,0:02:49.840
-in the newer libraries um
-
-0:02:48.319,0:02:51.760
-in a bit but uh first I want to talk
-
-0:02:49.840,0:02:54.319
-about how news does this and in order to
-
-0:02:51.760,0:02:57.440
-do that we are going to go deep into
-
-0:02:54.319,0:02:59.879
-the darkest corner of the new co source
-
-0:02:57.440,0:03:02.879
-code tree to a library called
-
-0:02:59.879,0:03:05.040
-nno.l very cryptically
-
-0:03:02.879,0:03:06.800
-titled uh library and when we open it up
-
-0:03:05.040,0:03:09.519
-we find
-
-0:03:06.800,0:03:11.040
-a library with no code comments and
-
-0:03:09.519,0:03:12.800
-almost no doc strings
-
-0:03:11.040,0:03:14.159
-almost as if lars was a little ashamed
-
-0:03:12.800,0:03:16.000
-not ashamed but knew he was doing
-
-0:03:14.159,0:03:19.040
-something a little bit crazy
-
-0:03:16.000,0:03:21.040
-and didn't want anyone to see so
-
-0:03:19.040,0:03:22.400
-this file contains the the object
-
-0:03:21.040,0:03:24.480
-oriented mechanism
-
-0:03:22.400,0:03:25.760
-whereby you can define different kinds
-
-0:03:24.480,0:03:27.280
-of back ends for news
-
-0:03:25.760,0:03:29.760
-and then those back ends can be
-
-0:03:27.280,0:03:32.480
-instantiated as individual
-
-0:03:29.760,0:03:33.360
-servers and as you define these backends
-
-0:03:32.480,0:03:36.000
-you're supposed to use
-
-0:03:33.360,0:03:36.640
-two macros which you can see here one is
-
-0:03:36.000,0:03:39.599
-called def
-
-0:03:36.640,0:03:41.280
-vu and one is called defu and if you
-
-0:03:39.599,0:03:43.280
-look at the definitions the definitions
-
-0:03:41.280,0:03:45.440
-look pretty simple here def vu basically
-
-0:03:43.280,0:03:49.040
-turns into a def var
-
-0:03:45.440,0:03:52.239
-and foo turns into a defund
-
-0:03:49.040,0:03:55.760
-and along with those basic definitions
-
-0:03:52.239,0:03:58.720
-the library also does some registration
-
-0:03:55.760,0:04:00.080
-memoization caching of those variables
-
-0:03:58.720,0:04:01.840
-it saves them in the structure
-
-0:04:00.080,0:04:03.360
-for later use so that we know that those
-
-0:04:01.840,0:04:05.280
-are meant to be
-
-0:04:03.360,0:04:06.640
-uh attributes and methods that are used
-
-0:04:05.280,0:04:08.000
-with instances
-
-0:04:06.640,0:04:09.280
-with server instances but you can see
-
-0:04:08.000,0:04:10.560
-that there's no server instance
-
-0:04:09.280,0:04:13.200
-definition here there's no
-
-0:04:10.560,0:04:14.239
-like no nothing these are top level
-
-0:04:13.200,0:04:18.160
-these are top level
-
-0:04:14.239,0:04:18.639
-definitions so really data attributes
-
-0:04:18.160,0:04:22.000
-for
-
-0:04:18.639,0:04:23.840
-new servers and
-
-0:04:22.000,0:04:25.440
-methods or functions that operate on
-
-0:04:23.840,0:04:28.400
-those instances are completely
-
-0:04:25.440,0:04:29.600
-separate mechanisms they don't really
-
-0:04:28.400,0:04:31.680
-have anything to do with each other they
-
-0:04:29.600,0:04:36.560
-don't belong to the same data structures
-
-0:04:31.680,0:04:36.560
-so how do they work follow me
-
-0:04:37.120,0:04:41.360
-aka methods and attributes these are all
-
-0:04:39.520,0:04:44.479
-the things I just said
-
-0:04:41.360,0:04:47.360
-so when you define a
-
-0:04:44.479,0:04:47.360
-a backend type
-
-0:04:48.560,0:04:52.400
-in noose what you get is this a
-
-0:04:51.199,0:04:54.080
-definition a list
-
-0:04:52.400,0:04:55.520
-and it'll say there is such a back end
-
-0:04:54.080,0:04:58.880
-as nnml
-
-0:04:55.520,0:04:59.520
-and these are its uh data attributes
-
-0:04:58.880,0:05:01.840
-that any
-
-0:04:59.520,0:05:02.960
-given instance can have and then these
-
-0:05:01.840,0:05:04.960
-are
-
-0:05:02.960,0:05:06.880
-the functions or methods that are
-
-0:05:04.960,0:05:08.960
-defined to operate on
-
-0:05:06.880,0:05:11.440
-an instance of this backend so a server
-
-0:05:08.960,0:05:13.360
-that belongs to the nnml
-
-0:05:11.440,0:05:15.120
-backend so at least we have this data
-
-0:05:13.360,0:05:16.880
-here so that's that's handy we don't you
-
-0:05:15.120,0:05:18.000
-don't really touch that that's like very
-
-0:05:16.880,0:05:20.560
-very very deep
-
-0:05:18.000,0:05:22.560
-um use code that doesn't really come up
-
-0:05:20.560,0:05:25.280
-even as a
-
-0:05:22.560,0:05:26.479
-even as a bug squasher or whatever we
-
-0:05:25.280,0:05:27.280
-don't touch that very often but there
-
-0:05:26.479,0:05:30.400
-they are and that's
-
-0:05:27.280,0:05:32.080
-that's how they work now the next thing
-
-0:05:30.400,0:05:34.000
-that obviously you want to know is okay
-
-0:05:32.080,0:05:35.039
-where are if I've started up news where
-
-0:05:34.000,0:05:37.199
-are my servers
-
-0:05:35.039,0:05:39.199
-uh where are these server objects since
-
-0:05:37.199,0:05:41.840
-this is object oriented
-
-0:05:39.199,0:05:43.199
-programming and the weird thing that you
-
-0:05:41.840,0:05:45.199
-will eventually
-
-0:05:43.199,0:05:46.880
-figure out in some cases after years of
-
-0:05:45.199,0:05:49.199
-poking around in the new source code
-
-0:05:46.880,0:05:50.320
-is that servers do not exist in an
-
-0:05:49.199,0:05:53.440
-ontological
-
-0:05:50.320,0:05:55.440
-philosophical sense as objects the
-
-0:05:53.440,0:05:57.039
-primary data structures of noose are
-
-0:05:55.440,0:05:58.960
-groups
-
-0:05:57.039,0:06:00.720
-and in sort of an object-oriented
-
-0:05:58.960,0:06:01.759
-hierarchical you know mindset you'd
-
-0:06:00.720,0:06:03.759
-think well
-
-0:06:01.759,0:06:05.759
-groups belong to servers so servers must
-
-0:06:03.759,0:06:08.000
-exist but they don't
-
-0:06:05.759,0:06:09.360
-each group and here you can see some
-
-0:06:08.000,0:06:11.199
-examples of groups
-
-0:06:09.360,0:06:13.039
-these are basically the data structures
-
-0:06:11.199,0:06:14.960
-that represent a group each group also
-
-0:06:13.039,0:06:17.039
-has a little entry here that
-
-0:06:14.960,0:06:18.000
-that tells you what server it belongs to
-
-0:06:17.039,0:06:20.479
-and each group
-
-0:06:18.000,0:06:23.120
-replicates that data uh saying which
-
-0:06:20.479,0:06:24.479
-server it belongs to and so when
-
-0:06:23.120,0:06:26.160
-nurse is going through doing its
-
-0:06:24.479,0:06:27.680
-business uh trying to figure out what's
-
-0:06:26.160,0:06:29.840
-like updating mail from the groups or
-
-0:06:27.680,0:06:31.600
-whatever almost every time
-
-0:06:29.840,0:06:32.960
-it will cycle through all the list of
-
-0:06:31.600,0:06:34.960
-groups it'll
-
-0:06:32.960,0:06:36.720
-it'll look at all the server definitions
-
-0:06:34.960,0:06:38.160
-and it will categorize the groups by
-
-0:06:36.720,0:06:41.120
-server
-
-0:06:38.160,0:06:42.160
-which which is just weird because you're
-
-0:06:41.120,0:06:43.840
-sort of looking for okay where does the
-
-0:06:42.160,0:06:44.479
-server exist it doesn't exist it's put
-
-0:06:43.840,0:06:48.319
-together
-
-0:06:44.479,0:06:50.400
-every time uh out of out of code
-
-0:06:48.319,0:06:51.840
-elsewhere in the news code base
-
-0:06:50.400,0:06:54.080
-specifically from these group
-
-0:06:51.840,0:06:55.199
-these group definitions and so this is
-
-0:06:54.080,0:06:58.080
-very odd because
-
-0:06:55.199,0:06:58.720
-in in some sense like here this one its
-
-0:06:58.080,0:07:02.240
-server is
-
-0:06:58.720,0:07:03.919
-nnml and an empty string so there's a
-
-0:07:02.240,0:07:04.479
-certain sense here in which this server
-
-0:07:03.919,0:07:06.400
-is not
-
-0:07:04.479,0:07:07.759
-really an object at all what it is is a
-
-0:07:06.400,0:07:08.560
-set of instructions for how to find
-
-0:07:07.759,0:07:11.199
-messages
-
-0:07:08.560,0:07:12.800
-and this set of instructions is go to
-
-0:07:11.199,0:07:15.440
-the default place where the user
-
-0:07:12.800,0:07:16.000
-might have their mail and expect to find
-
-0:07:15.440,0:07:18.080
-messages
-
-0:07:16.000,0:07:19.840
-there in an nml format which is
-
-0:07:18.080,0:07:22.479
-basically just one message per
-
-0:07:19.840,0:07:23.840
-um per file and any number of groups
-
-0:07:22.479,0:07:25.440
-could have those same instructions uh
-
-0:07:23.840,0:07:26.720
-but they're not it's not really a thing
-
-0:07:25.440,0:07:28.639
-it's really just a
-
-0:07:26.720,0:07:30.240
-it's more of a procedural instruction
-
-0:07:28.639,0:07:31.919
-and on the other end of the spectrum you
-
-0:07:30.240,0:07:33.599
-might have an nni map
-
-0:07:31.919,0:07:35.840
-server which very much is a thing it has
-
-0:07:33.599,0:07:37.759
-its own it has its own server its own
-
-0:07:35.840,0:07:40.240
-port its own authentication
-
-0:07:37.759,0:07:41.360
-system so some of the servers are more
-
-0:07:40.240,0:07:42.400
-like things some of the servers are more
-
-0:07:41.360,0:07:45.520
-like instructions
-
-0:07:42.400,0:07:47.280
-as news works right now um these
-
-0:07:45.520,0:07:48.879
-most of the servers are treated like
-
-0:07:47.280,0:07:50.879
-just instruction sets
-
-0:07:48.879,0:07:53.120
-and and there's no place where you can
-
-0:07:50.879,0:07:55.360
-go and find them there's no one central
-
-0:07:53.120,0:07:56.160
-uh variable that defines them all so how
-
-0:07:55.360,0:07:57.520
-do the
-
-0:07:56.160,0:07:59.520
-um so we'll talk about the methods in a
-
-0:07:57.520,0:08:02.639
-second how do the data attributes work
-
-0:07:59.520,0:08:04.479
-uh put very crudely um
-
-0:08:02.639,0:08:05.919
-your servers when they're put together
-
-0:08:04.479,0:08:08.080
-uh they are okay they are
-
-0:08:05.919,0:08:08.960
-kept in a variable and it's called nno
-
-0:08:08.080,0:08:11.120
-nno
-
-0:08:08.960,0:08:12.960
-state a list and there's a concept to
-
-0:08:11.120,0:08:16.560
-this of the current server
-
-0:08:12.960,0:08:19.039
-so when we go here let's go back to
-
-0:08:16.560,0:08:20.560
-our nnno definition a list so when we
-
-0:08:19.039,0:08:22.240
-have an nnml
-
-0:08:20.560,0:08:24.400
-server say we have one here and it's
-
-0:08:22.240,0:08:26.639
-just this blank string
-
-0:08:24.400,0:08:28.879
-these are all when you define that in
-
-0:08:26.639,0:08:31.919
-your own uh server definition code
-
-0:08:28.879,0:08:32.399
-you can put in different values for all
-
-0:08:31.919,0:08:35.760
-of these
-
-0:08:32.399,0:08:37.039
-various attributes and when noose comes
-
-0:08:35.760,0:08:38.959
-when it comes time for news to operate
-
-0:08:37.039,0:08:40.640
-on this server in particular ask it to
-
-0:08:38.959,0:08:42.080
-you know open a group or get new mail
-
-0:08:40.640,0:08:45.360
-what it will do is it will take
-
-0:08:42.080,0:08:45.920
-that particular server's data from these
-
-0:08:45.360,0:08:47.600
-symbols
-
-0:08:45.920,0:08:49.600
-and it will copy all that information
-
-0:08:47.600,0:08:51.760
-into the global devfars
-
-0:08:49.600,0:08:53.120
-so for the time that you are operating
-
-0:08:51.760,0:08:55.920
-on this particular server
-
-0:08:53.120,0:08:56.800
-its individual data becomes the values
-
-0:08:55.920,0:08:59.360
-of these global
-
-0:08:56.800,0:09:00.560
-variables which when you realize what's
-
-0:08:59.360,0:09:02.080
-happening is sort of terrifying you
-
-0:09:00.560,0:09:04.480
-think oh my god
-
-0:09:02.080,0:09:05.760
-but at the same time it's actually kind
-
-0:09:04.480,0:09:07.279
-of impressive and it's amazing that it
-
-0:09:05.760,0:09:09.120
-works as well as it does
-
-0:09:07.279,0:09:10.880
-I'm actually a little bit in awe of the
-
-0:09:09.120,0:09:12.560
-of the code in this in this library I
-
-0:09:10.880,0:09:15.760
-think it's pretty impressive
-
-0:09:12.560,0:09:18.320
-so as you nno change server
-
-0:09:15.760,0:09:20.080
-uh this function here these values get
-
-0:09:18.320,0:09:21.440
-copied into the global value into the
-
-0:09:20.080,0:09:22.399
-global variables and then as you go on
-
-0:09:21.440,0:09:24.000
-the next server
-
-0:09:22.399,0:09:26.399
-that gets you know cleaned out and
-
-0:09:24.000,0:09:29.680
-recopied there are a few
-
-0:09:26.399,0:09:32.000
-um a few other slot types
-
-0:09:29.680,0:09:33.440
-or attribute types which do because all
-
-0:09:32.000,0:09:34.720
-of these attributes see they all start
-
-0:09:33.440,0:09:37.920
-with the nml
-
-0:09:34.720,0:09:40.560
-or in this case and in folder prefix
-
-0:09:37.920,0:09:41.760
-but there are a few slot types that all
-
-0:09:40.560,0:09:43.279
-servers need for
-
-0:09:41.760,0:09:45.920
-for instance their most recent status
-
-0:09:43.279,0:09:46.640
-message a status symbol like open denied
-
-0:09:45.920,0:09:48.080
-whatever
-
-0:09:46.640,0:09:49.680
-and that data is sort of scattered
-
-0:09:48.080,0:09:51.200
-around the rest of the news
-
-0:09:49.680,0:09:53.440
-code base in various variables or
-
-0:09:51.200,0:09:55.440
-various places
-
-0:09:53.440,0:09:56.560
-so that's that sort of just contributes
-
-0:09:55.440,0:09:57.360
-to the confusion when you're trying to
-
-0:09:56.560,0:10:00.720
-figure out why
-
-0:09:57.360,0:10:03.839
-things are going wrong so that is our
-
-0:10:00.720,0:10:05.440
-um nnoo which is and
-
-0:10:03.839,0:10:07.360
-sort of how the attributes and these
-
-0:10:05.440,0:10:09.120
-global variables work
-
-0:10:07.360,0:10:10.480
-if we want to talk about defu and the
-
-0:10:09.120,0:10:19.839
-methods we
-
-0:10:10.480,0:10:19.839
-go to
-
-0:10:20.800,0:10:25.600
-and so this is the place where all the
-
-0:10:23.200,0:10:27.200
-server level methods are defined
-
-0:10:25.600,0:10:29.279
-and what we have here are things like
-
-0:10:27.200,0:10:32.640
-here's an example there's closed server
-
-0:10:29.279,0:10:36.320
-this closed server is given a
-
-0:10:32.640,0:10:38.079
-a server as a an argument
-
-0:10:36.320,0:10:40.560
-it looks at the server and basically it
-
-0:10:38.079,0:10:42.079
-finds the proper function to call on
-
-0:10:40.560,0:10:45.120
-this particular server
-
-0:10:42.079,0:10:45.600
-using the function new skip function by
-
-0:10:45.120,0:10:48.959
-taking
-
-0:10:45.600,0:10:49.760
-the sort of latter half of this function
-
-0:10:48.959,0:10:52.079
-symbol
-
-0:10:49.760,0:10:53.440
-and pasting it together with the symbol
-
-0:10:52.079,0:10:56.800
-that represents the back end so
-
-0:10:53.440,0:10:59.600
-if you were calling this on an nni map
-
-0:10:56.800,0:11:01.279
-server your skip function would look at
-
-0:10:59.600,0:11:02.240
-your imap server look at closed server I
-
-0:11:01.279,0:11:05.120
-knew what
-
-0:11:02.240,0:11:05.120
-it would come up with
-
-0:11:07.839,0:11:11.920
-server sure enough there's an imac close
-
-0:11:10.240,0:11:12.240
-server and it'll call this code and then
-
-0:11:11.920,0:11:14.000
-it'll
-
-0:11:12.240,0:11:15.279
-it'll go and do its other bookkeeping
-
-0:11:14.000,0:11:18.320
-another sort of
-
-0:11:15.279,0:11:19.279
-surrounding code and so that's not that
-
-0:11:18.320,0:11:22.640
-actually works pretty well
-
-0:11:19.279,0:11:24.959
-uh as as things go uh defu
-
-0:11:22.640,0:11:26.800
-makes a record that this this function
-
-0:11:24.959,0:11:28.320
-exists and nus gets function get
-
-0:11:26.800,0:11:29.600
-function looks on that cache finds the
-
-0:11:28.320,0:11:30.959
-function and calls it
-
-0:11:29.600,0:11:32.560
-now what's particularly confusing is
-
-0:11:30.959,0:11:33.360
-that you don't actually even have to use
-
-0:11:32.560,0:11:35.519
-defu
-
-0:11:33.360,0:11:38.399
-so whoever wrote and then mail gear
-
-0:11:35.519,0:11:39.920
-which is a weird library
-
-0:11:38.399,0:11:41.600
-said to heck with you I'm not using any
-
-0:11:39.920,0:11:43.120
-of these
-
-0:11:41.600,0:11:45.839
-any of this machinery I'm going to do it
-
-0:11:43.120,0:11:49.680
-myself so we have
-
-0:11:45.839,0:11:52.320
-def structs to hold uh the instance
-
-0:11:49.680,0:11:53.040
-data and then we have just plain old
-
-0:11:52.320,0:11:55.680
-defense
-
-0:11:53.040,0:11:57.279
-for things like animal your close server
-
-0:11:55.680,0:11:59.279
-request close all of these
-
-0:11:57.279,0:12:00.320
-these server level uh variables and it
-
-0:11:59.279,0:12:03.360
-just turns out that
-
-0:12:00.320,0:12:05.839
-news in its belt and suspenders
-
-0:12:03.360,0:12:07.279
-approach to uh to coding it'll actually
-
-0:12:05.839,0:12:10.320
-just go out if it can't find
-
-0:12:07.279,0:12:12.160
-the memoized function it'll just go out
-
-0:12:10.320,0:12:14.240
-and say has anybody defined a function
-
-0:12:12.160,0:12:16.000
-that looks like this pattern and then
-
-0:12:14.240,0:12:17.920
-and then melder says yes I did and then
-
-0:12:16.000,0:12:19.920
-we call it and then we go so it's just
-
-0:12:17.920,0:12:21.440
-it's fine it works it just adds to the
-
-0:12:19.920,0:12:24.240
-confusion why
-
-0:12:21.440,0:12:25.440
-why does it work we don't know sometimes
-
-0:12:24.240,0:12:26.880
-the only thing worse than not knowing
-
-0:12:25.440,0:12:30.000
-why something doesn't work is
-
-0:12:26.880,0:12:30.560
-not knowing why something does work um
-
-0:12:30.000,0:12:31.920
-and then
-
-0:12:30.560,0:12:33.680
-a last little bit I want to touch on
-
-0:12:31.920,0:12:35.440
-here is inheritance which is another
-
-0:12:33.680,0:12:38.480
-sort of cornerstone of object-oriented
-
-0:12:35.440,0:12:40.160
-coding as far as I can tell only uh
-
-0:12:38.480,0:12:41.920
-the only inheritance that goes on is in
-
-0:12:40.160,0:12:45.519
-something called nn male
-
-0:12:41.920,0:12:48.399
-which provides sort of common functions
-
-0:12:45.519,0:12:49.360
-for back ends that keep their mail on
-
-0:12:48.399,0:12:52.000
-your
-
-0:12:49.360,0:12:53.680
-local machine and you can spool it you
-
-0:12:52.000,0:12:55.440
-can delete it you can you know you own
-
-0:12:53.680,0:12:56.160
-the messages it's not like an nntp
-
-0:12:55.440,0:12:59.040
-server
-
-0:12:56.160,0:13:00.160
-and so a lot of those male deer nnml
-
-0:12:59.040,0:13:02.959
-whatever
-
-0:13:00.160,0:13:04.079
-a lot of those have sort of similar code
-
-0:13:02.959,0:13:07.600
-which they
-
-0:13:04.079,0:13:09.600
-which they share via this nn mail
-
-0:13:07.600,0:13:12.959
-you call it an abstract parent class I
-
-0:13:09.600,0:13:15.440
-guess so if you have something like nnml
-
-0:13:12.959,0:13:16.720
-it has a request scan uh when it goes
-
-0:13:15.440,0:13:18.800
-into request scan
-
-0:13:16.720,0:13:21.760
-it ends up calling nnmail.newmail and it
-
-0:13:18.800,0:13:23.279
-says I am calling this as an nml server
-
-0:13:21.760,0:13:24.959
-and here are some of my callback
-
-0:13:23.279,0:13:26.000
-functions and my variables that I would
-
-0:13:24.959,0:13:28.000
-like you to use
-
-0:13:26.000,0:13:30.120
-when you are getting your email so in
-
-0:13:28.000,0:13:33.120
-this way the code is sort of you know
-
-0:13:30.120,0:13:35.680
-inter-interleaved between the the child
-
-0:13:33.120,0:13:37.120
-class and the parent class even though
-
-0:13:35.680,0:13:39.440
-we're not talking in terms of classes
-
-0:13:37.120,0:13:42.160
-here at all really
-
-0:13:39.440,0:13:42.959
-so that's how noose works right now I
-
-0:13:42.160,0:13:45.519
-hope that's clear
-
-0:13:42.959,0:13:46.560
-it certainly wasn't to me and I still
-
-0:13:45.519,0:13:48.079
-have to go refresh my
-
-0:13:46.560,0:13:50.079
-memory I'd like to talk a little bit
-
-0:13:48.079,0:13:51.600
-about sort of the newer
-
-0:13:50.079,0:13:54.240
-libraries that are available now for
-
-0:13:51.600,0:13:56.959
-doing object-oriented code
-
-0:13:54.240,0:13:59.279
-uh as I mentioned I think earlier nno
-
-0:13:56.959,0:14:00.320
-the copyright headers for 1996 so that's
-
-0:13:59.279,0:14:02.639
-pretty venerable
-
-0:14:00.320,0:14:05.519
-coincidentally around the same time eric
-
-0:14:02.639,0:14:08.320
-ludlum started developing e-I-e-I-o
-
-0:14:05.519,0:14:09.360
-which is a which is sort of inspired by
-
-0:14:08.320,0:14:12.720
-a common lisp's
-
-0:14:09.360,0:14:14.240
-common lisp object system um I got a
-
-0:14:12.720,0:14:14.959
-very good introduction to that from this
-
-0:14:14.240,0:14:16.399
-book
-
-0:14:14.959,0:14:18.000
-practical common lisp which I would
-
-0:14:16.399,0:14:20.079
-encourage you to look at if you haven't
-
-0:14:18.000,0:14:22.320
-which you probably have anyway
-
-0:14:20.079,0:14:23.920
-e-I-e-I-o was incorporated into Emacs in
-
-0:14:22.320,0:14:27.839
-2010
-
-0:14:23.920,0:14:30.240
-so that yeah e-I-e-I-o provides um
-
-0:14:27.839,0:14:32.079
-the deaf class statements it provides
-
-0:14:30.240,0:14:32.639
-deaf generics deaf methods all that sort
-
-0:14:32.079,0:14:34.800
-of stuff
-
-0:14:32.639,0:14:36.320
-sort of a common lisp object-oriented
-
-0:14:34.800,0:14:38.399
-code
-
-0:14:36.320,0:14:39.760
-at some point stephan monier's money
-
-0:14:38.399,0:14:41.199
-money another name I haven't pronounced
-
-0:14:39.760,0:14:43.839
-it all out
-
-0:14:41.199,0:14:45.120
-started either cleaning up that code or
-
-0:14:43.839,0:14:46.959
-for one reason or another writing a
-
-0:14:45.120,0:14:48.000
-re-implementation of generic functions
-
-0:14:46.959,0:14:51.440
-which was added
-
-0:14:48.000,0:14:51.920
-uh in 2015 and then throughout this time
-
-0:14:51.440,0:14:54.639
-another
-
-0:14:51.920,0:14:55.760
-sort of object-oriented style
-
-0:14:54.639,0:14:58.160
-declaration is
-
-0:14:55.760,0:15:00.000
-defstruct which started off in the cl
-
-0:14:58.160,0:15:01.600
-libraries
-
-0:15:00.000,0:15:02.959
-implemented with vectors later was
-
-0:15:01.600,0:15:04.639
-implemented with records so they're
-
-0:15:02.959,0:15:06.720
-easier to target
-
-0:15:04.639,0:15:08.399
-anyway that's another option so how
-
-0:15:06.720,0:15:09.279
-would we this is I'm probably out of
-
-0:15:08.399,0:15:13.040
-time already but
-
-0:15:09.279,0:15:13.040
-we're only getting to the part
-
-0:15:13.839,0:15:17.920
-the whole point of this is how would we
-
-0:15:15.760,0:15:19.920
-rewrite someone news's code to use these
-
-0:15:17.920,0:15:21.760
-newer libraries
-
-0:15:19.920,0:15:23.839
-if we didn't have to support third party
-
-0:15:21.760,0:15:26.639
-libraries this wouldn't be that hard
-
-0:15:23.839,0:15:28.160
-but out there noose is really up on uh
-
-0:15:26.639,0:15:30.240
-you know backwards compatibility and not
-
-0:15:28.160,0:15:33.040
-breaking people's stuff and you know
-
-0:15:30.240,0:15:34.240
-multi-decade support for things so there
-
-0:15:33.040,0:15:35.759
-are people out there who have written
-
-0:15:34.240,0:15:38.480
-third-party libraries
-
-0:15:35.759,0:15:40.000
-um defining new backends for you can use
-
-0:15:38.480,0:15:41.759
-like hacker news or whatever as
-
-0:15:40.000,0:15:43.199
-a as a server so we want to be able to
-
-0:15:41.759,0:15:44.240
-support those if you didn't have to
-
-0:15:43.199,0:15:46.079
-support those it'd be fine you'd
-
-0:15:44.240,0:15:47.440
-re-implement you'd use generic functions
-
-0:15:46.079,0:15:48.560
-you'd use either structure classes
-
-0:15:47.440,0:15:51.040
-whatever but we got a
-
-0:15:48.560,0:15:52.000
-it's a little bit tricky to support
-
-0:15:51.040,0:15:54.320
-these other people's
-
-0:15:52.000,0:15:56.079
-libraries so one of the things we can do
-
-0:15:54.320,0:15:59.279
-is rewrite the defu
-
-0:15:56.079,0:16:00.079
-so if you remember defu is the thing
-
-0:15:59.279,0:16:03.120
-that uh
-
-0:16:00.079,0:16:04.800
-or sorry uh defu
-
-0:16:03.120,0:16:07.040
-is the thing that defines methods that
-
-0:16:04.800,0:16:10.160
-operate on object answers
-
-0:16:07.040,0:16:10.639
-instances and we can uh rewrite that to
-
-0:16:10.160,0:16:13.440
-use
-
-0:16:10.639,0:16:14.240
-cldef generic and that's this is fairly
-
-0:16:13.440,0:16:15.440
-fairly simple
-
-0:16:14.240,0:16:17.759
-it looks like a lot of code it's not a
-
-0:16:15.440,0:16:20.320
-lot of good for instance we have the
-
-0:16:17.759,0:16:21.199
-new closed server code that we looked at
-
-0:16:20.320,0:16:22.720
-earlier
-
-0:16:21.199,0:16:24.560
-and we have this phone call and the new
-
-0:16:22.720,0:16:28.720
-skip function so this would look
-
-0:16:24.560,0:16:30.240
-like using generic functions and methods
-
-0:16:28.720,0:16:32.959
-it would look like this we'd have
-
-0:16:30.240,0:16:34.560
-a generic def generic which is just a
-
-0:16:32.959,0:16:36.320
-sort of a declaration
-
-0:16:34.560,0:16:37.680
-and a doc string and then we have those
-
-0:16:36.320,0:16:40.320
-implementations
-
-0:16:37.680,0:16:42.399
-so we can see what the original code
-
-0:16:40.320,0:16:44.720
-does here is it first says okay what
-
-0:16:42.399,0:16:45.839
-type is our our is our argument here and
-
-0:16:44.720,0:16:48.560
-if it's a string
-
-0:16:45.839,0:16:50.160
-then go and get the proper s the proper
-
-0:16:48.560,0:16:52.480
-method definition
-
-0:16:50.160,0:16:53.920
-from that string so the way we do that
-
-0:16:52.480,0:16:56.000
-with methods is we
-
-0:16:53.920,0:16:57.440
-we say if the server is a string so if
-
-0:16:56.000,0:16:58.720
-it matches this type
-
-0:16:57.440,0:17:00.320
-then what we're going to do is just
-
-0:16:58.720,0:17:02.160
-recall we're going to call this function
-
-0:17:00.320,0:17:05.199
-all over again
-
-0:17:02.160,0:17:06.400
-using uh basically the same code here
-
-0:17:05.199,0:17:07.600
-the same code that takes a string and
-
-0:17:06.400,0:17:10.640
-gets the object so
-
-0:17:07.600,0:17:11.600
-this does this can add extra function
-
-0:17:10.640,0:17:12.880
-calls
-
-0:17:11.600,0:17:14.880
-depending on how you've written the rest
-
-0:17:12.880,0:17:16.640
-of your code um but this is sort of the
-
-0:17:14.880,0:17:19.679
-canonical way of doing this
-
-0:17:16.640,0:17:20.559
-uh using methods then our next part here
-
-0:17:19.679,0:17:22.000
-is
-
-0:17:20.559,0:17:24.559
-nishkit function we're going to get a
-
-0:17:22.000,0:17:26.079
-function called closed server
-
-0:17:24.559,0:17:27.360
-the difference here is that all these
-
-0:17:26.079,0:17:28.000
-functions are all going to be called
-
-0:17:27.360,0:17:29.360
-close
-
-0:17:28.000,0:17:31.120
-news close server they're not going to
-
-0:17:29.360,0:17:32.799
-be called news like nni my
-
-0:17:31.120,0:17:34.400
-closed server and ntp close server
-
-0:17:32.799,0:17:36.160
-they're all going to have the same name
-
-0:17:34.400,0:17:37.440
-and what we do is uh we have an around
-
-0:17:36.160,0:17:40.640
-method
-
-0:17:37.440,0:17:43.679
-for any server that is a const which is
-
-0:17:40.640,0:17:45.520
-which is as close as we care to get uh
-
-0:17:43.679,0:17:46.799
-for you know zeroing in on the type that
-
-0:17:45.520,0:17:48.559
-we're looking for
-
-0:17:46.799,0:17:50.480
-we put in a round method on that so that
-
-0:17:48.559,0:17:51.679
-we can call the next method which we'll
-
-0:17:50.480,0:17:53.440
-call the more specific
-
-0:17:51.679,0:17:55.600
-method and then we have our other
-
-0:17:53.440,0:17:57.280
-bookkeeping code to clean up you know
-
-0:17:55.600,0:17:58.640
-set up tear down code we'll go around
-
-0:17:57.280,0:18:00.080
-that
-
-0:17:58.640,0:18:02.080
-and then in one of the back-end
-
-0:18:00.080,0:18:04.320
-definitions for instance in an imap
-
-0:18:02.080,0:18:05.760
-we have another news closed server thing
-
-0:18:04.320,0:18:08.880
-this looks at the server
-
-0:18:05.760,0:18:10.799
-and it says is this server a list that
-
-0:18:08.880,0:18:12.480
-starts with a symbol and an imap and if
-
-0:18:10.799,0:18:13.679
-it is then we're almost guaranteed that
-
-0:18:12.480,0:18:15.840
-this is what we wanted
-
-0:18:13.679,0:18:17.600
-and then this is where we would insert
-
-0:18:15.840,0:18:18.960
-all the rest of the code from anonymous
-
-0:18:17.600,0:18:20.799
-closed server
-
-0:18:18.960,0:18:22.880
-where we'd re-redefine that to look like
-
-0:18:20.799,0:18:26.080
-this so it's not that hard
-
-0:18:22.880,0:18:28.720
-theoretically so what we would do
-
-0:18:26.080,0:18:29.679
-is take the defu macro macro and then
-
-0:18:28.720,0:18:32.240
-rewrite that
-
-0:18:29.679,0:18:33.039
-so that it actually defines a cl def
-
-0:18:32.240,0:18:35.520
-method like
-
-0:18:33.039,0:18:36.320
-one of these now there's a couple of
-
-0:18:35.520,0:18:38.960
-these things
-
-0:18:36.320,0:18:41.200
-unfortunately it's not that easy get rid
-
-0:18:38.960,0:18:43.490
-of you
-
-0:18:41.200,0:18:46.400
-a couple of these things
-
-0:18:43.490,0:18:49.039
-[Music]
-
-0:18:46.400,0:18:49.919
-that don't use their server as the first
-
-0:18:49.039,0:18:52.400
-argument
-
-0:18:49.919,0:18:53.280
-or any of the arguments or it's an
-
-0:18:52.400,0:18:54.720
-optional argument
-
-0:18:53.280,0:18:56.640
-and we need the server to be in there to
-
-0:18:54.720,0:18:58.799
-dispatch on its type
-
-0:18:56.640,0:19:00.080
-if the server doesn't show up as a as a
-
-0:18:58.799,0:19:01.760
-required
-
-0:19:00.080,0:19:03.600
-argument we're not going to be able to
-
-0:19:01.760,0:19:07.440
-locate the the proper
-
-0:19:03.600,0:19:10.640
-function call so in the case of
-
-0:19:07.440,0:19:12.080
-noose request group here we start with
-
-0:19:10.640,0:19:12.720
-the group it's the group that matters
-
-0:19:12.080,0:19:14.960
-and we get
-
-0:19:12.720,0:19:16.240
-the newscommand method as an optional
-
-0:19:14.960,0:19:18.559
-argument
-
-0:19:16.240,0:19:20.480
-so that's not cool we don't want that so
-
-0:19:18.559,0:19:21.360
-what we need instead is something that
-
-0:19:20.480,0:19:23.840
-looks like this
-
-0:19:21.360,0:19:25.360
-what we're going to do with uh this is
-
-0:19:23.840,0:19:26.640
-gonna be just terrible terrible code but
-
-0:19:25.360,0:19:28.160
-hopefully it won't get used very often
-
-0:19:26.640,0:19:30.559
-it's gonna be really embarrassing
-
-0:19:28.160,0:19:31.520
-um defu what's what definitely was gonna
-
-0:19:30.559,0:19:33.200
-have to do is
-
-0:19:31.520,0:19:34.559
-say okay is this a function that doesn't
-
-0:19:33.200,0:19:35.360
-have the server as the first argument
-
-0:19:34.559,0:19:36.960
-and if it does
-
-0:19:35.360,0:19:38.400
-it's gonna say oh it's news request
-
-0:19:36.960,0:19:39.280
-group what happens has to happen with
-
-0:19:38.400,0:19:40.799
-news request group
-
-0:19:39.280,0:19:43.200
-is we take the news command method and
-
-0:19:40.799,0:19:46.240
-we're going to move it up to the front
-
-0:19:43.200,0:19:47.520
-to the first argument here and it's
-
-0:19:46.240,0:19:48.720
-either going to be
-
-0:19:47.520,0:19:50.840
-it's either going to be given or it's
-
-0:19:48.720,0:19:52.080
-going to be nil because it's it is
-
-0:19:50.840,0:19:54.320
-optional
-
-0:19:52.080,0:19:55.760
-okay I briefly edited the space time
-
-0:19:54.320,0:19:56.400
-continuum there to conceal the fact that
-
-0:19:55.760,0:19:57.679
-I had
-
-0:19:56.400,0:19:59.440
-actually not finished writing the code
-
-0:19:57.679,0:20:02.159
-that I was supposed to write anyway
-
-0:19:59.440,0:20:02.960
-um so now we have once we've reordered
-
-0:20:02.159,0:20:04.320
-the
-
-0:20:02.960,0:20:05.760
-the arguments to the function then we
-
-0:20:04.320,0:20:06.880
-have to check our various possible
-
-0:20:05.760,0:20:08.640
-values one is
-
-0:20:06.880,0:20:10.080
-uh that the server was not passed in in
-
-0:20:08.640,0:20:12.400
-which case we recall
-
-0:20:10.080,0:20:13.840
-request group with the server um the
-
-0:20:12.400,0:20:15.360
-other is that it's just a string in
-
-0:20:13.840,0:20:16.559
-which case we do that and then this is
-
-0:20:15.360,0:20:18.559
-sort of the the normal
-
-0:20:16.559,0:20:20.720
-the normal case that we would expect to
-
-0:20:18.559,0:20:21.039
-cons so that's not that bad it's not you
-
-0:20:20.720,0:20:23.760
-know
-
-0:20:21.039,0:20:24.480
-it's not beautiful um I would be sort of
-
-0:20:23.760,0:20:26.159
-ashamed to
-
-0:20:24.480,0:20:28.000
-let anybody see that particular macro
-
-0:20:26.159,0:20:30.640
-but I think that it would work okay
-
-0:20:28.000,0:20:31.440
-now the more difficult thing is going to
-
-0:20:30.640,0:20:34.640
-be
-
-0:20:31.440,0:20:37.600
-the data variables so
-
-0:20:34.640,0:20:39.360
-the equivalent of def vu because our two
-
-0:20:37.600,0:20:41.039
-options for defining classes here are
-
-0:20:39.360,0:20:41.919
-def struct and def class both of which
-
-0:20:41.039,0:20:45.280
-required you
-
-0:20:41.919,0:20:46.960
-to define the slots inside this macro
-
-0:20:45.280,0:20:49.039
-itself
-
-0:20:46.960,0:20:51.280
-so defu is top level um how do we get
-
-0:20:49.039,0:20:55.039
-the top level this top level macro
-
-0:20:51.280,0:20:56.240
-uh to insert slot names into these
-
-0:20:55.039,0:20:58.960
-definitions it's
-
-0:20:56.240,0:21:00.240
-it's possible that it'll be um that I
-
-0:20:58.960,0:21:03.039
-could monkey patch
-
-0:21:00.240,0:21:04.799
-uh an existing struct or an existing
-
-0:21:03.039,0:21:05.280
-class to add a new slot into it that
-
-0:21:04.799,0:21:07.760
-sounds
-
-0:21:05.280,0:21:09.600
-ugly the other option would be to give
-
-0:21:07.760,0:21:11.520
-it a server variable slot which is just
-
-0:21:09.600,0:21:13.760
-a generalized bucket
-
-0:21:11.520,0:21:15.520
-that holds anything that gets defined
-
-0:21:13.760,0:21:16.720
-via def loop
-
-0:21:15.520,0:21:18.799
-I don't like either of those solutions
-
-0:21:16.720,0:21:22.480
-but I'm I don't see any other
-
-0:21:18.799,0:21:25.520
-any other way of doing that so we re
-
-0:21:22.480,0:21:27.440
-rewrite the nno declare macro to either
-
-0:21:25.520,0:21:29.840
-be a destructor or a def class
-
-0:21:27.440,0:21:31.039
-and we rewrite the def boom macro to
-
-0:21:29.840,0:21:33.039
-somehow
-
-0:21:31.039,0:21:34.480
-associate that variable name the symbol
-
-0:21:33.039,0:21:36.159
-with the with the resulting class
-
-0:21:34.480,0:21:37.760
-definition
-
-0:21:36.159,0:21:39.600
-then the last question is do we use
-
-0:21:37.760,0:21:41.600
-structure classes
-
-0:21:39.600,0:21:43.200
-they both got their their strengths and
-
-0:21:41.600,0:21:46.480
-their weaknesses
-
-0:21:43.200,0:21:47.520
-the nice thing is that I mean I've got
-
-0:21:46.480,0:21:49.600
-how many servers you're going to have
-
-0:21:47.520,0:21:51.919
-really I've got I think less than 10
-
-0:21:49.600,0:21:52.960
-uh truly deranged mine might have as as
-
-0:21:51.919,0:21:55.440
-many as
-
-0:21:52.960,0:21:56.480
-50 let's double that to 100 100 of
-
-0:21:55.440,0:21:58.400
-anything is not going to matter it
-
-0:21:56.480,0:22:00.159
-doesn't matter what we use
-
-0:21:58.400,0:22:02.720
-death structures are simpler they're
-
-0:22:00.159,0:22:05.600
-lighter weight they're defined on top of
-
-0:22:02.720,0:22:06.960
-the direct the c records so you know
-
-0:22:05.600,0:22:08.559
-that's nice
-
-0:22:06.960,0:22:10.320
-the slots don't carry very much
-
-0:22:08.559,0:22:11.760
-information with them there's no type
-
-0:22:10.320,0:22:14.480
-information there's no doc string for
-
-0:22:11.760,0:22:16.559
-the slots themselves
-
-0:22:14.480,0:22:17.919
-they can also only do single inheritance
-
-0:22:16.559,0:22:21.120
-which some might say
-
-0:22:17.919,0:22:22.640
-was an advantage def class each slot
-
-0:22:21.120,0:22:24.000
-gets a lot more information associated
-
-0:22:22.640,0:22:24.480
-with it with it which I think can be
-
-0:22:24.000,0:22:27.120
-nice
-
-0:22:24.480,0:22:28.799
-it can do multiple inheritance if you're
-
-0:22:27.120,0:22:30.720
-going to go there
-
-0:22:28.799,0:22:32.640
-they are heavier weight in particular
-
-0:22:30.720,0:22:34.080
-their printed representation is gross
-
-0:22:32.640,0:22:35.840
-it's enormous
-
-0:22:34.080,0:22:37.520
-so if you see one show up in a back
-
-0:22:35.840,0:22:38.240
-trace or in your messages buffer can
-
-0:22:37.520,0:22:39.520
-really
-
-0:22:38.240,0:22:41.360
-it can really blow that up and make it
-
-0:22:39.520,0:22:43.200
-hard to read this of course won't be an
-
-0:22:41.360,0:22:46.240
-issue because our code won't have any
-
-0:22:43.200,0:22:48.320
-errors in it um my argument for multiple
-
-0:22:46.240,0:22:51.280
-inheritance here is that I can imagine
-
-0:22:48.320,0:22:52.720
-new servers falling into sort of like a
-
-0:22:51.280,0:22:56.240
-little two by two matrix of
-
-0:22:52.720,0:22:56.799
-of parent classes one being news versus
-
-0:22:56.240,0:23:00.320
-mail
-
-0:22:56.799,0:23:00.720
-so news the messages belong to somebody
-
-0:23:00.320,0:23:02.080
-else
-
-0:23:00.720,0:23:03.840
-you can't touch them you can't delete
-
-0:23:02.080,0:23:06.000
-them mail meaning
-
-0:23:03.840,0:23:08.960
-the messages are under your command
-
-0:23:06.000,0:23:11.039
-either a local mail dealer a remote imap
-
-0:23:08.960,0:23:12.640
-you're allowed to spool them copy them
-
-0:23:11.039,0:23:13.919
-delete them at will
-
-0:23:12.640,0:23:16.400
-and then the other sort of line of the
-
-0:23:13.919,0:23:19.760
-matrix would be a local file system
-
-0:23:16.400,0:23:20.559
-versus some kind of a you know server
-
-0:23:19.760,0:23:23.280
-port
-
-0:23:20.559,0:23:24.960
-remote access and that second the server
-
-0:23:23.280,0:23:26.880
-port remote access thing might require
-
-0:23:24.960,0:23:28.559
-authentication it might require a keep
-
-0:23:26.880,0:23:30.159
-alive for a connection
-
-0:23:28.559,0:23:31.600
-um it's there's going to be a process
-
-0:23:30.159,0:23:32.400
-there rather than just file system
-
-0:23:31.600,0:23:33.840
-commands
-
-0:23:32.400,0:23:35.360
-so I could see if I was going to do
-
-0:23:33.840,0:23:36.240
-multiple inheritance that's what I would
-
-0:23:35.360,0:23:39.039
-do those two
-
-0:23:36.240,0:23:40.400
-those two possible parent classes anyway
-
-0:23:39.039,0:23:41.520
-that's as far as I've gotten
-
-0:23:40.400,0:23:43.279
-I thought that I would be able to write
-
-0:23:41.520,0:23:44.720
-more of this code before I did this talk
-
-0:23:43.279,0:23:46.720
-but instead I spent the whole time
-
-0:23:44.720,0:23:48.320
-messing with video codecs but that's
-
-0:23:46.720,0:23:49.440
-where we're at and I'm going to cut
-
-0:23:48.320,0:23:50.960
-myself off now
-
-0:23:49.440,0:23:53.440
-I hope there are questions I hope I'm
-
-0:23:50.960,0:23:55.919
-there to to answer your questions
-
-0:23:53.440,0:23:57.120
-and thanks very much again to everyone
-
-0:23:55.919,0:23:59.279
-involved
-
-0:23:57.120,0:23:59.279
-bye
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--33-maxima-a-computer-algebra-system-in-emacs--fermin.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--33-maxima-a-computer-algebra-system-in-emacs--fermin.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index c5edf2c6..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--33-maxima-a-computer-algebra-system-in-emacs--fermin.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1707 +0,0 @@
-0:00:01.680,0:00:08.000
-you are now unmuted
-
-0:00:04.480,0:00:11.280
-okay can you guys hear me yeah
-
-0:00:08.000,0:00:14.480
-can you guys hear me sir yep I can and
-
-0:00:11.280,0:00:17.199
-we're live so take it away okay
-
-0:00:14.480,0:00:18.400
-so um hello everyone my name is ferming
-
-0:00:17.199,0:00:20.960
-I'm a programmer
-
-0:00:18.400,0:00:22.400
-a math student from spain I've been
-
-0:00:20.960,0:00:24.960
-using me e-max for
-
-0:00:22.400,0:00:26.000
-two years now more or less and today I'm
-
-0:00:24.960,0:00:28.320
-going to talk about
-
-0:00:26.000,0:00:29.199
-a maxima computer algebra system in 2
-
-0:00:28.320,0:00:32.239
-max
-
-0:00:29.199,0:00:34.239
-so let's talk about what is maxima
-
-0:00:32.239,0:00:36.079
-well maxim is a system for manipulation
-
-0:00:34.239,0:00:37.920
-of symbolic and numerical expression
-
-0:00:36.079,0:00:39.440
-and it's similar in some regard to
-
-0:00:37.920,0:00:42.160
-octave
-
-0:00:39.440,0:00:45.039
-and it's also free software is derived
-
-0:00:42.160,0:00:47.120
-from the maxima from the 60 from the m80
-
-0:00:45.039,0:00:48.320
-and it's written in common lisp which is
-
-0:00:47.120,0:00:50.719
-a language that I really
-
-0:00:48.320,0:00:51.600
-like I enjoy writing it so for me it's a
-
-0:00:50.719,0:00:55.039
-plus
-
-0:00:51.600,0:00:57.039
-okay so let's talk about the initial
-
-0:00:55.039,0:00:59.280
-support for maxima when I first started
-
-0:00:57.039,0:01:00.320
-using it I looked for support into Emacs
-
-0:00:59.280,0:01:03.120
-and I found that
-
-0:01:00.320,0:01:04.640
-there's two major modes in the main
-
-0:01:03.120,0:01:07.200
-repository of maxima
-
-0:01:04.640,0:01:09.280
-for remax the first one is imaxima which
-
-0:01:07.200,0:01:12.000
-I don't know too much about it
-
-0:01:09.280,0:01:13.439
-and the second one is maxima dot l which
-
-0:01:12.000,0:01:16.640
-is the one I took first
-
-0:01:13.439,0:01:18.080
-and it was pretty nice has like a major
-
-0:01:16.640,0:01:21.280
-mode a minor mode
-
-0:01:18.080,0:01:23.040
-a nice ripple but it also has some
-
-0:01:21.280,0:01:25.040
-disadvantage
-
-0:01:23.040,0:01:26.479
-and the first one is that is quite
-
-0:01:25.040,0:01:29.600
-outdated I think
-
-0:01:26.479,0:01:30.960
-it was from the 2007
-
-0:01:29.600,0:01:33.280
-so it's not tested with the current
-
-0:01:30.960,0:01:35.520
-email version and the second one
-
-0:01:33.280,0:01:36.320
-is that it doesn't use modern e-max
-
-0:01:35.520,0:01:38.640
-capability
-
-0:01:36.320,0:01:40.479
-I'm talking for example about the last
-
-0:01:38.640,0:01:44.720
-or more latex preview
-
-0:01:40.479,0:01:46.079
-from the last a max 27.1 I think
-
-0:01:44.720,0:01:47.920
-and that's why is that they know
-
-0:01:46.079,0:01:49.600
-integrated with common third party
-
-0:01:47.920,0:01:51.520
-extension I'm talking about company for
-
-0:01:49.600,0:01:55.360
-example third party
-
-0:01:51.520,0:01:57.280
-yeah you know the alpa melba packages
-
-0:01:55.360,0:01:58.719
-so uh this stock is going to be divided
-
-0:01:57.280,0:02:00.799
-in two parts the first one is going to
-
-0:01:58.719,0:02:03.040
-be how I maximize my date today
-
-0:02:00.799,0:02:03.840
-in max exercise don't worry it's going
-
-0:02:03.040,0:02:06.000
-to be
-
-0:02:03.840,0:02:07.680
-quite easy and the second one is going
-
-0:02:06.000,0:02:10.560
-to be why for the package
-
-0:02:07.680,0:02:13.200
-and the list improvement that I did and
-
-0:02:10.560,0:02:14.480
-a couple of things more maybe the future
-
-0:02:13.200,0:02:16.720
-and where's the package right now if you
-
-0:02:14.480,0:02:19.440
-can use it so
-
-0:02:16.720,0:02:21.360
-let's talk about the workflow so right
-
-0:02:19.440,0:02:23.040
-out of the box it has like an
-
-0:02:21.360,0:02:24.400
-orimal support I didn't write this it
-
-0:02:23.040,0:02:27.680
-was already
-
-0:02:24.400,0:02:30.319
-in Emacs
-
-0:02:27.680,0:02:32.720
-so that's pretty nice let's go with a
-
-0:02:30.319,0:02:34.480
-simple example
-
-0:02:32.720,0:02:36.000
-okay so this is an array of three
-
-0:02:34.480,0:02:37.920
-equations and three variables
-
-0:02:36.000,0:02:39.840
-so it's a system that can be solved and
-
-0:02:37.920,0:02:42.560
-the solution is unique
-
-0:02:39.840,0:02:44.120
-um so we're going to solve it right
-
-0:02:42.560,0:02:47.519
-let's go
-
-0:02:44.120,0:02:48.080
-solutions okay here's how you define a
-
-0:02:47.519,0:02:52.400
-variable
-
-0:02:48.080,0:02:52.400
-in it's called solve okay
-
-0:02:52.640,0:03:00.400
-it's called implicit explicit
-
-0:02:56.480,0:03:03.680
-sorry okay and now an array of
-
-0:03:00.400,0:03:05.760
-our variables actually okay
-
-0:03:03.680,0:03:07.599
-so first of all we have to send this
-
-0:03:05.760,0:03:10.400
-variable to the maxima
-
-0:03:07.599,0:03:11.200
-repo with we can do that with ctrl c
-
-0:03:10.400,0:03:14.480
-control c
-
-0:03:11.200,0:03:19.200
-or with the maxima send line
-
-0:03:14.480,0:03:20.560
-okay so let's um let's put the maxima
-
-0:03:19.200,0:03:23.680
-buffer right here
-
-0:03:20.560,0:03:25.360
-okay let's so um
-
-0:03:23.680,0:03:27.040
-right now we can get the solution like
-
-0:03:25.360,0:03:29.360
-this so we call already
-
-0:03:27.040,0:03:30.239
-uh we call this line right now control
-
-0:03:29.360,0:03:31.920
-sequence to c
-
-0:03:30.239,0:03:33.440
-as you can see we get like an array
-
-0:03:31.920,0:03:36.080
-inside an array because
-
-0:03:33.440,0:03:38.799
-uh let's see why we get this so we can
-
-0:03:36.080,0:03:42.239
-call maxima
-
-0:03:38.799,0:03:44.879
-help a point this will open a
-
-0:03:42.239,0:03:46.000
-dock um buffer with all information
-
-0:03:44.879,0:03:48.799
-about the
-
-0:03:46.000,0:03:51.360
-solve function so we can see that this
-
-0:03:48.799,0:03:54.560
-list of solution equations
-
-0:03:51.360,0:03:56.640
-you can see it okay so but we no we know
-
-0:03:54.560,0:03:58.239
-that this system only have one solution
-
-0:03:56.640,0:04:00.400
-so we're only interested in the first
-
-0:03:58.239,0:04:02.080
-one we can do this like pretty easily
-
-0:04:00.400,0:04:05.120
-just to take the first one
-
-0:04:02.080,0:04:06.640
-we can send it to the buffer so this is
-
-0:04:05.120,0:04:09.280
-quite easy example as you can see
-
-0:04:06.640,0:04:10.400
-they have to completion much of the help
-
-0:04:09.280,0:04:12.319
-facilities that we have
-
-0:04:10.400,0:04:14.720
-we can also get information about the
-
-0:04:12.319,0:04:17.440
-symbol for example maxima
-
-0:04:14.720,0:04:17.840
-symbol doc and we get in the and now you
-
-0:04:17.440,0:04:19.840
-can see
-
-0:04:17.840,0:04:20.959
-correctly in the mini buffer all the
-
-0:04:19.840,0:04:24.080
-possible
-
-0:04:20.959,0:04:28.000
-um parameter of the function
-
-0:04:24.080,0:04:31.440
-right so let's continue
-
-0:04:28.000,0:04:34.880
-okay so let's go to a more well
-
-0:04:31.440,0:04:38.560
-complicated example to say oops
-
-0:04:34.880,0:04:42.400
-okay so we have this
-
-0:04:38.560,0:04:43.919
-equation and we want to go from -1 to 5
-
-0:04:42.400,0:04:46.400
-I want to show in a nice
-
-0:04:43.919,0:04:47.759
-graph right first of all we begin
-
-0:04:46.400,0:04:51.759
-sending this line to the
-
-0:04:47.759,0:04:54.880
-maxima ripple hold it button again
-
-0:04:51.759,0:04:56.960
-okay um so this is not ideal if you want
-
-0:04:54.880,0:05:00.160
-to write down this equation because
-
-0:04:56.960,0:05:03.039
-it's quite messy what is when so
-
-0:05:00.160,0:05:04.479
-uh what's thing are where so we can call
-
-0:05:03.039,0:05:07.520
-the function maxima
-
-0:05:04.479,0:05:10.240
-let's say insert form okay
-
-0:05:07.520,0:05:11.280
-and this is more easy this basically put
-
-0:05:10.240,0:05:14.240
-text behind
-
-0:05:11.280,0:05:15.120
-and led or mode to render it and this is
-
-0:05:14.240,0:05:19.039
-quite easy to
-
-0:05:15.120,0:05:22.560
-write down you can use it like in every
-
-0:05:19.039,0:05:23.199
-expression so um first we have to call a
-
-0:05:22.560,0:05:27.280
-library
-
-0:05:23.199,0:05:29.199
-let's load the library library draw
-
-0:05:27.280,0:05:31.520
-we have also completion for local
-
-0:05:29.199,0:05:35.039
-variable and local
-
-0:05:31.520,0:05:38.240
-libraries sorry let me try to finish
-
-0:05:35.039,0:05:40.320
-draw okay and we send the line
-
-0:05:38.240,0:05:42.240
-so right now we have a leverage and we
-
-0:05:40.320,0:05:43.600
-should even have auto completion for the
-
-0:05:42.240,0:05:47.039
-library function
-
-0:05:43.600,0:05:50.400
-okay we have let's call draw2d
-
-0:05:47.039,0:05:51.199
-and now we can call implicit we should
-
-0:05:50.400,0:05:54.400
-have
-
-0:05:51.199,0:05:57.520
-okay and we can I mean put the variable
-
-0:05:54.400,0:05:58.639
-of equations we put the first variable d
-
-0:05:57.520,0:06:02.319
-minus
-
-0:05:58.639,0:06:05.280
-five d five five
-
-0:06:02.319,0:06:06.639
-the v variable the minus five and the
-
-0:06:05.280,0:06:09.680
-five
-
-0:06:06.639,0:06:11.759
-okay it should be all all good so let me
-
-0:06:09.680,0:06:14.639
-try to send it
-
-0:06:11.759,0:06:16.639
-okay you cannot see it right now because
-
-0:06:14.639,0:06:19.360
-I'm just sharing the maxima screen let
-
-0:06:16.639,0:06:23.520
-me try to change that
-
-0:06:19.360,0:06:27.199
-okay um
-
-0:06:23.520,0:06:27.199
-okay can you plot hello
-
-0:06:31.520,0:06:35.440
-okay so this is basically the graph that
-
-0:06:33.919,0:06:38.800
-I can upload generates
-
-0:06:35.440,0:06:41.039
-uh right now it's not integrated into
-
-0:06:38.800,0:06:42.240
-into the maximum package but it's a work
-
-0:06:41.039,0:06:46.000
-in progress
-
-0:06:42.240,0:06:50.160
-so let's go back to Emacs
-
-0:06:46.000,0:06:53.520
-uh where are you okay there you are okay
-
-0:06:50.160,0:06:56.639
-okay so um
-
-0:06:53.520,0:06:57.759
-let's continue so uh this is some of the
-
-0:06:56.639,0:07:00.000
-things that you can use
-
-0:06:57.759,0:07:01.919
-for your day-to-day programming in
-
-0:07:00.000,0:07:05.680
-maxima
-
-0:07:01.919,0:07:05.680
-let's go now with the
-
-0:07:05.759,0:07:08.880
-okay as you can see this is just text
-
-0:07:07.360,0:07:11.199
-that is render
-
-0:07:08.880,0:07:13.440
-okay let's go within a slide this is how
-
-0:07:11.199,0:07:14.400
-I use maxima a simple example you don't
-
-0:07:13.440,0:07:16.240
-want to
-
-0:07:14.400,0:07:17.919
-talk too much about it because everyone
-
-0:07:16.240,0:07:19.680
-use the package in a different way
-
-0:07:17.919,0:07:21.039
-so right now I'm going to talk about the
-
-0:07:19.680,0:07:23.520
-original package and
-
-0:07:21.039,0:07:25.120
-the way I change it right so the
-
-0:07:23.520,0:07:27.840
-documentation
-
-0:07:25.120,0:07:29.680
-of the original was great but for me it
-
-0:07:27.840,0:07:31.840
-wasn't embedded in the code
-
-0:07:29.680,0:07:33.599
-it was something sometimes hard to read
-
-0:07:31.840,0:07:36.319
-like it was like a big
-
-0:07:33.599,0:07:37.039
-chunk of comment it gave me all the
-
-0:07:36.319,0:07:40.400
-information
-
-0:07:37.039,0:07:44.240
-like um for me that's too much I prefer
-
-0:07:40.400,0:07:45.360
-a cohesive small comment and then a big
-
-0:07:44.240,0:07:47.759
-redmi will order
-
-0:07:45.360,0:07:48.960
-all the links and information so that's
-
-0:07:47.759,0:07:52.080
-one of the first thing I
-
-0:07:48.960,0:07:52.560
-change um then also completion I'm a big
-
-0:07:52.080,0:07:55.759
-fan
-
-0:07:52.560,0:07:58.639
-I'm used to slime so I'm I love
-
-0:07:55.759,0:08:00.160
-great auto completion so um the first
-
-0:07:58.639,0:08:01.840
-thing that I noticed that well
-
-0:08:00.160,0:08:04.479
-it uses an absolute function I don't
-
-0:08:01.840,0:08:07.039
-know if you can see correctly okay
-
-0:08:04.479,0:08:08.800
-comment dynamic is deprecated and it
-
-0:08:07.039,0:08:10.720
-also have like this
-
-0:08:08.800,0:08:12.720
-variable which is maximus symbol which
-
-0:08:10.720,0:08:16.160
-is basically a big
-
-0:08:12.720,0:08:19.280
-list of all the possible completions so
-
-0:08:16.160,0:08:20.960
-if I load the library it's not aware of
-
-0:08:19.280,0:08:23.039
-the new symbols or even if I
-
-0:08:20.960,0:08:24.240
-create a variable it's not loaded so
-
-0:08:23.039,0:08:26.160
-it's not dynamic
-
-0:08:24.240,0:08:28.319
-so I want the first thing I want is
-
-0:08:26.160,0:08:31.680
-dynamic completion right
-
-0:08:28.319,0:08:34.159
-so I improve it which wasn't that hard
-
-0:08:31.680,0:08:36.080
-I first of all create maximum completion
-
-0:08:34.159,0:08:38.479
-which we're going to see in a moment
-
-0:08:36.080,0:08:39.200
-and then it changes completion region so
-
-0:08:38.479,0:08:41.039
-this is the
-
-0:08:39.200,0:08:43.760
-improved version but the good thing is
-
-0:08:41.039,0:08:45.839
-like I decoupled the completion function
-
-0:08:43.760,0:08:47.600
-so I make that you can use it on your
-
-0:08:45.839,0:08:50.800
-own so you get a prefix
-
-0:08:47.600,0:08:52.560
-which is um like
-
-0:08:50.800,0:08:55.040
-the thing that you're going to also
-
-0:08:52.560,0:08:56.959
-complete you get the inferior process
-
-0:08:55.040,0:08:58.959
-which I'm going to talk about later but
-
-0:08:56.959,0:08:59.760
-basically it's a maxima process you can
-
-0:08:58.959,0:09:01.760
-work with
-
-0:08:59.760,0:09:03.040
-and you get an optional argument which
-
-0:09:01.760,0:09:06.399
-is fuzzy finding
-
-0:09:03.040,0:09:07.200
-okay so you can easily send a block here
-
-0:09:06.399,0:09:10.399
-what
-
-0:09:07.200,0:09:11.440
-uh with the propos which is a maxima
-
-0:09:10.399,0:09:13.839
-command that gets you
-
-0:09:11.440,0:09:14.959
-all the auto completion and then you
-
-0:09:13.839,0:09:18.240
-process the
-
-0:09:14.959,0:09:20.480
-the output and you return a list
-
-0:09:18.240,0:09:21.600
-of possible completion this function can
-
-0:09:20.480,0:09:24.800
-be easily put into
-
-0:09:21.600,0:09:26.640
-company as you can see you just
-
-0:09:24.800,0:09:28.560
-get maximum auxiliary inferior process
-
-0:09:26.640,0:09:32.080
-is a process that just
-
-0:09:28.560,0:09:35.360
-uses sorry I have of
-
-0:09:32.080,0:09:36.480
-all the apropos and the get that symbol
-
-0:09:35.360,0:09:39.440
-it's like uh
-
-0:09:36.480,0:09:41.360
-like you say auxiliary let's help me uh
-
-0:09:39.440,0:09:43.680
-for that dirty stuff
-
-0:09:41.360,0:09:44.640
-so and process manipulation let's talk
-
-0:09:43.680,0:09:46.959
-about
-
-0:09:44.640,0:09:47.920
-how the maxima process was in the
-
-0:09:46.959,0:09:50.720
-beginning
-
-0:09:47.920,0:09:52.560
-so at first it was just one process and
-
-0:09:50.720,0:09:54.560
-you send all of the things there
-
-0:09:52.560,0:09:56.320
-and you move the processor here and
-
-0:09:54.560,0:09:58.160
-there and
-
-0:09:56.320,0:09:59.600
-there was a global state right so all
-
-0:09:58.160,0:10:02.000
-the function depends on
-
-0:09:59.600,0:10:05.120
-variable global variables and I don't
-
-0:10:02.000,0:10:07.680
-like that approach I prefer more like a
-
-0:10:05.120,0:10:09.519
-shirt to say functional like you sense
-
-0:10:07.680,0:10:12.000
-one of things and you return
-
-0:10:09.519,0:10:13.440
-something so it's not like a void
-
-0:10:12.000,0:10:16.399
-function so to say
-
-0:10:13.440,0:10:18.079
-so I change it recipe uh well this is
-
-0:10:16.399,0:10:20.959
-the maxima start function now
-
-0:10:18.079,0:10:22.560
-let's just create a startup process with
-
-0:10:20.959,0:10:23.680
-this function which is maxima make
-
-0:10:22.560,0:10:26.880
-inferior
-
-0:10:23.680,0:10:30.000
-so this function just gets a name
-
-0:10:26.880,0:10:31.519
-and it return a process of maxima and
-
-0:10:30.000,0:10:32.240
-you can then manipulate it the way you
-
-0:10:31.519,0:10:35.600
-want
-
-0:10:32.240,0:10:36.800
-let's see a better version so this is
-
-0:10:35.600,0:10:39.200
-the opposite right this
-
-0:10:36.800,0:10:41.760
-remove an inferior process and delete
-
-0:10:39.200,0:10:43.440
-the process and kill the buffer
-
-0:10:41.760,0:10:45.519
-right so let's give an example because
-
-0:10:43.440,0:10:46.399
-this you can see pretty easily in this
-
-0:10:45.519,0:10:50.079
-example
-
-0:10:46.399,0:10:51.519
-so I want to go to the scratch buffer
-
-0:10:50.079,0:10:54.399
-which I think you can see it better
-
-0:10:51.519,0:10:55.760
-okay so this is the way you can get a
-
-0:10:54.399,0:10:58.320
-process with your name
-
-0:10:55.760,0:11:00.880
-and save it into a variable right let's
-
-0:10:58.320,0:11:02.880
-execute this so as you can see well
-
-0:11:00.880,0:11:03.920
-I don't know if you can see big you get
-
-0:11:02.880,0:11:05.839
-a process
-
-0:11:03.920,0:11:07.040
-let's go to it the process called my
-
-0:11:05.839,0:11:09.519
-maxima
-
-0:11:07.040,0:11:10.079
-as the buffer right and if we can you
-
-0:11:09.519,0:11:12.240
-can send
-
-0:11:10.079,0:11:14.959
-stuff to the process right we can call
-
-0:11:12.240,0:11:16.880
-maximus in block get a block of valid
-
-0:11:14.959,0:11:17.760
-maxima code and just pass the variable
-
-0:11:16.880,0:11:20.800
-the process
-
-0:11:17.760,0:11:21.519
-and we send code to the process right we
-
-0:11:20.800,0:11:23.440
-can
-
-0:11:21.519,0:11:25.760
-this is useful if you have some
-
-0:11:23.440,0:11:28.480
-expensive computation that you want
-
-0:11:25.760,0:11:29.680
-to process laser to say so the process
-
-0:11:28.480,0:11:32.640
-can manage it
-
-0:11:29.680,0:11:33.920
-and when you get the results correctly
-
-0:11:32.640,0:11:34.399
-you can also get the result from the
-
-0:11:33.920,0:11:35.920
-process
-
-0:11:34.399,0:11:38.000
-I mean I don't put it here but quite
-
-0:11:35.920,0:11:41.200
-easy and then you
-
-0:11:38.000,0:11:42.079
-removed in favor which is the way to get
-
-0:11:41.200,0:11:43.600
-rid of the process
-
-0:11:42.079,0:11:45.279
-and the buffer so if we call this
-
-0:11:43.600,0:11:48.399
-function we should get rid of the
-
-0:11:45.279,0:11:49.920
-this process and it works the processing
-
-0:11:48.399,0:11:54.160
-is no longer
-
-0:11:49.920,0:11:56.160
-I'm happy to continue so um
-
-0:11:54.160,0:11:57.680
-other things that improve the package on
-
-0:11:56.160,0:11:59.760
-my commitment during time
-
-0:11:57.680,0:12:01.360
-I'm going good okay another thing that I
-
-0:11:59.760,0:12:02.560
-did to the package was to add
-
-0:12:01.360,0:12:04.959
-continue integration and continue
-
-0:12:02.560,0:12:06.320
-delivery right so the package didn't
-
-0:12:04.959,0:12:09.440
-have any tests
-
-0:12:06.320,0:12:12.959
-and the code was a little bit messy so
-
-0:12:09.440,0:12:16.560
-I add integration a test
-
-0:12:12.959,0:12:19.519
-and test with the test simple framework
-
-0:12:16.560,0:12:20.560
-from rocky bursting the maintainer of
-
-0:12:19.519,0:12:23.279
-real
-
-0:12:20.560,0:12:24.079
-good which is a great package by the way
-
-0:12:23.279,0:12:25.920
-um
-
-0:12:24.079,0:12:28.079
-yeah this is one example of the process
-
-0:12:25.920,0:12:29.760
-so right now because um
-
-0:12:28.079,0:12:31.680
-the infrastructure of the process
-
-0:12:29.760,0:12:33.680
-management is decoupled
-
-0:12:31.680,0:12:35.200
-so I can test it pretty easily this is
-
-0:12:33.680,0:12:37.519
-the test function of the
-
-0:12:35.200,0:12:39.519
-inferior running so I can check if an
-
-0:12:37.519,0:12:41.440
-inferior is running right now
-
-0:12:39.519,0:12:43.200
-and I can just delete it after and get
-
-0:12:41.440,0:12:45.279
-the results
-
-0:12:43.200,0:12:46.959
-and I also did some integration with the
-
-0:12:45.279,0:12:48.639
-party packages the first one company of
-
-0:12:46.959,0:12:50.880
-course I love auto completion
-
-0:12:48.639,0:12:53.839
-the second one was hormone that was
-
-0:12:50.880,0:12:56.880
-already there and latex with the
-
-0:12:53.839,0:13:00.079
-um or logic insert form
-
-0:12:56.880,0:13:02.959
-and with poly mode because um let me
-
-0:13:00.079,0:13:03.680
-evaluate this maxima can understand lisp
-
-0:13:02.959,0:13:06.959
-code
-
-0:13:03.680,0:13:10.000
-well more or less it has like a
-
-0:13:06.959,0:13:11.279
-function so to say that you can send a
-
-0:13:10.000,0:13:13.600
-list command to the
-
-0:13:11.279,0:13:14.480
-maxima rebel and you can understand it
-
-0:13:13.600,0:13:17.839
-in some way so
-
-0:13:14.480,0:13:20.959
-we can go to the maxima poly
-
-0:13:17.839,0:13:22.800
-only maxima right you enable polymaxima
-
-0:13:20.959,0:13:25.519
-and it creates a polymode
-
-0:13:22.800,0:13:26.399
-which this is lisp code and this is
-
-0:13:25.519,0:13:28.639
-maxima code
-
-0:13:26.399,0:13:30.560
-so we can send this to the maxima ripple
-
-0:13:28.639,0:13:34.240
-we come to c control r which
-
-0:13:30.560,0:13:37.760
-it sends the um the current
-
-0:13:34.240,0:13:40.160
-um area region sorry
-
-0:13:37.760,0:13:41.839
-and we define a variable which is called
-
-0:13:40.160,0:13:44.000
-test and as we can see we have the
-
-0:13:41.839,0:13:47.360
-variable test right here so you can
-
-0:13:44.000,0:13:48.079
-program in lisp and you can send it to
-
-0:13:47.360,0:13:50.399
-maxima
-
-0:13:48.079,0:13:51.920
-so this is pretty good pretty nice um
-
-0:13:50.399,0:13:55.040
-working integration with
-
-0:13:51.920,0:13:57.120
-the slime mode and with swank so you can
-
-0:13:55.040,0:13:59.120
-actually have a completion of
-
-0:13:57.120,0:14:00.959
-a function inside the maximal list
-
-0:13:59.120,0:14:02.800
-package but
-
-0:14:00.959,0:14:04.399
-this is going to take quite a while
-
-0:14:02.800,0:14:07.360
-because it's not trivial
-
-0:14:04.399,0:14:09.440
-so um we're the feature of maxima right
-
-0:14:07.360,0:14:11.519
-now well we have fonts highlighting
-
-0:14:09.440,0:14:14.480
-smart indentation uh it was already in
-
-0:14:11.519,0:14:16.880
-the package but now it's quite better
-
-0:14:14.480,0:14:18.160
-great help functions right now I can
-
-0:14:16.880,0:14:20.800
-find the recommendation quite
-
-0:14:18.160,0:14:22.160
-fast and currently the menu integration
-
-0:14:20.800,0:14:23.120
-this is quite basic it needs to be a
-
-0:14:22.160,0:14:25.199
-little bit improved
-
-0:14:23.120,0:14:26.720
-uh latex support also completion the
-
-0:14:25.199,0:14:28.480
-company and maximizer process
-
-0:14:26.720,0:14:29.120
-integration and mini buffer I didn't
-
-0:14:28.480,0:14:32.880
-show you
-
-0:14:29.120,0:14:34.639
-but basically if you call global maxima
-
-0:14:32.880,0:14:36.720
-minor mode you have the minor mode you
-
-0:14:34.639,0:14:38.399
-call maxima mini buffer
-
-0:14:36.720,0:14:40.720
-how are you okay mini buffer you can
-
-0:14:38.399,0:14:42.720
-basically just write simple maxima
-
-0:14:40.720,0:14:45.920
-command and it will give you the result
-
-0:14:42.720,0:14:48.959
-this is like a permanent version of um
-
-0:14:45.920,0:14:50.560
-calc so you can do it you write the
-
-0:14:48.959,0:14:52.320
-command and you get the output uh way
-
-0:14:50.560,0:14:56.079
-more to come I have like a list
-
-0:14:52.320,0:14:58.880
-of issues that I put enhancement a new
-
-0:14:56.079,0:15:01.199
-feature that I'm going to develop
-
-0:14:58.880,0:15:03.120
-so uh the future under presence of the
-
-0:15:01.199,0:15:06.880
-package well the package is right now
-
-0:15:03.120,0:15:10.720
-melpa a melba stable um
-
-0:15:06.880,0:15:13.360
-in this 0.7.6 version
-
-0:15:10.720,0:15:15.279
-and I'm planning to include into the
-
-0:15:13.360,0:15:16.720
-known canoe alpha
-
-0:15:15.279,0:15:18.959
-this is the url of the package by the
-
-0:15:16.720,0:15:20.079
-way so you can if you go to metapod you
-
-0:15:18.959,0:15:22.160
-put maxima and
-
-0:15:20.079,0:15:23.199
-you can download it it doesn't have too
-
-0:15:22.160,0:15:26.639
-much dependencies
-
-0:15:23.199,0:15:27.120
-you aware of that um and thank you very
-
-0:15:26.639,0:15:28.720
-much
-
-0:15:27.120,0:15:30.959
-uh this is going to be my talk these are
-
-0:15:28.720,0:15:33.519
-my uh information
-
-0:15:30.959,0:15:34.000
-this is my gitlab this is my page which
-
-0:15:33.519,0:15:37.120
-I don't
-
-0:15:34.000,0:15:40.240
-love too much and this is my email
-
-0:15:37.120,0:15:41.839
-so um thank you very much and I will be
-
-0:15:40.240,0:15:44.720
-answering some questions right now
-
-0:15:41.839,0:15:44.720
-and happy hacking
-
-0:15:45.600,0:15:52.720
-you are now unmuted thank you very much
-
-0:15:49.600,0:15:55.759
-vermin for the great talk um okay yeah
-
-0:15:52.720,0:15:58.800
-let's see if you have any questions
-
-0:15:55.759,0:16:01.759
-uh yeah I'm reading like this um
-
-0:15:58.800,0:16:04.079
-so I'm a buddy october usually right now
-
-0:16:01.759,0:16:04.079
-okay
-
-0:16:04.560,0:16:08.639
-maxima over october yep there are a
-
-0:16:06.880,0:16:11.519
-couple questions
-
-0:16:08.639,0:16:12.160
-wow maxima we're okay I don't want to I
-
-0:16:11.519,0:16:13.940
-don't know
-
-0:16:12.160,0:16:15.680
-october that much um
-
-0:16:13.940,0:16:17.839
-[Music]
-
-0:16:15.680,0:16:18.880
-like I use it like a couple of times but
-
-0:16:17.839,0:16:24.000
-I'm not happy
-
-0:16:18.880,0:16:27.120
-and I found the octave packets to be
-
-0:16:24.000,0:16:31.519
-quite a little bit harder to understand
-
-0:16:27.120,0:16:33.839
-and also that
-
-0:16:31.519,0:16:35.680
-it didn't have too much features like I
-
-0:16:33.839,0:16:37.839
-prefer the maximum used to
-
-0:16:35.680,0:16:38.880
-maybe octave is better I don't I'm not
-
-0:16:37.839,0:16:40.800
-100 sure
-
-0:16:38.880,0:16:42.079
-I know that you can use it for similar
-
-0:16:40.800,0:16:45.920
-stuff but
-
-0:16:42.079,0:16:45.920
-that's it so sorry
-
-0:16:47.120,0:16:54.079
-okay I'm in a little bit of a rush sorry
-
-0:16:50.959,0:16:56.399
-let me drink a little blue okay
-
-0:16:54.079,0:16:56.399
-okay
-
-0:17:00.639,0:17:08.000
-okay how does maxima compare to sagemath
-
-0:17:05.280,0:17:08.000
-in imax
-
-0:17:08.959,0:17:17.439
-I mean I don't know what is sage
-
-0:17:13.360,0:17:18.079
-math I'm sorry um so I cannot answer
-
-0:17:17.439,0:17:21.839
-your question
-
-0:17:18.079,0:17:25.039
-with your question I think um
-
-0:17:21.839,0:17:26.720
-sorry but I mean maxima is ready in
-
-0:17:25.039,0:17:28.000
-combo list that's just a preference for
-
-0:17:26.720,0:17:31.120
-me because I like
-
-0:17:28.000,0:17:35.520
-lisp dialect and common lisp is
-
-0:17:31.120,0:17:35.520
-interesting um
-
-0:17:36.400,0:17:42.720
-yeah do you plan to
-
-0:17:40.480,0:17:43.840
-I mean a maximum organization for maxima
-
-0:17:42.720,0:17:47.360
-code block
-
-0:17:43.840,0:17:50.720
-yes I want to improve the um
-
-0:17:47.360,0:17:52.000
-of maxima package but I didn't have
-
-0:17:50.720,0:17:54.400
-enough time and I want to
-
-0:17:52.000,0:17:57.200
-clear a little bit of the code because
-
-0:17:54.400,0:17:57.200
-still right now
-
-0:17:58.000,0:18:02.080
-the code is quite messy in some areas
-
-0:18:00.080,0:18:03.520
-because I pretty much implement first
-
-0:18:02.080,0:18:05.600
-the base function I want to
-
-0:18:03.520,0:18:07.120
-build on top of so right now it's quite
-
-0:18:05.600,0:18:07.919
-usable but I still have something that I
-
-0:18:07.120,0:18:11.120
-want to improve
-
-0:18:07.919,0:18:14.799
-so when I finish that I will
-
-0:18:11.120,0:18:16.640
-improve the normal version I think
-
-0:18:14.799,0:18:18.640
-it's maximizing to get into into your
-
-0:18:16.640,0:18:21.200
-opinion yes I
-
-0:18:18.640,0:18:21.919
-I think that the creator of maxima like
-
-0:18:21.200,0:18:26.400
-have this
-
-0:18:21.919,0:18:26.400
-lisp mine and probably
-
-0:18:26.640,0:18:30.559
-that they if you go to a symbol you get
-
-0:18:29.520,0:18:33.520
-all the information
-
-0:18:30.559,0:18:36.480
-and that reflects that you can actually
-
-0:18:33.520,0:18:40.000
-write your program of maxima into
-
-0:18:36.480,0:18:40.799
-um into lisp literally because they have
-
-0:18:40.000,0:18:42.480
-a command
-
-0:18:40.799,0:18:44.880
-so I think that is quite easy to get
-
-0:18:42.480,0:18:48.240
-into some university use it for
-
-0:18:44.880,0:18:51.200
-um first um
-
-0:18:48.240,0:18:53.039
-years so it's quite easy and I think
-
-0:18:51.200,0:18:56.640
-with my package you can use it
-
-0:18:53.039,0:18:58.960
-like pretty pretty easily just create a
-
-0:18:56.640,0:19:00.880
-file and you can start typing and
-
-0:18:58.960,0:19:04.400
-maximize quite easy to install also
-
-0:19:00.880,0:19:07.600
-so I think yeah it's crazy and
-
-0:19:04.400,0:19:10.080
-the page should restart I don't know why
-
-0:19:07.600,0:19:10.080
-sorry
-
-0:19:18.320,0:19:25.440
-strict in fixed lisp syntax
-
-0:19:22.559,0:19:26.240
-you're talking about the maxima itself
-
-0:19:25.440,0:19:27.760
-syntax
-
-0:19:26.240,0:19:30.160
-or I don't understand the question
-
-0:19:27.760,0:19:30.160
-correctly
-
-0:19:32.240,0:19:35.440
-well I'm going to go to the next
-
-0:19:33.679,0:19:37.360
-question is there
-
-0:19:35.440,0:19:38.880
-support for images in maximum mode not
-
-0:19:37.360,0:19:43.840
-right now
-
-0:19:38.880,0:19:43.840
-the way I want to implement some imax
-
-0:19:45.280,0:19:51.280
-things uh is there support for
-
-0:19:49.120,0:19:53.360
-but right now it doesn't have like a if
-
-0:19:51.280,0:19:55.600
-you could want to have a new plot
-
-0:19:53.360,0:19:56.720
-um inside you buffer right now it's not
-
-0:19:55.600,0:19:59.360
-possible so
-
-0:19:56.720,0:20:01.200
-that's the thing that I maximized that
-
-0:19:59.360,0:20:03.520
-maxima.l still doesn't
-
-0:20:01.200,0:20:04.720
-do which university you start to use
-
-0:20:03.520,0:20:08.799
-maxima um
-
-0:20:04.720,0:20:11.840
-in this aragosa university from spain
-
-0:20:08.799,0:20:12.640
-they used to maximize the um thing in
-
-0:20:11.840,0:20:16.400
-the engineer
-
-0:20:12.640,0:20:18.320
-and in the math also so I'm 100 sure
-
-0:20:16.400,0:20:19.679
-right now but when I started
-
-0:20:18.320,0:20:22.559
-are you planning to option your package
-
-0:20:19.679,0:20:25.440
-into maxima um I don't know about that
-
-0:20:22.559,0:20:26.320
-because uh maybe can be a little bit
-
-0:20:25.440,0:20:30.720
-messy
-
-0:20:26.320,0:20:32.960
-um because the maxima ripple is more
-
-0:20:30.720,0:20:33.360
-built around like maxima itself and they
-
-0:20:32.960,0:20:37.600
-don't
-
-0:20:33.360,0:20:42.240
-update the interfaces that much
-
-0:20:37.600,0:20:45.360
-I have no problem like it's okay it just
-
-0:20:42.240,0:20:46.320
-you have to um if you want to push you
-
-0:20:45.360,0:20:48.480
-can push in other
-
-0:20:46.320,0:20:49.520
-repository I mean it's just changed the
-
-0:20:48.480,0:20:52.880
-file another way
-
-0:20:49.520,0:20:54.080
-but also the test um is going to be a
-
-0:20:52.880,0:20:55.200
-little bit harder because I think
-
-0:20:54.080,0:20:59.120
-they're using
-
-0:20:55.200,0:21:01.200
-search for and I'm using
-
-0:20:59.120,0:21:02.159
-git lab continue integration within the
-
-0:21:01.200,0:21:06.799
-jury
-
-0:21:02.159,0:21:09.679
-so yeah I don't think that now unmuted
-
-0:21:06.799,0:21:09.679
-yeah it will be nice
-
-0:21:10.799,0:21:14.840
-okay um it's possible to include
-
-0:21:12.799,0:21:16.480
-maximizing or false similar to jupiter
-
-0:21:14.840,0:21:19.919
-notebooks
-
-0:21:16.480,0:21:23.280
-um I mean you can uh use maximize your
-
-0:21:19.919,0:21:26.320
-or files and you have maximum l mod
-
-0:21:23.280,0:21:31.520
-integrated and you can like create put
-
-0:21:26.320,0:21:34.400
-that code into a buffer and then
-
-0:21:31.520,0:21:36.159
-uh edited correctly but it is now not it
-
-0:21:34.400,0:21:37.679
-doesn't have like all the features like
-
-0:21:36.159,0:21:40.480
-other languages because
-
-0:21:37.679,0:21:42.320
-right now uh as my understanding is
-
-0:21:40.480,0:21:45.440
-quite basic so I still have some
-
-0:21:42.320,0:21:47.679
-still needs some some stuff some work
-
-0:21:45.440,0:21:47.679
-around
-
-0:21:47.919,0:21:51.760
-okay I think that's it
-
-0:21:52.320,0:21:55.440
-you are now unmuted
-
-0:21:56.320,0:22:01.919
-yep so that's it uh thank you very much
-
-0:21:59.600,0:22:04.640
-fermin for your live talk and for you
-
-0:22:01.919,0:22:07.679
-know the live q a
-
-0:22:04.640,0:22:09.840
-thank you all amazing uh max conf
-
-0:22:07.679,0:22:10.720
-cheers thank you it's thanks to you all
-
-0:22:09.840,0:22:16.240
-you guys
-
-0:22:10.720,0:22:16.240
-it's awesome okay thank you cheers bye
-
-0:22:16.840,0:22:19.840
-bye
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--34-extend-emacs-to-modern-gui-applications-with-eaf--matthew-zeng-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--34-extend-emacs-to-modern-gui-applications-with-eaf--matthew-zeng-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 44941159..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--34-extend-emacs-to-modern-gui-applications-with-eaf--matthew-zeng-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1713 +0,0 @@
-0:00:03.600,0:00:06.720
-hello
-
-0:00:04.560,0:00:08.000
-hopefully everyone is staying safe and
-
-0:00:06.720,0:00:10.000
-staying home
-
-0:00:08.000,0:00:12.000
-I feel very grateful to live in a world
-
-0:00:10.000,0:00:13.759
-today that technology and free software
-
-0:00:12.000,0:00:16.080
-can be leveraged to connect people in
-
-0:00:13.759,0:00:17.840
-such disconnected and difficult times
-
-0:00:16.080,0:00:19.920
-and to have an online conference like
-
-0:00:17.840,0:00:22.960
-this hopefully you've all
-
-0:00:19.920,0:00:24.720
-enjoyed this year's Emacs con so far
-
-0:00:22.960,0:00:26.880
-many thanks to all the people that made
-
-0:00:24.720,0:00:30.000
-this possible
-
-0:00:26.880,0:00:30.960
-anyways welcome to my talk extend Emacs
-
-0:00:30.000,0:00:34.079
-to modern gui
-
-0:00:30.960,0:00:35.920
-applications with eaf the imax
-
-0:00:34.079,0:00:38.320
-application framework
-
-0:00:35.920,0:00:39.840
-this will be my first ever talk so
-
-0:00:38.320,0:00:43.280
-apologies for my
-
-0:00:39.840,0:00:46.559
-inexperience let us begin
-
-0:00:43.280,0:00:47.840
-about me my name is matthew zing you can
-
-0:00:46.559,0:00:50.640
-also call me mt
-
-0:00:47.840,0:00:51.440
-or mindu I'm a chinese canadian living
-
-0:00:50.640,0:00:54.239
-in toronto
-
-0:00:51.440,0:00:56.079
-ontario offline I'm an undergrad
-
-0:00:54.239,0:00:57.760
-studying mathematics at the university
-
-0:00:56.079,0:01:00.480
-of urudu
-
-0:00:57.760,0:01:03.039
-online I mean one of the admins of the
-
-0:01:00.480,0:01:06.320
-Emacs china
-
-0:01:03.039,0:01:08.080
-the largest Emacs forum in china so
-
-0:01:06.320,0:01:10.960
-to all chinese listen to my talk right
-
-0:01:08.080,0:01:14.320
-now feel free to check it out
-
-0:01:10.960,0:01:17.280
-and this is a link to my github profile
-
-0:01:14.320,0:01:18.240
-to my projects I'm involving one's me
-
-0:01:17.280,0:01:20.159
-max which is
-
-0:01:18.240,0:01:21.840
-I'm the author of a user-friendly
-
-0:01:20.159,0:01:22.799
-full-featured image configuration
-
-0:01:21.840,0:01:25.040
-distribution
-
-0:01:22.799,0:01:26.880
-it is what I'm using right now as well
-
-0:01:25.040,0:01:29.119
-as the imax application filter
-
-0:01:26.880,0:01:30.400
-which I help to maintain along with the
-
-0:01:29.119,0:01:33.040
-other other
-
-0:01:30.400,0:01:35.360
-lazy cat which of course is today's
-
-0:01:33.040,0:01:35.360
-topic
-
-0:01:35.759,0:01:40.960
-so as you might all might have already
-
-0:01:38.720,0:01:43.600
-noticed I'm currently using Emacs
-
-0:01:40.960,0:01:45.360
-and oh and opening navigating closing
-
-0:01:43.600,0:01:46.159
-all these websites that are rendered
-
-0:01:45.360,0:01:49.200
-properly
-
-0:01:46.159,0:01:51.840
-or within Emacs it's all thanks to the
-
-0:01:49.200,0:01:54.000
-ef project
-
-0:01:51.840,0:01:55.920
-so we're living in a society that's
-
-0:01:54.000,0:01:59.520
-heavily dependent on the internet
-
-0:01:55.920,0:02:01.200
-and multimedia it is unavoidable to run
-
-0:01:59.520,0:02:02.880
-to some occasion that you need to
-
-0:02:01.200,0:02:04.799
-open a fancy website that uses
-
-0:02:02.880,0:02:08.239
-javascript and css
-
-0:02:04.799,0:02:11.120
-or you need to watch some videos however
-
-0:02:08.239,0:02:11.840
-due to the nature and history of Emacs
-
-0:02:11.120,0:02:13.840
-it cannot
-
-0:02:11.840,0:02:16.400
-render all these modern graphics
-
-0:02:13.840,0:02:19.360
-effectively and efficiently
-
-0:02:16.400,0:02:20.400
-Emacs is solely a text-based editing
-
-0:02:19.360,0:02:23.520
-environment
-
-0:02:20.400,0:02:25.680
-and I argue that this is not a bad thing
-
-0:02:23.520,0:02:27.760
-in fact it is one of the reasons that me
-
-0:02:25.680,0:02:29.760
-and I believe many of you as well
-
-0:02:27.760,0:02:30.879
-are attracted to Emacs in the first
-
-0:02:29.760,0:02:33.760
-place
-
-0:02:30.879,0:02:35.680
-unfortunately this results in us having
-
-0:02:33.760,0:02:37.040
-to open a dedicated web browser to
-
-0:02:35.680,0:02:38.879
-browse the internet
-
-0:02:37.040,0:02:41.440
-open a dedicated video player to watch
-
-0:02:38.879,0:02:42.640
-some videos or a pdf render to read some
-
-0:02:41.440,0:02:45.200
-documents
-
-0:02:42.640,0:02:46.000
-so far ems cannot do all these tasks on
-
-0:02:45.200,0:02:48.080
-its own
-
-0:02:46.000,0:02:51.519
-but can only be achieved using other
-
-0:02:48.080,0:02:55.840
-external applications
-
-0:02:51.519,0:02:58.640
-so the other the author manatee lazy cat
-
-0:02:55.840,0:03:00.560
-or lazy cat in short didn't want to use
-
-0:02:58.640,0:03:03.120
-all these external applications
-
-0:03:00.560,0:03:04.159
-he wanted to have an uninterrupted e-max
-
-0:03:03.120,0:03:07.280
-experience
-
-0:03:04.159,0:03:10.080
-he wanted to truly live in e-max
-
-0:03:07.280,0:03:11.040
-however it would be a lot of work to
-
-0:03:10.080,0:03:13.519
-build this
-
-0:03:11.040,0:03:16.239
-modern application from scratch there's
-
-0:03:13.519,0:03:18.800
-simply no time or research to do that
-
-0:03:16.239,0:03:20.400
-so lazy car without utilizing existing
-
-0:03:18.800,0:03:22.319
-applications
-
-0:03:20.400,0:03:24.959
-and to try to make it collaborate with
-
-0:03:22.319,0:03:26.000
-Emacs there are many solutions available
-
-0:03:24.959,0:03:28.560
-one of it
-
-0:03:26.000,0:03:30.159
-is the e-max x windows manager and I'm
-
-0:03:28.560,0:03:33.360
-sure a lot of you already know that
-
-0:03:30.159,0:03:35.200
-the exwm however it didn't work for him
-
-0:03:33.360,0:03:37.440
-because although ux doubling opens the
-
-0:03:35.200,0:03:38.239
-door to use other applications within
-
-0:03:37.440,0:03:40.879
-Emacs
-
-0:03:38.239,0:03:41.519
-it as a fine window manager cannot
-
-0:03:40.879,0:03:43.920
-modify
-
-0:03:41.519,0:03:45.040
-customize or extend other software from
-
-0:03:43.920,0:03:46.799
-Emacs
-
-0:03:45.040,0:03:48.480
-for example it cannot modify the
-
-0:03:46.799,0:03:49.599
-behavior when you press a key in
-
-0:03:48.480,0:03:52.159
-chromium or
-
-0:03:49.599,0:03:54.000
-pdf viewer therefore it cannot utilize
-
-0:03:52.159,0:03:57.360
-the rich emax ecosystem that's been
-
-0:03:54.000,0:04:00.720
-growing for almost 40 years
-
-0:03:57.360,0:04:03.760
-on the other hand in the ef browser so
-
-0:04:00.720,0:04:07.200
-if you mx ef open
-
-0:04:03.760,0:04:09.840
-browser with history you can see
-
-0:04:07.200,0:04:11.920
-on the lower half of my screen a list of
-
-0:04:09.840,0:04:14.560
-histories sorted by my personal
-
-0:04:11.920,0:04:16.560
-most visited sites and you can search
-
-0:04:14.560,0:04:19.440
-for a site that you've been
-
-0:04:16.560,0:04:21.840
-into or search for some keyword and in a
-
-0:04:19.440,0:04:24.240
-search engine
-
-0:04:21.840,0:04:25.919
-so this is all achieved by utilizing the
-
-0:04:24.240,0:04:29.120
-popular completion framework in the
-
-0:04:25.919,0:04:29.120
-Emacs ecosystem
-
-0:04:29.280,0:04:33.680
-so this car decided to develop a
-
-0:04:31.120,0:04:36.960
-solution of its own in 2018
-
-0:04:33.680,0:04:40.000
-namely the eaf project so I joined the
-
-0:04:36.960,0:04:40.000
-development last year
-
-0:04:40.840,0:04:47.880
-2019 ef is
-
-0:04:44.000,0:04:49.759
-a highly customizable and extensible
-
-0:04:47.880,0:04:52.160
-reapplication framework that extends
-
-0:04:49.759,0:04:57.840
-imax to graphical capabilities using pi
-
-0:04:52.160,0:05:02.479
-qd5 and it is not a window manager
-
-0:04:57.840,0:05:03.440
-alright so in the readme you can see a
-
-0:05:02.479,0:05:05.600
-list of gifs
-
-0:05:03.440,0:05:06.720
-showcasing all the available ef
-
-0:05:05.600,0:05:09.520
-applications
-
-0:05:06.720,0:05:10.960
-a browser a markdown premier a video
-
-0:05:09.520,0:05:14.240
-player
-
-0:05:10.960,0:05:16.160
-a pdf viewer and more today I don't have
-
-0:05:14.240,0:05:16.560
-enough time to demonstrate each one of
-
-0:05:16.160,0:05:18.720
-them
-
-0:05:16.560,0:05:21.120
-but I will select a couple applications
-
-0:05:18.720,0:05:24.240
-to show you
-
-0:05:21.120,0:05:27.840
-so since we are already using ef browser
-
-0:05:24.240,0:05:29.600
-we'll start with this besides using the
-
-0:05:27.840,0:05:32.000
-classic control n control p
-
-0:05:29.600,0:05:33.840
-you can also use the vim style xjkl to
-
-0:05:32.000,0:05:36.320
-move up or down
-
-0:05:33.840,0:05:37.280
-also meta shift comma or g to the
-
-0:05:36.320,0:05:39.120
-beginning of page
-
-0:05:37.280,0:05:41.199
-when that shift period or capital g to
-
-0:05:39.120,0:05:44.320
-the end of page
-
-0:05:41.199,0:05:46.479
-limiting and surfing keys linear and
-
-0:05:44.320,0:05:48.400
-surfing keys are popular keyboard-based
-
-0:05:46.479,0:05:50.479
-browsing techniques in chrome
-
-0:05:48.400,0:05:52.720
-and they've imported here as well you
-
-0:05:50.479,0:05:53.039
-can press f to toggle markers pointing
-
-0:05:52.720,0:05:55.280
-to
-
-0:05:53.039,0:05:56.960
-all the links in the current page say I
-
-0:05:55.280,0:05:59.680
-want to visit the wiki
-
-0:05:56.960,0:06:02.400
-which comes very very handy when you
-
-0:05:59.680,0:06:04.720
-want to configure ef to your liking
-
-0:06:02.400,0:06:05.440
-so you see the marker on top of wiki is
-
-0:06:04.720,0:06:08.479
-dd
-
-0:06:05.440,0:06:10.240
-press dd and you enter and now
-
-0:06:08.479,0:06:13.680
-you will navigate it to this link so you
-
-0:06:10.240,0:06:13.680
-don't need to use your mouse at all
-
-0:06:13.840,0:06:17.680
-so a full list of key bindings can be
-
-0:06:16.560,0:06:20.560
-found when you
-
-0:06:17.680,0:06:21.199
-control hm just as any other max major
-
-0:06:20.560,0:06:22.960
-mode
-
-0:06:21.199,0:06:25.600
-so you don't have to remember everything
-
-0:06:22.960,0:06:28.560
-all the key bindings I said to you
-
-0:06:25.600,0:06:30.960
-so this is a global binding application
-
-0:06:28.560,0:06:34.319
-to every other ef application as well
-
-0:06:30.960,0:06:36.720
-so you can find it under the week or or
-
-0:06:34.319,0:06:37.600
-you can find it under the wiki in the
-
-0:06:36.720,0:06:40.639
-key binding
-
-0:06:37.600,0:06:44.240
-section so press f again and use
-
-0:06:40.639,0:06:45.600
-ns press enter now you're in the key
-
-0:06:44.240,0:06:47.520
-binding web page
-
-0:06:45.600,0:06:49.280
-you can see all of the key buttons
-
-0:06:47.520,0:06:53.919
-available in every
-
-0:06:49.280,0:06:56.479
-es application and you can try them out
-
-0:06:53.919,0:06:57.360
-and you can customize your key bindings
-
-0:06:56.479,0:07:00.240
-using ef
-
-0:06:57.360,0:07:02.960
-bank key you can customize control n as
-
-0:07:00.240,0:07:05.759
-in the web page to
-
-0:07:02.960,0:07:06.639
-to scroll up in the ef pdf viewer or you
-
-0:07:05.759,0:07:09.599
-can unbind
-
-0:07:06.639,0:07:10.000
-an existing binding using using yet bank
-
-0:07:09.599,0:07:14.800
-key
-
-0:07:10.000,0:07:14.800
-binder to new so it doesn't bind to
-
-0:07:14.840,0:07:20.319
-anything
-
-0:07:16.160,0:07:22.479
-okay so here comes the important part
-
-0:07:20.319,0:07:25.440
-if you want to customize ef you should
-
-0:07:22.479,0:07:28.840
-visit the customization page in the wiki
-
-0:07:25.440,0:07:30.240
-so now I press meta b to go back in
-
-0:07:28.840,0:07:32.960
-history and
-
-0:07:30.240,0:07:34.080
-go to the customization package press f
-
-0:07:32.960,0:07:36.639
-press a d
-
-0:07:34.080,0:07:37.360
-enter and now we're in the customization
-
-0:07:36.639,0:07:39.280
-page
-
-0:07:37.360,0:07:42.400
-so the first customization option you
-
-0:07:39.280,0:07:42.400
-see is dark mode
-
-0:07:42.639,0:07:46.720
-let's say if you want to turn on the doc
-
-0:07:44.479,0:07:48.479
-mode for ef browser
-
-0:07:46.720,0:07:49.919
-and you don't want to use your mouse to
-
-0:07:48.479,0:07:53.360
-do all this stuff
-
-0:07:49.919,0:07:55.840
-you press c and you can select
-
-0:07:53.360,0:07:58.240
-c to toggle the correct browsing you can
-
-0:07:55.840,0:08:01.280
-see a lot of markers available
-
-0:07:58.240,0:08:02.720
-pop um again but they're not they're not
-
-0:08:01.280,0:08:03.599
-on top of links but instead of
-
-0:08:02.720,0:08:05.360
-paragraphs
-
-0:08:03.599,0:08:06.639
-you select the paragraph or your choice
-
-0:08:05.360,0:08:10.240
-in this case you want
-
-0:08:06.639,0:08:12.720
-ls which comes here
-
-0:08:10.240,0:08:15.120
-and then you just you just move the
-
-0:08:12.720,0:08:18.800
-cursor like what you always do
-
-0:08:15.120,0:08:23.280
-in Emacs and now you select everything
-
-0:08:18.800,0:08:25.680
-and use meta w to
-
-0:08:23.280,0:08:26.479
-excuse me metadata to copy the taste the
-
-0:08:25.680,0:08:29.199
-text
-
-0:08:26.479,0:08:30.960
-now we made a shift column to evaluate
-
-0:08:29.199,0:08:35.120
-what we just copied
-
-0:08:30.960,0:08:38.320
-and set that to true and
-
-0:08:35.120,0:08:42.159
-press r or f5 to refresh the page
-
-0:08:38.320,0:08:44.880
-voila we have the dark mode enabled
-
-0:08:42.159,0:08:46.160
-so there are well let's take a toggle
-
-0:08:44.880,0:08:49.360
-back off for now
-
-0:08:46.160,0:08:51.600
-now we made our shift column again
-
-0:08:49.360,0:08:53.519
-and we find the the one we just used and
-
-0:08:51.600,0:08:56.880
-change it back to false
-
-0:08:53.519,0:08:59.120
-and refresh the page back in the light
-
-0:08:56.880,0:08:59.120
-mode
-
-0:08:59.360,0:09:03.680
-so there are many other customization
-
-0:09:02.160,0:09:05.920
-options available you can either
-
-0:09:03.680,0:09:08.000
-evaluate like what we just did or add it
-
-0:09:05.920,0:09:11.680
-to your Emacs configuration file
-
-0:09:08.000,0:09:14.399
-so in this wiki you can have you can
-
-0:09:11.680,0:09:16.320
-you can make the ef browser to to
-
-0:09:14.399,0:09:20.160
-continue where you left off
-
-0:09:16.320,0:09:22.800
-similar to the chromium setting
-
-0:09:20.160,0:09:23.839
-and you can make yes the default browser
-
-0:09:22.800,0:09:26.720
-Emacs by
-
-0:09:23.839,0:09:27.680
-aliasing aliasing browse web to your
-
-0:09:26.720,0:09:30.399
-open browser
-
-0:09:27.680,0:09:31.200
-or or set the browse url browser
-
-0:09:30.399,0:09:33.519
-function to
-
-0:09:31.200,0:09:34.480
-open browser there's just some tricks
-
-0:09:33.519,0:09:37.920
-and there are also
-
-0:09:34.480,0:09:41.680
-uh an experimental app blocker currently
-
-0:09:37.920,0:09:44.720
-take in place and so therefore it can
-
-0:09:41.680,0:09:47.279
-block some elements but not all so
-
-0:09:44.720,0:09:48.240
-we we really encourage people to help us
-
-0:09:47.279,0:09:51.440
-test out and
-
-0:09:48.240,0:09:54.560
-add more conditions in
-
-0:09:51.440,0:09:55.760
-so you can so the ef browser is able to
-
-0:09:54.560,0:09:57.680
-download
-
-0:09:55.760,0:09:59.920
-any files from the internet and it will
-
-0:09:57.680,0:10:04.000
-be downloaded using
-
-0:09:59.920,0:10:06.079
-a area too and
-
-0:10:04.000,0:10:07.200
-you can also customize the ef browser
-
-0:10:06.079,0:10:11.120
-download path
-
-0:10:07.200,0:10:14.399
-using ef set so it's a function that we
-
-0:10:11.120,0:10:15.040
-defined similar to set the normal set we
-
-0:10:14.399,0:10:16.480
-know
-
-0:10:15.040,0:10:18.160
-so by default the download file is
-
-0:10:16.480,0:10:19.600
-stored in your home directory slash
-
-0:10:18.160,0:10:20.800
-downloads
-
-0:10:19.600,0:10:22.720
-and you can change that whenever you
-
-0:10:20.800,0:10:26.079
-want you can also disable
-
-0:10:22.720,0:10:28.959
-saving browsing history so remember
-
-0:10:26.079,0:10:30.480
-when I press when I use mx you have open
-
-0:10:28.959,0:10:32.079
-browser's history I see all the
-
-0:10:30.480,0:10:33.680
-histories here but if you want more
-
-0:10:32.079,0:10:35.360
-privacy you don't want that to be
-
-0:10:33.680,0:10:36.560
-available at all you can turn it off
-
-0:10:35.360,0:10:38.720
-easily with ef
-
-0:10:36.560,0:10:40.640
-set queue and set that remember history
-
-0:10:38.720,0:10:42.399
-to false
-
-0:10:40.640,0:10:43.839
-you can also say your default search
-
-0:10:42.399,0:10:47.200
-engine so
-
-0:10:43.839,0:10:50.480
-so right now we have google although
-
-0:10:47.200,0:10:53.600
-not not really good but google and also
-
-0:10:50.480,0:10:57.360
-go which is a better search engine
-
-0:10:53.600,0:10:59.360
-well uh yeah ethically better search
-
-0:10:57.360,0:11:02.560
-engine
-
-0:10:59.360,0:11:05.040
-so you can also configure
-
-0:11:02.560,0:11:07.600
-the zoom so the default zoom of your
-
-0:11:05.040,0:11:10.000
-browser is 1.0 so you can convert
-
-0:11:07.600,0:11:11.920
-convert 3000 to 1.25 so you can so when
-
-0:11:10.000,0:11:14.079
-you open any web page about it will be
-
-0:11:11.920,0:11:17.360
-zoomed
-
-0:11:14.079,0:11:20.399
-by default uh you can
-
-0:11:17.360,0:11:22.240
-also disable javascript although I
-
-0:11:20.399,0:11:23.440
-personally don't really suggest you to
-
-0:11:22.240,0:11:26.240
-do because it will
-
-0:11:23.440,0:11:28.480
-basically break a lot of our features
-
-0:11:26.240,0:11:29.519
-because a lot of the browser browser
-
-0:11:28.480,0:11:33.600
-related features
-
-0:11:29.519,0:11:33.600
-must be implemented using javascript
-
-0:11:33.760,0:11:37.920
-but yeah you can do it if you really
-
-0:11:35.440,0:11:41.519
-want to and there also some
-
-0:11:37.920,0:11:45.519
-customization on ef camera
-
-0:11:41.519,0:11:45.519
-you can do as well yeah
-
-0:11:47.760,0:11:56.079
-so uh let's move on to efpd viewer
-
-0:11:52.399,0:11:59.440
-so now now let's open
-
-0:11:56.079,0:12:01.519
-the pdf file using af
-
-0:11:59.440,0:12:02.720
-so that's one something already here but
-
-0:12:01.519,0:12:06.079
-let's open it here
-
-0:12:02.720,0:12:08.160
-so yes open and
-
-0:12:06.079,0:12:11.440
-select introduction to programming in
-
-0:12:08.160,0:12:13.760
-e-max list
-
-0:12:11.440,0:12:16.800
-uh I have it already open but it's okay
-
-0:12:13.760,0:12:16.800
-so you have the file
-
-0:12:17.040,0:12:22.800
-you have other files displayed
-
-0:12:20.160,0:12:23.200
-you have all the pages display story yes
-
-0:12:22.800,0:12:27.040
-and
-
-0:12:23.200,0:12:29.279
-there are 273 pages in total but notice
-
-0:12:27.040,0:12:31.440
-like how fast it is to browse
-
-0:12:29.279,0:12:33.519
-all the pages it is blazingly fast
-
-0:12:31.440,0:12:37.040
-that's all thanks to python and
-
-0:12:33.519,0:12:39.839
-mupdf which you don't really get from
-
-0:12:37.040,0:12:39.839
-Emacs list
-
-0:12:40.880,0:12:44.079
-so let's say if I want to jump to page
-
-0:12:43.600,0:12:48.320
-50
-
-0:12:44.079,0:12:48.320
-we press p and enter 50.
-
-0:12:48.639,0:12:55.440
-50 and here we are we are at page 50.
-
-0:12:53.279,0:12:58.880
-you can look at the lower right to
-
-0:12:55.440,0:13:02.079
-verify the page you're on
-
-0:12:58.880,0:13:05.120
-and you can you can
-
-0:13:02.079,0:13:07.839
-use I to toggle dark mode
-
-0:13:05.120,0:13:08.240
-as expected and let's say you want to
-
-0:13:07.839,0:13:11.519
-find
-
-0:13:08.240,0:13:15.680
-table of contents so use ctrl s
-
-0:13:11.519,0:13:19.360
-the image default binding for I search
-
-0:13:15.680,0:13:21.680
-and search for a table of contents
-
-0:13:19.360,0:13:23.120
-here we are it is highlighted for you
-
-0:13:21.680,0:13:24.240
-and you can control s for more but
-
-0:13:23.120,0:13:27.200
-there's only one or
-
-0:13:24.240,0:13:28.800
-one match one other one you ctrl g to
-
-0:13:27.200,0:13:30.880
-disable the highlight
-
-0:13:28.800,0:13:32.320
-and you see a lot of options for you to
-
-0:13:30.880,0:13:35.040
-go
-
-0:13:32.320,0:13:36.240
-okay let's say if you want to go to the
-
-0:13:35.040,0:13:39.519
-preface
-
-0:13:36.240,0:13:40.639
-so that is you press f which which is
-
-0:13:39.519,0:13:44.240
-also similar to
-
-0:13:40.639,0:13:47.760
-eef browser you press f for vimeo
-
-0:13:44.240,0:13:50.160
-and you see the marker now change to w
-
-0:13:47.760,0:13:51.279
-press wn and then you can go to the
-
-0:13:50.160,0:13:54.320
-prefix
-
-0:13:51.279,0:13:56.480
-now we'll add a prefix
-
-0:13:54.320,0:13:57.600
-so now you finish reading you want to
-
-0:13:56.480,0:13:59.440
-save your progress
-
-0:13:57.600,0:14:01.199
-no worries it is already saved for you
-
-0:13:59.440,0:14:04.240
-by ef you can safely
-
-0:14:01.199,0:14:07.519
-close the document using x
-
-0:14:04.240,0:14:10.560
-and opening again af
-
-0:14:07.519,0:14:14.000
-open and the file see your I
-
-0:14:10.560,0:14:16.560
-preface again so you're right at where
-
-0:14:14.000,0:14:19.440
-you let up left up
-
-0:14:16.560,0:14:20.480
-you can also use mx org store link or
-
-0:14:19.440,0:14:23.279
-ctrl cl
-
-0:14:20.480,0:14:24.480
-which I prefer to if you want to save a
-
-0:14:23.279,0:14:28.240
-particular page in
-
-0:14:24.480,0:14:30.320
-a orgmo file so now
-
-0:14:28.240,0:14:31.760
-I go back to my presentation now I don't
-
-0:14:30.320,0:14:35.600
-need this anymore
-
-0:14:31.760,0:14:39.120
-uh so you just control c control l
-
-0:14:35.600,0:14:41.040
-or I think mx or insert link
-
-0:14:39.120,0:14:42.399
-so you can find the file right here and
-
-0:14:41.040,0:14:44.320
-you press enter
-
-0:14:42.399,0:14:46.480
-and you press enter for the description
-
-0:14:44.320,0:14:50.720
-again and now it's right here
-
-0:14:46.480,0:14:54.000
-and ctrl c ctrl o to open it voila
-
-0:14:50.720,0:14:57.120
-you're back right so
-
-0:14:54.000,0:14:58.880
-let's now demonstrate the ef video
-
-0:14:57.120,0:15:02.639
-player
-
-0:14:58.880,0:15:03.279
-so mxef open if you use ef open whenever
-
-0:15:02.639,0:15:06.079
-you want to
-
-0:15:03.279,0:15:07.279
-open some file you use yet open browser
-
-0:15:06.079,0:15:09.920
-if you want to use some
-
-0:15:07.279,0:15:11.199
-actual application that's not really
-
-0:15:09.920,0:15:14.800
-related to a file
-
-0:15:11.199,0:15:15.600
-so you have open and select the video
-
-0:15:14.800,0:15:18.320
-you want so
-
-0:15:15.600,0:15:19.040
-video demo so I already have a video
-
-0:15:18.320,0:15:21.839
-demo
-
-0:15:19.040,0:15:22.720
-ready so because I recorded a video of
-
-0:15:21.839,0:15:26.000
-the demo
-
-0:15:22.720,0:15:28.079
-of the ef camera have a look so
-
-0:15:26.000,0:15:29.279
-let's move to the beginning hello people
-
-0:15:28.079,0:15:32.399
-from the future
-
-0:15:29.279,0:15:35.199
-this is a demo of the ef video player
-
-0:15:32.399,0:15:37.440
-that demos the ef camera feature
-
-0:15:35.199,0:15:38.639
-so as you can see on the screen of me
-
-0:15:37.440,0:15:40.959
-inside my camera
-
-0:15:38.639,0:15:42.880
-and the screen is actually with all
-
-0:15:40.959,0:15:46.079
-within Emacs
-
-0:15:42.880,0:15:49.839
-right so and you can open this
-
-0:15:46.079,0:15:53.040
-using here open camera
-
-0:15:49.839,0:15:53.600
-and which I'm already into and you can
-
-0:15:53.040,0:15:56.720
-press
-
-0:15:53.600,0:15:59.680
-p to capture a photo
-
-0:15:56.720,0:16:00.880
-so the photo is by default stored at
-
-0:15:59.680,0:16:03.920
-your home slash
-
-0:16:00.880,0:16:04.320
-downloads directory and you can modify
-
-0:16:03.920,0:16:07.839
-it
-
-0:16:04.320,0:16:09.519
-freely so if you go here and you can see
-
-0:16:07.839,0:16:13.759
-the camera stored
-
-0:16:09.519,0:16:16.240
-right here so why what I used here
-
-0:16:13.759,0:16:17.120
-so you press space to pause what I used
-
-0:16:16.240,0:16:20.320
-here is
-
-0:16:17.120,0:16:22.959
-the year so ef open this entire so
-
-0:16:20.320,0:16:23.839
-basically so in direct you you go to you
-
-0:16:22.959,0:16:26.959
-you select
-
-0:16:23.839,0:16:30.320
-the file that should be opened by
-
-0:16:26.959,0:16:32.720
-eaf and I use that so it it detects that
-
-0:16:30.320,0:16:35.839
-it wants to use the ef image viewer so
-
-0:16:32.720,0:16:39.759
-I accidentally tested if image viewer
-
-0:16:35.839,0:16:40.240
-before I noticed so that that that gives
-
-0:16:39.759,0:16:43.680
-the
-
-0:16:40.240,0:16:47.040
-image of the photo I just took
-
-0:16:43.680,0:16:47.360
-using ef camera and as you can see you
-
-0:16:47.040,0:16:50.720
-can
-
-0:16:47.360,0:16:51.600
-I can use hl the bim button to navigate
-
-0:16:50.720,0:16:55.920
-in the time
-
-0:16:51.600,0:17:00.880
-timestamp in the video and I can use
-
-0:16:55.920,0:17:00.880
-jk to to change the volumes of the video
-
-0:17:02.320,0:17:06.160
-alright so now you've seen all the basic
-
-0:17:05.520,0:17:08.720
-usages
-
-0:17:06.160,0:17:11.600
-of the ef project it comes the question
-
-0:17:08.720,0:17:14.559
-of what is the magic behind it
-
-0:17:11.600,0:17:15.919
-all right let's open the hacking page in
-
-0:17:14.559,0:17:20.400
-the wiki
-
-0:17:15.919,0:17:24.799
-the design is laid out in a diagram here
-
-0:17:20.400,0:17:24.799
-so and let's put it
-
-0:17:25.120,0:17:28.160
-side by side along with my text so you
-
-0:17:27.839,0:17:32.320
-can
-
-0:17:28.160,0:17:36.080
-go we can follow through
-
-0:17:32.320,0:17:39.440
-right okay let me
-
-0:17:36.080,0:17:39.440
-sorry let me drink some water
-
-0:17:42.320,0:17:48.160
-so this page in the wiki went into a lot
-
-0:17:46.000,0:17:49.520
-of detail
-
-0:17:48.160,0:17:51.679
-due to the time constraint I will just
-
-0:17:49.520,0:17:53.520
-rephrase some of the ideas here so for
-
-0:17:51.679,0:17:55.600
-anyone interested please have a look at
-
-0:17:53.520,0:17:58.160
-the wiki yourself
-
-0:17:55.600,0:17:58.720
-the easiest way to think about eaf is
-
-0:17:58.160,0:18:01.679
-that
-
-0:17:58.720,0:18:02.960
-the actual gui application is started in
-
-0:18:01.679,0:18:04.960
-the background
-
-0:18:02.960,0:18:07.120
-then the frame of the application is
-
-0:18:04.960,0:18:07.679
-attached to the appropriate location on
-
-0:18:07.120,0:18:10.720
-the
-
-0:18:07.679,0:18:13.440
-Emacs window so
-
-0:18:10.720,0:18:14.960
-you have linked qt5 with Emacs using
-
-0:18:13.440,0:18:17.120
-list and python
-
-0:18:14.960,0:18:18.640
-of the python site which is colored
-
-0:18:17.120,0:18:20.559
-yellow in the image
-
-0:18:18.640,0:18:22.960
-you have two graphics view and queue
-
-0:18:20.559,0:18:25.039
-graphics scene objects
-
-0:18:22.960,0:18:26.640
-these are used to simulate the e-max
-
-0:18:25.039,0:18:28.640
-window buffer design
-
-0:18:26.640,0:18:29.840
-where q graphics scene is similar to
-
-0:18:28.640,0:18:31.840
-buffers in Emacs
-
-0:18:29.840,0:18:34.240
-it controls the state and the content
-
-0:18:31.840,0:18:38.880
-details of the application
-
-0:18:34.240,0:18:38.880
-well q graphics view is similar to
-
-0:18:39.039,0:18:43.200
-geographic view is similar to imax
-
-0:18:41.200,0:18:45.919
-window it populates the buffer
-
-0:18:43.200,0:18:46.960
-to graphics scene to the full program at
-
-0:18:45.919,0:18:50.320
-the appropriate
-
-0:18:46.960,0:18:57.679
-position whenever an ef mode buffer
-
-0:18:50.320,0:18:59.679
-brings to a background
-
-0:18:57.679,0:19:00.880
-whenever an ef mode buffer brings to the
-
-0:18:59.679,0:19:02.559
-foreground sorry
-
-0:19:00.880,0:19:05.120
-a queue graphics view instance is
-
-0:19:02.559,0:19:06.080
-created and whenever the buffer goes to
-
-0:19:05.120,0:19:08.000
-the background
-
-0:19:06.080,0:19:09.120
-the q graphics view instance is then
-
-0:19:08.000,0:19:10.960
-deleted
-
-0:19:09.120,0:19:12.480
-while q graphics scene the actual
-
-0:19:10.960,0:19:14.480
-process remains running in the
-
-0:19:12.480,0:19:16.000
-background until the ef mode buffer is
-
-0:19:14.480,0:19:18.320
-killed
-
-0:19:16.000,0:19:19.440
-gpa compositing is used to ensure that q
-
-0:19:18.320,0:19:21.840
-graphics view and
-
-0:19:19.440,0:19:24.000
-graphics sync is synchronized real time
-
-0:19:21.840,0:19:25.679
-using q windows set parent function
-
-0:19:24.000,0:19:27.840
-the queue graphics view is attached to
-
-0:19:25.679,0:19:30.640
-appropriate location on the e-max frame
-
-0:19:27.840,0:19:32.400
-so that although great applications are
-
-0:19:30.640,0:19:35.760
-not running within e-max
-
-0:19:32.400,0:19:35.760
-they look as if they were
-
-0:19:36.160,0:19:41.039
-so when user types on the keyboard it is
-
-0:19:39.039,0:19:43.520
-first received by the Emacs ef
-
-0:19:41.039,0:19:45.360
-ef mode buffer and then it lifts sends
-
-0:19:43.520,0:19:46.240
-the event to google graphics sync using
-
-0:19:45.360,0:19:48.720
-dbus
-
-0:19:46.240,0:19:50.400
-when user clicks on the gui application
-
-0:19:48.720,0:19:50.799
-it is received by the queue graphics
-
-0:19:50.400,0:19:53.280
-view
-
-0:19:50.799,0:19:55.200
-and process in python ellipse can
-
-0:19:53.280,0:19:59.200
-communicate with python through dbus
-
-0:19:55.200,0:20:01.360
-in other words in other words you can
-
-0:19:59.200,0:20:01.760
-customize and extend Emacs not just
-
-0:20:01.360,0:20:04.480
-using
-
-0:20:01.760,0:20:05.360
-lisp and now you can use python this way
-
-0:20:04.480,0:20:07.039
-one can leverage
-
-0:20:05.360,0:20:09.600
-all the python properties like
-
-0:20:07.039,0:20:11.679
-multi-threading or some other stuff
-
-0:20:09.600,0:20:13.520
-the entire python ecosystem can be
-
-0:20:11.679,0:20:16.159
-utilized as well
-
-0:20:13.520,0:20:16.960
-such as the qt web engine that is the
-
-0:20:16.159,0:20:20.640
-basis for
-
-0:20:16.960,0:20:23.360
-our eef browser and pi mu pdf is the
-
-0:20:20.640,0:20:25.840
-basis for the ef pdf viewer
-
-0:20:23.360,0:20:28.240
-so this really opens the window to many
-
-0:20:25.840,0:20:31.120
-many new possibilities to extend Emacs
-
-0:20:28.240,0:20:31.120
-using eaf
-
-0:20:32.720,0:20:37.760
-all right back here we are always
-
-0:20:36.080,0:20:39.679
-looking for people to join the
-
-0:20:37.760,0:20:42.720
-development there are many many
-
-0:20:39.679,0:20:44.640
-more work that needs to be done like
-
-0:20:42.720,0:20:46.640
-such as testing and debug if there are
-
-0:20:44.640,0:20:47.760
-more linux distros and window managers
-
-0:20:46.640,0:20:51.200
-such as i3
-
-0:20:47.760,0:20:52.080
-and stuff I mean you can also add new ef
-
-0:20:51.200,0:20:54.240
-applications
-
-0:20:52.080,0:20:55.440
-or debug and enhance existing af
-
-0:20:54.240,0:20:58.000
-applications
-
-0:20:55.440,0:21:00.240
-or you can port ef to native wayland
-
-0:20:58.000,0:21:03.840
-which I just discussed with the
-
-0:21:00.240,0:21:07.919
-the ems whip kit author uh a kill
-
-0:21:03.840,0:21:10.159
-akira tile and she he told me that like
-
-0:21:07.919,0:21:11.200
-really like it must really yeah it
-
-0:21:10.159,0:21:14.320
-doesn't really work
-
-0:21:11.200,0:21:16.799
-um native villain because it uses
-
-0:21:14.320,0:21:18.159
-x valence so it doesn't work on the pgdk
-
-0:21:16.799,0:21:20.559
-port of Emacs
-
-0:21:18.159,0:21:22.080
-so and we also need people to pour ef to
-
-0:21:20.559,0:21:25.600
-non-free operating systems
-
-0:21:22.080,0:21:28.480
-including windows and mac os
-
-0:21:25.600,0:21:30.080
-and that's because like debug is a linux
-
-0:21:28.480,0:21:31.360
-specific feature so it doesn't really
-
-0:21:30.080,0:21:33.039
-work on other platform
-
-0:21:31.360,0:21:34.640
-we need to change replace it with some
-
-0:21:33.039,0:21:36.720
-alternative and
-
-0:21:34.640,0:21:38.640
-geographic scene somehow doesn't really
-
-0:21:36.720,0:21:40.320
-work on mac os
-
-0:21:38.640,0:21:42.880
-and there are many other to-do lists
-
-0:21:40.320,0:21:45.039
-available so please have a look
-
-0:21:42.880,0:21:46.640
-if and see it's anything you want to
-
-0:21:45.039,0:21:49.039
-work on
-
-0:21:46.640,0:21:51.120
-all right so since this is a
-
-0:21:49.039,0:21:53.520
-pre-recorded talk I won't be able to do
-
-0:21:51.120,0:21:56.080
-the q a real time in the video
-
-0:21:53.520,0:21:57.200
-however I will be around on the
-
-0:21:56.080,0:22:00.559
-collaborate pad
-
-0:21:57.200,0:22:01.360
-and the irc imax con you must come
-
-0:22:00.559,0:22:04.240
-questions
-
-0:22:01.360,0:22:05.760
-to answer any questions it pops up and
-
-0:22:04.240,0:22:09.120
-you can also submit an issue
-
-0:22:05.760,0:22:12.640
-on the repo and you can check the wiki
-
-0:22:09.120,0:22:15.039
-for some other guides and tricks
-
-0:22:12.640,0:22:16.000
-all right thank you guys and hopefully
-
-0:22:15.039,0:22:18.320
-you find the
-
-0:22:16.000,0:22:24.320
-this year project very interesting and
-
-0:22:18.320,0:22:24.320
-enjoy the rest of Emacs com 2020
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--35-waveing-at-repetitive-repetitive-repetitive-music-zmusic--questions--zachary-kanfer-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--35-waveing-at-repetitive-repetitive-repetitive-music-zmusic--questions--zachary-kanfer-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 6c265873..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--35-waveing-at-repetitive-repetitive-repetitive-music-zmusic--questions--zachary-kanfer-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,507 +0,0 @@
-0:00:02.800,0:00:05.600
-I can yes
-
-0:00:09.200,0:00:14.920
-okay um yeah so I'm uh zachary canfer
-
-0:00:13.120,0:00:17.520
-let's go to the
-
-0:00:14.920,0:00:19.119
-questions uh the first question uh why
-
-0:00:17.520,0:00:19.840
-do we go top to bottom for time
-
-0:00:19.119,0:00:23.920
-progression
-
-0:00:19.840,0:00:27.279
-uh and left to right uh for low to high
-
-0:00:23.920,0:00:30.000
-interesting I think uh so the initial
-
-0:00:27.279,0:00:31.599
-uh thing I was copying that initial app
-
-0:00:30.000,0:00:35.280
-work this way
-
-0:00:31.599,0:00:36.960
-um and
-
-0:00:35.280,0:00:38.960
-yeah I mean certainly traditional music
-
-0:00:36.960,0:00:43.040
-you know on a staff uh
-
-0:00:38.960,0:00:46.000
-does go left to right uh like this
-
-0:00:43.040,0:00:47.440
-um I mean going top to bottom does make
-
-0:00:46.000,0:00:48.960
-it easier to add more beats without
-
-0:00:47.440,0:00:49.920
-having to wrap but certainly that could
-
-0:00:48.960,0:00:52.239
-be managed
-
-0:00:49.920,0:00:53.760
-um yeah I I had not really thought about
-
-0:00:52.239,0:00:55.199
-it but it is definitely something worth
-
-0:00:53.760,0:00:59.840
-looking into
-
-0:00:55.199,0:00:59.840
-uh yeah you are now unmuted
-
-0:01:02.480,0:01:06.960
-ah good point thank you let me go ahead
-
-0:01:05.680,0:01:13.840
-and do that
-
-0:01:06.960,0:01:13.840
-uh the entire screen
-
-0:01:14.240,0:01:18.320
-okay so the screen share should be
-
-0:01:16.880,0:01:21.439
-starting
-
-0:01:18.320,0:01:24.880
-there we go cool all right uh
-
-0:01:21.439,0:01:26.640
-two will be placed on the song um not
-
-0:01:24.880,0:01:28.080
-now I can I can make some recordings of
-
-0:01:26.640,0:01:30.720
-it or certainly you can try it
-
-0:01:28.080,0:01:33.119
-um I couldn't quite get the the
-
-0:01:30.720,0:01:37.040
-microphone and the webcam and everything
-
-0:01:33.119,0:01:40.079
-to work with the sound playing now um so
-
-0:01:37.040,0:01:43.520
-uh I can record some also please uh
-
-0:01:40.079,0:01:46.640
-I put a link at the uh here in the uh
-
-0:01:43.520,0:01:48.479
-etherpad https://zck.me/emacsconf2020
-
-0:01:46.640,0:01:49.920
-where you can go and get the source
-
-0:01:48.479,0:01:51.920
-and you can try it yourself uh there's
-
-0:01:49.920,0:01:54.560
-no dependencies needed so it's just all
-
-0:01:51.920,0:01:56.880
-in Emacs um so please you know try it
-
-0:01:54.560,0:01:56.880
-yourself
-
-0:01:57.040,0:02:01.040
-any chance for an Emacs tracker or mod
-
-0:02:00.079,0:02:03.680
-player
-
-0:02:01.040,0:02:04.479
-um I don't really know what a mod player
-
-0:02:03.680,0:02:08.000
-or tracker
-
-0:02:04.479,0:02:09.679
-are but I mean I'm sure
-
-0:02:08.000,0:02:11.599
-that would be cool uh maybe there's one
-
-0:02:09.679,0:02:13.920
-on now but I don't know uh
-
-0:02:11.599,0:02:15.200
-my musical background so I've played
-
-0:02:13.920,0:02:15.840
-various instruments since about the
-
-0:02:15.200,0:02:18.160
-third grade
-
-0:02:15.840,0:02:19.520
-uh started recorder uh play cello I play
-
-0:02:18.160,0:02:22.560
-guitar now
-
-0:02:19.520,0:02:23.680
-um but yeah so just kind of random
-
-0:02:22.560,0:02:26.959
-instruments and
-
-0:02:23.680,0:02:27.280
-uh yeah I guess kind of some of those
-
-0:02:26.959,0:02:30.480
-things
-
-0:02:27.280,0:02:33.519
-influence how I think about music um
-
-0:02:30.480,0:02:35.360
-uh yeah um
-
-0:02:33.519,0:02:36.640
-are there any open source musical
-
-0:02:35.360,0:02:37.840
-management sample libraries that could
-
-0:02:36.640,0:02:41.200
-be used
-
-0:02:37.840,0:02:42.400
-um good question I'm sure there are um I
-
-0:02:41.200,0:02:43.360
-don't know any that integrate really
-
-0:02:42.400,0:02:44.560
-well with Emacs
-
-0:02:43.360,0:02:45.680
-one of the cool things that I liked
-
-0:02:44.560,0:02:47.440
-about this is that there are no
-
-0:02:45.680,0:02:49.360
-dependencies
-
-0:02:47.440,0:02:50.800
-you know you don't need any external
-
-0:02:49.360,0:02:53.040
-program to
-
-0:02:50.800,0:02:54.160
-uh generate the music I mean it it does
-
-0:02:53.040,0:02:57.280
-shell out to
-
-0:02:54.160,0:02:58.640
-to play um but that
-
-0:02:57.280,0:02:59.840
-should be able to be done on any
-
-0:02:58.640,0:03:03.200
-operating system as always you have
-
-0:02:59.840,0:03:03.200
-something that can play wav files
-
-0:03:03.519,0:03:06.879
-um but yeah it is interesting to kind of
-
-0:03:05.599,0:03:10.000
-try the different
-
-0:03:06.879,0:03:12.239
-uh different sounds and different
-
-0:03:10.000,0:03:14.400
-tones uh that you could get with
-
-0:03:12.239,0:03:16.959
-different instruments
-
-0:03:14.400,0:03:17.599
-have I written any actual songs um
-
-0:03:16.959,0:03:20.640
-nothing
-
-0:03:17.599,0:03:20.640
-super uh
-
-0:03:21.040,0:03:25.519
-uh well put together just I kind of just
-
-0:03:23.680,0:03:27.440
-been playing around with this
-
-0:03:25.519,0:03:29.040
-it's kind of I making this was one of
-
-0:03:27.440,0:03:30.080
-those things where like once I made it I
-
-0:03:29.040,0:03:31.280
-was like okay
-
-0:03:30.080,0:03:32.720
-now I can play with it and I did a
-
-0:03:31.280,0:03:33.920
-little bit and was like I don't know if
-
-0:03:32.720,0:03:37.280
-I feel like it right now
-
-0:03:33.920,0:03:38.720
-you know which I've I've found that to
-
-0:03:37.280,0:03:39.599
-be the case with some things that I've
-
-0:03:38.720,0:03:41.360
-implemented
-
-0:03:39.599,0:03:43.519
-in Emacs where it's I make it and then
-
-0:03:41.360,0:03:44.480
-it's the kind of some of the desire to
-
-0:03:43.519,0:03:46.879
-use it all the time
-
-0:03:44.480,0:03:47.760
-goes away but I'm sure I'll circle back
-
-0:03:46.879,0:03:51.040
-around
-
-0:03:47.760,0:03:52.400
-at some point especially kind of maybe
-
-0:03:51.040,0:03:54.640
-once I add in different tones or
-
-0:03:52.400,0:03:56.400
-something
-
-0:03:54.640,0:03:57.840
-I guess a similar question for
-
-0:03:56.400,0:04:01.120
-pre-recorded sounds yeah I mean
-
-0:03:57.840,0:04:02.080
-if it's part of what I did what I wrote
-
-0:04:01.120,0:04:04.720
-was a
-
-0:04:02.080,0:04:06.720
-wave generation library so if you kind
-
-0:04:04.720,0:04:08.400
-of have the data
-
-0:04:06.720,0:04:10.159
-you could use those and like chop them
-
-0:04:08.400,0:04:13.360
-up and take certain lengths of them
-
-0:04:10.159,0:04:14.959
-and make a wav file so it's not plug and
-
-0:04:13.360,0:04:19.120
-play right now but you could certainly
-
-0:04:14.959,0:04:21.040
-add those notes uh to do it
-
-0:04:19.120,0:04:22.720
-um any knitting midi mapping
-
-0:04:21.040,0:04:24.560
-possibilities um
-
-0:04:22.720,0:04:26.160
-I haven't looked into it but I'm sure
-
-0:04:24.560,0:04:28.800
-you definitely could output to midi
-
-0:04:26.160,0:04:30.400
-um which is another benefit of having
-
-0:04:28.800,0:04:31.520
-that multiple layers with the top layer
-
-0:04:30.400,0:04:33.360
-is just like
-
-0:04:31.520,0:04:35.120
-um you know if the root note is this
-
-0:04:33.360,0:04:36.560
-we're just two semitones up or seven
-
-0:04:35.120,0:04:38.160
-semitones up or whatever it is
-
-0:04:36.560,0:04:40.720
-uh it should be relatively simple to
-
-0:04:38.160,0:04:44.479
-kind of switch out that layer underneath
-
-0:04:40.720,0:04:45.759
-uh from wave to midi or other things
-
-0:04:44.479,0:04:47.520
-what were some of the challenges with
-
-0:04:45.759,0:04:49.759
-writing a special mode for Emacs
-
-0:04:47.520,0:04:51.040
-uh interested in getting into this not
-
-0:04:49.759,0:04:54.960
-sure where to start
-
-0:04:51.040,0:04:57.120
-um there uh yeah it so
-
-0:04:54.960,0:04:58.320
-this isn't the first mode I've written
-
-0:04:57.120,0:05:01.759
-um so that's right
-
-0:04:58.320,0:05:05.600
-certainly that helps um I actually
-
-0:05:01.759,0:05:08.240
-um I have a video that we recorded it
-
-0:05:05.600,0:05:09.039
-as part of Emacs nyc on making a major
-
-0:05:08.240,0:05:10.720
-mode
-
-0:05:09.039,0:05:12.639
-that's basically like starts from
-
-0:05:10.720,0:05:15.680
-nothing and kind of builds up to
-
-0:05:12.639,0:05:17.039
-an implementation of tic-tac-toe um
-
-0:05:15.680,0:05:19.600
-but so it kind of goes into printing
-
-0:05:17.039,0:05:21.280
-things out and buttons and making the
-
-0:05:19.600,0:05:22.800
-mode
-
-0:05:21.280,0:05:24.560
-I mean one of the best parts about Emacs
-
-0:05:22.800,0:05:26.479
-is because it's so
-
-0:05:24.560,0:05:28.479
-uh configurable and so introspectible
-
-0:05:26.479,0:05:30.320
-you can start pretty simply
-
-0:05:28.479,0:05:32.320
-and just kind of asking max about things
-
-0:05:30.320,0:05:34.960
-and then make one little
-
-0:05:32.320,0:05:36.479
-change um it's really it's not that bad
-
-0:05:34.960,0:05:39.039
-so uh
-
-0:05:36.479,0:05:40.560
-I'll try to throw a link up on that uh
-
-0:05:39.039,0:05:42.000
-on on that page I put up or
-
-0:05:40.560,0:05:44.479
-please email me for whoever asked this
-
-0:05:42.000,0:05:46.240
-question uh to get a link to that video
-
-0:05:44.479,0:05:47.919
-um or just look at look at the source
-
-0:05:46.240,0:05:50.479
-code of this or any other major mode
-
-0:05:47.919,0:05:52.880
-um it it's pretty ems breaks it makes it
-
-0:05:50.479,0:05:56.479
-pretty easy to extend uh
-
-0:05:52.880,0:05:57.600
-major modes and I think that's that's
-
-0:05:56.479,0:06:00.240
-the last question
-
-0:05:57.600,0:06:02.479
-in the ether pad so uh thanks so much
-
-0:06:00.240,0:06:06.720
-everybody for coming
-
-0:06:02.479,0:06:09.039
-you are now unmuted uh thank you so much
-
-0:06:06.720,0:06:12.960
-to curry for your awesome talk
-
-0:06:09.039,0:06:19.840
-and for doing live questions
-
-0:06:12.960,0:06:19.840
-thank you thank you cheers
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--38-emacs-development-update--john-wiegley-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--38-emacs-development-update--john-wiegley-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 803bb0c9..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--38-emacs-development-update--john-wiegley-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,459 +0,0 @@
-0:00:00.080,0:00:04.960
-hello EmacsConf this is john wigley I'm
-
-0:00:03.040,0:00:06.319
-one of the co-maintainers of Emacs along
-
-0:00:04.960,0:00:09.280
-with ellie zoretsky
-
-0:00:06.319,0:00:09.840
-and lars ingebrigston and I wanted to
-
-0:00:09.280,0:00:12.639
-give you
-
-0:00:09.840,0:00:14.960
-a technical update on what has been
-
-0:00:12.639,0:00:18.400
-happening
-
-0:00:14.960,0:00:20.640
-with the Emacs in the last year so
-
-0:00:18.400,0:00:21.600
-specifically uh we have a few notes that
-
-0:00:20.640,0:00:24.480
-I've gotten from
-
-0:00:21.600,0:00:25.840
-a call with ellie he's been in charge of
-
-0:00:24.480,0:00:28.000
-directing most of the
-
-0:00:25.840,0:00:30.160
-technical contributions on the mailing
-
-0:00:28.000,0:00:33.200
-list and monitoring all the patches
-
-0:00:30.160,0:00:35.840
-so I'm more here just as a messenger
-
-0:00:33.200,0:00:37.120
-he says that we have good progress and
-
-0:00:35.840,0:00:39.040
-support for cairo
-
-0:00:37.120,0:00:40.320
-this is going to be enabled by default
-
-0:00:39.040,0:00:42.480
-and emax 28
-
-0:00:40.320,0:00:44.800
-and cairo plus half buzz is going to be
-
-0:00:42.480,0:00:46.879
-the preferred rendering combination
-
-0:00:44.800,0:00:48.719
-so cairo support is not new but in the
-
-0:00:46.879,0:00:51.440
-past there were a lot of bugs in the
-
-0:00:48.719,0:00:52.960
-code and so it was made experimental
-
-0:00:51.440,0:00:54.960
-so most of those bugs have been fixed
-
-0:00:52.960,0:00:56.320
-recently and now it becomes the default
-
-0:00:54.960,0:00:58.320
-and the next major version
-
-0:00:56.320,0:01:00.320
-which will enable several good features
-
-0:00:58.320,0:01:01.680
-such as color emojis if you're looking
-
-0:01:00.320,0:01:04.720
-forward to those
-
-0:01:01.680,0:01:06.560
-xft as a result is deprecated there are
-
-0:01:04.720,0:01:07.760
-bugs not getting fixed in that code it
-
-0:01:06.560,0:01:08.720
-doesn't appear to be very well
-
-0:01:07.760,0:01:10.960
-maintained
-
-0:01:08.720,0:01:13.760
-it was the most advanced font mac end
-
-0:01:10.960,0:01:15.920
-and emax before cairo became dependable
-
-0:01:13.760,0:01:17.840
-so now that we have a more a better
-
-0:01:15.920,0:01:19.360
-maintained and available solution in
-
-0:01:17.840,0:01:23.200
-cairo we're going to go from that
-
-0:01:19.360,0:01:23.840
-go from xft to that native compilation
-
-0:01:23.200,0:01:26.400
-in lisp
-
-0:01:23.840,0:01:28.080
-will also be landing soon it's currently
-
-0:01:26.400,0:01:28.799
-on a branch but there are several people
-
-0:01:28.080,0:01:31.040
-using it
-
-0:01:28.799,0:01:32.479
-they say they're very impressed it does
-
-0:01:31.040,0:01:35.600
-require live gcc
-
-0:01:32.479,0:01:37.439
-jit to be installed for it to work and
-
-0:01:35.600,0:01:38.960
-this means you have to have gcc 10
-
-0:01:37.439,0:01:41.040
-installed
-
-0:01:38.960,0:01:42.240
-execution of Emacs lisp with native
-
-0:01:41.040,0:01:45.280
-compilation on
-
-0:01:42.240,0:01:46.159
-is about 2.5 times faster than the
-
-0:01:45.280,0:01:48.399
-bytecode
-
-0:01:46.159,0:01:49.439
-interpreter we don't yet have any
-
-0:01:48.399,0:01:51.600
-measurements on
-
-0:01:49.439,0:01:52.960
-memory or how it affects resources
-
-0:01:51.600,0:01:54.720
-besides cpu so
-
-0:01:52.960,0:01:56.399
-we do look forward to having more
-
-0:01:54.720,0:01:58.320
-numbers and analysis to see what the
-
-0:01:56.399,0:02:01.360
-real impact of that is going to be
-
-0:01:58.320,0:02:02.799
-also it may vary in compute advantage
-
-0:02:01.360,0:02:04.320
-based on the type of workload that
-
-0:02:02.799,0:02:06.240
-you're performing
-
-0:02:04.320,0:02:08.080
-a downside to the native compilation at
-
-0:02:06.240,0:02:10.720
-the moment is that it takes a long
-
-0:02:08.080,0:02:12.720
-time to compile even when you're doing a
-
-0:02:10.720,0:02:14.959
-16 core build of Emacs
-
-0:02:12.720,0:02:15.760
-it can still take 15 minutes to compile
-
-0:02:14.959,0:02:17.840
-Emacs
-
-0:02:15.760,0:02:19.520
-and all of its in all of its lisp code
-
-0:02:17.840,0:02:21.840
-with this enabled
-
-0:02:19.520,0:02:23.120
-also this is going to have to happen on
-
-0:02:21.840,0:02:25.360
-every user's machine
-
-0:02:23.120,0:02:27.520
-because we cannot distribute the native
-
-0:02:25.360,0:02:28.319
-compilation products they are specific
-
-0:02:27.520,0:02:29.760
-to the compo
-
-0:02:28.319,0:02:31.440
-to the processor that you might be
-
-0:02:29.760,0:02:33.920
-running on so
-
-0:02:31.440,0:02:35.680
-the emax distribution will remain much
-
-0:02:33.920,0:02:37.760
-as it is now but if you want to have the
-
-0:02:35.680,0:02:39.599
-benefits of natively compiled
-
-0:02:37.760,0:02:41.519
-core lisp files you're going to have to
-
-0:02:39.599,0:02:42.400
-spend that time and have gcc 10
-
-0:02:41.519,0:02:45.840
-available
-
-0:02:42.400,0:02:48.959
-to get that compilation support um
-
-0:02:45.840,0:02:52.160
-the gtk only build is being prepared
-
-0:02:48.959,0:02:52.959
-for merging so what this does is it
-
-0:02:52.160,0:02:55.120
-throws away
-
-0:02:52.959,0:02:56.000
-most of the other tool kits that Emacs
-
-0:02:55.120,0:02:59.280
-was using
-
-0:02:56.000,0:03:01.760
-and relies only on gtk making Emacs
-
-0:02:59.280,0:03:03.920
-much more of a gtk application than it
-
-0:03:01.760,0:03:06.480
-has been
-
-0:03:03.920,0:03:08.480
-the main issue here is that we were
-
-0:03:06.480,0:03:09.360
-abusing gtk in some ways that weren't
-
-0:03:08.480,0:03:10.879
-really meant
-
-0:03:09.360,0:03:12.879
-and now we're going to be more of a
-
-0:03:10.879,0:03:14.080
-first club gtk will be more of a first
-
-0:03:12.879,0:03:17.040
-class citizen in the
-
-0:03:14.080,0:03:17.440
-approach and the ways that we use it and
-
-0:03:17.040,0:03:19.280
-and
-
-0:03:17.440,0:03:21.200
-be using it in the ways that the gtk
-
-0:03:19.280,0:03:23.360
-developers intended
-
-0:03:21.200,0:03:24.640
-there is going to be much more support
-
-0:03:23.360,0:03:27.280
-for xt mouse
-
-0:03:24.640,0:03:29.120
-so xt mouse allows you to use your mouse
-
-0:03:27.280,0:03:30.799
-inside of a terminal window
-
-0:03:29.120,0:03:33.120
-which you could do before but there were
-
-0:03:30.799,0:03:36.159
-certain aspects such as menus
-
-0:03:33.120,0:03:38.239
-that weren't supported so instead of
-
-0:03:36.159,0:03:39.840
-having kind of partial support for mouse
-
-0:03:38.239,0:03:42.879
-inside of an x term with xt
-
-0:03:39.840,0:03:44.959
-mouse you get full support this is going
-
-0:03:42.879,0:03:46.720
-to allow
-
-0:03:44.959,0:03:48.159
-changes in the way that things can be
-
-0:03:46.720,0:03:51.200
-bound the ways that
-
-0:03:48.159,0:03:53.200
-uh key bindings can the mouse events can
-
-0:03:51.200,0:03:56.879
-be mapped to key bindings while in
-
-0:03:53.200,0:03:58.480
-x terms and um yeah little by little
-
-0:03:56.879,0:03:59.040
-this support is being extended even
-
-0:03:58.480,0:04:01.599
-further
-
-0:03:59.040,0:04:04.080
-so we look forward to seeing that
-
-0:04:01.599,0:04:06.239
-develop in the near term
-
-0:04:04.080,0:04:08.080
-once this is merged by the way also then
-
-0:04:06.239,0:04:09.840
-Emacs will have mouse support in every
-
-0:04:08.080,0:04:12.720
-one of its available configurations
-
-0:04:09.840,0:04:14.680
-which has not been true until now Emacs
-
-0:04:12.720,0:04:17.519
-27 will be soon releasing
-
-0:04:14.680,0:04:19.919
-27.2 and the pretest for that should
-
-0:04:17.519,0:04:20.880
-begin sometime soon after Emacs comp is
-
-0:04:19.919,0:04:23.360
-done
-
-0:04:20.880,0:04:24.800
-and finally Emacs 28 is going to get
-
-0:04:23.360,0:04:26.479
-better emoji support
-
-0:04:24.800,0:04:29.120
-right now emojis are registered
-
-0:04:26.479,0:04:31.759
-internally within Emacs as symbols
-
-0:04:29.120,0:04:33.759
-which works in some ways but does not
-
-0:04:31.759,0:04:37.360
-support some of the special features
-
-0:04:33.759,0:04:40.000
-of of emojis such as different
-
-0:04:37.360,0:04:41.120
-skin tones for the hand emoji or face
-
-0:04:40.000,0:04:43.280
-emojis
-
-0:04:41.120,0:04:45.199
-in Emacs 28 emojis are going to have
-
-0:04:43.280,0:04:47.199
-their own support within the sequel
-
-0:04:45.199,0:04:49.360
-c code and then this is going to allow
-
-0:04:47.199,0:04:52.720
-those types of variations and other
-
-0:04:49.360,0:04:54.639
-emoji specific font setups so that is
-
-0:04:52.720,0:04:56.720
-everything for Emacs
-
-0:04:54.639,0:04:59.120
-in the future I don't have a timeline
-
-0:04:56.720,0:05:01.520
-for you on when 28 will be available
-
-0:04:59.120,0:05:02.720
-but 27 is going to keep improving until
-
-0:05:01.520,0:05:04.479
-we're ready to get there
-
-0:05:02.720,0:05:06.479
-so have fun with the rest of you max
-
-0:05:04.479,0:05:09.199
-conf and I hope to see you there
-
-0:05:06.479,0:05:09.199
-bye
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--39-nongnu-elpa--questions--richard-stallman-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--39-nongnu-elpa--questions--richard-stallman-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 1936a150..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--39-nongnu-elpa--questions--richard-stallman-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2832 +0,0 @@
-0:00:00.640,0:00:05.680
-okay so the first question is what is an
-
-0:00:04.160,0:00:08.800
-example of a car
-
-0:00:05.680,0:00:12.160
-a package currently in
-
-0:00:08.800,0:00:13.759
-a non-elpa repo that does not work well
-
-0:00:12.160,0:00:18.000
-with Emacs
-
-0:00:13.759,0:00:19.760
-well one of them is s dot el
-
-0:00:18.000,0:00:21.920
-and this is what made me aware that
-
-0:00:19.760,0:00:25.760
-there was an issue here that caused
-
-0:00:21.920,0:00:29.439
-problems well s.e.l
-
-0:00:25.760,0:00:31.279
-is a beautifully written package
-
-0:00:29.439,0:00:32.800
-that appears to be very useful for
-
-0:00:31.279,0:00:36.320
-people
-
-0:00:32.800,0:00:39.520
-and there's just one thing wrong with it
-
-0:00:36.320,0:00:43.680
-it gobbled up the name space
-
-0:00:39.520,0:00:47.039
-of symbols starting with s dash
-
-0:00:43.680,0:00:49.440
-and I was shocked to discover that
-
-0:00:47.039,0:00:51.760
-somebody who had not coordinated with
-
-0:00:49.440,0:00:55.360
-the Emacs developers at all
-
-0:00:51.760,0:00:56.800
-had implemented a package using such a
-
-0:00:55.360,0:00:59.760
-short prefix which
-
-0:00:56.800,0:01:01.520
-isn't the right way to do things oh by
-
-0:00:59.760,0:01:04.000
-the way the questions have moved off the
-
-0:01:01.520,0:01:05.360
-screen this is no good I can continue
-
-0:01:04.000,0:01:08.880
-answering this one
-
-0:01:05.360,0:01:12.159
-but I'll be stuck when this one is over
-
-0:01:08.880,0:01:15.040
-anyway so uh
-
-0:01:12.159,0:01:16.560
-and I was told that there was nothing I
-
-0:01:15.040,0:01:19.920
-could do about it
-
-0:01:16.560,0:01:22.960
-that so many users packages were using
-
-0:01:19.920,0:01:24.240
-swl and thus essentially using that
-
-0:01:22.960,0:01:28.080
-definition
-
-0:01:24.240,0:01:31.360
-of the s dash star symbols
-
-0:01:28.080,0:01:34.720
-that any attempt to use them
-
-0:01:31.360,0:01:38.079
-publicly or privately for anything else
-
-0:01:34.720,0:01:41.680
-would lead to horrible problems
-
-0:01:38.079,0:01:45.520
-and I don't like that
-
-0:01:41.680,0:01:49.040
-I decided I wanted to do something
-
-0:01:45.520,0:01:52.320
-a so that that wouldn't happen again
-
-0:01:49.040,0:01:55.119
-and b to make it unhappen
-
-0:01:52.320,0:01:57.840
-in that case well the way to make it
-
-0:01:55.119,0:02:02.240
-unhappen in that case is with a new
-
-0:01:57.840,0:02:05.360
-symbol renaming feature the idea is
-
-0:02:02.240,0:02:09.119
-you rename that file to something else
-
-0:02:05.360,0:02:11.520
-and then you define an s.e.l that
-
-0:02:09.119,0:02:13.040
-sets up symbol renaming and then loads
-
-0:02:11.520,0:02:16.080
-the something else
-
-0:02:13.040,0:02:16.400
-so it actually runs the same code it
-
-0:02:16.080,0:02:20.879
-just
-
-0:02:16.400,0:02:23.920
-doesn't globally define the symbols
-
-0:02:20.879,0:02:26.160
-s dash whatever but they
-
-0:02:23.920,0:02:28.319
-appear to work for the programs that
-
-0:02:26.160,0:02:32.640
-explicitly
-
-0:02:28.319,0:02:36.000
-require that require sdl
-
-0:02:32.640,0:02:38.080
-or the s package so this gets the same
-
-0:02:36.000,0:02:40.239
-behavior for all the programs that are
-
-0:02:38.080,0:02:43.360
-using that library
-
-0:02:40.239,0:02:47.840
-and uh doesn't interfere
-
-0:02:43.360,0:02:50.319
-with the global name space at all
-
-0:02:47.840,0:02:52.080
-however to do that we need to have a
-
-0:02:50.319,0:02:55.360
-package
-
-0:02:52.080,0:02:57.760
-s.e.l that isn't the same
-
-0:02:55.360,0:02:58.640
-totally a short file that's totally
-
-0:02:57.760,0:03:01.440
-different
-
-0:02:58.640,0:03:02.840
-plus we've got to have the file that
-
-0:03:01.440,0:03:06.239
-normally is called
-
-0:03:02.840,0:03:10.319
-s.e.l available but
-
-0:03:06.239,0:03:13.040
-uh under another name well
-
-0:03:10.319,0:03:14.800
-how are we going to do that we can't put
-
-0:03:13.040,0:03:18.879
-this into
-
-0:03:14.800,0:03:21.920
-into Emacs in a nice way that
-
-0:03:18.879,0:03:24.560
-won't make the uh won't make the
-
-0:03:21.920,0:03:26.480
-maintainer angry
-
-0:03:24.560,0:03:28.159
-of the mate to the developer of that
-
-0:03:26.480,0:03:32.080
-package
-
-0:03:28.159,0:03:34.640
-but we can do it with non-gnu
-
-0:03:32.080,0:03:36.239
-elpa we can put those two things into
-
-0:03:34.640,0:03:38.720
-non-gnu elpa
-
-0:03:36.239,0:03:40.720
-without any difficulty and this shows
-
-0:03:38.720,0:03:43.280
-one of the advantages
-
-0:03:40.720,0:03:45.440
-we can put files we can put packages
-
-0:03:43.280,0:03:48.400
-into non-gdu elpa
-
-0:03:45.440,0:03:49.599
-and make changes in them now in general
-
-0:03:48.400,0:03:51.760
-we wouldn't
-
-0:03:49.599,0:03:54.319
-go to the effort of making big changes
-
-0:03:51.760,0:03:56.400
-that's just too much to do
-
-0:03:54.319,0:03:58.000
-unless something's really important but
-
-0:03:56.400,0:04:01.120
-small changes
-
-0:03:58.000,0:04:04.319
-that help things fit in are
-
-0:04:01.120,0:04:07.120
-easy to do and
-
-0:04:04.319,0:04:10.319
-uh okay oh so basically the recording
-
-0:04:07.120,0:04:13.439
-didn't get anything until now I just saw
-
-0:04:10.319,0:04:14.319
-a note pop up this session is now being
-
-0:04:13.439,0:04:16.320
-recorded
-
-0:04:14.319,0:04:18.160
-I hope it's been recorded all along it
-
-0:04:16.320,0:04:21.280
-would be a shame to
-
-0:04:18.160,0:04:27.120
-spoil oh good okay
-
-0:04:21.280,0:04:30.479
-okay good so uh that's one of the issues
-
-0:04:27.120,0:04:33.840
-uh does non-gnu eopa already exist
-
-0:04:30.479,0:04:35.360
-or is this a sort of quote plan I don't
-
-0:04:33.840,0:04:37.919
-know why you have to
-
-0:04:35.360,0:04:40.400
-put scare quotes around the word plan
-
-0:04:37.919,0:04:44.160
-it's sort of in between
-
-0:04:40.400,0:04:45.440
-it's the creation of it is started you
-
-0:04:44.160,0:04:48.160
-will find
-
-0:04:45.440,0:04:51.520
-that there is an archive that it's
-
-0:04:48.160,0:04:54.880
-possible to download packages from
-
-0:04:51.520,0:04:57.120
-and there is a repository to put them in
-
-0:04:54.880,0:04:58.560
-but that's not the way it's really
-
-0:04:57.120,0:05:02.800
-supposed to work
-
-0:04:58.560,0:05:04.320
-uh this is not supposed to be like the
-
-0:05:02.800,0:05:07.280
-new elpa where there's
-
-0:05:04.320,0:05:09.039
-one repo for all the packages and thus
-
-0:05:07.280,0:05:11.199
-anyone who wants to edit any of them
-
-0:05:09.039,0:05:11.680
-anyone that we want to have edit any of
-
-0:05:11.199,0:05:13.280
-them
-
-0:05:11.680,0:05:15.440
-has got to have access to the whole
-
-0:05:13.280,0:05:18.560
-thing for one thing
-
-0:05:15.440,0:05:21.840
-some packages will make
-
-0:05:18.560,0:05:25.120
-an arrangement with the developers
-
-0:05:21.840,0:05:27.039
-and they'll assure us that they will
-
-0:05:25.120,0:05:28.400
-do things as things should be done and
-
-0:05:27.039,0:05:32.080
-then we'll
-
-0:05:28.400,0:05:35.919
-have their repo copied automatically
-
-0:05:32.080,0:05:38.160
-or in other cases say
-
-0:05:35.919,0:05:40.160
-copied manually with a little checking
-
-0:05:38.160,0:05:43.199
-every so often
-
-0:05:40.160,0:05:46.400
-uh and then uh in
-
-0:05:43.199,0:05:49.440
-other cases we'll need to have our own
-
-0:05:46.400,0:05:52.479
-repo for a particular package
-
-0:05:49.440,0:05:54.400
-but we shouldn't have a single repo for
-
-0:05:52.479,0:05:55.919
-all the packages we should have a repo
-
-0:05:54.400,0:05:57.840
-for each package
-
-0:05:55.919,0:06:01.120
-so that the people working on that can
-
-0:05:57.840,0:06:04.319
-get access to modify it
-
-0:06:01.120,0:06:06.080
-this has to be finished setting up
-
-0:06:04.319,0:06:07.680
-and we're still working out the
-
-0:06:06.080,0:06:11.039
-procedures
-
-0:06:07.680,0:06:14.400
-for instance for making the arrangements
-
-0:06:11.039,0:06:15.440
-with the developers of a package so that
-
-0:06:14.400,0:06:18.840
-we can
-
-0:06:15.440,0:06:20.400
-we hope uh entrust its development to
-
-0:06:18.840,0:06:24.240
-them and
-
-0:06:20.400,0:06:24.240
-rely on them directly
-
-0:06:24.800,0:06:29.520
-and there may be more that needs to be
-
-0:06:26.560,0:06:29.520
-worked on
-
-0:06:29.840,0:06:35.840
-oh there's so many questions
-
-0:06:36.639,0:06:40.880
-well I hope you the third question is
-
-0:06:39.280,0:06:43.680
-what are the benefits
-
-0:06:40.880,0:06:46.240
-I hope that people now see the benefits
-
-0:06:43.680,0:06:49.599
-I've described them
-
-0:06:46.240,0:06:51.440
-uh next question is it possible to work
-
-0:06:49.599,0:06:54.720
-with the melba team
-
-0:06:51.440,0:06:59.440
-to integrate that into Emacs
-
-0:06:54.720,0:07:03.759
-no because the goal doesn't make sense
-
-0:06:59.440,0:07:07.199
-melba the way it's done does not belong
-
-0:07:03.759,0:07:08.560
-inside Emacs in any sense well first of
-
-0:07:07.199,0:07:11.280
-all it can't literally be
-
-0:07:08.560,0:07:13.280
-inside Emacs we don't have copyright
-
-0:07:11.280,0:07:18.160
-assignments for that code
-
-0:07:13.280,0:07:20.560
-and to get it would be unfeasible
-
-0:07:18.160,0:07:21.520
-but we're not asking for copyright
-
-0:07:20.560,0:07:25.280
-assignments for
-
-0:07:21.520,0:07:27.599
-non-gnu elpa so that's
-
-0:07:25.280,0:07:31.440
-you might wonder could melpa be merged
-
-0:07:27.599,0:07:35.039
-with non-venue elpa the problem is
-
-0:07:31.440,0:07:38.240
-melpa doesn't modify the packages
-
-0:07:35.039,0:07:41.360
-it's just a place to find releases of
-
-0:07:38.240,0:07:44.800
-packages wherever they happen to be
-
-0:07:41.360,0:07:48.319
-and they put packages in with
-
-0:07:44.800,0:07:51.520
-only a little bit of checking
-
-0:07:48.319,0:07:51.919
-so no we there are a lot of packages
-
-0:07:51.520,0:07:55.280
-that are
-
-0:07:51.919,0:07:58.479
-in melpa that we'd like to get into
-
-0:07:55.280,0:08:00.800
-non-canoe elpa I don't know the names of
-
-0:07:58.479,0:08:04.160
-most of them but I expect most of them
-
-0:08:00.800,0:08:07.680
-would be fine to have but they've got to
-
-0:08:04.160,0:08:07.680
-be looked at one by one
-
-0:08:08.560,0:08:14.479
-there are some rules for non-glpa
-
-0:08:12.000,0:08:18.000
-and the only way to check them is to
-
-0:08:14.479,0:08:22.160
-check them on one package at a time
-
-0:08:18.000,0:08:25.039
-and that's going to take effort
-
-0:08:22.160,0:08:26.080
-now with the people who work on melba
-
-0:08:25.039,0:08:29.440
-want to get involved
-
-0:08:26.080,0:08:32.800
-of this that would be great
-
-0:08:29.440,0:08:33.919
-I haven't tried asking them first we've
-
-0:08:32.800,0:08:37.599
-got to get this thing
-
-0:08:33.919,0:08:40.479
-set up I doubt they would want to
-
-0:08:37.599,0:08:42.959
-but if they said yes that would be
-
-0:08:40.479,0:08:42.959
-wonderful
-
-0:08:44.159,0:08:55.839
-uh any thoughts of packages being
-
-0:08:48.399,0:08:55.839
-added I'm afraid
-
-0:09:00.959,0:09:03.360
-um
-
-0:09:05.440,0:09:08.959
-I'm afraid any thoughts of packages
-
-0:09:07.200,0:09:11.040
-being added as
-
-0:09:08.959,0:09:13.120
-some url I don't know anything about but
-
-0:09:11.040,0:09:16.800
-it talks about open source
-
-0:09:13.120,0:09:17.680
-which means I'm very unlikely to have
-
-0:09:16.800,0:09:20.959
-much
-
-0:09:17.680,0:09:24.080
-in common with whatever they say about
-
-0:09:20.959,0:09:27.760
-either licensing or
-
-0:09:24.080,0:09:29.959
-what's right and wrong uh
-
-0:09:27.760,0:09:31.920
-but this seems to be something about
-
-0:09:29.959,0:09:35.680
-disregarding licenses
-
-0:09:31.920,0:09:39.360
-altogether well that is basically
-
-0:09:35.680,0:09:43.360
-asking to lose there are reasons
-
-0:09:39.360,0:09:45.600
-why we developed gnu licenses to release
-
-0:09:43.360,0:09:48.320
-software why we have criteria
-
-0:09:45.600,0:09:49.519
-for which licenses make a program free
-
-0:09:48.320,0:09:52.640
-software
-
-0:09:49.519,0:09:55.519
-if the program doesn't carry a license
-
-0:09:52.640,0:09:56.080
-or if it carries a non-free license that
-
-0:09:55.519,0:09:59.760
-program
-
-0:09:56.080,0:10:02.839
-is not free software now you can
-
-0:09:59.760,0:10:04.800
-maybe get away with disregarding that
-
-0:10:02.839,0:10:07.600
-fact uh unless
-
-0:10:04.800,0:10:08.959
-somebody an author or publisher stops
-
-0:10:07.600,0:10:11.360
-you
-
-0:10:08.959,0:10:12.399
-but we're not going to take we're not
-
-0:10:11.360,0:10:15.200
-basically going to
-
-0:10:12.399,0:10:16.399
-disregard the question of whether the
-
-0:10:15.200,0:10:19.040
-software we
-
-0:10:16.399,0:10:21.360
-recommend to people really is free
-
-0:10:19.040,0:10:24.560
-software or not
-
-0:10:21.360,0:10:27.519
-that's basically uh
-
-0:10:24.560,0:10:29.120
-blindfolding yourself to the legal
-
-0:10:27.519,0:10:30.480
-situation of the software you're
-
-0:10:29.120,0:10:33.519
-distributing
-
-0:10:30.480,0:10:35.920
-it's a terrible idea uh if they
-
-0:10:33.519,0:10:38.640
-disregard our licenses they will hear
-
-0:10:35.920,0:10:40.959
-from us about it
-
-0:10:38.640,0:10:42.720
-and if you want to contribute to the
-
-0:10:40.959,0:10:46.320
-free world
-
-0:10:42.720,0:10:48.640
-put free licenses on your code
-
-0:10:46.320,0:10:50.000
-and choose good ones to get this
-
-0:10:48.640,0:10:53.440
-information
-
-0:10:50.000,0:10:57.120
-look at gnu.org slash licensing
-
-0:10:53.440,0:10:59.839
-in particular slash licenses
-
-0:10:57.120,0:11:01.120
-and one page that input that's important
-
-0:10:59.839,0:11:05.040
-is license
-
-0:11:01.120,0:11:07.360
-dash recommendations.html
-
-0:11:05.040,0:11:09.279
-that's where we advise you on what
-
-0:11:07.360,0:11:11.360
-license we would recommend you use
-
-0:11:09.279,0:11:15.600
-depending on the circumstances
-
-0:11:11.360,0:11:20.160
-there's also license dash list dot html
-
-0:11:15.600,0:11:22.160
-which describes a lot of licenses and
-
-0:11:20.160,0:11:25.040
-says which ones are free
-
-0:11:22.160,0:11:26.160
-which ones are compatible with the new
-
-0:11:25.040,0:11:28.640
-gpl
-
-0:11:26.160,0:11:31.519
-it's really important to use only gpl
-
-0:11:28.640,0:11:34.320
-compatible licenses
-
-0:11:31.519,0:11:35.519
-so that the various programs can be
-
-0:11:34.320,0:11:40.480
-combined together
-
-0:11:35.519,0:11:40.480
-or linked and
-
-0:11:40.720,0:11:44.240
-you can also get other information about
-
-0:11:43.120,0:11:47.040
-gnu licenses
-
-0:11:44.240,0:11:49.680
-and the reasons why they are written the
-
-0:11:47.040,0:11:49.680
-way they are
-
-0:11:55.279,0:11:59.760
-oh sorry I don't see the next question
-
-0:12:03.200,0:12:07.519
-oh why do I insist on using per and
-
-0:12:05.600,0:12:11.680
-purrs
-
-0:12:07.519,0:12:14.959
-uh I'm not happy with using
-
-0:12:11.680,0:12:17.440
-they which is a plural pronoun with a
-
-0:12:14.959,0:12:20.480
-singular antecedent
-
-0:12:17.440,0:12:24.800
-it's bad because it causes
-
-0:12:20.480,0:12:28.639
-confusion that is completely gratuitous
-
-0:12:24.800,0:12:33.200
-many sentences become a lot of work
-
-0:12:28.639,0:12:36.480
-to parse and understand if you
-
-0:12:33.200,0:12:39.839
-add that ambiguity that source of him of
-
-0:12:36.480,0:12:42.720
-regular ambiguity now
-
-0:12:39.839,0:12:43.680
-I do not accept the demands of other
-
-0:12:42.720,0:12:47.519
-people
-
-0:12:43.680,0:12:50.800
-in regard to changing my grammar
-
-0:12:47.519,0:12:54.240
-you can try to convince me but
-
-0:12:50.800,0:12:55.440
-no one is entitled to give me orders
-
-0:12:54.240,0:12:58.880
-about that
-
-0:12:55.440,0:13:03.200
-or state their desires and expect
-
-0:12:58.880,0:13:06.560
-obedience not for me and not from you
-
-0:13:03.200,0:13:09.839
-or anyone we are all
-
-0:13:06.560,0:13:13.200
-equally entitled to decide
-
-0:13:09.839,0:13:18.000
-how we will speak and how we won't speak
-
-0:13:13.200,0:13:22.880
-now I've spelled out all of these points
-
-0:13:18.000,0:13:26.079
-in a file called stolman.org
-
-0:13:22.880,0:13:26.079
-articles slash
-
-0:13:30.120,0:13:33.760
-genderneutrality.html
-
-0:13:31.600,0:13:36.000
-of course this is not a gnu project
-
-0:13:33.760,0:13:40.800
-policy
-
-0:13:36.000,0:13:40.800
-it's my own personal ideas on the
-
-0:13:46.839,0:13:49.839
-subject
-
-0:13:53.920,0:14:01.040
-if any of you feels offended
-
-0:13:57.120,0:14:04.320
-by my referring to you with a singular
-
-0:14:01.040,0:14:07.680
-gender neutral pronoun feel free
-
-0:14:04.320,0:14:10.720
-to ex contact me privately
-
-0:14:07.680,0:14:14.000
-and explain to me your reasons
-
-0:14:10.720,0:14:16.639
-I will pay attention to them I'll
-
-0:14:14.000,0:14:18.399
-think about them assuming that they're
-
-0:14:16.639,0:14:24.079
-not something I've already
-
-0:14:18.399,0:14:27.760
-considered and decided to dismiss before
-
-0:14:24.079,0:14:30.240
-but you must not speak to me as if I had
-
-0:14:27.760,0:14:30.800
-no business not obeying you because
-
-0:14:30.240,0:14:34.320
-that's
-
-0:14:30.800,0:14:37.360
-rude and it is not likely to convince me
-
-0:14:34.320,0:14:37.360
-to change my mind
-
-0:14:40.720,0:14:48.320
-I believe it is not actually
-
-0:14:44.240,0:14:50.560
-of stating offense to anyone
-
-0:14:48.320,0:14:52.880
-and the fact that somebody disagrees
-
-0:14:50.560,0:14:59.839
-with me does not mean I'm wrong
-
-0:14:52.880,0:14:59.839
-but I always can be wrong
-
-0:15:00.720,0:15:05.680
-when you wrote that you could add a
-
-0:15:02.560,0:15:07.120
-package to non your new elpa
-
-0:15:05.680,0:15:09.199
-are you implying that you would add
-
-0:15:07.120,0:15:11.120
-packages with or without package
-
-0:15:09.199,0:15:15.279
-maintainers knowledge
-
-0:15:11.120,0:15:18.000
-of course the packages we would
-
-0:15:15.279,0:15:19.519
-we would distribute in this way are free
-
-0:15:18.000,0:15:21.920
-software
-
-0:15:19.519,0:15:22.720
-everyone is entitled to redistribute
-
-0:15:21.920,0:15:26.560
-them
-
-0:15:22.720,0:15:26.959
-and everyone is also entitled to modify
-
-0:15:26.560,0:15:29.199
-them
-
-0:15:26.959,0:15:31.680
-and redistribute them that's part of the
-
-0:15:29.199,0:15:35.040
-meaning of free software
-
-0:15:31.680,0:15:38.320
-I have been unable to understand
-
-0:15:35.040,0:15:42.560
-how there came to be an idea
-
-0:15:38.320,0:15:45.600
-that those who redistribute packages
-
-0:15:42.560,0:15:49.360
-have some idea to be mere
-
-0:15:45.600,0:15:54.480
-some obligation to be near mirrors
-
-0:15:49.360,0:15:58.560
-and not modify things themselves
-
-0:15:54.480,0:16:01.440
-well if a package is
-
-0:15:58.560,0:16:03.440
-being maintained by developers who are
-
-0:16:01.440,0:16:06.240
-cooperating with us
-
-0:16:03.440,0:16:07.360
-we'll normally just leave it to them
-
-0:16:06.240,0:16:10.079
-after all
-
-0:16:07.360,0:16:10.399
-we have lots of other work to do they
-
-0:16:10.079,0:16:14.000
-are
-
-0:16:10.399,0:16:15.600
-clearly experts on the packages they've
-
-0:16:14.000,0:16:18.399
-developed
-
-0:16:15.600,0:16:22.800
-let's leave it to them if they make that
-
-0:16:18.399,0:16:26.480
-sort of arrangement with us but
-
-0:16:22.800,0:16:29.120
-that's up to them we can't insist that
-
-0:16:26.480,0:16:30.720
-anyone make an arrangement with us
-
-0:16:29.120,0:16:33.279
-but since those programs are free
-
-0:16:30.720,0:16:36.639
-software anyone c is
-
-0:16:33.279,0:16:38.880
-free to redistribute them and we will do
-
-0:16:36.639,0:16:38.880
-that
-
-0:16:41.839,0:16:51.839
-have you ever used vi or vim or
-
-0:16:45.519,0:16:51.839
-evil mode no
-
-0:16:52.079,0:16:56.800
-are there any plans to implement
-
-0:16:53.920,0:17:00.720
-security considerations in non-gnu
-
-0:16:56.800,0:17:02.959
-elpa uh we probably
-
-0:17:00.720,0:17:04.959
-should and this will have to be
-
-0:17:02.959,0:17:08.559
-implemented
-
-0:17:04.959,0:17:12.000
-but at the moment
-
-0:17:08.559,0:17:13.280
-developer Emacs maintainers will copy
-
-0:17:12.000,0:17:18.160
-packages
-
-0:17:13.280,0:17:20.160
-into it and so as long as they are
-
-0:17:18.160,0:17:22.480
-verifying the packages and getting the
-
-0:17:20.160,0:17:25.199
-packages from the right place
-
-0:17:22.480,0:17:25.919
-that will take care of the security once
-
-0:17:25.199,0:17:30.160
-there is
-
-0:17:25.919,0:17:33.200
-when with automatic copying in
-
-0:17:30.160,0:17:35.200
-will have to do something to
-
-0:17:33.200,0:17:38.480
-make sure that we're fetching the
-
-0:17:35.200,0:17:38.480
-packages securely
-
-0:17:40.320,0:17:44.000
-and uh some of you might be interested
-
-0:17:43.360,0:17:46.080
-in
-
-0:17:44.000,0:17:48.000
-helping to design and implement this
-
-0:17:46.080,0:17:52.559
-system
-
-0:17:48.000,0:17:56.720
-uh what distro do I use
-
-0:17:52.559,0:17:58.000
-uh well which distro of gnu slash linux
-
-0:17:56.720,0:18:01.840
-do I use
-
-0:17:58.000,0:18:01.840
-I use tree scale
-
-0:18:03.520,0:18:10.080
-I haven't tried most of the free distros
-
-0:18:07.200,0:18:11.120
-and the reason is it's not crucial that
-
-0:18:10.080,0:18:13.520
-I do so
-
-0:18:11.120,0:18:14.799
-we don't need me to rate the various
-
-0:18:13.520,0:18:17.520
-free distros on
-
-0:18:14.799,0:18:20.000
-practical questions because anyone can
-
-0:18:17.520,0:18:24.400
-do that as well as I can
-
-0:18:20.000,0:18:27.760
-and so you can tell people what
-
-0:18:24.400,0:18:29.360
-you think of using them for me what's
-
-0:18:27.760,0:18:32.400
-important to me
-
-0:18:29.360,0:18:34.160
-is to inform people of the difference
-
-0:18:32.400,0:18:36.799
-between the free distros
-
-0:18:34.160,0:18:38.799
-and the non-free distros making sure
-
-0:18:36.799,0:18:42.000
-people are aware that if you
-
-0:18:38.799,0:18:45.600
-install a non-free gnu slash linux
-
-0:18:42.000,0:18:46.720
-distro you'll get a free operating
-
-0:18:45.600,0:18:49.919
-system with
-
-0:18:46.720,0:18:54.160
-non-free stuff in various quantities
-
-0:18:49.919,0:18:56.240
-added thus you will not reach freedom
-
-0:18:54.160,0:18:57.520
-although you you'll make a lot of
-
-0:18:56.240,0:19:01.039
-progress compared
-
-0:18:57.520,0:19:03.919
-with using for instance windows or
-
-0:19:01.039,0:19:06.160
-mac os or whatever vicious thing it
-
-0:19:03.919,0:19:08.559
-might be
-
-0:19:06.160,0:19:09.760
-I'd like to I'd like to people to be
-
-0:19:08.559,0:19:12.799
-aware
-
-0:19:09.760,0:19:14.720
-of this next step towards
-
-0:19:12.799,0:19:16.160
-getting freedom for yourself and your
-
-0:19:14.720,0:19:24.480
-own computing
-
-0:19:16.160,0:19:26.799
-so that you can do that if you want to
-
-0:19:24.480,0:19:26.799
-uh
-
-0:19:29.039,0:19:32.799
-so who gets to make the final decision
-
-0:19:31.360,0:19:36.640
-regarding
-
-0:19:32.799,0:19:39.200
-non-gnu elpa the
-
-0:19:36.640,0:19:40.960
-emax maintainers are going to be in
-
-0:19:39.200,0:19:44.480
-charge of this
-
-0:19:40.960,0:19:47.760
-but because it's not
-
-0:19:44.480,0:19:51.360
-just a technical decision it has with
-
-0:19:47.760,0:19:54.960
-only technical consequences
-
-0:19:51.360,0:19:57.760
-but in general unless there's some
-
-0:19:54.960,0:20:00.720
-severe problem with the package we will
-
-0:19:57.760,0:20:00.720
-want to put it in
-
-0:20:03.600,0:20:07.440
-and I expect most packages won't have a
-
-0:20:06.400,0:20:09.919
-problem
-
-0:20:07.440,0:20:11.679
-and we can just put them in when we get
-
-0:20:09.919,0:20:15.919
-to them
-
-0:20:11.679,0:20:17.600
-won't the elpa link to non-free sites
-
-0:20:15.919,0:20:20.799
-like github
-
-0:20:17.600,0:20:24.320
-uh it's a mistake to talk about a
-
-0:20:20.799,0:20:24.320
-non-free site
-
-0:20:25.760,0:20:32.159
-because a site is not a program
-
-0:20:29.120,0:20:32.960
-a program is either free or non-free and
-
-0:20:32.159,0:20:36.480
-we have
-
-0:20:32.960,0:20:39.679
-clearly stated criteria for that in
-
-0:20:36.480,0:20:43.039
-gnu.org philosophy slash
-
-0:20:39.679,0:20:45.360
-free dash sw.html we have the free
-
-0:20:43.039,0:20:51.360
-software definition
-
-0:20:45.360,0:20:51.360
-but a site well their programs on it
-
-0:20:51.919,0:20:55.120
-but it doesn't make sense to ask whether
-
-0:20:54.000,0:20:58.000
-the site is
-
-0:20:55.120,0:20:58.880
-free or not it's too simplistic a
-
-0:20:58.000,0:21:02.000
-question
-
-0:20:58.880,0:21:05.679
-to have a meaningful answer now one
-
-0:21:02.000,0:21:08.799
-thing you can ask about is does the site
-
-0:21:05.679,0:21:11.760
-send javascript to the user's machine
-
-0:21:08.799,0:21:12.960
-to the user's browser and if so is that
-
-0:21:11.760,0:21:17.120
-javascript
-
-0:21:12.960,0:21:19.919
-non-free well github
-
-0:21:17.120,0:21:21.200
-does send non-free javascript for some
-
-0:21:19.919,0:21:24.240
-operations
-
-0:21:21.200,0:21:26.159
-so we consider it unsatisfactory as a
-
-0:21:24.240,0:21:29.600
-repository
-
-0:21:26.159,0:21:33.360
-but uh that doesn't mean linking to it
-
-0:21:29.600,0:21:34.720
-for is a bad thing to do regardless of
-
-0:21:33.360,0:21:36.640
-what the purpose is
-
-0:21:34.720,0:21:38.240
-for instance if the purpose is to refer
-
-0:21:36.640,0:21:40.799
-to some things
-
-0:21:38.240,0:21:42.880
-that you can access without running the
-
-0:21:40.799,0:21:47.039
-non-free javascript
-
-0:21:42.880,0:21:47.039
-then it's okay for that purpose
-
-0:21:47.200,0:21:52.559
-so if now that you understand the
-
-0:21:50.480,0:21:54.880
-details of this issue
-
-0:21:52.559,0:21:55.919
-you think that there is a problem with
-
-0:21:54.880,0:22:00.080
-the
-
-0:21:55.919,0:22:03.679
-link to camel there's
-
-0:22:00.080,0:22:06.799
-sorry a link in camel dot html
-
-0:22:03.679,0:22:10.880
-well report it to
-
-0:22:06.799,0:22:14.159
-uh bug gnu emax reported as an Emacs bug
-
-0:22:10.880,0:22:15.840
-but do think about the criteria I've
-
-0:22:14.159,0:22:18.000
-just said because maybe it's not a
-
-0:22:15.840,0:22:21.840
-problem
-
-0:22:18.000,0:22:24.559
-is it okay to use the gnu of pharaoh gpl
-
-0:22:21.840,0:22:27.840
-for emax packages
-
-0:22:24.559,0:22:27.840
-yes it is
-
-0:22:28.880,0:22:32.080
-uh which is your favorite programming
-
-0:22:31.120,0:22:35.200
-language
-
-0:22:32.080,0:22:38.400
-if lisp which variant
-
-0:22:35.200,0:22:41.760
-well I don't exactly have a
-
-0:22:38.400,0:22:45.120
-favorite variant but
-
-0:22:41.760,0:22:47.520
-when I designed Emacs lisp I
-
-0:22:45.120,0:22:48.799
-did the best thing I could think of at
-
-0:22:47.520,0:22:52.559
-the time
-
-0:22:48.799,0:22:55.520
-subject to the need to keep it small
-
-0:22:52.559,0:22:56.960
-for the first few years it was important
-
-0:22:55.520,0:22:59.840
-for gdu Emacs
-
-0:22:56.960,0:23:00.799
-to run in a machine which could only
-
-0:22:59.840,0:23:04.480
-give it half
-
-0:23:00.799,0:23:06.559
-a meg of user space
-
-0:23:04.480,0:23:09.200
-so there are a lot of constructs that
-
-0:23:06.559,0:23:12.320
-clearly were desirable to include
-
-0:23:09.200,0:23:15.840
-that I left out because we could
-
-0:23:12.320,0:23:15.840
-make it work without them
-
-0:23:16.880,0:23:20.640
-and then a lot of those have been added
-
-0:23:18.960,0:23:23.200
-since because
-
-0:23:20.640,0:23:37.840
-it's been a long time since we needed to
-
-0:23:23.200,0:23:37.840
-keep Emacs so rigorously small
-
-0:23:40.960,0:23:47.679
-um someone is
-
-0:23:44.240,0:23:51.360
-asking about the
-
-0:23:47.679,0:23:54.400
-fsf's repository project well
-
-0:23:51.360,0:23:55.440
-we agreed that there would be another
-
-0:23:54.400,0:23:59.919
-virtual machine
-
-0:23:55.440,0:24:05.840
-running one of those for the gnu project
-
-0:23:59.919,0:24:05.840
-but that's as far as the discussion went
-
-0:24:15.840,0:24:25.600
-question 17 is extremely insulting
-
-0:24:20.480,0:24:28.720
-I have not engaged in sexual harassment
-
-0:24:25.600,0:24:28.960
-don't expect me to plead guilty to such
-
-0:24:28.720,0:24:32.640
-a
-
-0:24:28.960,0:24:35.600
-nasty claim
-
-0:24:32.640,0:24:36.799
-people have been accusing me of many
-
-0:24:35.600,0:24:39.919
-things
-
-0:24:36.799,0:24:43.120
-some of which are
-
-0:24:39.919,0:24:46.559
-basically mole hills and some of which
-
-0:24:43.120,0:24:50.640
-are false so
-
-0:24:46.559,0:24:53.840
-uh I'm not going to give them
-
-0:24:50.640,0:24:56.400
-anything I have been bullied in a
-
-0:24:53.840,0:24:59.360
-horrible way
-
-0:24:56.400,0:24:59.360
-that was wrong
-
-0:24:59.679,0:25:03.520
-I would like the bullies to apologize to
-
-0:25:02.720,0:25:06.320
-me
-
-0:25:03.520,0:25:08.960
-and when I see that they're not bullying
-
-0:25:06.320,0:25:11.279
-I will forgive them
-
-0:25:08.960,0:25:14.799
-I would like to have conversations with
-
-0:25:11.279,0:25:17.840
-them if any of the mole hills
-
-0:25:14.799,0:25:20.880
-annoyed someone I'm happy to talk
-
-0:25:17.840,0:25:29.840
-with her and thus
-
-0:25:20.880,0:25:29.840
-uh help help resolve things with peace
-
-0:25:31.120,0:25:39.200
-and my opinion on
-
-0:25:35.120,0:25:42.720
-quote diversity within
-
-0:25:39.200,0:25:45.679
-Emacs well Emacs is
-
-0:25:42.720,0:25:46.480
-never going to be diverse it is extended
-
-0:25:45.679,0:25:49.760
-in
-
-0:25:46.480,0:25:53.279
-one language Emacs lisp
-
-0:25:49.760,0:25:55.840
-well I don't know uh we did have an idea
-
-0:25:53.279,0:25:58.400
-of implementing extensibility using
-
-0:25:55.840,0:26:01.120
-scheme and the hope was that guile
-
-0:25:58.400,0:26:02.960
-could be integrated with Emacs that
-
-0:26:01.120,0:26:05.279
-turned out to be difficult it may be
-
-0:26:02.960,0:26:07.520
-impossible but in principle
-
-0:26:05.279,0:26:11.039
-it might be a good thing that would be a
-
-0:26:07.520,0:26:14.960
-small amount of diversity
-
-0:26:11.039,0:26:16.960
-but it's not that important
-
-0:26:14.960,0:26:18.880
-what I think is really important for
-
-0:26:16.960,0:26:22.799
-developing Emacs
-
-0:26:18.880,0:26:27.039
-is to make it do word processing
-
-0:26:22.799,0:26:30.080
-I sometimes use libra office
-
-0:26:27.039,0:26:32.799
-and yeah I can make it do things
-
-0:26:30.080,0:26:34.880
-it has features for wysiwyg which are
-
-0:26:32.799,0:26:38.000
-very nice
-
-0:26:34.880,0:26:40.400
-but it's in other regards
-
-0:26:38.000,0:26:42.400
-it's not Emacs and it doesn't have the
-
-0:26:40.400,0:26:45.520
-abilities of Emacs
-
-0:26:42.400,0:26:45.520
-and it should
-
-0:26:45.600,0:26:49.039
-so I urge people to work on extending
-
-0:26:48.400,0:26:51.600
-Emacs
-
-0:26:49.039,0:27:07.840
-in that direction adding the features
-
-0:26:51.600,0:27:07.840
-that a word processor has to have
-
-0:27:13.600,0:27:21.679
-the last question I can answer is
-
-0:27:16.640,0:27:24.960
-18 but yes it's a very sad thing
-
-0:27:21.679,0:27:28.399
-how many companies
-
-0:27:24.960,0:27:33.200
-insist on using non-free software
-
-0:27:28.399,0:27:36.799
-well I would get a different kind of job
-
-0:27:33.200,0:27:40.320
-that's a decision I made many years ago
-
-0:27:36.799,0:27:42.799
-early in the gnu project
-
-0:27:40.320,0:27:47.440
-I decided I would not first I would not
-
-0:27:42.799,0:27:47.440
-get a job developing non-free software
-
-0:27:47.679,0:27:54.880
-and later on I decided
-
-0:27:50.960,0:27:57.120
-once I could stop using non-free
-
-0:27:54.880,0:28:00.799
-software that is once we had
-
-0:27:57.120,0:28:05.679
-a gnu slash linux system that we could
-
-0:28:00.799,0:28:05.679
-switch over to and uh
-
-0:28:08.320,0:28:16.240
-oh wait I thought I thought magic wand
-
-0:28:11.679,0:28:20.080
-time meant it was time to stop
-
-0:28:16.240,0:28:20.080
-but now I rather ask the question
-
-0:28:21.039,0:28:23.279
-uh
-
-0:28:27.760,0:28:35.679
-so what do you do well if I were you
-
-0:28:32.480,0:28:37.440
-I'd probably not work for any of those
-
-0:28:35.679,0:28:39.679
-companies
-
-0:28:37.440,0:28:40.799
-if I needed to make money I'd get a job
-
-0:28:39.679,0:28:43.840
-but I get some
-
-0:28:40.799,0:28:48.080
-other kind of job
-
-0:28:43.840,0:28:51.039
-that didn't involve using software
-
-0:28:48.080,0:28:53.600
-I would or that let me choose the
-
-0:28:51.039,0:28:56.880
-software I would use
-
-0:28:53.600,0:28:58.000
-but I would live cheaply you know the
-
-0:28:56.880,0:29:00.640
-less you spend
-
-0:28:58.000,0:29:01.120
-the less you need to make and the more
-
-0:29:00.640,0:29:04.720
-time
-
-0:29:01.120,0:29:07.200
-you can take away from your paid work
-
-0:29:04.720,0:29:08.640
-and the more flexibility you have in
-
-0:29:07.200,0:29:13.039
-which paid work
-
-0:29:08.640,0:29:16.399
-you can do being in a position
-
-0:29:13.039,0:29:19.919
-to say no to avoid being
-
-0:29:16.399,0:29:19.919
-desperate to say yes
-
-0:29:23.679,0:29:31.200
-uh strengthens your position
-
-0:29:27.440,0:29:33.279
-and you need that one way you can help
-
-0:29:31.200,0:29:36.559
-do that is by
-
-0:29:33.279,0:29:38.960
-not having children now that is a
-
-0:29:36.559,0:29:41.760
-tangent but it can't be denied that
-
-0:29:38.960,0:29:42.399
-raising children is very expensive I
-
-0:29:41.760,0:29:45.559
-have heard
-
-0:29:42.399,0:29:48.080
-many people say that they are
-
-0:29:45.559,0:29:50.880
-uncomfortable with their jobs
-
-0:29:48.080,0:29:52.240
-but they have to do those jobs to make
-
-0:29:50.880,0:29:55.440
-enough money
-
-0:29:52.240,0:29:59.120
-to support their children
-
-0:29:55.440,0:30:01.520
-well think about that be aware
-
-0:29:59.120,0:30:04.720
-that's likely to happen to you before
-
-0:30:01.520,0:30:04.720
-you make that decision
-
-0:30:06.159,0:30:09.840
-what would I
-
-0:30:10.000,0:30:16.960
-what would I change about free software
-
-0:30:13.279,0:30:20.880
-well since this is
-
-0:30:16.960,0:30:25.600
-magic I would magically find
-
-0:30:20.880,0:30:28.000
-a way of showing everyone why
-
-0:30:25.600,0:30:29.679
-most free software needs to be copy
-
-0:30:28.000,0:30:32.480
-lifted
-
-0:30:29.679,0:30:34.880
-so that our community would not
-
-0:30:32.480,0:30:38.640
-basically
-
-0:30:34.880,0:30:41.360
-submit to abuse by proprietary software
-
-0:30:38.640,0:30:41.360
-developers
-
-0:30:45.919,0:30:53.279
-of course I could go further if I could
-
-0:30:49.760,0:30:55.760
-magically recruit a hundred thousand
-
-0:30:53.279,0:30:57.919
-good programmers to do lots of work
-
-0:30:55.760,0:31:01.039
-improving free software
-
-0:30:57.919,0:31:03.279
-we might well if we could do this 20
-
-0:31:01.039,0:31:06.559
-years ago we might have wiped out
-
-0:31:03.279,0:31:07.200
-non-free systems and then we wouldn't
-
-0:31:06.559,0:31:10.320
-have had
-
-0:31:07.200,0:31:14.480
-horrible things like
-
-0:31:10.320,0:31:18.000
-world wide web drm that
-
-0:31:14.480,0:31:20.480
-no one has the courage to resist
-
-0:31:18.000,0:31:22.640
-if they're desperately trying to get
-
-0:31:20.480,0:31:26.240
-money for anything
-
-0:31:22.640,0:31:29.519
-and if they need approval of companies
-
-0:31:26.240,0:31:32.960
-of the big companies that push for drm
-
-0:31:29.519,0:31:36.720
-uh then they don't dare even resist as
-
-0:31:32.960,0:31:36.720
-much as they can resist
-
-0:31:38.240,0:31:43.200
-and look what happened to the world wide
-
-0:31:40.880,0:31:47.279
-web consortium
-
-0:31:43.200,0:31:50.399
-uh they surrendered blatantly
-
-0:31:47.279,0:31:54.399
-and ignominiously by
-
-0:31:50.399,0:31:54.399
-endorsing the drm system
-
-0:31:55.760,0:32:00.880
-so what can you do I don't have a magic
-
-0:31:59.600,0:32:04.720
-wand
-
-0:32:00.880,0:32:06.559
-I'm a human being with the capabilities
-
-0:32:04.720,0:32:09.919
-I have
-
-0:32:06.559,0:32:12.840
-but the advantage of
-
-0:32:09.919,0:32:14.000
-great firmness in campaigning for free
-
-0:32:12.840,0:32:18.240
-software
-
-0:32:14.000,0:32:23.200
-and this enables me to do things
-
-0:32:18.240,0:32:23.200
-that no one else will do
-
-0:32:27.679,0:32:31.519
-what tools from pre unix days do you
-
-0:32:30.480,0:32:34.240
-miss
-
-0:32:31.519,0:32:34.880
-well I don't I don't think about them
-
-0:32:34.240,0:32:38.640
-with
-
-0:32:34.880,0:32:42.080
-missing them actually but
-
-0:32:38.640,0:32:46.240
-it was sort of nice to have
-
-0:32:42.080,0:32:49.600
-ddt as your login shell
-
-0:32:46.240,0:32:52.640
-so in using modern terminology
-
-0:32:49.600,0:32:55.519
-because that meant at any time you could
-
-0:32:52.640,0:32:57.519
-stop a program lotus debugging symbols
-
-0:32:55.519,0:32:58.799
-and start examining the data in the
-
-0:32:57.519,0:33:01.519
-instructions
-
-0:32:58.799,0:33:03.039
-you could debug it that way and then you
-
-0:33:01.519,0:33:06.720
-could even
-
-0:33:03.039,0:33:09.760
-patch in instructions to continue
-
-0:33:06.720,0:33:11.600
-running that job with the bug fixed
-
-0:33:09.760,0:33:13.919
-in fact you could even do this with the
-
-0:33:11.600,0:33:16.640
-system kernel
-
-0:33:13.919,0:33:17.840
-so that your jobs wouldn't get lost I
-
-0:33:16.640,0:33:20.559
-did that
-
-0:33:17.840,0:33:22.720
-quite a few times of course sometimes I
-
-0:33:20.559,0:33:25.919
-saw what was wrong and I just had to
-
-0:33:22.720,0:33:28.240
-fix a piece of data but sometimes
-
-0:33:25.919,0:33:29.679
-it took me a long time to figure out how
-
-0:33:28.240,0:33:32.480
-to get the system to
-
-0:33:29.679,0:33:34.240
-keep on going but with the work I had
-
-0:33:32.480,0:33:39.279
-done
-
-0:33:34.240,0:33:41.600
-I didn't want to lose that work
-
-0:33:39.279,0:33:43.039
-and so one of the first features I put
-
-0:33:41.600,0:33:45.840
-into gdu Emacs was
-
-0:33:43.039,0:33:45.840
-auto save
-
-0:33:47.760,0:33:54.320
-uh I'm not going to try to figure out
-
-0:33:50.640,0:33:56.480
-which packages I re I actually used
-
-0:33:54.320,0:33:59.039
-uh if I knew I would get hit by a bus
-
-0:33:56.480,0:34:02.320
-tomorrow
-
-0:33:59.039,0:34:05.039
-uh say because of a fortune teller
-
-0:34:02.320,0:34:06.240
-no a fortune teller doesn't give you any
-
-0:34:05.039,0:34:10.159
-knowledge it's just
-
-0:34:06.240,0:34:13.760
-superstitious uh hand waving
-
-0:34:10.159,0:34:16.480
-so assuming that I
-
-0:34:13.760,0:34:18.879
-talked that I got a reading from a
-
-0:34:16.480,0:34:23.119
-fortune teller which is
-
-0:34:18.879,0:34:25.040
-implausible enough to begin with uh
-
-0:34:23.119,0:34:28.320
-that wouldn't give me any knowledge
-
-0:34:25.040,0:34:32.879
-about what was going to happen to me
-
-0:34:28.320,0:34:34.960
-oh by the way fortune tellers generally
-
-0:34:32.879,0:34:36.879
-play back to you facts that they've
-
-0:34:34.960,0:34:40.480
-discovered about you
-
-0:34:36.879,0:34:43.440
-together with cold reading which means
-
-0:34:40.480,0:34:44.639
-they say things calculated to make it
-
-0:34:43.440,0:34:49.119
-appear that they know
-
-0:34:44.639,0:34:52.399
-more than they do or things that are
-
-0:34:49.119,0:34:55.679
-uh that sound wise to anyone
-
-0:34:52.399,0:34:58.800
-so you can say the same thing to
-
-0:34:55.679,0:35:02.000
-uh say 100 people
-
-0:34:58.800,0:35:05.359
-and 80 or 90 of them will say boy that
-
-0:35:02.000,0:35:05.359
-was really accurate
-
-0:35:06.480,0:35:14.880
-but what if for some reason
-
-0:35:10.400,0:35:14.880
-uh about
-
-0:35:15.119,0:35:18.560
-what what advice would I give for
-
-0:35:17.440,0:35:22.079
-stewardship of
-
-0:35:18.560,0:35:25.359
-Emacs well basically
-
-0:35:22.079,0:35:28.480
-focus on
-
-0:35:25.359,0:35:29.280
-keeping the community strong in
-
-0:35:28.480,0:35:32.640
-defending
-
-0:35:29.280,0:35:34.400
-freedom if you have a choice between
-
-0:35:32.640,0:35:36.079
-keeping the community strong in
-
-0:35:34.400,0:35:38.800
-defending freedom
-
-0:35:36.079,0:35:40.720
-and getting more people to participate
-
-0:35:38.800,0:35:43.839
-in the development
-
-0:35:40.720,0:35:44.400
-you've got to choose the freedom it is
-
-0:35:43.839,0:35:48.400
-very
-
-0:35:44.400,0:35:52.320
-easy for free software projects to
-
-0:35:48.400,0:35:55.359
-subordinate freedom to other criteria
-
-0:35:52.320,0:35:58.079
-and once that happens it's
-
-0:35:55.359,0:35:58.720
-easy for those who don't care much about
-
-0:35:58.079,0:36:00.800
-freedom
-
-0:35:58.720,0:36:02.640
-such as sometimes companies that might
-
-0:36:00.800,0:36:08.160
-offer you some money
-
-0:36:02.640,0:36:10.560
-to purchase your soul
-
-0:36:08.160,0:36:14.240
-not that there are really things that
-
-0:36:10.560,0:36:16.560
-exist called souls it's a metaphor but
-
-0:36:14.240,0:36:18.800
-it's an important metaphor for something
-
-0:36:16.560,0:36:20.880
-important
-
-0:36:18.800,0:36:24.320
-people in the community have to be
-
-0:36:20.880,0:36:27.280
-thinking about freedom
-
-0:36:24.320,0:36:30.240
-when they make decisions about what is
-
-0:36:27.280,0:36:30.240
-wise to do
-
-0:36:31.839,0:36:39.839
-the decision to devel to set up non-glpa
-
-0:36:36.480,0:36:41.520
-has a drawback it was a compromise now a
-
-0:36:39.839,0:36:44.560
-lot of people will
-
-0:36:41.520,0:36:46.240
-tell you that I am uncompromising and
-
-0:36:44.560,0:36:48.720
-say that that's a flaw
-
-0:36:46.240,0:36:50.320
-well they're wrong I make little
-
-0:36:48.720,0:36:53.040
-compromises
-
-0:36:50.320,0:36:55.359
-very often and occasionally I make a
-
-0:36:53.040,0:36:58.880
-medium-sized compromise
-
-0:36:55.359,0:36:59.359
-the compromise is in the past we wanted
-
-0:36:58.880,0:37:01.599
-to get
-
-0:36:59.359,0:37:02.400
-copyright assignments for the packages
-
-0:37:01.599,0:37:06.240
-in gnu
-
-0:37:02.400,0:37:09.119
-elpa so that we could move them into
-
-0:37:06.240,0:37:11.200
-core Emacs and of course sometimes we
-
-0:37:09.119,0:37:14.480
-move packages in the other direction
-
-0:37:11.200,0:37:16.160
-that way we are where we distribute a
-
-0:37:14.480,0:37:18.160
-given package
-
-0:37:16.160,0:37:20.720
-is something we can decide purely
-
-0:37:18.160,0:37:20.720
-technically
-
-0:37:20.880,0:37:26.800
-and however make insisting on getting
-
-0:37:25.200,0:37:28.640
-copyright assignments for all the
-
-0:37:26.800,0:37:32.079
-packages in gnu elpa
-
-0:37:28.640,0:37:35.119
-meant that we had to say sorry no
-
-0:37:32.079,0:37:38.560
-we will not install that packages in
-
-0:37:35.119,0:37:41.520
-packaging dewey lpa unless the
-
-0:37:38.560,0:37:44.079
-authors sign copyright assignments and
-
-0:37:41.520,0:37:47.520
-sometimes that's a lot of trouble
-
-0:37:44.079,0:37:50.160
-well non-glpa
-
-0:37:47.520,0:37:51.520
-won't require copyright assignments if
-
-0:37:50.160,0:37:54.560
-there's a free package
-
-0:37:51.520,0:37:57.200
-we can make whatever changes presumably
-
-0:37:54.560,0:38:00.560
-small otherwise we would probably say
-
-0:37:57.200,0:38:04.560
-we don't have time but and then
-
-0:38:00.560,0:38:05.599
-put it in but it does have the drawback
-
-0:38:04.560,0:38:07.680
-that
-
-0:38:05.599,0:38:09.119
-we in general we won't be able to move
-
-0:38:07.680,0:38:12.960
-those packages
-
-0:38:09.119,0:38:14.960
-into core Emacs without
-
-0:38:12.960,0:38:19.839
-getting the legal papers then that we
-
-0:38:14.960,0:38:19.839
-didn't get before
-
-0:38:20.160,0:38:27.599
-how do you see the future of gdu Emacs
-
-0:38:24.320,0:38:29.839
-uh I don't see the future
-
-0:38:27.599,0:38:31.680
-I used to say that my crystal ball is
-
-0:38:29.839,0:38:35.680
-cloudy today
-
-0:38:31.680,0:38:39.040
-unfortunately that has another
-
-0:38:35.680,0:38:41.200
-meaning which is quite ironic uh we
-
-0:38:39.040,0:38:44.800
-certainly don't want
-
-0:38:41.200,0:38:48.480
-our lives to be
-
-0:38:44.800,0:38:51.119
-somewhere in a cloud because
-
-0:38:48.480,0:38:51.599
-that clouds your mind and then people
-
-0:38:51.119,0:38:54.240
-start
-
-0:38:51.599,0:38:56.880
-cheating you and taking advantage of you
-
-0:38:54.240,0:39:00.160
-and it's horrible
-
-0:38:56.880,0:39:02.720
-but uh I don't see the future I just
-
-0:39:00.160,0:39:03.839
-can be sure from the past that there
-
-0:39:02.720,0:39:07.599
-will be
-
-0:39:03.839,0:39:10.720
-challenges where some of the people
-
-0:39:07.599,0:39:12.960
-involved want to make a big compromise
-
-0:39:10.720,0:39:16.880
-that isn't worth it
-
-0:39:12.960,0:39:18.079
-and they some they may even get the
-
-0:39:16.880,0:39:21.200
-impression that it's
-
-0:39:18.079,0:39:24.480
-up to them well actually
-
-0:39:21.200,0:39:27.440
-Emacs has appointed maintainers just as
-
-0:39:24.480,0:39:29.280
-every gdu package does and they are the
-
-0:39:27.440,0:39:30.480
-ones in charge of developing that
-
-0:39:29.280,0:39:34.400
-package
-
-0:39:30.480,0:39:38.200
-and this is for a good reason
-
-0:39:34.400,0:39:39.760
-because the appointed maintainers take
-
-0:39:38.200,0:39:42.240
-responsibility
-
-0:39:39.760,0:39:44.079
-to carry out the gnu project policies
-
-0:39:42.240,0:39:46.160
-and most important of all
-
-0:39:44.079,0:39:47.520
-are the ones that make the whole system
-
-0:39:46.160,0:39:52.160
-work together
-
-0:39:47.520,0:39:52.160
-and the ethical standards
-
-0:39:52.640,0:39:57.839
-to respect freedom and defend freedom
-
-0:39:59.920,0:40:04.960
-is there any plan to move more packages
-
-0:40:02.240,0:40:08.480
-from core Emacs into elpa
-
-0:40:04.960,0:40:11.440
-uh I don't know uh
-
-0:40:08.480,0:40:12.720
-whether there is a plan I suppose if
-
-0:40:11.440,0:40:15.680
-there's a plan
-
-0:40:12.720,0:40:16.960
-we probably would have done it if there
-
-0:40:15.680,0:40:19.839
-had been a plan
-
-0:40:16.960,0:40:20.319
-some have been moved I don't see this as
-
-0:40:19.839,0:40:22.400
-a
-
-0:40:20.319,0:40:24.160
-fundamentally important issue it's a
-
-0:40:22.400,0:40:26.640
-matter of what's convenient for
-
-0:40:24.160,0:40:29.599
-the users and their advantages and
-
-0:40:26.640,0:40:32.800
-disadvantages to each choice
-
-0:40:29.599,0:40:35.760
-what is your opinion on higher education
-
-0:40:32.800,0:40:36.720
-uh requiring non-free software for
-
-0:40:35.760,0:40:40.400
-instance
-
-0:40:36.720,0:40:43.440
-well I wouldn't I wouldn't
-
-0:40:40.400,0:40:49.119
-matriculate in a school which did that
-
-0:40:43.440,0:40:49.119
-unless I saw a way I could refuse
-
-0:40:50.960,0:40:57.760
-now of course I do this
-
-0:40:54.960,0:41:00.240
-because I can get away with it and
-
-0:40:57.760,0:41:04.960
-therefore my doing it is extremely
-
-0:41:00.240,0:41:08.400
-important to show somebody does resist
-
-0:41:04.960,0:41:09.359
-I don't expect most people who support
-
-0:41:08.400,0:41:12.319
-free school
-
-0:41:09.359,0:41:13.599
-who advocate free software to go that
-
-0:41:12.319,0:41:17.760
-far
-
-0:41:13.599,0:41:21.040
-uh I published an article in the spring
-
-0:41:17.760,0:41:24.640
-entitled saying no even once
-
-0:41:21.040,0:41:25.359
-is helping saying no to non-free
-
-0:41:24.640,0:41:29.040
-software
-
-0:41:25.359,0:41:32.240
-even once because
-
-0:41:29.040,0:41:34.640
-the more you do it the more you help but
-
-0:41:32.240,0:41:36.640
-even doing it a little in a way that
-
-0:41:34.640,0:41:39.920
-other people notice
-
-0:41:36.640,0:41:43.440
-is starting to help so
-
-0:41:39.920,0:41:45.119
-uh please don't think that your choices
-
-0:41:43.440,0:41:48.480
-are either
-
-0:41:45.119,0:41:52.240
-be as firm and stubborn as I am
-
-0:41:48.480,0:41:56.240
-or just give up and let yourself drift
-
-0:41:52.240,0:41:58.079
-helplessly as if you had no volition
-
-0:41:56.240,0:42:00.720
-there are a lot of points in between
-
-0:41:58.079,0:42:04.079
-there and you can surely
-
-0:42:00.720,0:42:07.839
-manage to say no some of the time
-
-0:42:04.079,0:42:11.040
-and show people an example of saying no
-
-0:42:07.839,0:42:12.720
-some of the time for instance you could
-
-0:42:11.040,0:42:15.520
-say to people
-
-0:42:12.720,0:42:16.000
-you know I hate the fact that my school
-
-0:42:15.520,0:42:20.400
-makes me
-
-0:42:16.000,0:42:22.240
-use zoom uh so whenever
-
-0:42:20.400,0:42:24.640
-I'm not being forced I'm not going to
-
-0:42:22.240,0:42:24.640
-use it
-
-0:42:25.760,0:42:31.200
-or I hate the fact that the only way I
-
-0:42:29.200,0:42:35.200
-can talk to that group of people
-
-0:42:31.200,0:42:38.400
-is resume but when
-
-0:42:35.200,0:42:40.079
-but for anything else I will feel better
-
-0:42:38.400,0:42:42.880
-about myself if I don't
-
-0:42:40.079,0:42:44.000
-see lots of ways to say no some of the
-
-0:42:42.880,0:42:47.040
-time
-
-0:42:44.000,0:42:50.960
-and yield some of the time
-
-0:42:47.040,0:42:53.920
-and when you try saying no occasionally
-
-0:42:50.960,0:42:56.400
-you may just develop the ability to say
-
-0:42:53.920,0:42:58.800
-no more often
-
-0:42:56.400,0:43:00.640
-now whether you would ever get to be as
-
-0:42:58.800,0:43:04.480
-stubborn as I am
-
-0:43:00.640,0:43:08.480
-I don't know but what I find is that
-
-0:43:04.480,0:43:12.480
-I like the fact that I've never made
-
-0:43:08.480,0:43:15.839
-this kind of compromise
-
-0:43:12.480,0:43:19.319
-I feel I have a reputation to maintain
-
-0:43:15.839,0:43:21.119
-nobody's forcing me but I get
-
-0:43:19.319,0:43:24.319
-satisfaction
-
-0:43:21.119,0:43:26.400
-out of maintaining out of being able to
-
-0:43:24.319,0:43:29.280
-continue to say
-
-0:43:26.400,0:43:29.280
-I will not
-
-0:43:30.880,0:43:40.480
-you are now unmuted and that also
-
-0:43:34.480,0:43:43.520
-can happen at various different levels
-
-0:43:40.480,0:43:46.640
-so you can get that satisfaction
-
-0:43:43.520,0:43:54.400
-of fully maintaining a refusal
-
-0:43:46.640,0:43:57.040
-that applies only to certain areas
-
-0:43:54.400,0:43:58.880
-citizens uh noon already let's maybe
-
-0:43:57.040,0:43:59.599
-take one or two more questions and then
-
-0:43:58.880,0:44:03.200
-break for
-
-0:43:59.599,0:44:06.000
-the lunch break okay thank you
-
-0:44:03.200,0:44:07.440
-how often do you personally use Emacs as
-
-0:44:06.000,0:44:10.640
-the
-
-0:44:07.440,0:44:14.960
-lowest question now uh
-
-0:44:10.640,0:44:14.960
-well I use it most of the day
-
-0:44:16.640,0:44:20.160
-I occasionally do use other things in
-
-0:44:18.880,0:44:21.599
-fact I occasionally edit with
-
-0:44:20.160,0:44:24.240
-libreoffice
-
-0:44:21.599,0:44:25.280
-I occasionally use media players I
-
-0:44:24.240,0:44:27.520
-occasionally
-
-0:44:25.280,0:44:27.520
-uh
-
-0:44:29.040,0:44:34.000
-I occasionally ssh to a machine and type
-
-0:44:32.480,0:44:35.440
-some commands on it
-
-0:44:34.000,0:44:38.240
-which occasionally includes running
-
-0:44:35.440,0:44:38.240
-Emacs on it
-
-0:44:42.319,0:44:47.520
-I read pdf files a lot
-
-0:44:45.760,0:44:49.599
-would be nice if you could get those
-
-0:44:47.520,0:44:52.240
-into Emacs so that I could read them
-
-0:44:49.599,0:44:55.040
-with Emacs commands
-
-0:44:52.240,0:44:56.160
-and I maybe even edit them with the max
-
-0:44:55.040,0:44:59.440
-commands
-
-0:44:56.160,0:45:02.960
-when they can be edited I use
-
-0:44:59.440,0:45:07.680
-uh journal sometimes
-
-0:45:02.960,0:45:07.680
-to write on a pdf file
-
-0:45:10.079,0:45:13.760
-are there any more interesting projects
-
-0:45:12.160,0:45:18.400
-you have in mind over and above
-
-0:45:13.760,0:45:22.079
-non-gnu elpa uh
-
-0:45:18.400,0:45:25.520
-I can't think of one right now well
-
-0:45:22.079,0:45:27.119
-there are things there are things that
-
-0:45:25.520,0:45:30.560
-the gnu project needs
-
-0:45:27.119,0:45:32.319
-doing there are packages that don't have
-
-0:45:30.560,0:45:35.839
-maintainers or could use
-
-0:45:32.319,0:45:38.880
-more maintainers uh
-
-0:45:35.839,0:45:42.000
-talk with maintainers at canoe.org
-
-0:45:38.880,0:45:44.960
-and the assistant candusences will
-
-0:45:42.000,0:45:47.839
-help you find a package where you can do
-
-0:45:44.960,0:45:47.839
-good
-
-0:45:48.400,0:45:52.079
-not for beginners though you got to get
-
-0:45:50.560,0:45:55.599
-you got to learn
-
-0:45:52.079,0:45:58.160
-uh a substantive substantial level of
-
-0:45:55.599,0:45:59.440
-capacity to develop and debug programs
-
-0:45:58.160,0:46:02.800
-before you can
-
-0:45:59.440,0:46:04.480
-be a maintainer uh have I ever looked at
-
-0:46:02.800,0:46:08.400
-maggot
-
-0:46:04.480,0:46:11.920
-uh no I haven't
-
-0:46:08.400,0:46:14.880
-but I believe
-
-0:46:11.920,0:46:16.560
-work is being done to get it put into
-
-0:46:14.880,0:46:21.200
-Emacs
-
-0:46:16.560,0:46:21.200
-and at that point I'll give it a try
-
-0:46:22.240,0:46:25.760
-I do not want to share my configuration
-
-0:46:25.200,0:46:29.520
-files
-
-0:46:25.760,0:46:33.599
-they're personal but
-
-0:46:29.520,0:46:36.880
-how about if we end this now
-
-0:46:33.599,0:46:38.880
-you are now unmuted sounds good to me
-
-0:46:36.880,0:46:41.520
-thank you very much richard for joining
-
-0:46:38.880,0:46:43.839
-in for live questions
-
-0:46:41.520,0:46:43.839
-okay
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--40-closing-remarks-part-1-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--40-closing-remarks-part-1-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 4681429c..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--40-closing-remarks-part-1-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,205 +0,0 @@
-0:00:07.359,0:00:17.920
-alrighty
-
-0:00:09.519,0:00:17.920
-we're all set up waiting for corbin
-
-0:00:19.840,0:00:22.720
-you are now muted
-
-0:00:22.960,0:00:28.080
-oh it might be having a kid emergency so
-
-0:00:26.240,0:00:30.080
-if you want we can get started with our
-
-0:00:28.080,0:00:31.199
-closing remarks you are now unmuted and
-
-0:00:30.080,0:00:35.120
-then we will
-
-0:00:31.199,0:00:37.760
-um you know bring corwin in when when um
-
-0:00:35.120,0:00:37.760
-things permit
-
-0:00:38.879,0:00:44.160
-let me just share the closing remarks
-
-0:00:42.840,0:00:46.879
-notes
-
-0:00:44.160,0:00:48.879
-so that we can see what that's like
-
-0:00:46.879,0:00:51.200
-actually
-
-0:00:48.879,0:00:51.200
-um
-
-0:00:55.440,0:01:00.719
-yeah sure I guess we can do the closing
-
-0:00:58.399,0:01:03.680
-remarks
-
-0:01:00.719,0:01:06.400
-okay not actually closing yet there
-
-0:01:03.680,0:01:08.479
-might be another talk after this but
-
-0:01:06.400,0:01:09.680
-since we have a little time before uh
-
-0:01:08.479,0:01:12.320
-before
-
-0:01:09.680,0:01:13.439
-uh cornbread comes well you know share
-
-0:01:12.320,0:01:14.799
-some of the interesting things we've
-
-0:01:13.439,0:01:18.479
-seen today
-
-0:01:14.799,0:01:21.840
-so uh there have been about 12 20 talks
-
-0:01:18.479,0:01:25.360
-21 out once once ong macros
-
-0:01:21.840,0:01:26.159
-happens that's all today there's 16 more
-
-0:01:25.360,0:01:28.560
-talks tomorrow
-
-0:01:26.159,0:01:30.880
-so if you thought today was lots of fun
-
-0:01:28.560,0:01:33.920
-be sure to tune in tomorrow as well
-
-0:01:30.880,0:01:36.240
-uh for reference last year's EmacsConf
-
-0:01:33.920,0:01:37.600
-had 30 talks many of which were lighting
-
-0:01:36.240,0:01:39.680
-talks this year
-
-0:01:37.600,0:01:41.360
-we had slightly longer talks and a lot
-
-0:01:39.680,0:01:43.119
-more interactivities or a lot more
-
-0:01:41.360,0:01:45.360
-question and answer sections
-
-0:01:43.119,0:01:47.040
-they're worth more than there were about
-
-0:01:45.360,0:01:50.079
-391 viewers
-
-0:01:47.040,0:01:52.320
-on the main main stream
-
-0:01:50.079,0:01:53.680
-and about 26 in the lower resolution
-
-0:01:52.320,0:01:55.680
-stream
-
-0:01:53.680,0:01:58.960
-last year's viewers were last year had
-
-0:01:55.680,0:02:01.280
-about 270 viewers at the same time so
-
-0:01:58.960,0:02:02.719
-the max clock is getting bigger and
-
-0:02:01.280,0:02:05.360
-etherpad has been working out
-
-0:02:02.719,0:02:07.280
-really really well uh people have been
-
-0:02:05.360,0:02:08.800
-using that to pose their questions
-
-0:02:07.280,0:02:11.120
-so I think at some point I saw there
-
-0:02:08.800,0:02:12.640
-were 124 people working on it and we
-
-0:02:11.120,0:02:17.440
-only managed to
-
-0:02:12.640,0:02:19.599
-accidentally erase it once so yay us
-
-0:02:17.440,0:02:23.840
-and yay everybody for helping thank you
-
-0:02:19.599,0:02:23.840
-so much
-
-0:02:24.319,0:02:29.200
-so yeah so the videos and other
-
-0:02:27.920,0:02:31.840
-resources
-
-0:02:29.200,0:02:33.680
-um we're planning to post uh sometime
-
-0:02:31.840,0:02:36.000
-over the next few weeks
-
-0:02:33.680,0:02:37.519
-um it actually took a couple weeks last
-
-0:02:36.000,0:02:39.519
-year but this year
-
-0:02:37.519,0:02:41.040
-I'm hoping that we can at least
-
-0:02:39.519,0:02:44.160
-partially partially
-
-0:02:41.040,0:02:45.440
-um release them much sooner um
-
-0:02:44.160,0:02:47.280
-you know I might be able to get around
-
-0:02:45.440,0:02:48.160
-to uploading some of the pre-recorded
-
-0:02:47.280,0:02:52.800
-talks
-
-0:02:48.160,0:02:52.800
-um later tonight after the conference
-
-0:02:53.360,0:02:57.760
-so keep an eye on emacsconf.org/2020 for that
-
-0:02:57.760,0:03:04.400
-Join our mailing lists which is
-
-0:03:01.120,0:03:07.840
-a list that you know. https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacsconf-discuss
-
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--40-closing-remarks-part-2-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--40-closing-remarks-part-2-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 895b219d..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--40-closing-remarks-part-2-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,999 +0,0 @@
-0:00:03.760,0:00:06.640
-this is the
-
-0:00:04.480,0:00:07.680
-closing remarks section where we get to
-
-0:00:06.640,0:00:09.440
-again thank people
-
-0:00:07.680,0:00:10.800
-and get people to share their lessons
-
-0:00:09.440,0:00:13.599
-learned and whatnot
-
-0:00:10.800,0:00:14.080
-but uh leo since you've stayed up to uh
-
-0:00:13.599,0:00:16.000
-to
-
-0:00:14.080,0:00:17.520
-say something let's let's let's turn it
-
-0:00:16.000,0:00:20.240
-over to you
-
-0:00:17.520,0:00:22.640
-oh what should I be saying I mean let me
-
-0:00:20.240,0:00:25.279
-just turn on the webcam first
-
-0:00:22.640,0:00:26.480
-and uh as you can see the day has
-
-0:00:25.279,0:00:28.640
-progressed I'm not
-
-0:00:26.480,0:00:30.080
-blasting light into my face I'm now
-
-0:00:28.640,0:00:32.160
-sitting instead of
-
-0:00:30.080,0:00:33.760
-you know standing so you can tell that
-
-0:00:32.160,0:00:35.920
-it's getting quite late for europe right
-
-0:00:33.760,0:00:35.920
-now
-
-0:00:38.239,0:00:42.559
-but uh yeah I'm not sure if you want me
-
-0:00:40.320,0:00:44.800
-to to go we've already done a little bit
-
-0:00:42.559,0:00:45.920
-of our closing remarks anyway before uh
-
-0:00:44.800,0:00:48.719
-colleen's talk
-
-0:00:45.920,0:00:49.120
-so yeah what do you want me to add I
-
-0:00:48.719,0:00:50.800
-mean we've
-
-0:00:49.120,0:00:52.719
-all we've all been thanking one another
-
-0:00:50.800,0:00:55.440
-we've been spanking the speakers
-
-0:00:52.719,0:00:56.800
-uh you know nothing would have been
-
-0:00:55.440,0:00:59.359
-possible without the efforts
-
-0:00:56.800,0:01:01.280
-of you know all the other organizers in
-
-0:00:59.359,0:01:03.039
-the team but also the speakers so
-
-0:01:01.280,0:01:05.040
-I'll just reiterate what corwin has been
-
-0:01:03.039,0:01:05.680
-telling you thank you so much for being
-
-0:01:05.040,0:01:07.920
-so
-
-0:01:05.680,0:01:09.520
-so many today I believe we've tripled
-
-0:01:07.920,0:01:11.360
-the amount of viewers that we had for
-
-0:01:09.520,0:01:14.960
-the previous imax conf
-
-0:01:11.360,0:01:17.600
-and that's mind-boggling to have
-
-0:01:14.960,0:01:19.119
-so many people have seen me to think
-
-0:01:17.600,0:01:20.479
-that so many people have seen me spill
-
-0:01:19.119,0:01:22.560
-water on myself
-
-0:01:20.479,0:01:24.040
-and do a fool of myself for the entire
-
-0:01:22.560,0:01:26.320
-day it is
-
-0:01:24.040,0:01:27.119
-outstandingly stupid but still thank you
-
-0:01:26.320,0:01:30.880
-so much
-
-0:01:27.119,0:01:32.640
-it's fine yeah it's this one
-
-0:01:30.880,0:01:34.240
-yeah this is this is going going really
-
-0:01:32.640,0:01:36.079
-really well um
-
-0:01:34.240,0:01:37.360
-but of course there's always ideas we
-
-0:01:36.079,0:01:39.439
-can you can try to
-
-0:01:37.360,0:01:41.840
-make it even even better so if you have
-
-0:01:39.439,0:01:43.280
-any ideas or if you have any
-
-0:01:41.840,0:01:44.479
-uh comments on the things that work
-
-0:01:43.280,0:01:45.600
-really well that you'd like us to keep
-
-0:01:44.479,0:01:47.040
-doing tomorrow
-
-0:01:45.600,0:01:49.920
-please make sure to leave them in the
-
-0:01:47.040,0:01:51.600
-other pad uh so the url is somewhere in
-
-0:01:49.920,0:01:53.200
-all the different places we put it
-
-0:01:51.600,0:01:55.439
-and there's a section all the way at the
-
-0:01:53.200,0:01:56.640
-end where you people can drop in their
-
-0:01:55.439,0:01:59.200
-general feedback
-
-0:01:56.640,0:02:01.040
-and what went well what can be improved
-
-0:01:59.200,0:02:01.439
-if you want to volunteer to help out
-
-0:02:01.040,0:02:04.240
-with
-
-0:02:01.439,0:02:05.439
-copying questions for example that might
-
-0:02:04.240,0:02:08.879
-be great
-
-0:02:05.439,0:02:11.920
-anyways it's all there uh and um
-
-0:02:08.879,0:02:11.920
-that's that's my part
-
-0:02:12.879,0:02:18.400
-um sorry
-
-0:02:16.000,0:02:20.480
-so say that again uh it's been lots of
-
-0:02:18.400,0:02:23.280
-fun and there's tomorrow oh my goodness
-
-0:02:20.480,0:02:25.680
-you're still tomorrow that's tomorrow
-
-0:02:23.280,0:02:25.680
-damn it
-
-0:02:26.720,0:02:31.680
-yeah it's so it's been a lot of fun
-
-0:02:30.239,0:02:35.280
-today
-
-0:02:31.680,0:02:38.080
-um let's see so yeah I'm
-
-0:02:35.280,0:02:39.280
-I guess we did go through the stats
-
-0:02:38.080,0:02:42.319
-before but I'll
-
-0:02:39.280,0:02:44.879
-also quickly add that um
-
-0:02:42.319,0:02:45.680
-you know I've been looking a bit of an
-
-0:02:44.879,0:02:47.920
-eye on the
-
-0:02:45.680,0:02:49.280
-server's network bandwidth usage and you
-
-0:02:47.920,0:02:51.920
-know today we've
-
-0:02:49.280,0:02:53.200
-had about 1.3 terabytes of outbound
-
-0:02:51.920,0:02:56.319
-traffic
-
-0:02:53.200,0:02:59.280
-um which is definitely something
-
-0:02:56.319,0:03:00.800
-and it's a record it's by by far you
-
-0:02:59.280,0:03:01.680
-know shattered last year's numbers we
-
-0:03:00.800,0:03:04.959
-had I think
-
-0:03:01.680,0:03:06.159
-about like 400 viewers live um peaking
-
-0:03:04.959,0:03:09.280
-at one point
-
-0:03:06.159,0:03:13.040
-um and it's very humble
-
-0:03:09.280,0:03:16.480
-humbling to see um like so many people
-
-0:03:13.040,0:03:18.080
-um you know tune in to watch talks
-
-0:03:16.480,0:03:20.319
-um about their favorite piece of
-
-0:03:18.080,0:03:23.760
-software um about Emacs
-
-0:03:20.319,0:03:27.280
-and um you know be part of the community
-
-0:03:23.760,0:03:28.239
-and you know have us be be part of the
-
-0:03:27.280,0:03:30.799
-community or
-
-0:03:28.239,0:03:32.080
-I guess um you know run this sort of an
-
-0:03:30.799,0:03:35.680
-event so it's been absolutely
-
-0:03:32.080,0:03:36.319
-awesome um I guess I can quickly get to
-
-0:03:35.680,0:03:38.879
-the
-
-0:03:36.319,0:03:40.799
-thanks if you leo or sasha don't have
-
-0:03:38.879,0:03:44.000
-anything else to add
-
-0:03:40.799,0:03:47.040
-nope all good alrighty um
-
-0:03:44.000,0:03:48.400
-yeah so let's see I'd like to thank the
-
-0:03:47.040,0:03:51.840
-free software foundation
-
-0:03:48.400,0:03:53.680
-especially the tech team um for
-
-0:03:51.840,0:03:55.599
-for their general support for letting us
-
-0:03:53.680,0:03:58.640
-use their big blue button
-
-0:03:55.599,0:04:00.640
-um yeah thank you so much it's
-
-0:03:58.640,0:04:02.720
-it's made a lot of difference this year
-
-0:04:00.640,0:04:04.000
-um you know last year for EmacsConf
-
-0:04:02.720,0:04:07.040
-2019 we used
-
-0:04:04.000,0:04:10.799
-um jitsi meat um
-
-0:04:07.040,0:04:13.280
-which was awesome but um
-
-0:04:10.799,0:04:15.599
-you know we did run into some technical
-
-0:04:13.280,0:04:17.840
-difficulties with it but this time
-
-0:04:15.599,0:04:19.519
-um you know big blue button was for the
-
-0:04:17.840,0:04:22.639
-most part smooth sailing
-
-0:04:19.519,0:04:23.919
-um so yeah thank you very much to the
-
-0:04:22.639,0:04:25.520
-free software foundation
-
-0:04:23.919,0:04:27.360
-foundation for letting us use their
-
-0:04:25.520,0:04:29.199
-weekly watson instance
-
-0:04:27.360,0:04:31.280
-allow me to just interject for a second
-
-0:04:29.199,0:04:33.360
-it was smooth sailing for absolutely
-
-0:04:31.280,0:04:35.520
-every single speaker but myself
-
-0:04:33.360,0:04:37.600
-well I managed to have three different
-
-0:04:35.520,0:04:39.440
-problems with big blue buttons so
-
-0:04:37.600,0:04:42.000
-I'll be fighting buggy pulse all night
-
-0:04:39.440,0:04:44.560
-you can be sure of that
-
-0:04:42.000,0:04:46.000
-please do um yeah that's that's the
-
-0:04:44.560,0:04:48.240
-beauty of free software I guess
-
-0:04:46.000,0:04:49.360
-is you know it it can be frustrating but
-
-0:04:48.240,0:04:51.040
-at least you know there's
-
-0:04:49.360,0:04:52.880
-multiple ways forward with you know
-
-0:04:51.040,0:04:55.840
-reporting bugs and sending patches
-
-0:04:52.880,0:04:56.960
-um and you know that's part of I guess
-
-0:04:55.840,0:04:59.360
-the message that
-
-0:04:56.960,0:05:01.680
-I'm I'm hoping that like you know people
-
-0:04:59.360,0:05:04.560
-who take away from an event like this
-
-0:05:01.680,0:05:05.440
-um around a community like this um you
-
-0:05:04.560,0:05:08.320
-know Emacs
-
-0:05:05.440,0:05:10.960
-you know being such an um long-standing
-
-0:05:08.320,0:05:13.840
-piece of free software um
-
-0:05:10.960,0:05:15.840
-and having this large of a community
-
-0:05:13.840,0:05:17.520
-around it who who's been continuing to
-
-0:05:15.840,0:05:20.160
-grow
-
-0:05:17.520,0:05:23.199
-and mature with Emacs and you know every
-
-0:05:20.160,0:05:26.240
-year we get new people in
-
-0:05:23.199,0:05:27.840
-more and more people discover Emacs um
-
-0:05:26.240,0:05:31.520
-you know join the community
-
-0:05:27.840,0:05:34.720
-or communities I should say um
-
-0:05:31.520,0:05:36.560
-it's just wonderful and
-
-0:05:34.720,0:05:38.800
-a large part of it is possible because
-
-0:05:36.560,0:05:42.560
-Emacs is free software um
-
-0:05:38.800,0:05:43.280
-so I mean at the risk of spoiling my own
-
-0:05:42.560,0:05:46.400
-talk
-
-0:05:43.280,0:05:48.000
-uh-huh I I I
-
-0:05:46.400,0:05:50.000
-I want to say that's that's what we're
-
-0:05:48.000,0:05:50.400
-going to pivot to tomorrow that's that's
-
-0:05:50.000,0:05:52.800
-what
-
-0:05:50.400,0:05:55.199
-uh welcome to the dungeon talk is really
-
-0:05:52.800,0:05:58.080
-about why it has to be free software
-
-0:05:55.199,0:05:58.960
-and as you peel the project apart I
-
-0:05:58.080,0:06:02.000
-think you'll see
-
-0:05:58.960,0:06:05.440
-eric and I have for a long time that it
-
-0:06:02.000,0:06:06.560
-is shameful to even think about trying
-
-0:06:05.440,0:06:10.240
-to put
-
-0:06:06.560,0:06:14.639
-some things outside of the public domain
-
-0:06:10.240,0:06:17.120
-right yeah exactly and I think that's a
-
-0:06:14.639,0:06:18.240
-good point to bring this up um this is a
-
-0:06:17.120,0:06:19.919
-closing remark
-
-0:06:18.240,0:06:22.319
-but it's only for today you know we've
-
-0:06:19.919,0:06:25.919
-got tomorrow a long day of events
-
-0:06:22.319,0:06:26.639
-um much like today um you know I say it
-
-0:06:25.919,0:06:28.720
-long but
-
-0:06:26.639,0:06:29.840
-in a way like thinking back it kind of
-
-0:06:28.720,0:06:34.160
-like went by like this
-
-0:06:29.840,0:06:37.120
-so um yeah it's gonna be a lot of fun
-
-0:06:34.160,0:06:38.800
-much like today was so yeah definitely
-
-0:06:37.120,0:06:41.039
-tune in tomorrow
-
-0:06:38.800,0:06:43.240
-um we're going to be starting at the
-
-0:06:41.039,0:06:45.919
-same time same place you know
-
-0:06:43.240,0:06:47.360
-live.emacsconf.org
-
-0:06:45.919,0:06:48.960
-for the specific mount points for
-
-0:06:47.360,0:06:50.000
-example you know we'll be using
-
-0:06:48.960,0:06:53.599
-main.webm
-
-0:06:50.000,0:06:57.680
-and main dash 480p dot webm
-
-0:06:53.599,0:07:00.000
-um I want to say thank you to sasha for
-
-0:06:57.680,0:07:00.800
-setting that up and getting it running
-
-0:07:00.000,0:07:04.240
-because
-
-0:07:00.800,0:07:06.960
-I remember last year um
-
-0:07:04.240,0:07:08.080
-you know we had a couple of people um
-
-0:07:06.960,0:07:11.280
-requesting
-
-0:07:08.080,0:07:14.000
-that you know a a lower resolution
-
-0:07:11.280,0:07:14.560
-stream or mount point be made available
-
-0:07:14.000,0:07:18.000
-um
-
-0:07:14.560,0:07:19.840
-because of their limited bandwidth and
-
-0:07:18.000,0:07:21.759
-it like when you have like free software
-
-0:07:19.840,0:07:25.919
-tools it's not too hard
-
-0:07:21.759,0:07:27.919
-um to get something like that going um
-
-0:07:25.919,0:07:29.199
-I mean not impossible I should say it
-
-0:07:27.919,0:07:32.000
-wasn't too easy
-
-0:07:29.199,0:07:33.120
-we did have some difficulties with it
-
-0:07:32.000,0:07:34.800
-today
-
-0:07:33.120,0:07:36.160
-I'm learning more about ffmpeg and I
-
-0:07:34.800,0:07:37.840
-expected to know at this point but it's
-
-0:07:36.160,0:07:41.599
-great
-
-0:07:37.840,0:07:44.720
-maybe it'll work tomorrow too yeah
-
-0:07:41.599,0:07:46.160
-um yeah sasha can attest to it um
-
-0:07:44.720,0:07:47.759
-you know there were still some king
-
-0:07:46.160,0:07:51.039
-spitting iron out
-
-0:07:47.759,0:07:51.840
-um and it's a process but you know we're
-
-0:07:51.039,0:07:54.879
-all learning
-
-0:07:51.840,0:07:58.000
-um each each of us in our own ways
-
-0:07:54.879,0:08:00.400
-um yeah so there's that
-
-0:07:58.000,0:08:02.800
-I'm very happy to have had that mount
-
-0:08:00.400,0:08:03.599
-points to making banks conf accessible
-
-0:08:02.800,0:08:06.560
-to people
-
-0:08:03.599,0:08:08.160
-in um you know areas of the world where
-
-0:08:06.560,0:08:10.160
-bandwidth may not be
-
-0:08:08.160,0:08:12.240
-um you know as cheap or as readily
-
-0:08:10.160,0:08:13.680
-available
-
-0:08:12.240,0:08:15.280
-or just you know someone wanting to
-
-0:08:13.680,0:08:17.520
-watch on their phone um
-
-0:08:15.280,0:08:18.560
-even here um you know in the us and
-
-0:08:17.520,0:08:20.160
-canada
-
-0:08:18.560,0:08:21.919
-data plans are not exactly cheap or
-
-0:08:20.160,0:08:24.960
-unlimited so
-
-0:08:21.919,0:08:29.520
-um yeah that's great
-
-0:08:24.960,0:08:31.199
-let's see yeah so
-
-0:08:29.520,0:08:33.599
-we are already halfway through this
-
-0:08:31.199,0:08:34.560
-one's uh network bandwidth usage for our
-
-0:08:33.599,0:08:38.839
-server
-
-0:08:34.560,0:08:41.360
-um for tomorrow we should save some for
-
-0:08:38.839,0:08:44.240
-tomorrow
-
-0:08:41.360,0:08:45.680
-all right yeah but for for tomorrow I'll
-
-0:08:44.240,0:08:47.600
-probably try bumping up the server a
-
-0:08:45.680,0:08:50.959
-little bit more to get us some bandwidth
-
-0:08:47.600,0:08:54.399
-some more bandwidth um
-
-0:08:50.959,0:08:56.320
-yeah um in terms of thank yous
-
-0:08:54.399,0:08:58.880
-um can you scroll down a little bit
-
-0:08:56.320,0:09:02.000
-please of course
-
-0:08:58.880,0:09:05.440
-uh thank you
-
-0:09:02.000,0:09:06.800
-right um yeah so the fsf and fsf tech
-
-0:09:05.440,0:09:08.320
-team again for letting us use their
-
-0:09:06.800,0:09:11.839
-picture button instance
-
-0:09:08.320,0:09:15.120
-um volunteers and organizers
-
-0:09:11.839,0:09:17.519
-um so there's there's me
-
-0:09:15.120,0:09:19.279
-um there's valvin 192 there's david
-
-0:09:17.519,0:09:22.399
-bremner david o'toole
-
-0:09:19.279,0:09:24.399
-um corwin who
-
-0:09:22.399,0:09:26.399
-both presented and also has been helping
-
-0:09:24.399,0:09:30.240
-out um
-
-0:09:26.399,0:09:33.600
-and especially um oops can you scroll
-
-0:09:30.240,0:09:36.959
-up again in the past
-
-0:09:33.600,0:09:40.240
-leo leo
-
-0:09:36.959,0:09:42.720
-um right so sorry I got distracted by
-
-0:09:40.240,0:09:42.720
-cool stuff
-
-0:09:45.680,0:09:48.880
-sorry go ahead okay go no no go ahead I
-
-0:09:48.160,0:09:52.480
-was just
-
-0:09:48.880,0:09:53.680
-being distracted um yeah we'll have some
-
-0:09:52.480,0:09:57.360
-time to check it out later
-
-0:09:53.680,0:10:00.399
-after the event today um but yeah
-
-0:09:57.360,0:10:02.160
-a special thank you um to to to you
-
-0:10:00.399,0:10:05.839
-sasha and to you leo
-
-0:10:02.160,0:10:08.240
-um you know for hanging out all day um
-
-0:10:05.839,0:10:09.120
-and helping with like you know juggling
-
-0:10:08.240,0:10:11.360
-everything
-
-0:10:09.120,0:10:12.959
-me for the most part I was just you know
-
-0:10:11.360,0:10:13.920
-running the stream and making sure that
-
-0:10:12.959,0:10:17.360
-I joined the
-
-0:10:13.920,0:10:18.640
-the right room um but you know a lot of
-
-0:10:17.360,0:10:21.680
-it was um
-
-0:10:18.640,0:10:23.120
-sasha um and leo doing a lot of stuff
-
-0:10:21.680,0:10:24.240
-behind the scenes you know doing quick
-
-0:10:23.120,0:10:27.360
-tech checks with
-
-0:10:24.240,0:10:27.680
-with the speakers to to make sure um you
-
-0:10:27.360,0:10:29.120
-know
-
-0:10:27.680,0:10:31.120
-things are generally working pretty
-
-0:10:29.120,0:10:34.160
-smoothly and
-
-0:10:31.120,0:10:37.279
-you know I'm happy to say that of course
-
-0:10:34.160,0:10:37.839
-except for um leo's bad luck a little
-
-0:10:37.279,0:10:41.040
-bit with
-
-0:10:37.839,0:10:42.399
-with big blue button um we didn't really
-
-0:10:41.040,0:10:44.160
-have any technical issue
-
-0:10:42.399,0:10:46.480
-other technical issues this year um
-
-0:10:44.160,0:10:49.360
-which is awesome compared to last year
-
-0:10:46.480,0:10:50.640
-um yeah and leo I do look forward to
-
-0:10:49.360,0:10:53.760
-those bug reports too
-
-0:10:50.640,0:10:56.480
-people watching you can make sure I'll
-
-0:10:53.760,0:11:00.560
-cc you into them so don't worry about it
-
-0:10:56.480,0:11:03.040
-please do um yes so
-
-0:11:00.560,0:11:04.480
-I'll say briefly I very much like to
-
-0:11:03.040,0:11:08.720
-thank our speakers
-
-0:11:04.480,0:11:12.560
-and um our participants um the audience
-
-0:11:08.720,0:11:14.160
-for hanging out with us watching and
-
-0:11:12.560,0:11:16.480
-you know just being a part of this
-
-0:11:14.160,0:11:18.160
-making Emacs conf20
-
-0:11:16.480,0:11:19.920
-as awesome as it turned out as it's
-
-0:11:18.160,0:11:22.160
-turned out to be and
-
-0:11:19.920,0:11:24.160
-um I'm personally very much looking
-
-0:11:22.160,0:11:27.360
-forward to an awesome tomorrow as well
-
-0:11:24.160,0:11:29.600
-um and with that I'll basically speak
-
-0:11:27.360,0:11:31.440
-less and pass it on to sasha and leo to
-
-0:11:29.600,0:11:33.040
-conclude
-
-0:11:31.440,0:11:34.770
-well you're just expecting us to have
-
-0:11:33.040,0:11:38.880
-anything left to say after you
-
-0:11:34.770,0:11:41.200
-[Laughter]
-
-0:11:38.880,0:11:44.640
-but the fighter deals you're the lead
-
-0:11:41.200,0:11:48.000
-organizer you get to have the last word
-
-0:11:44.640,0:11:48.000
-most definitely yes
-
-0:11:48.320,0:11:54.000
-come on um okay I mean
-
-0:11:51.680,0:11:55.200
-if I start talking again if I start
-
-0:11:54.000,0:11:58.320
-talking again
-
-0:11:55.200,0:12:00.079
-also just ramp us right back up I have
-
-0:11:58.320,0:12:02.160
-so much positive to say about this
-
-0:12:00.079,0:12:04.000
-community um
-
-0:12:02.160,0:12:05.279
-if I'm jumping back in again it's only
-
-0:12:04.000,0:12:08.000
-to say thank you for
-
-0:12:05.279,0:12:10.560
-uh running the show for closing the show
-
-0:12:08.000,0:12:12.160
-for being in the show cheers
-
-0:12:10.560,0:12:14.160
-absolutely I mean I couldn't say it
-
-0:12:12.160,0:12:17.519
-better myself um
-
-0:12:14.160,0:12:19.839
-yeah so on that great positive note we
-
-0:12:17.519,0:12:21.440
-I guess we will conclude today and we'll
-
-0:12:19.839,0:12:24.880
-catch you all at uh
-
-0:12:21.440,0:12:26.160
-9am tomorrow by the way you can start
-
-0:12:24.880,0:12:29.839
-placing beds to know which
-
-0:12:26.160,0:12:29.839
-color my suit is going to be tomorrow
-
-0:12:30.560,0:12:39.839
-sounds good bye alrighty
-
-0:12:33.600,0:12:39.839
-bye guys bye
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--41-opening-remarks-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--41-opening-remarks-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 3ac6a74a..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--41-opening-remarks-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1035 +0,0 @@
-0:00:09.360,0:00:11.280
-so we can't hear you right now just to
-
-0:00:10.719,0:00:15.120
-make sure
-
-0:00:11.280,0:00:18.560
-no now we can hello
-
-0:00:15.120,0:00:21.680
-hello morning good morning
-
-0:00:18.560,0:00:25.039
-good morning all right so looks like
-
-0:00:21.680,0:00:28.240
-um you can hear me let's see if the um
-
-0:00:25.039,0:00:28.880
-stream can hear me can someone in Emacs
-
-0:00:28.240,0:00:32.000
-con
-
-0:00:28.880,0:00:35.920
-confirm that they can hear me as well
-
-0:00:32.000,0:00:39.520
-yes awesome yep apparently they can
-
-0:00:35.920,0:00:42.399
-awesome okay great um
-
-0:00:39.520,0:00:42.719
-alrighty let's get started do you guys
-
-0:00:42.399,0:00:45.840
-wanna
-
-0:00:42.719,0:00:48.160
-go ahead with the opening sure
-
-0:00:45.840,0:00:50.160
-sasha do you want to start okay hello
-
-0:00:48.160,0:00:51.920
-and welcome to the second day of Emacs
-
-0:00:50.160,0:00:54.719
-con 2020
-
-0:00:51.920,0:00:55.520
-and you could we've got a whole lot of
-
-0:00:54.719,0:00:57.600
-uh
-
-0:00:55.520,0:00:59.840
-of development talks and coding related
-
-0:00:57.600,0:01:02.160
-talks scheduled for today so you can
-
-0:00:59.840,0:01:04.559
-do a quick scan of the schedule again
-
-0:01:02.160,0:01:07.200
-all the times are very approximate
-
-0:01:04.559,0:01:08.320
-so if you happen to be earlier late for
-
-0:01:07.200,0:01:11.600
-something that you wanted to
-
-0:01:08.320,0:01:12.240
-see we'll figure it out uh we've got um
-
-0:01:11.600,0:01:14.560
-we've got
-
-0:01:12.240,0:01:15.439
-talks about the Emacs development itself
-
-0:01:14.560,0:01:18.799
-as well as
-
-0:01:15.439,0:01:19.439
-developing with Emacs uh and a couple of
-
-0:01:18.799,0:01:21.200
-things that
-
-0:01:19.439,0:01:22.960
-were more user talks but got moved to
-
-0:01:21.200,0:01:24.080
-the second day for timing reasons
-
-0:01:22.960,0:01:25.759
-because there's so much stuff on the
-
-0:01:24.080,0:01:27.280
-first day
-
-0:01:25.759,0:01:29.119
-that's uh that's our quick schedule
-
-0:01:27.280,0:01:31.680
-overview the schedule page has more
-
-0:01:29.119,0:01:32.479
-of course now how do you actually do all
-
-0:01:31.680,0:01:35.680
-that uh
-
-0:01:32.479,0:01:37.119
-leo you want to tell them yep so as
-
-0:01:35.680,0:01:38.320
-yesterday if you want to participate
-
-0:01:37.119,0:01:40.159
-well I suppose you're
-
-0:01:38.320,0:01:41.600
-watching the stream right now so I won't
-
-0:01:40.159,0:01:42.399
-go into detail as far as this is
-
-0:01:41.600,0:01:44.079
-concerned
-
-0:01:42.399,0:01:46.000
-but for the questions and for taking
-
-0:01:44.079,0:01:47.840
-notes we are using an after pad
-
-0:01:46.000,0:01:49.360
-where basically you just go onto the
-
-0:01:47.840,0:01:51.439
-page and you add your questions
-
-0:01:49.360,0:01:53.040
-under the topic which is being discussed
-
-0:01:51.439,0:01:54.560
-at the moment so I'm sure the people
-
-0:01:53.040,0:01:55.840
-will be putting the legs back in the
-
-0:01:54.560,0:01:57.280
-chat I'm just going to do this real
-
-0:01:55.840,0:02:00.880
-quick
-
-0:01:57.280,0:02:04.000
-there we go so now it's in the chat sir
-
-0:02:00.880,0:02:04.399
-we have on isc three rooms that you can
-
-0:02:04.000,0:02:05.840
-use
-
-0:02:04.399,0:02:07.439
-if you want to get in touch with us
-
-0:02:05.840,0:02:08.959
-first if you want to discuss whatever is
-
-0:02:07.439,0:02:09.679
-going on during this stream you can go
-
-0:02:08.959,0:02:12.560
-on
-
-0:02:09.679,0:02:13.760
-imax cont okay and that's where most of
-
-0:02:12.560,0:02:16.319
-the discussion happens
-
-0:02:13.760,0:02:18.239
-we also have #emacsconf-accessible
-
-0:02:16.319,0:02:19.920
-for the people who either can't see or
-
-0:02:18.239,0:02:21.520
-can't hear and you know they
-
-0:02:19.920,0:02:22.720
-we have lovely volunteers who have been
-
-0:02:21.520,0:02:23.680
-describing what has been going on
-
-0:02:22.720,0:02:25.599
-yesterday
-
-0:02:23.680,0:02:27.760
-uh and we really thank you for this
-
-0:02:25.599,0:02:29.760
-because it's really great for getting
-
-0:02:27.760,0:02:31.120
-you know more people giving the chance
-
-0:02:29.760,0:02:32.800
-to more people to follow the conference
-
-0:02:31.120,0:02:34.080
-so thank you so much for this
-
-0:02:32.800,0:02:36.640
-and also if you want to get in touch
-
-0:02:34.080,0:02:38.640
-with us the organizers either if you are
-
-0:02:36.640,0:02:40.319
-a speaker or if you have anything that
-
-0:02:38.640,0:02:42.400
-you'd like us to know about
-
-0:02:40.319,0:02:43.840
-something like a streaming problem or
-
-0:02:42.400,0:02:45.599
-audio problem or anything along those
-
-0:02:43.840,0:02:46.959
-lines you know
-
-0:02:45.599,0:02:48.480
-maybe other programs actually keep them
-
-0:02:46.959,0:02:49.280
-in imax conf we are looking at both
-
-0:02:48.480,0:02:52.160
-charts anyway
-
-0:02:49.280,0:02:52.560
-but to get in touch Emacsconf that oh
-
-0:02:52.160,0:02:56.480
-sorry
-
-0:02:52.560,0:02:57.120
-dash.org and also we had I don't believe
-
-0:02:56.480,0:02:58.720
-we have
-
-0:02:57.120,0:03:00.560
-we had all that much of this yesterday
-
-0:02:58.720,0:03:01.680
-but if you would like to continue the
-
-0:03:00.560,0:03:03.920
-discussion
-
-0:03:01.680,0:03:05.360
-with some of the speakers like you had a
-
-0:03:03.920,0:03:07.120
-topic that you really liked and you'd
-
-0:03:05.360,0:03:10.159
-like to continue talking with them
-
-0:03:07.120,0:03:11.120
-well we invite you to go on jitsi and to
-
-0:03:10.159,0:03:13.040
-create a room
-
-0:03:11.120,0:03:15.280
-uh all together and to have a direct
-
-0:03:13.040,0:03:17.280
-direct chat with the speaker
-
-0:03:15.280,0:03:18.560
-or whichever people might be interested
-
-0:03:17.280,0:03:20.640
-in the topic as well
-
-0:03:18.560,0:03:21.760
-okay I believe that's me I'm not sure to
-
-0:03:20.640,0:03:23.360
-whom I'm handing
-
-0:03:21.760,0:03:26.080
-the rest of the presentation is it to
-
-0:03:23.360,0:03:29.760
-you I mean um yeah sure I can take it
-
-0:03:26.080,0:03:32.480
-um all right so hello everyone welcome
-
-0:03:29.760,0:03:33.840
-to the second day of ux comp 2020 um
-
-0:03:32.480,0:03:35.360
-thank you for being here
-
-0:03:33.840,0:03:36.799
-today and for those of you who were
-
-0:03:35.360,0:03:38.239
-around yesterday thank you for being
-
-0:03:36.799,0:03:40.959
-around yesterday as well
-
-0:03:38.239,0:03:42.400
-um it was an awesome day and you know
-
-0:03:40.959,0:03:44.400
-like leo and sasha said
-
-0:03:42.400,0:03:46.560
-today I think is also very much gonna be
-
-0:03:44.400,0:03:49.040
-another awesome day of great talks
-
-0:03:46.560,0:03:49.760
-um yeah so I'm very much looking forward
-
-0:03:49.040,0:03:53.040
-to it
-
-0:03:49.760,0:03:56.560
-um so yeah the schedule is up um
-
-0:03:53.040,0:03:57.760
-at emacsconf.org/2020/schedule you
-
-0:03:56.560,0:04:00.959
-gotta scroll down
-
-0:03:57.760,0:04:02.640
-to the second day uh let's see people
-
-0:04:00.959,0:04:05.840
-tell me that my mic is quiet
-
-0:04:02.640,0:04:09.120
-um I guess I can on the stream
-
-0:04:05.840,0:04:09.599
-um I think so yeah let me double check
-
-0:04:09.120,0:04:12.720
-this
-
-0:04:09.599,0:04:14.959
-real quick okay I can also try
-
-0:04:12.720,0:04:17.360
-um like increasing the volume here a
-
-0:04:14.959,0:04:17.360
-little bit
-
-0:04:17.919,0:04:21.440
-okay it doesn't sound all that quiet to
-
-0:04:20.000,0:04:23.840
-me just because we are
-
-0:04:21.440,0:04:24.479
-I'm being very familiar right now so the
-
-0:04:23.840,0:04:27.360
-volume
-
-0:04:24.479,0:04:28.479
-must be quite high compared to you no
-
-0:04:27.360,0:04:32.240
-yeah it's it's fine um
-
-0:04:28.479,0:04:35.919
-okay I think it's better now um anyways
-
-0:04:32.240,0:04:38.479
-let's see awesome yeah so yesterday
-
-0:04:35.919,0:04:40.800
-um you know so the setup that I'm using
-
-0:04:38.479,0:04:44.400
-this year for streaming the desktop
-
-0:04:40.800,0:04:47.919
-and the talks is that I use the um
-
-0:04:44.400,0:04:52.000
-script a a script by the fsf forks which
-
-0:04:47.919,0:04:54.400
-they also used for liquor planet
-
-0:04:52.000,0:04:56.240
-and so the thing with this script is
-
-0:04:54.400,0:04:57.040
-that it only takes one audio source by
-
-0:04:56.240,0:04:59.120
-default
-
-0:04:57.040,0:05:01.520
-and so I have that set to the desktop
-
-0:04:59.120,0:05:03.440
-audio so yesterday on the spot I had to
-
-0:05:01.520,0:05:05.199
-improvise to how to get my own audio on
-
-0:05:03.440,0:05:06.880
-the stream and I used mumbo
-
-0:05:05.199,0:05:08.720
-but then that added a delay which was
-
-0:05:06.880,0:05:10.720
-pretty annoying um
-
-0:05:08.720,0:05:13.120
-but today this morning I figured I could
-
-0:05:10.720,0:05:14.240
-use pulse audio's um monitor system to
-
-0:05:13.120,0:05:17.039
-add myself
-
-0:05:14.240,0:05:18.479
-um right on this machine um so that the
-
-0:05:17.039,0:05:19.840
-delay is shorter and
-
-0:05:18.479,0:05:21.759
-seems to be working well so I'm very
-
-0:05:19.840,0:05:24.080
-happy about that um
-
-0:05:21.759,0:05:24.960
-but anyways yeah so let's get on we have
-
-0:05:24.080,0:05:26.880
-the schedule
-
-0:05:24.960,0:05:28.479
-um I'm thanking again the free software
-
-0:05:26.880,0:05:31.680
-foundation tech team
-
-0:05:28.479,0:05:33.600
-um for um you know
-
-0:05:31.680,0:05:35.280
-uh allowing us to use this very big
-
-0:05:33.600,0:05:38.720
-button uh instance
-
-0:05:35.280,0:05:41.039
-um that uh you know for live talks um
-
-0:05:38.720,0:05:42.240
-let's see um I'd like to thank all the
-
-0:05:41.039,0:05:45.680
-volunteers once again
-
-0:05:42.240,0:05:48.240
-um you know uh bavin david bremner
-
-0:05:45.680,0:05:49.280
-david dave o'toole who's been specially
-
-0:05:48.240,0:05:51.360
-helping out a lot
-
-0:05:49.280,0:05:53.120
-in the e-max imax conf dash accessible
-
-0:05:51.360,0:05:54.800
-channel with describing what's going on
-
-0:05:53.120,0:05:58.000
-at any given moment
-
-0:05:54.800,0:06:01.039
-um of course corwin
-
-0:05:58.000,0:06:02.639
-carl boyd and um the two folks that
-
-0:06:01.039,0:06:04.080
-you're seeing right beside me right now
-
-0:06:02.639,0:06:06.479
-uh leon sasha
-
-0:06:04.080,0:06:08.240
-who's been doing so much this year um
-
-0:06:06.479,0:06:12.479
-thank you all very much
-
-0:06:08.240,0:06:15.440
-um yeah let's see oh and also of course
-
-0:06:12.479,0:06:15.840
-our wonderful speakers and audience um
-
-0:06:15.440,0:06:18.000
-which
-
-0:06:15.840,0:06:18.880
-are basically the main thing that this
-
-0:06:18.000,0:06:21.199
-conference
-
-0:06:18.880,0:06:23.280
-is about and is centered about us people
-
-0:06:21.199,0:06:25.360
-talking about their experiences
-
-0:06:23.280,0:06:26.880
-um sharing the things they've learned or
-
-0:06:25.360,0:06:29.840
-they find interesting and
-
-0:06:26.880,0:06:31.440
-for everyone to discussing in chat um
-
-0:06:29.840,0:06:33.759
-yeah so it's awesome
-
-0:06:31.440,0:06:34.880
-uh if you scroll down a little bit on
-
-0:06:33.759,0:06:37.600
-the page
-
-0:06:34.880,0:06:38.319
-um I just want to plug the mailing list
-
-0:06:37.600,0:06:40.639
-right
-
-0:06:38.319,0:06:41.919
-yeah so we have the emacsconf-discuss
-
-0:06:40.639,0:06:45.039
-mailing list
-
-0:06:41.919,0:06:47.600
-once again um which you know is
-
-0:06:45.039,0:06:48.240
-we use for discussions around the
-
-0:06:47.600,0:06:51.039
-conference
-
-0:06:48.240,0:06:52.479
-including announcements before and after
-
-0:06:51.039,0:06:55.520
-it's a fairly quiet list
-
-0:06:52.479,0:06:55.840
-um so if you do like to subscribe um you
-
-0:06:55.520,0:06:57.199
-know
-
-0:06:55.840,0:06:59.440
-you won't get bombarded with emails
-
-0:06:57.199,0:07:01.759
-really um
-
-0:06:59.440,0:07:02.880
-uh yeah so that's something to consider
-
-0:07:01.759,0:07:04.639
-um for example you know
-
-0:07:02.880,0:07:06.240
-after the conference we're gonna be
-
-0:07:04.639,0:07:07.759
-posting all the videos
-
-0:07:06.240,0:07:09.440
-and um that's where I'm gonna be
-
-0:07:07.759,0:07:12.880
-announcing it um at least
-
-0:07:09.440,0:07:15.680
-in in one place one of the places um
-
-0:07:12.880,0:07:16.720
-yeah and I'd also like to draw attention
-
-0:07:15.680,0:07:19.360
-to our
-
-0:07:16.720,0:07:21.199
-conduct guidelines at emacsconf.org
-
-0:07:19.360,0:07:23.120
-conduct
-
-0:07:21.199,0:07:25.599
-which is a series of guidelines and
-
-0:07:23.120,0:07:28.800
-suggestions to to help make the event
-
-0:07:25.599,0:07:30.000
-you know enjoyable and um you know an
-
-0:07:28.800,0:07:33.280
-awesome experience for everyone
-
-0:07:30.000,0:07:34.639
-involved um I think um so I wasn't
-
-0:07:33.280,0:07:36.160
-keeping a close eye on the chat
-
-0:07:34.639,0:07:36.880
-yesterday because it was super busy but
-
-0:07:36.160,0:07:38.479
-I think
-
-0:07:36.880,0:07:40.240
-uh in general you know everything was
-
-0:07:38.479,0:07:42.319
-going pretty well pretty smoothly
-
-0:07:40.240,0:07:44.319
-um so thank you so much everyone for
-
-0:07:42.319,0:07:46.879
-keeping these in mind
-
-0:07:44.319,0:07:48.479
-and um yeah that's it for me let's see
-
-0:07:46.879,0:07:50.800
-if lee or sasha would like to add
-
-0:07:48.479,0:07:50.800
-anything
-
-0:07:51.520,0:07:54.319
-no but if you're all good to go you've
-
-0:07:52.879,0:07:55.680
-said everything and we've said
-
-0:07:54.319,0:07:59.120
-everything
-
-0:07:55.680,0:08:02.000
-have a great day awesome yeah um
-
-0:07:59.120,0:08:03.280
-uh okay someone okay so dave is asking
-
-0:08:02.000,0:08:06.319
-what is the hallway track
-
-0:08:03.280,0:08:07.520
-uh slash on conference um do either of
-
-0:08:06.319,0:08:08.160
-you want to explain that or should I
-
-0:08:07.520,0:08:10.080
-take it
-
-0:08:08.160,0:08:12.400
-uh basically we're gonna have our hands
-
-0:08:10.080,0:08:14.080
-full keeping the keeping the main track
-
-0:08:12.400,0:08:15.360
-running but of course
-
-0:08:14.080,0:08:17.280
-people have all sorts of interesting
-
-0:08:15.360,0:08:18.879
-conversation ideas and sometimes it's
-
-0:08:17.280,0:08:20.960
-nice to do it in real time or with
-
-0:08:18.879,0:08:23.360
-shared screens or things like that
-
-0:08:20.960,0:08:24.639
-so if you're having a conversation and
-
-0:08:23.360,0:08:28.000
-you want to have
-
-0:08:24.639,0:08:31.039
-more of a webcam or screen sharing thing
-
-0:08:28.000,0:08:32.800
-to enrich that discussion feel free to
-
-0:08:31.039,0:08:35.360
-set up a web conference using any of
-
-0:08:32.800,0:08:36.880
-your okay
-
-0:08:35.360,0:08:38.880
-can you do time in practice later all
-
-0:08:36.880,0:08:41.760
-right feel free to
-
-0:08:38.880,0:08:43.120
-set up your own conference c type web
-
-0:08:41.760,0:08:46.080
-conference thingy
-
-0:08:43.120,0:08:47.279
-and um and go find the people who are
-
-0:08:46.080,0:08:49.839
-interested in the same thing
-
-0:08:47.279,0:08:50.480
-and I'll do all that stuff right
-
-0:08:49.839,0:08:53.120
-absolutely
-
-0:08:50.480,0:08:53.760
-thanks sasha yeah so basically the idea
-
-0:08:53.120,0:08:55.360
-is that
-
-0:08:53.760,0:08:58.080
-so you know because of the limited time
-
-0:08:55.360,0:09:00.720
-we kind of have to um keep moving along
-
-0:08:58.080,0:09:02.240
-uh from one talk to the next and you
-
-0:09:00.720,0:09:04.080
-know sometimes there's a lot of awesome
-
-0:09:02.240,0:09:05.760
-questions or discussions going on
-
-0:09:04.080,0:09:08.240
-from for example you know in Emacs con
-
-0:09:05.760,0:09:11.440
-for like for the questions on the pad
-
-0:09:08.240,0:09:12.160
-um yeah so the I guess hallway track or
-
-0:09:11.440,0:09:15.360
-unconference
-
-0:09:12.160,0:09:16.160
-is basically a suggestion for those who
-
-0:09:15.360,0:09:19.120
-are interested
-
-0:09:16.160,0:09:21.120
-to for example set up a jutsu meet room
-
-0:09:19.120,0:09:23.519
-and then you know I'll go join there
-
-0:09:21.120,0:09:25.279
-and discuss the talk if you know if the
-
-0:09:23.519,0:09:26.240
-speaker can join after their talk
-
-0:09:25.279,0:09:29.519
-wonderful
-
-0:09:26.240,0:09:31.519
-um but if not even um you know if if
-
-0:09:29.519,0:09:34.000
-only like you know the audience and
-
-0:09:31.519,0:09:35.760
-folks you know from the emax campfire c
-
-0:09:34.000,0:09:37.279
-would like to join and discuss that
-
-0:09:35.760,0:09:40.320
-definitely works too
-
-0:09:37.279,0:09:42.000
-um yeah that's it um
-
-0:09:40.320,0:09:44.560
-I think oh one other thing that we I
-
-0:09:42.000,0:09:46.560
-guess wanted to mention possibly is that
-
-0:09:44.560,0:09:48.640
-um yesterday I think I noticed that a
-
-0:09:46.560,0:09:52.240
-lot of the questions were getting added
-
-0:09:48.640,0:09:54.560
-um like top to bottom on the pad but um
-
-0:09:52.240,0:09:56.000
-I think the suggestion is to put them
-
-0:09:54.560,0:09:58.000
-like stack them up so like
-
-0:09:56.000,0:09:59.360
-um add new at the new questions on the
-
-0:09:58.000,0:10:01.600
-top um
-
-0:09:59.360,0:10:03.120
-that might make it easier both for you
-
-0:10:01.600,0:10:05.760
-know the people
-
-0:10:03.120,0:10:07.120
-to who are typing the questions um but
-
-0:10:05.760,0:10:09.519
-also for the speaker to
-
-0:10:07.120,0:10:10.720
-sort of have a fixed I guess um point
-
-0:10:09.519,0:10:11.760
-where they're looking at for new
-
-0:10:10.720,0:10:13.839
-questions
-
-0:10:11.760,0:10:15.200
-um so don't put your questions under
-
-0:10:13.839,0:10:17.760
-somebody else's question
-
-0:10:15.200,0:10:18.640
-put it at that top level sort of you
-
-0:10:17.760,0:10:21.519
-know thing
-
-0:10:18.640,0:10:23.040
-right get your own bullet points yeah
-
-0:10:21.519,0:10:24.480
-and on the same topic yesterday some
-
-0:10:23.040,0:10:26.959
-people were a little scared
-
-0:10:24.480,0:10:27.839
-when all the colors were removed it was
-
-0:10:26.959,0:10:29.839
-me basically
-
-0:10:27.839,0:10:31.680
-in order to help the speakers know which
-
-0:10:29.839,0:10:33.680
-is the section that should be looking at
-
-0:10:31.680,0:10:35.200
-at the start of every presentation what
-
-0:10:33.680,0:10:35.760
-I will do is that I will wipe all the
-
-0:10:35.200,0:10:38.480
-colors
-
-0:10:35.760,0:10:39.360
-so all the attributions of modifications
-
-0:10:38.480,0:10:41.600
-to authors
-
-0:10:39.360,0:10:43.200
-so that the streamer sorry the speaker
-
-0:10:41.600,0:10:44.480
-has a little easier time finding their
-
-0:10:43.200,0:10:47.200
-talk in the list
-
-0:10:44.480,0:10:48.560
-right yeah so yeah for for speakers just
-
-0:10:47.200,0:10:49.360
-keep scrolling down until you hit a
-
-0:10:48.560,0:10:52.079
-colorful
-
-0:10:49.360,0:10:52.640
-colorful section um with the author
-
-0:10:52.079,0:10:55.600
-colors
-
-0:10:52.640,0:10:57.200
-and um yeah double check that um that's
-
-0:10:55.600,0:11:00.560
-you know it is your talk
-
-0:10:57.200,0:11:04.240
-um yeah with that said I think that's
-
-0:11:00.560,0:11:07.760
-all of it for our opening remarks right
-
-0:11:04.240,0:11:12.320
-um okay awesome so in that case
-
-0:11:07.760,0:11:14.560
-um we will start queuing up the talks
-
-0:11:12.320,0:11:16.959
-next up right after this opening remark
-
-0:11:14.560,0:11:18.880
-we have Emacs development updates by
-
-0:11:16.959,0:11:20.240
-um one of the co-maintainers of Emacs
-
-0:11:18.880,0:11:24.320
-john weekley
-
-0:11:20.240,0:11:27.519
-um it is a pre-recording and um
-
-0:11:24.320,0:11:28.399
-I don't think john is awake yet because
-
-0:11:27.519,0:11:31.279
-of right he's
-
-0:11:28.399,0:11:31.839
-probably uh still asleep but um he will
-
-0:11:31.279,0:11:33.920
-be
-
-0:11:31.839,0:11:35.120
-um looking taking a look at the
-
-0:11:33.920,0:11:38.160
-questions on the pad
-
-0:11:35.120,0:11:40.160
-later on um so yeah please keep posting
-
-0:11:38.160,0:11:43.279
-your questions on the path for him to
-
-0:11:40.160,0:11:48.800
-later look and try to answer awesome
-
-0:11:43.279,0:11:48.800
-so see you guys in a bit
-
diff --git a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--42-closing-remarks-autogen.sbv b/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--42-closing-remarks-autogen.sbv
deleted file mode 100644
index 47e93ed1..00000000
--- a/2020/subtitles/emacsconf-2020--42-closing-remarks-autogen.sbv
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2904 +0,0 @@
-0:00:02.240,0:00:05.359
-all right
-
-0:00:03.120,0:00:06.399
-in the meantime while waiting for corwin
-
-0:00:05.359,0:00:08.960
-wow we did it
-
-0:00:06.399,0:00:08.960
-look at that
-
-0:00:09.599,0:00:14.960
-yeah it's I mean who would have thought
-
-0:00:12.799,0:00:17.279
-right
-
-0:00:14.960,0:00:18.640
-I mean I I surely didn't when we started
-
-0:00:17.279,0:00:20.560
-no knowing how
-
-0:00:18.640,0:00:22.000
-exhausted I was at the end of the first
-
-0:00:20.560,0:00:24.480
-day I would have imagined
-
-0:00:22.000,0:00:27.519
-to survive the second day of more of
-
-0:00:24.480,0:00:27.519
-this same nonsense
-
-0:00:29.279,0:00:35.200
-um yeah it's it's been fun
-
-0:00:32.320,0:00:36.880
-it's been a lot of work um especially
-
-0:00:35.200,0:00:39.680
-for you and sasha
-
-0:00:36.880,0:00:41.040
-but um you know it's it's incredible I'm
-
-0:00:39.680,0:00:43.520
-I'm very happy
-
-0:00:41.040,0:00:44.399
-that um you know we managed to pull
-
-0:00:43.520,0:00:46.960
-through
-
-0:00:44.399,0:00:48.800
-um you know for two days straight not
-
-0:00:46.960,0:00:52.320
-one day
-
-0:00:48.800,0:00:54.000
-yeah well hey we did try
-
-0:00:52.320,0:00:55.360
-well we actually did manage to accept
-
-0:00:54.000,0:00:57.360
-all the top proposals
-
-0:00:55.360,0:00:59.039
-so if you're thinking oh I could I could
-
-0:00:57.360,0:00:59.840
-give an even better talk than the ones I
-
-0:00:59.039,0:01:01.680
-heard today
-
-0:00:59.840,0:01:03.440
-or yesterday please send us a talk
-
-0:01:01.680,0:01:04.960
-proposal for next year
-
-0:01:03.440,0:01:06.720
-we might be able to fit it's all in but
-
-0:01:04.960,0:01:09.119
-we might have to declare an Emacs week I
-
-0:01:06.720,0:01:09.119
-don't know
-
-0:01:09.840,0:01:13.200
-yeah absolutely yeah it's it's funny
-
-0:01:12.799,0:01:15.360
-like
-
-0:01:13.200,0:01:16.880
-um I remember a little bit last year but
-
-0:01:15.360,0:01:19.439
-also this year we kind of
-
-0:01:16.880,0:01:20.960
-we're trying to set up um I guess sort
-
-0:01:19.439,0:01:23.200
-of a procedure for
-
-0:01:20.960,0:01:24.720
-accepting and rejecting talks but then
-
-0:01:23.200,0:01:27.680
-you know we have got the actual
-
-0:01:24.720,0:01:28.880
-submissions and oh my god so much
-
-0:01:27.680,0:01:30.799
-awesome stuff
-
-0:01:28.880,0:01:33.280
-um I mean I definitely wouldn't have
-
-0:01:30.799,0:01:33.280
-been a movie
-
-0:01:33.360,0:01:36.720
-how can you say not anything it's emad
-
-0:01:35.360,0:01:38.159
-so you just throw it all in
-
-0:01:36.720,0:01:40.640
-including the kitchen sink and then
-
-0:01:38.159,0:01:42.720
-we'll sort it all out later
-
-0:01:40.640,0:01:44.240
-so if you went through all this the
-
-0:01:42.720,0:01:46.079
-entire conference and you missed some
-
-0:01:44.240,0:01:46.640
-interesting talks because a we started
-
-0:01:46.079,0:01:48.240
-early
-
-0:01:46.640,0:01:50.399
-because you're very excited and didn't
-
-0:01:48.240,0:01:53.119
-need the technical you know buffer time
-
-0:01:50.399,0:01:54.159
-uh or b you really had to step away at
-
-0:01:53.119,0:01:55.840
-some point so you must
-
-0:01:54.159,0:01:58.960
-talk you really wanted to recordings
-
-0:01:55.840,0:02:02.320
-will eventually be available
-
-0:01:58.960,0:02:05.360
-yes absolutely um yeah I know
-
-0:02:02.320,0:02:06.000
-so many people asked in the chat um you
-
-0:02:05.360,0:02:08.000
-know
-
-0:02:06.000,0:02:09.200
-is did I already miss the stock or are
-
-0:02:08.000,0:02:12.319
-the pre-recordings up
-
-0:02:09.200,0:02:15.280
-um yeah so they're not up yet but
-
-0:02:12.319,0:02:16.400
-um you know especially with the
-
-0:02:15.280,0:02:18.560
-pre-recordings that
-
-0:02:16.400,0:02:19.920
-those are basically um ready to be
-
-0:02:18.560,0:02:22.879
-uploaded so
-
-0:02:19.920,0:02:23.760
-you know right after we finish this talk
-
-0:02:22.879,0:02:26.879
-um
-
-0:02:23.760,0:02:29.599
-I'm going to um start uploading them
-
-0:02:26.879,0:02:30.480
-um because you know those are just ready
-
-0:02:29.599,0:02:32.720
-we have them
-
-0:02:30.480,0:02:33.519
-and then for the ones that were only
-
-0:02:32.720,0:02:36.879
-live
-
-0:02:33.519,0:02:40.080
-also as well as the live q a sessions um
-
-0:02:36.879,0:02:43.440
-we will try to process them
-
-0:02:40.080,0:02:45.680
-and get those up as well yes after
-
-0:02:43.440,0:02:49.040
-you've had some sleep
-
-0:02:45.680,0:02:51.920
-yeah after after some rest um
-
-0:02:49.040,0:02:54.879
-yeah and I'm I'm just with us oh there
-
-0:02:51.920,0:02:54.879
-you go hey corbin
-
-0:02:55.040,0:02:58.959
-um yeah I don't think we have your sound
-
-0:02:57.280,0:03:03.440
-yet so double check that
-
-0:02:58.959,0:03:05.920
-but um hi how about now yes
-
-0:03:03.440,0:03:07.360
-um yeah I'm just seeing the chatbot go
-
-0:03:05.920,0:03:09.360
-by an EmacsConf and
-
-0:03:07.360,0:03:12.239
-everyone is being so nice um it's just
-
-0:03:09.360,0:03:14.159
-making me smile
-
-0:03:12.239,0:03:15.360
-okay people want a question section so
-
-0:03:14.159,0:03:17.599
-I'm gonna add a question
-
-0:03:15.360,0:03:18.720
-thing and people can throw in their
-
-0:03:17.599,0:03:22.159
-questions
-
-0:03:18.720,0:03:23.840
-somewhere just telling you if you want
-
-0:03:22.159,0:03:26.159
-three Emacs conference per year the
-
-0:03:23.840,0:03:28.159
-answer is no judging by the amount of
-
-0:03:26.159,0:03:28.959
-stress that we've accrued all together
-
-0:03:28.159,0:03:30.799
-today
-
-0:03:28.959,0:03:32.640
-we are not ready to do this three times
-
-0:03:30.799,0:03:34.480
-every year the answer is
-
-0:03:32.640,0:03:36.000
-you're welcome to organize it and we'll
-
-0:03:34.480,0:03:38.159
-happily share our notes
-
-0:03:36.000,0:03:39.040
-um and I will take a mention of it in my
-
-0:03:38.159,0:03:41.200
-Emacs news
-
-0:03:39.040,0:03:43.920
-so please feel free to go ahead and put
-
-0:03:41.200,0:03:46.959
-things together yourselves
-
-0:03:43.920,0:03:48.400
-yeah absolutely um you know for me I
-
-0:03:46.959,0:03:51.680
-think once a year is
-
-0:03:48.400,0:03:55.040
-quite enough but um if
-
-0:03:51.680,0:03:56.080
-go ahead oh however if I if today leaves
-
-0:03:55.040,0:03:58.720
-you wanting more
-
-0:03:56.080,0:04:00.000
-there are emax meetups and I think there
-
-0:03:58.720,0:04:02.239
-are a couple of a
-
-0:04:00.000,0:04:04.319
-couple of them coming up in december so
-
-0:04:02.239,0:04:06.560
-if you check back in my talk
-
-0:04:04.319,0:04:08.080
-for Emacs news highlights I've linked to
-
-0:04:06.560,0:04:09.760
-a couple that are coming up in the next
-
-0:04:08.080,0:04:12.000
-couple of weeks
-
-0:04:09.760,0:04:12.959
-nice yeah and I think zakariya mentioned
-
-0:04:12.000,0:04:15.920
-that um
-
-0:04:12.959,0:04:17.840
-he's either participating or he runs or
-
-0:04:15.920,0:04:19.120
-is one of the people that runs the Emacs
-
-0:04:17.840,0:04:22.079
-nyc meetup
-
-0:04:19.120,0:04:23.759
-um yeah so definitely check that out and
-
-0:04:22.079,0:04:24.639
-you know all the other ones that may be
-
-0:04:23.759,0:04:29.120
-out there
-
-0:04:24.639,0:04:32.160
-um yeah for sure uh
-
-0:04:29.120,0:04:34.720
-yeah so so I'll jump in on there
-
-0:04:32.160,0:04:36.000
-on that point too I I have a lot of
-
-0:04:34.720,0:04:39.840
-energy for
-
-0:04:36.000,0:04:43.440
-um for helping people get together um
-
-0:04:39.840,0:04:46.880
-adam uh uh from melpa
-
-0:04:43.440,0:04:48.880
-suggested uh I should do some twitch
-
-0:04:46.880,0:04:50.320
-stuff I'll probably try that I have put
-
-0:04:48.880,0:04:51.360
-a couple things out there and even a few
-
-0:04:50.320,0:04:53.919
-people came by
-
-0:04:51.360,0:04:54.840
-so I I think I would agree the interest
-
-0:04:53.919,0:04:57.600
-is there
-
-0:04:54.840,0:04:59.120
-and I definitely would love to spend
-
-0:04:57.600,0:05:00.000
-that time talking to people that want to
-
-0:04:59.120,0:05:01.759
-organize
-
-0:05:00.000,0:05:04.160
-as well as people that are interested in
-
-0:05:01.759,0:05:07.120
-just learning to use Emacs as an editor
-
-0:05:04.160,0:05:08.880
-I think it's um I think it's a fantastic
-
-0:05:07.120,0:05:10.560
-journey speaking for myself as somebody
-
-0:05:08.880,0:05:12.080
-that um I don't
-
-0:05:10.560,0:05:13.759
-always have the right keystrokes right
-
-0:05:12.080,0:05:16.160
-at hand sometimes yeah
-
-0:05:13.759,0:05:17.840
-my mentor in in computer programming is
-
-0:05:16.160,0:05:21.440
-david dyer bennett and
-
-0:05:17.840,0:05:24.800
-um I started uh apprenticing with him
-
-0:05:21.440,0:05:28.160
-as when he was a freelancer um
-
-0:05:24.800,0:05:31.919
-many decades ago now and
-
-0:05:28.160,0:05:33.440
-you know he has a mantra that is uh
-
-0:05:31.919,0:05:35.280
-you know I can do that in about five
-
-0:05:33.440,0:05:37.840
-minutes if it's
-
-0:05:35.280,0:05:39.919
-the right five minutes and and that's
-
-0:05:37.840,0:05:43.360
-kind of the story of my life
-
-0:05:39.919,0:05:45.759
-um and Emacs is just a tool to
-
-0:05:43.360,0:05:46.560
-get the right five minutes more often no
-
-0:05:45.759,0:05:48.720
-matter
-
-0:05:46.560,0:05:49.600
-you know how can how cooperative the
-
-0:05:48.720,0:05:52.400
-fingers are
-
-0:05:49.600,0:05:52.800
-or or whether the ideas are free-flowing
-
-0:05:52.400,0:05:55.680
-you know
-
-0:05:52.800,0:05:56.800
-and getting that right environment is a
-
-0:05:55.680,0:05:58.720
-lot of things for a lot of different
-
-0:05:56.800,0:06:00.639
-people a lot of things to us on a
-
-0:05:58.720,0:06:04.080
-different day
-
-0:06:00.639,0:06:08.400
-um so yeah I have a ton of energy
-
-0:06:04.080,0:06:11.919
-around you know hey let's talk more
-
-0:06:08.400,0:06:14.560
-absolutely um yes so
-
-0:06:11.919,0:06:15.600
-you know I think we are everyone's
-
-0:06:14.560,0:06:18.080
-pretty energetic
-
-0:06:15.600,0:06:18.639
-oh before I forget I know I will forget
-
-0:06:18.080,0:06:20.800
-um
-
-0:06:18.639,0:06:22.400
-to speakers uh those of you who are
-
-0:06:20.800,0:06:24.720
-still watching right now
-
-0:06:22.400,0:06:26.240
-um I would very much appreciate it if
-
-0:06:24.720,0:06:27.520
-you could send us you know
-
-0:06:26.240,0:06:29.919
-any of the materials you know for
-
-0:06:27.520,0:06:31.600
-example the slides or any links and
-
-0:06:29.919,0:06:34.880
-resources to us
-
-0:06:31.600,0:06:38.240
-so we could add them to to the
-
-0:06:34.880,0:06:38.240
-EmacsConf wiki
-
-0:06:38.880,0:06:43.759
-or you can add them directly yourself if
-
-0:06:41.840,0:06:46.400
-you go to Emacsconf.org
-
-0:06:43.759,0:06:47.120
-edit there's instructions for basically
-
-0:06:46.400,0:06:50.800
-anyone
-
-0:06:47.120,0:06:54.000
-to edit the wiki if they like to um
-
-0:06:50.800,0:06:57.039
-yes so now uh back to getting
-
-0:06:54.000,0:06:58.800
-uh getting back to corwin's point um and
-
-0:06:57.039,0:07:01.520
-also what sasha mentioned
-
-0:06:58.800,0:07:02.800
-so um you know maybe one EmacsConf
-
-0:07:01.520,0:07:06.319
-might be enough
-
-0:07:02.800,0:07:09.840
-um for us for one year or for me but
-
-0:07:06.319,0:07:14.160
-um in terms of Emacs related events
-
-0:07:09.840,0:07:17.360
-um so this this conference was
-
-0:07:14.160,0:07:20.960
-uh is like you know mainly about Emacs
-
-0:07:17.360,0:07:22.319
-um but it's also in my opinion a
-
-0:07:20.960,0:07:24.160
-showcase of
-
-0:07:22.319,0:07:27.440
-um just how much you can do with free
-
-0:07:24.160,0:07:30.800
-software Emacs itself is free software
-
-0:07:27.440,0:07:34.400
-but um also all the tools that we used
-
-0:07:30.800,0:07:37.759
-um these two days for like uh streaming
-
-0:07:34.400,0:07:39.840
-for you know playing back to videos um
-
-0:07:37.759,0:07:41.440
-yeah it's all free software and anyone
-
-0:07:39.840,0:07:43.840
-can use and improve them
-
-0:07:41.440,0:07:45.440
-so um one thing that I wanted to put out
-
-0:07:43.840,0:07:48.960
-there before I forget
-
-0:07:45.440,0:07:50.000
-is that um so we have these couple of
-
-0:07:48.960,0:07:52.960
-servers set up
-
-0:07:50.000,0:07:54.639
-for streaming for imax conf and I would
-
-0:07:52.960,0:07:59.039
-be very much happy to
-
-0:07:54.639,0:08:00.319
-um help any other group basically
-
-0:07:59.039,0:08:03.199
-you know look into using our
-
-0:08:00.319,0:08:06.720
-infrastructure for
-
-0:08:03.199,0:08:09.360
-doing their own live event using only
-
-0:08:06.720,0:08:10.080
-free software so if you are interested
-
-0:08:09.360,0:08:12.639
-in that
-
-0:08:10.080,0:08:14.879
-please feel free to ping me either in
-
-0:08:12.639,0:08:17.840
-the max conf channel on freenode
-
-0:08:14.879,0:08:18.720
-um where my nick is bandali or just
-
-0:08:17.840,0:08:21.440
-email me at
-
-0:08:18.720,0:08:22.800
-bandeli gnu.org um I would be happy to
-
-0:08:21.440,0:08:27.840
-help you with that
-
-0:08:22.800,0:08:27.840
-um yeah I'll defer to others
-
-0:08:29.199,0:08:33.599
-we'll jump in and jump in there george I
-
-0:08:31.440,0:08:33.599
-mean
-
-0:08:34.080,0:08:37.839
-it's okay you've been you've been quiet
-
-0:08:35.760,0:08:39.279
-for too long now I I have this I have to
-
-0:08:37.839,0:08:40.640
-pick on people when there's more than
-
-0:08:39.279,0:08:42.000
-three people in a group
-
-0:08:40.640,0:08:44.000
-you know somehow that's the point of
-
-0:08:42.000,0:08:47.920
-wait I'm afraid somebody gets shy
-
-0:08:44.000,0:08:51.440
-and when it's not me I I you know
-
-0:08:47.920,0:08:54.080
-um so you know I I
-
-0:08:51.440,0:08:55.360
-uh yeah I can't thank you enough for the
-
-0:08:54.080,0:08:57.040
-for all you've done I mean I have a
-
-0:08:55.360,0:08:58.320
-whole list of thank yous here that I
-
-0:08:57.040,0:09:01.360
-could just start reading
-
-0:08:58.320,0:09:02.880
-uh but but they you know they start with
-
-0:09:01.360,0:09:04.480
-you and that was the abbreviated list I
-
-0:09:02.880,0:09:05.200
-gave at the beginning of the first talk
-
-0:09:04.480,0:09:06.800
-right
-
-0:09:05.200,0:09:08.399
-I just appreciate the sense of
-
-0:09:06.800,0:09:12.320
-encouragement and
-
-0:09:08.399,0:09:15.519
-openness that you bring to it I think
-
-0:09:12.320,0:09:17.120
-you know we share uh
-
-0:09:15.519,0:09:19.279
-taking inspiration from a lot of people
-
-0:09:17.120,0:09:20.800
-in the community and want to give that
-
-0:09:19.279,0:09:21.440
-back and that's a great thing to have in
-
-0:09:20.800,0:09:24.880
-common
-
-0:09:21.440,0:09:27.920
-around any any volunteer
-
-0:09:24.880,0:09:29.040
-thank you it's a it's a pleasure um to
-
-0:09:27.920,0:09:31.920
-be part of this
-
-0:09:29.040,0:09:33.600
-awesome community around Emacs um this
-
-0:09:31.920,0:09:36.800
-piece of free software that has been
-
-0:09:33.600,0:09:38.720
-around for more than 40 years as
-
-0:09:36.800,0:09:41.440
-impressive as that is I think more
-
-0:09:38.720,0:09:44.720
-impressive is a community around it
-
-0:09:41.440,0:09:51.839
-and all the people people around it
-
-0:09:44.720,0:09:51.839
-um yeah definitely
-
-0:09:52.640,0:09:56.240
-sorry I'm just smiling because I've
-
-0:09:54.560,0:09:57.760
-managed to catch a glimpse of the first
-
-0:09:56.240,0:10:00.560
-question that we have
-
-0:09:57.760,0:10:02.560
-and I'm trying to suit myself literally
-
-0:10:00.560,0:10:04.640
-to know how to answer this question
-
-0:10:02.560,0:10:08.160
-and I'm not exactly sure how to do this
-
-0:10:04.640,0:10:08.160
-to the best of my ability so
-
-0:10:11.040,0:10:14.240
-I don't know I think this at this point
-
-0:10:12.880,0:10:15.680
-we would like to remind all of our
-
-0:10:14.240,0:10:18.800
-viewers of the
-
-0:10:15.680,0:10:22.800
-conduct guidelines
-
-0:10:18.800,0:10:24.959
-try not to objectify our speakers
-
-0:10:22.800,0:10:25.920
-yeah that's a generally good point to
-
-0:10:24.959,0:10:29.680
-remember
-
-0:10:25.920,0:10:31.680
-um even in the closing remarks
-
-0:10:29.680,0:10:34.000
-because that's that's a thing I do and I
-
-0:10:31.680,0:10:34.320
-just wa I want to go on record saying I
-
-0:10:34.000,0:10:36.399
-am
-
-0:10:34.320,0:10:38.880
-ready to take it on any live stream any
-
-0:10:36.399,0:10:40.720
-day of the week please call me on that
-
-0:10:38.880,0:10:42.320
-it's always you it's always a new
-
-0:10:40.720,0:10:44.399
-experience for somebody
-
-0:10:42.320,0:10:46.160
-I've definitely been across lines that
-
-0:10:44.399,0:10:48.320
-embarrass me before and
-
-0:10:46.160,0:10:50.320
-I want to know about that thank you in
-
-0:10:48.320,0:10:52.800
-advance
-
-0:10:50.320,0:10:53.519
-okay so do you want to do like someone's
-
-0:10:52.800,0:10:55.760
-official
-
-0:10:53.519,0:10:56.560
-closing of people so closing up stuff
-
-0:10:55.760,0:10:58.000
-just in case
-
-0:10:56.560,0:10:59.839
-people want to know what the next steps
-
-0:10:58.000,0:11:02.800
-are and then we can do all the fun
-
-0:10:59.839,0:11:06.880
-questions and hanging out thing
-
-0:11:02.800,0:11:06.880
-okay um right so yeah
-
-0:11:07.040,0:11:11.279
-okay following up um emax meetups and
-
-0:11:09.680,0:11:12.640
-mention those uh if you want to keep
-
-0:11:11.279,0:11:14.079
-connecting with people you can do that
-
-0:11:12.640,0:11:16.240
-throughout the year
-
-0:11:14.079,0:11:18.399
-we'll figure out some kind of like list
-
-0:11:16.240,0:11:19.600
-on Emacs wiki or whatever that will list
-
-0:11:18.399,0:11:21.839
-the different meetups or you can just
-
-0:11:19.600,0:11:23.360
-search for emats meetup in your area
-
-0:11:21.839,0:11:25.680
-but of course since many of them have
-
-0:11:23.360,0:11:27.600
-online meetups now um Emacs news will
-
-0:11:25.680,0:11:29.600
-mention those whenever people remember
-
-0:11:27.600,0:11:31.920
-to tell me in advance
-
-0:11:29.600,0:11:33.440
-um okay so Emacs meetups that's the
-
-0:11:31.920,0:11:36.160
-thing collaborative pad
-
-0:11:33.440,0:11:38.079
-the either pad isn't great there is a
-
-0:11:36.160,0:11:40.000
-meta discussion so if you want to add
-
-0:11:38.079,0:11:41.760
-things that worked well or make notes of
-
-0:11:40.000,0:11:42.560
-things that could work even better next
-
-0:11:41.760,0:11:44.880
-year
-
-0:11:42.560,0:11:46.720
-then write it while it's fresh we'll
-
-0:11:44.880,0:11:49.440
-make a copy and we'll post it
-
-0:11:46.720,0:11:50.160
-to the wiki somewhere like we did last
-
-0:11:49.440,0:11:52.000
-year
-
-0:11:50.160,0:11:53.680
-we can also copy and paste the links
-
-0:11:52.000,0:11:56.079
-from the individual sections
-
-0:11:53.680,0:11:58.240
-into top pages so you can follow the
-
-0:11:56.079,0:12:00.240
-links from there
-
-0:11:58.240,0:12:01.680
-and if you spoke at a conference and you
-
-0:12:00.240,0:12:02.880
-would like to make it easier for people
-
-0:12:01.680,0:12:04.560
-to follow up with you
-
-0:12:02.880,0:12:06.079
-please let us know your follow-up
-
-0:12:04.560,0:12:07.040
-information and we can add it to that
-
-0:12:06.079,0:12:09.600
-page also
-
-0:12:07.040,0:12:11.120
-or it's a wiki you can edit yourself if
-
-0:12:09.600,0:12:12.079
-you have questions when the videos
-
-0:12:11.120,0:12:13.519
-finally come out
-
-0:12:12.079,0:12:15.360
-when you watch them after the videos
-
-0:12:13.519,0:12:17.120
-have come out then you can look at the
-
-0:12:15.360,0:12:20.000
-page for follow-up information
-
-0:12:17.120,0:12:22.000
-and subscribe to the mailing list low
-
-0:12:20.000,0:12:24.480
-traffic you can get updates like when we
-
-0:12:22.000,0:12:26.320
-release the photos I release the videos
-
-0:12:24.480,0:12:28.800
-and uh and they're ready for you to
-
-0:12:26.320,0:12:32.160
-check out so that's what I got for
-
-0:12:28.800,0:12:34.880
-next steps awesome
-
-0:12:32.160,0:12:35.680
-thank you sasha um do one of you guys
-
-0:12:34.880,0:12:39.760
-want to do
-
-0:12:35.680,0:12:42.800
-the um the thanks or should I do them
-
-0:12:39.760,0:12:44.480
-no read to you so good
-
-0:12:42.800,0:12:46.560
-I was gonna I was gonna say the same
-
-0:12:44.480,0:12:48.880
-thing you are so you go ahead
-
-0:12:46.560,0:12:48.880
-okay
-
-0:12:50.240,0:12:53.760
-thinking that that was an awesome thing
-
-0:12:51.920,0:12:56.079
-for for ramen to do if you would be
-
-0:12:53.760,0:12:56.079
-willing
-
-0:12:57.360,0:13:00.959
-yeah you're the lead organizer you get
-
-0:12:59.120,0:13:05.440
-stuck with other fun jobs
-
-0:13:00.959,0:13:07.360
-all the difficult stuff yeah
-
-0:13:05.440,0:13:08.720
-yeah you don't know dating upwards read
-
-0:13:07.360,0:13:12.320
-my crap if you don't want to
-
-0:13:08.720,0:13:14.959
-but um oh no that's
-
-0:13:12.320,0:13:16.399
-I definitely want to read that corbin um
-
-0:13:14.959,0:13:20.399
-yeah I'll pull it up
-
-0:13:16.399,0:13:23.279
-but um yeah before we get into that um
-
-0:13:20.399,0:13:25.040
-I want to read what we have here so uh
-
-0:13:23.279,0:13:26.079
-thank you very much to the free software
-
-0:13:25.040,0:13:29.040
-foundation
-
-0:13:26.079,0:13:29.600
-especially the tech team for lending us
-
-0:13:29.040,0:13:31.760
-allowing
-
-0:13:29.600,0:13:32.720
-us to use this very big blue button
-
-0:13:31.760,0:13:35.839
-instance
-
-0:13:32.720,0:13:38.000
-that we've used for live calls and um
-
-0:13:35.839,0:13:39.199
-live q a with so many of the speakers
-
-0:13:38.000,0:13:42.959
-this year
-
-0:13:39.199,0:13:43.760
-um thank you so much uh shout out to the
-
-0:13:42.959,0:13:47.040
-tech team
-
-0:13:43.760,0:13:50.240
-um especially reuben who does a lot
-
-0:13:47.040,0:13:53.199
-especially with big blue button um
-
-0:13:50.240,0:13:53.680
-and like streaming in general um but
-
-0:13:53.199,0:13:55.519
-also
-
-0:13:53.680,0:13:57.360
-the other members of the tech team like
-
-0:13:55.519,0:14:01.519
-ian andrew and michael
-
-0:13:57.360,0:14:05.920
-thank you all um next stop volunteers
-
-0:14:01.519,0:14:09.199
-bobbin david bremner uh dave o'toole for
-
-0:14:05.920,0:14:10.240
-taking um on basically writing
-
-0:14:09.199,0:14:15.279
-descriptive text
-
-0:14:10.240,0:14:18.480
-in our #emacsconf-accessible channel
-
-0:14:15.279,0:14:21.920
-along with uh joe corneli and
-
-0:14:18.480,0:14:25.199
-um sea bass or sea bass um
-
-0:14:21.920,0:14:27.950
-basically for transcribing talks
-
-0:14:25.199,0:14:29.120
-um in a way live um
-
-0:14:27.950,0:14:32.320
-[Music]
-
-0:14:29.120,0:14:35.600
-yes thank you to corwin of course
-
-0:14:32.320,0:14:35.920
-uh thank you to carl voight uh thank you
-
-0:14:35.600,0:14:39.519
-to
-
-0:14:35.920,0:14:42.639
-sasha and leo very much um
-
-0:14:39.519,0:14:44.240
-for all your hard work um this event
-
-0:14:42.639,0:14:45.680
-literally wouldn't have been possible
-
-0:14:44.240,0:14:49.279
-without all of your uh
-
-0:14:45.680,0:14:51.760
-guys's helps um so thank you
-
-0:14:49.279,0:14:52.639
-and as I told you in the chat you know
-
-0:14:51.760,0:14:54.800
-you would have been
-
-0:14:52.639,0:14:58.160
-really happy to one-man army the entire
-
-0:14:54.800,0:15:00.560
-thing if we hadn't been there so
-
-0:14:58.160,0:15:01.839
-I I don't know I may have been able to
-
-0:15:00.560,0:15:02.320
-but I definitely would have been happy
-
-0:15:01.839,0:15:05.760
-to
-
-0:15:02.320,0:15:07.600
-I'm much more happier this way so um
-
-0:15:05.760,0:15:09.519
-I guess it's the moment when we ask you
-
-0:15:07.600,0:15:12.560
-uh your energy level is it at
-
-0:15:09.519,0:15:13.120
-50 is it at 40 can you give us an
-
-0:15:12.560,0:15:16.399
-estimate
-
-0:15:13.120,0:15:19.120
-roughly um yeah which is what uh
-
-0:15:16.399,0:15:19.519
-corbin had mentioned um I think I'm at a
-
-0:15:19.120,0:15:22.320
-good
-
-0:15:19.519,0:15:23.040
-like 50 or 60 percent um it's just
-
-0:15:22.320,0:15:24.800
-blended
-
-0:15:23.040,0:15:27.199
-yeah definitely more than I can say last
-
-0:15:24.800,0:15:30.320
-for last year
-
-0:15:27.199,0:15:33.519
-but yes thank you um
-
-0:15:30.320,0:15:36.720
-thank you to um all of the
-
-0:15:33.519,0:15:39.279
-our awesome audience members um everyone
-
-0:15:36.720,0:15:42.880
-who participated in any way
-
-0:15:39.279,0:15:44.959
-in the conference also
-
-0:15:42.880,0:15:46.399
-of course a big thank you to all the
-
-0:15:44.959,0:15:48.720
-awesome speakers
-
-0:15:46.399,0:15:49.440
-for submitting all of these amazing
-
-0:15:48.720,0:15:52.320
-talks
-
-0:15:49.440,0:15:53.120
-um on a very wide range of topics from a
-
-0:15:52.320,0:15:56.160
-wide
-
-0:15:53.120,0:15:59.680
-range of backgrounds it was just awesome
-
-0:15:56.160,0:16:03.519
-thank you um and now corbin do you want
-
-0:15:59.680,0:16:03.519
-to read over your text or should I do it
-
-0:16:03.600,0:16:09.920
-it's entirely up to you I mean I
-
-0:16:07.759,0:16:11.759
-I would have to find it again but I will
-
-0:16:09.920,0:16:12.720
-I just have to bring the right Emacs to
-
-0:16:11.759,0:16:16.240
-the front here
-
-0:16:12.720,0:16:18.959
-my story of today yeah sure go forward
-
-0:16:16.240,0:16:20.480
-um I've already talked enough so I kind
-
-0:16:18.959,0:16:20.880
-of like the idea of putting words in
-
-0:16:20.480,0:16:23.600
-your mouth
-
-0:16:20.880,0:16:25.440
-honestly if you feel good saying go go
-
-0:16:23.600,0:16:27.759
-for it and that'll be good for me
-
-0:16:25.440,0:16:29.680
-or if we want to segue into random next
-
-0:16:27.759,0:16:30.720
-conversation I'm up for that too but I'm
-
-0:16:29.680,0:16:33.839
-conscious of
-
-0:16:30.720,0:16:35.600
-other people with uh um
-
-0:16:33.839,0:16:37.120
-young friends wandering about the house
-
-0:16:35.600,0:16:39.360
-and beginning to thump on things
-
-0:16:37.120,0:16:41.440
-I got it I probably didn't what have you
-
-0:16:39.360,0:16:44.399
-pasted me before
-
-0:16:41.440,0:16:44.800
-right that one is that what you wanted
-
-0:16:44.399,0:16:46.399
-yeah
-
-0:16:44.800,0:16:48.399
-I saw the question in there about
-
-0:16:46.399,0:16:50.320
-windows that's definitely a subject I'm
-
-0:16:48.399,0:16:51.519
-happy to talk about I think others on
-
-0:16:50.320,0:16:54.000
-the call have gotten
-
-0:16:51.519,0:16:55.600
-uh gotten some of that in in as part of
-
-0:16:54.000,0:16:58.800
-other conversations
-
-0:16:55.600,0:16:59.839
-um in brief summary it's kind of a
-
-0:16:58.800,0:17:03.040
-necessity thing
-
-0:16:59.839,0:17:06.160
-it's um
-
-0:17:03.040,0:17:09.280
-it's it's complicated you know it's but
-
-0:17:06.160,0:17:11.760
-I I guess I I can say uh
-
-0:17:09.280,0:17:13.280
-I'd ask you not to not to make free
-
-0:17:11.760,0:17:17.439
-software purity tests right
-
-0:17:13.280,0:17:19.839
-you know I um need windows right now
-
-0:17:17.439,0:17:33.840
-and so that has to be fine because I
-
-0:17:19.839,0:17:35.360
-want to be able to give back
-
-0:17:33.840,0:17:47.840
-I'm looking at it I had the wrong part
-
-0:17:35.360,0:17:47.840
-of the buffer open I think karen
-
-0:17:48.799,0:17:52.880
-let me briefly say um
-
-0:17:56.799,0:18:00.960
-we're using okay so I can I can talk
-
-0:17:58.559,0:18:04.320
-about crdt we experimented with it um
-
-0:18:00.960,0:18:07.039
-and I quite a bit and then eric and I
-
-0:18:04.320,0:18:08.880
-significantly further we uh messed up
-
-0:18:07.039,0:18:10.480
-some of our slides significantly getting
-
-0:18:08.880,0:18:12.080
-a little too ambitious with having
-
-0:18:10.480,0:18:14.400
-multiple people editing it
-
-0:18:12.080,0:18:15.360
-and letting everybody go to work on the
-
-0:18:14.400,0:18:17.919
-presentations
-
-0:18:15.360,0:18:19.679
-so we wasted we found many different
-
-0:18:17.919,0:18:21.360
-ways to use Emacs to waste time and
-
-0:18:19.679,0:18:23.840
-preparing for emax conf
-
-0:18:21.360,0:18:25.520
-but I'm pretty confident we have we have
-
-0:18:23.840,0:18:28.480
-all the good parts saved and
-
-0:18:25.520,0:18:28.880
-we'll just need to pull those together
-
-0:18:28.480,0:18:30.720
-uh
-
-0:18:28.880,0:18:33.600
-for you back into a single or more file
-
-0:18:30.720,0:18:36.000
-that we can put up with those videos
-
-0:18:33.600,0:18:37.919
-thanks again for bearing with us um
-
-0:18:36.000,0:18:43.840
-hopefully my point about
-
-0:18:37.919,0:18:43.840
-Emacs being there for you came across
-
-0:18:54.640,0:18:57.679
-oh yes I can scroll I can scroll back
-
-0:18:56.480,0:19:00.400
-down to your text if you like
-
-0:18:57.679,0:19:00.400
-okay here we go
-
-0:19:04.320,0:19:08.240
-uh we're figuring out carwin here's your
-
-0:19:06.559,0:19:10.080
-text
-
-0:19:08.240,0:19:11.600
-if you want to read it otherwise I'll be
-
-0:19:10.080,0:19:12.480
-plenty happy to read it if you want me
-
-0:19:11.600,0:19:15.919
-to
-
-0:19:12.480,0:19:18.400
-take it all right
-
-0:19:15.919,0:19:20.480
-obviously you had to ask the esl learner
-
-0:19:18.400,0:19:24.000
-so english as a second language to read
-
-0:19:20.480,0:19:28.960
-a chunk of text so thank you for this
-
-0:19:24.000,0:19:32.400
-all right okay so uh this is my call win
-
-0:19:28.960,0:19:35.440
-so Emacs is very very complicated
-
-0:19:32.400,0:19:37.200
-and using computer is hard with Emacs we
-
-0:19:35.440,0:19:40.160
-have an ideal opportunity to learn
-
-0:19:37.200,0:19:41.600
-from our errors to take on hard work
-
-0:19:40.160,0:19:44.160
-with diverse groups
-
-0:19:41.600,0:19:44.960
-and to effect lasting solutions to make
-
-0:19:44.160,0:19:47.600
-Emacs
-
-0:19:44.960,0:19:48.320
-and thereby any word of software thing
-
-0:19:47.600,0:19:50.799
-in practically
-
-0:19:48.320,0:19:52.320
-any human and spoken language easier to
-
-0:19:50.799,0:19:55.520
-learn and to use
-
-0:19:52.320,0:19:56.080
-forever life doesn't come with warning
-
-0:19:55.520,0:19:59.039
-labels
-
-0:19:56.080,0:20:00.799
-or margin notes we have a blank map and
-
-0:19:59.039,0:20:01.840
-an uncertain number of batteries for the
-
-0:20:00.799,0:20:04.159
-torch
-
-0:20:01.840,0:20:05.200
-but there's light in the darkness it's
-
-0:20:04.159,0:20:07.200
-freedom
-
-0:20:05.200,0:20:11.039
-it's the idea of giving to people
-
-0:20:07.200,0:20:11.039
-something that cannot be taken away
-
-0:20:12.240,0:20:15.440
-ultraman to say that that was very
-
-0:20:14.320,0:20:21.120
-beautiful uh
-
-0:20:15.440,0:20:25.760
-thank you corbin for writing that
-
-0:20:21.120,0:20:25.760
-okay so uh are there any questions
-
-0:20:26.960,0:20:29.760
-oh muted
-
-0:20:32.159,0:20:36.400
-I still can't I'm muted I think I'm
-
-0:20:34.240,0:20:40.559
-sorry
-
-0:20:36.400,0:20:43.120
-um what I said was thank you uh
-
-0:20:40.559,0:20:43.120
-just thanks
-
-0:20:45.600,0:20:49.760
-I just this community has really been
-
-0:20:48.640,0:20:52.640
-there for me it's
-
-0:20:49.760,0:20:52.640
-hard to learn and need
-
-0:20:56.080,0:21:00.000
-so yeah I keep laughing because I I see
-
-0:20:58.080,0:21:01.600
-things coming through the chat and I do
-
-0:21:00.000,0:21:02.960
-not know how to react visually
-
-0:21:01.600,0:21:04.640
-I'm not used to getting those types of
-
-0:21:02.960,0:21:08.000
-messages
-
-0:21:04.640,0:21:11.120
-it is very upsetting I don't know which
-
-0:21:08.000,0:21:13.120
-one to use I'm using my english as well
-
-0:21:11.120,0:21:14.320
-I'm intentionally not looking over there
-
-0:21:13.120,0:21:16.799
-because I'll just get dragged into
-
-0:21:14.320,0:21:18.080
-conversation and then this we will be on
-
-0:21:16.799,0:21:19.600
-live stream all night I don't know if
-
-0:21:18.080,0:21:21.679
-you know me at all in fact I
-
-0:21:19.600,0:21:24.080
-I my apologies you probably don't hi my
-
-0:21:21.679,0:21:27.039
-name is corwin I like to talk
-
-0:21:24.080,0:21:28.720
-I like to get you excited about ideas
-
-0:21:27.039,0:21:31.440
-that I think we agree about
-
-0:21:28.720,0:21:33.200
-so we can get somewhere solving an
-
-0:21:31.440,0:21:35.520
-important problem and there's a lot of
-
-0:21:33.200,0:21:37.840
-important problems in the world so
-
-0:21:35.520,0:21:39.600
-I have been living in a devil's paradise
-
-0:21:37.840,0:21:40.159
-throughout covet as people are sitting
-
-0:21:39.600,0:21:42.799
-at home
-
-0:21:40.159,0:21:44.480
-and really frustrated especially in the
-
-0:21:42.799,0:21:46.640
-united states where I live
-
-0:21:44.480,0:21:47.520
-about political and social justice
-
-0:21:46.640,0:21:49.760
-issues you
-
-0:21:47.520,0:21:50.799
-probably heard of the town where I live
-
-0:21:49.760,0:21:54.559
-recently
-
-0:21:50.799,0:21:58.000
-as a direct um
-
-0:21:54.559,0:22:02.400
-uh kind of crucible there right
-
-0:21:58.000,0:22:04.559
-um we are a troubled people
-
-0:22:02.400,0:22:06.320
-we're arguing about freedom it's to the
-
-0:22:04.559,0:22:07.280
-point where it's hard to put those words
-
-0:22:06.320,0:22:10.400
-down
-
-0:22:07.280,0:22:12.320
-without assuming people are gonna write
-
-0:22:10.400,0:22:15.600
-you off as a shyster
-
-0:22:12.320,0:22:16.640
-that's insanity we know exactly what
-
-0:22:15.600,0:22:20.480
-that means
-
-0:22:16.640,0:22:23.679
-especially in this community we uh
-
-0:22:20.480,0:22:26.640
-we're here because we want to
-
-0:22:23.679,0:22:27.200
-um because we want to make sure that
-
-0:22:26.640,0:22:29.280
-some
-
-0:22:27.200,0:22:30.880
-part of what the potential that
-
-0:22:29.280,0:22:32.880
-technology offers
-
-0:22:30.880,0:22:34.320
-is indelibly written out there that
-
-0:22:32.880,0:22:36.799
-nobody can take away
-
-0:22:34.320,0:22:38.240
-that's the bottom line on that that that
-
-0:22:36.799,0:22:40.240
-closing thought I mean that's where I'd
-
-0:22:38.240,0:22:41.919
-leave you at with Emacs conference
-
-0:22:40.240,0:22:43.280
-you want to make stuff that other people
-
-0:22:41.919,0:22:44.320
-can't take away because that's where
-
-0:22:43.280,0:22:47.120
-freedom
-
-0:22:44.320,0:22:47.120
-is hiding
-
-0:22:48.320,0:22:52.799
-thank you and I agree there is something
-
-0:22:51.360,0:22:55.039
-to be said about
-
-0:22:52.799,0:22:56.080
-um you know this idea of having some
-
-0:22:55.039,0:22:59.360
-piece of software
-
-0:22:56.080,0:23:01.679
-or an art form to um
-
-0:22:59.360,0:23:03.360
-setting it free to to live on
-
-0:23:01.679,0:23:04.400
-indefinitely into the future and for
-
-0:23:03.360,0:23:06.320
-everyone else
-
-0:23:04.400,0:23:07.600
-um and for people who may have not
-
-0:23:06.320,0:23:09.679
-already even been born
-
-0:23:07.600,0:23:11.280
-to you know at some point someday
-
-0:23:09.679,0:23:13.840
-discover it and
-
-0:23:11.280,0:23:15.039
-um you know start using it and making it
-
-0:23:13.840,0:23:18.880
-even better
-
-0:23:15.039,0:23:21.120
-um yeah so I think on that note
-
-0:23:18.880,0:23:23.039
-this might be a good note to conclude on
-
-0:23:21.120,0:23:24.720
-what you folks think
-
-0:23:23.039,0:23:26.640
-I always like to go around the room one
-
-0:23:24.720,0:23:28.240
-time but again I'll keep everybody on
-
-0:23:26.640,0:23:30.960
-the phone forever so don't
-
-0:23:28.240,0:23:31.860
-don't don't use my definitely I have to
-
-0:23:30.960,0:23:33.840
-be seconded
-
-0:23:31.860,0:23:38.000
-[Laughter]
-
-0:23:33.840,0:23:40.240
-okay um leo sasha
-
-0:23:38.000,0:23:41.760
-uh I was just wondering if we'd answered
-
-0:23:40.240,0:23:43.840
-as many questions as we could
-
-0:23:41.760,0:23:45.440
-from the people because I believe we've
-
-0:23:43.840,0:23:47.520
-answered some of them and sasha has been
-
-0:23:45.440,0:23:49.360
-kind enough to answer them in line
-
-0:23:47.520,0:23:50.960
-but maybe we wanted to take some of them
-
-0:23:49.360,0:23:52.080
-live especially some of the later ones
-
-0:23:50.960,0:23:54.320
-just to
-
-0:23:52.080,0:23:56.240
-send people off with a feeling that we
-
-0:23:54.320,0:23:58.640
-answered to the very last question that
-
-0:23:56.240,0:24:01.360
-they had
-
-0:23:58.640,0:24:03.360
-and until the sound over my head gets
-
-0:24:01.360,0:24:04.400
-too loud and I have to mute I'll be here
-
-0:24:03.360,0:24:07.039
-and then I'll uh
-
-0:24:04.400,0:24:09.840
-be here if I can convince the loud ones
-
-0:24:07.039,0:24:09.840
-to come watch with me
-
-0:24:10.799,0:24:14.559
-so it's really up to you I mean we I'm
-
-0:24:13.039,0:24:15.200
-the one crumbling right now you know I'm
-
-0:24:14.559,0:24:17.200
-just
-
-0:24:15.200,0:24:18.799
-it's pure showmanship that is keeping me
-
-0:24:17.200,0:24:21.120
-up right now the energy that I've been
-
-0:24:18.799,0:24:22.799
-accumulating over the last few days
-
-0:24:21.120,0:24:24.400
-but what's going to happen basically
-
-0:24:22.799,0:24:26.240
-when we finish this live stream
-
-0:24:24.400,0:24:27.840
-firstly I'm going to turn off this light
-
-0:24:26.240,0:24:30.000
-which has been blasting
-
-0:24:27.840,0:24:31.039
-a very white light in my eyes and up
-
-0:24:30.000,0:24:34.400
-until 11 pm
-
-0:24:31.039,0:24:37.120
-every single day you see this very comfy
-
-0:24:34.400,0:24:37.919
-uh you know so far what not I'm just
-
-0:24:37.120,0:24:42.240
-going to
-
-0:24:37.919,0:24:42.240
-crush on it right away so
-
-0:24:42.880,0:24:47.279
-that sounds like a good plan to me um
-
-0:24:45.440,0:24:50.159
-you know we've all worked hard
-
-0:24:47.279,0:24:51.360
-especially you all um and definitely
-
-0:24:50.159,0:24:54.640
-deserve some rest
-
-0:24:51.360,0:24:58.159
-to um you know rejuvenate our job
-
-0:24:54.640,0:25:01.279
-and get back into it again um
-
-0:24:58.159,0:25:03.520
-yeah sasha did you want to add anything
-
-0:25:01.279,0:25:03.520
-else
-
-0:25:05.919,0:25:10.880
-you just muted yourself yes you've just
-
-0:25:08.240,0:25:10.880
-muted yourself
-
-0:25:12.640,0:25:15.780
-uh yeah just answering questions at the
-
-0:25:14.799,0:25:17.039
-moment um
-
-0:25:15.780,0:25:18.400
-[Music]
-
-0:25:17.039,0:25:20.320
-at some point I will have to do two
-
-0:25:18.400,0:25:24.320
-things but in the meantime I can do
-
-0:25:20.320,0:25:24.320
-Emacs grown-up Emacs things wow
-
-0:25:25.520,0:25:28.799
-what are you saying grown-up Emacs but
-
-0:25:26.880,0:25:32.400
-we still had a talk by uh
-
-0:25:28.799,0:25:36.320
-someone today who was uh 17 I believe
-
-0:25:32.400,0:25:36.320
-so yeah I was very impressed by this
-
-0:25:36.480,0:25:40.320
-yeah it's awesome just seeing the wide
-
-0:25:39.039,0:25:43.600
-diversity and the wide
-
-0:25:40.320,0:25:45.200
-age range of people um just getting into
-
-0:25:43.600,0:25:48.240
-Emacs picking up
-
-0:25:45.200,0:25:49.840
-for all sorts of different things um
-
-0:25:48.240,0:25:51.440
-corbin and I had a bit of a chat about
-
-0:25:49.840,0:25:53.440
-this about this
-
-0:25:51.440,0:25:54.960
-piece of free software that is Emacs and
-
-0:25:53.440,0:25:58.320
-all the freedoms
-
-0:25:54.960,0:25:58.960
-freedoms that it grants us um but yeah
-
-0:25:58.320,0:26:02.080
-we could
-
-0:25:58.960,0:26:02.559
-go on forever and ever um yeah I really
-
-0:26:02.080,0:26:05.039
-can
-
-0:26:02.559,0:26:06.400
-and then and you know and it has to be
-
-0:26:05.039,0:26:07.440
-about getting something done and that's
-
-0:26:06.400,0:26:11.679
-where I think
-
-0:26:07.440,0:26:15.679
-sasha your work and organization is so
-
-0:26:11.679,0:26:18.799
-uh vital to us
-
-0:26:15.679,0:26:20.720
-we uh you know we have to direct that
-
-0:26:18.799,0:26:22.480
-energy into self-organizing
-
-0:26:20.720,0:26:24.159
-and and that's where I'd like probably
-
-0:26:22.480,0:26:26.159
-to focus my work
-
-0:26:24.159,0:26:27.200
-over the probably the next several years
-
-0:26:26.159,0:26:31.120
-is
-
-0:26:27.200,0:26:32.000
-um is is putting that thought and some
-
-0:26:31.120,0:26:34.720
-of the
-
-0:26:32.000,0:26:35.600
-uh some of the ideas that are built into
-
-0:26:34.720,0:26:37.200
-org mode and
-
-0:26:35.600,0:26:38.720
-in fact some of the implementation
-
-0:26:37.200,0:26:40.240
-that's built into org one and in fact
-
-0:26:38.720,0:26:43.440
-probably org mode
-
-0:26:40.240,0:26:46.159
-because hey there it is
-
-0:26:43.440,0:26:47.279
-to work on that yeah you should see all
-
-0:26:46.159,0:26:50.320
-the org scripts I wrote
-
-0:26:47.279,0:26:51.760
-so cool not that other people but anyway
-
-0:26:50.320,0:26:52.000
-we wrote this like fancy scheduling
-
-0:26:51.760,0:26:52.799
-thing
-
-0:26:52.000,0:26:55.360
-and you should check out the
-
-0:26:52.799,0:26:57.279
-submissions.org to to try to use it
-
-0:26:55.360,0:26:59.360
-because then if other people use it they
-
-0:26:57.279,0:27:00.720
-can improve it and then I get to use the
-
-0:26:59.360,0:27:04.159
-improvements next year
-
-0:27:00.720,0:27:06.159
-also erc ux irc clients awesome
-
-0:27:04.159,0:27:07.919
-so a lot of automation was a lot of fun
-
-0:27:06.159,0:27:10.400
-to work on absolutely
-
-0:27:07.919,0:27:11.440
-yeah sasha did a lot of cool automation
-
-0:27:10.400,0:27:13.200
-stuff this year
-
-0:27:11.440,0:27:15.039
-um you know around generating the
-
-0:27:13.200,0:27:17.200
-schedules and everything the pages in
-
-0:27:15.039,0:27:19.919
-the Emacs freaky with org mode
-
-0:27:17.200,0:27:21.039
-um and you know for the calls with uh
-
-0:27:19.919,0:27:24.159
-speakers
-
-0:27:21.039,0:27:26.720
-and coordinating in imaxcom.org
-
-0:27:24.159,0:27:27.600
-um or like you know updating the topics
-
-0:27:26.720,0:27:30.480
-all this stuff
-
-0:27:27.600,0:27:32.240
-she basically automated all of this um
-
-0:27:30.480,0:27:34.480
-which is definitely very impressive and
-
-0:27:32.240,0:27:37.600
-I know I'm gonna be looking into
-
-0:27:34.480,0:27:40.720
-um yeah definitely check out um
-
-0:27:37.600,0:27:43.360
-erc I'm a little biased um I
-
-0:27:40.720,0:27:44.320
-started sort of maintaining it a little
-
-0:27:43.360,0:27:47.760
-bit ago
-
-0:27:44.320,0:27:49.279
-but um it's been there forever and
-
-0:27:47.760,0:27:51.919
-you know I'm just following the
-
-0:27:49.279,0:27:53.120
-footsteps of giants or standing on their
-
-0:27:51.919,0:27:56.640
-shoulders
-
-0:27:53.120,0:27:59.919
-so definitely check it out um yeah
-
-0:27:56.640,0:28:00.559
-any uh last notes to add before we get
-
-0:27:59.919,0:28:03.120
-back
-
-0:28:00.559,0:28:04.960
-to um playing the last few demos that we
-
-0:28:03.120,0:28:07.600
-have
-
-0:28:04.960,0:28:08.480
-I just wanted to say that I'm really sad
-
-0:28:07.600,0:28:11.360
-for the people
-
-0:28:08.480,0:28:12.000
-uh viewing uh viewers right now who
-
-0:28:11.360,0:28:14.320
-won't get
-
-0:28:12.000,0:28:16.080
-the thrill of receiving a message by
-
-0:28:14.320,0:28:17.679
-sasha at 3am telling
-
-0:28:16.080,0:28:18.960
-oh I found a way to automate all the
-
-0:28:17.679,0:28:20.480
-talks I found a way to have this
-
-0:28:18.960,0:28:21.760
-schedule be generated automatically in
-
-0:28:20.480,0:28:23.520
-an old mode file
-
-0:28:21.760,0:28:25.360
-and you know I'm having my team in the
-
-0:28:23.520,0:28:27.760
-morning I'm waking up I see an email
-
-0:28:25.360,0:28:31.039
-which was unless three am and I say
-
-0:28:27.760,0:28:33.600
-wow impressive
-
-0:28:31.039,0:28:34.159
-that works like quite nicely for you um
-
-0:28:33.600,0:28:36.000
-leo
-
-0:28:34.159,0:28:37.360
-with like you know the times and time
-
-0:28:36.000,0:28:39.440
-zones and everything
-
-0:28:37.360,0:28:40.480
-and with sasha usually getting it on
-
-0:28:39.440,0:28:44.399
-later at night
-
-0:28:40.480,0:28:45.919
-um yeah you do get this bedtime right
-
-0:28:44.399,0:28:47.279
-wait until bedtime and then up until
-
-0:28:45.919,0:28:49.200
-like one or two because it's too much
-
-0:28:47.279,0:28:52.559
-fun
-
-0:28:49.200,0:28:56.240
-yeah exactly um yeah
-
-0:28:52.559,0:28:59.919
-so uh on that note
-
-0:28:56.240,0:29:03.200
-if uh there isn't much else to say then
-
-0:28:59.919,0:29:04.000
-I will uh thank each and every one once
-
-0:29:03.200,0:29:07.039
-again
-
-0:29:04.000,0:29:10.240
-um who was in any way
-
-0:29:07.039,0:29:13.520
-part of this um and helped with um
-
-0:29:10.240,0:29:16.640
-any of this um basically
-
-0:29:13.520,0:29:17.039
-um Emacs company anyway um and watched
-
-0:29:16.640,0:29:20.640
-it
-
-0:29:17.039,0:29:22.960
-helped whatever um submitted the talk um
-
-0:29:20.640,0:29:23.760
-I very much thank you um this wouldn't
-
-0:29:22.960,0:29:27.120
-have been
-
-0:29:23.760,0:29:30.240
-what it has been without um all of
-
-0:29:27.120,0:29:32.960
-you folks participation and help and
-
-0:29:30.240,0:29:34.720
-um just being out there and spreading
-
-0:29:32.960,0:29:37.760
-the gospel of Emacs
-
-0:29:34.720,0:29:40.799
-um yeah so
-
-0:29:37.760,0:29:42.399
-yep there we go leo
-
-0:29:40.799,0:29:44.159
-sorry someone just asked me if I was
-
-0:29:42.399,0:29:46.799
-still wearing jeans today so I just felt
-
-0:29:44.159,0:29:50.320
-obligated to show it
-
-0:29:46.799,0:29:51.039
-nice I never got my thanks in I I have
-
-0:29:50.320,0:29:54.399
-to thank
-
-0:29:51.039,0:29:57.760
-uh leo and uh
-
-0:29:54.399,0:29:58.480
-and I'll just stare at you but I I won't
-
-0:29:57.760,0:30:01.520
-say your name
-
-0:29:58.480,0:30:02.000
-yet again um for the insane work that
-
-0:30:01.520,0:30:06.320
-you do
-
-0:30:02.000,0:30:09.039
-and and and sasha um
-
-0:30:06.320,0:30:11.039
-you are an asset to our whole community
-
-0:30:09.039,0:30:13.200
-with the vibrance that you bring and the
-
-0:30:11.039,0:30:16.720
-the passion that you have for
-
-0:30:13.200,0:30:18.480
-um for community itself uh
-
-0:30:16.720,0:30:20.000
-I think a lot of us can say that you're
-
-0:30:18.480,0:30:23.919
-you're driving a lot of our work
-
-0:30:20.000,0:30:23.919
-in in certain ways um
-
-0:30:24.240,0:30:28.480
-and then I I want to thank all the
-
-0:30:25.919,0:30:30.399
-presenters for uh
-
-0:30:28.480,0:30:31.760
-for working with us to get every
-
-0:30:30.399,0:30:35.520
-everything scheduled
-
-0:30:31.760,0:30:39.279
-and also my team and project
-
-0:30:35.520,0:30:41.200
-um for helping uh get the project
-
-0:30:39.279,0:30:43.279
-actually testable we had some
-
-0:30:41.200,0:30:46.720
-interesting stuff to show
-
-0:30:43.279,0:30:49.279
-and my family for uh all that they do
-
-0:30:46.720,0:30:52.399
-to make it possible for me to give back
-
-0:30:49.279,0:30:52.399
-to free software
-
-0:30:56.080,0:30:59.440
-oh there's a question um someone's
-
-0:30:57.679,0:31:00.399
-volunteering to help just get the stream
-
-0:30:59.440,0:31:02.880
-recordings out
-
-0:31:00.399,0:31:03.600
-so it's it's up to you yeah your call
-
-0:31:02.880,0:31:05.760
-you want
-
-0:31:03.600,0:31:07.200
-them out and then you have some time to
-
-0:31:05.760,0:31:09.600
-prepare nice
-
-0:31:07.200,0:31:11.120
-cut up versions or do you want everyone
-
-0:31:09.600,0:31:12.960
-to hang on and then just link to like
-
-0:31:11.120,0:31:16.159
-the EmacsConf website
-
-0:31:12.960,0:31:17.679
-right right um I would very much
-
-0:31:16.159,0:31:20.880
-appreciate help with that
-
-0:31:17.679,0:31:21.919
-in fact um for last year's um live
-
-0:31:20.880,0:31:25.279
-recordings
-
-0:31:21.919,0:31:28.320
-we had someone to help us um
-
-0:31:25.279,0:31:30.159
-uh andrew jordy in fact who also helped
-
-0:31:28.320,0:31:32.559
-light a bunch of transcripts last year
-
-0:31:30.159,0:31:34.240
-did an awesome job um
-
-0:31:32.559,0:31:36.080
-yeah I really wanted to have him around
-
-0:31:34.240,0:31:36.720
-this year but you know circumstances
-
-0:31:36.080,0:31:39.279
-with
-
-0:31:36.720,0:31:39.840
-um everything going on around around the
-
-0:31:39.279,0:31:42.880
-world
-
-0:31:39.840,0:31:43.279
-um just didn't work out but um yeah I
-
-0:31:42.880,0:31:46.240
-could
-
-0:31:43.279,0:31:48.159
-definitely use um help with cutting up
-
-0:31:46.240,0:31:49.679
-the videos
-
-0:31:48.159,0:31:51.519
-you know for the pre-recordings that's
-
-0:31:49.679,0:31:52.640
-pretty trivial it's just me having to
-
-0:31:51.519,0:31:55.120
-upload them
-
-0:31:52.640,0:31:55.679
-and create the pages so I will do that
-
-0:31:55.120,0:31:58.320
-but
-
-0:31:55.679,0:31:59.279
-um to whoever asked the question if it's
-
-0:31:58.320,0:32:01.200
-on the pad
-
-0:31:59.279,0:32:03.440
-or if it's in irc sorry I missed it I
-
-0:32:01.200,0:32:06.240
-will go I'll look back later
-
-0:32:03.440,0:32:07.200
-um yeah just ping me message me or email
-
-0:32:06.240,0:32:10.080
-me
-
-0:32:07.200,0:32:12.880
-at vandalia gnu.org and um I would
-
-0:32:10.080,0:32:12.880
-appreciate your help
-
-0:32:17.840,0:32:20.880
-so have we finished the roundtable uh I
-
-0:32:20.159,0:32:23.760
-believe we're
-
-0:32:20.880,0:32:24.640
-doing the last thinking so colwin did it
-
-0:32:23.760,0:32:27.360
-sasha did it
-
-0:32:24.640,0:32:27.360
-should I go next
-
-0:32:27.679,0:32:31.200
-so well as you can see I've lowered
-
-0:32:30.320,0:32:33.360
-myself
-
-0:32:31.200,0:32:34.399
-ever since the last time I've spoken so
-
-0:32:33.360,0:32:36.640
-the dynasty started
-
-0:32:34.399,0:32:37.600
-starting to set in but uh yeah I just
-
-0:32:36.640,0:32:40.399
-wanted to
-
-0:32:37.600,0:32:40.880
-um rejoin everyone and just say that
-
-0:32:40.399,0:32:42.320
-thank you
-
-0:32:40.880,0:32:44.640
-so much to all the organizers who have
-
-0:32:42.320,0:32:45.279
-been helping us uh we've done a stellar
-
-0:32:44.640,0:32:47.279
-job
-
-0:32:45.279,0:32:48.880
-that I believe at least this year of
-
-0:32:47.279,0:32:51.440
-keeping things on track
-
-0:32:48.880,0:32:53.039
-and I hope that all of you have been
-
-0:32:51.440,0:32:56.240
-able to enjoy this
-
-0:32:53.039,0:32:58.480
-and yeah I don't have any anyone
-
-0:32:56.240,0:32:59.840
-in particular to thank you know uh for
-
-0:32:58.480,0:33:01.919
-me free software was
-
-0:32:59.840,0:33:02.960
-for a very long time something I did in
-
-0:33:01.919,0:33:04.559
-my bedroom
-
-0:33:02.960,0:33:06.080
-on the side of my studies and generally
-
-0:33:04.559,0:33:08.720
-when I was procrastinating
-
-0:33:06.080,0:33:10.559
-from writing that one particular essay
-
-0:33:08.720,0:33:13.120
-or that one particular thesis
-
-0:33:10.559,0:33:13.919
-you know I did my old mood stuff in the
-
-0:33:13.120,0:33:16.159
-background so
-
-0:33:13.919,0:33:17.440
-just to be able to you know join the
-
-0:33:16.159,0:33:19.360
-community
-
-0:33:17.440,0:33:21.279
-when normally I got the chance to you
-
-0:33:19.360,0:33:23.600
-know write some code for it and try to
-
-0:33:21.279,0:33:24.399
-animate to community but also to be part
-
-0:33:23.600,0:33:28.480
-of an event
-
-0:33:24.399,0:33:30.960
-that is so genuine
-
-0:33:28.480,0:33:31.519
-in its mission so genuine in the way
-
-0:33:30.960,0:33:34.799
-that
-
-0:33:31.519,0:33:36.399
-we got speakers together we had you know
-
-0:33:34.799,0:33:38.000
-we had this excitement that we wanted to
-
-0:33:36.399,0:33:39.360
-share and judging
-
-0:33:38.000,0:33:41.200
-by the reactions we've had over the
-
-0:33:39.360,0:33:41.840
-couple of days you know I I believe
-
-0:33:41.200,0:33:44.799
-we've
-
-0:33:41.840,0:33:45.679
-completely hit our target and as corwin
-
-0:33:44.799,0:33:48.320
-said yesterday I
-
-0:33:45.679,0:33:50.000
-am I guess I suppose a little humbled I
-
-0:33:48.320,0:33:50.320
-know it might sound weird for me because
-
-0:33:50.000,0:33:52.240
-I'm
-
-0:33:50.320,0:33:53.760
-from britain all the time but when we're
-
-0:33:52.240,0:33:56.080
-going to press stop
-
-0:33:53.760,0:33:56.799
-to diet you know for the broadcast I
-
-0:33:56.080,0:33:59.840
-think it's
-
-0:33:56.799,0:34:02.880
-going to start slowly dawning slowly
-
-0:33:59.840,0:34:06.480
-sorry french accent coming back slowly
-
-0:34:02.880,0:34:08.320
-dawning on me what we've done and
-
-0:34:06.480,0:34:09.520
-yeah it'll take me a couple of weeks to
-
-0:34:08.320,0:34:12.000
-recover mentally
-
-0:34:09.520,0:34:13.599
-spiritually physically and whatnot but I
-
-0:34:12.000,0:34:15.599
-believe after I'll be able to enjoy what
-
-0:34:13.599,0:34:20.800
-we've been able to do and for that
-
-0:34:15.599,0:34:24.480
-thank you so much
-
-0:34:20.800,0:34:25.919
-um yeah it's you're still you know kind
-
-0:34:24.480,0:34:29.359
-of in the moment and
-
-0:34:25.919,0:34:32.159
-um kind of maybe you haven't quite grabs
-
-0:34:29.359,0:34:33.359
-grasped at all yet but yeah I think
-
-0:34:32.159,0:34:36.079
-it'll
-
-0:34:33.359,0:34:37.599
-start hitting us all individually at
-
-0:34:36.079,0:34:39.119
-different points over the next couple of
-
-0:34:37.599,0:34:42.079
-days or weeks
-
-0:34:39.119,0:34:43.599
-um as we take some time to you know rest
-
-0:34:42.079,0:34:47.359
-up and re-energize
-
-0:34:43.599,0:34:50.960
-and you know keep going forward um
-
-0:34:47.359,0:34:53.839
-yeah so on that note if um
-
-0:34:50.960,0:34:54.320
-no one else has anything to add I will
-
-0:34:53.839,0:34:57.200
-um
-
-0:34:54.320,0:34:59.680
-[ __ ] you all farewell and thank you
-
-0:34:57.200,0:35:02.800
-everyone once again for joining us
-
-0:34:59.680,0:35:03.839
-and making an awesome amazing EmacsConf 2020.
-
-0:35:03.839,0:35:07.680
-um just quickly say we weren't sure that
-
-0:35:06.079,0:35:09.599
-we will be able to pull it off
-
-0:35:07.680,0:35:10.720
-given all the madness going on around
-
-0:35:09.599,0:35:13.839
-the world but
-
-0:35:10.720,0:35:14.880
-for us to have broken um so many of our
-
-0:35:13.839,0:35:17.440
-numbers and records
-
-0:35:14.880,0:35:18.240
-for all of them basically um you know we
-
-0:35:17.440,0:35:20.240
-just had
-
-0:35:18.240,0:35:22.320
-just about like two and a half or three
-
-0:35:20.240,0:35:22.960
-terabytes of streaming bandwidth usage
-
-0:35:22.320,0:35:25.520
-so that's
-
-0:35:22.960,0:35:26.400
-incredible and so many people join in so
-
-0:35:25.520,0:35:30.079
-many talks
-
-0:35:26.400,0:35:31.839
-so it's amazing thank you um
-
-0:35:30.079,0:35:34.040
-yes I see a question coming will the
-
-0:35:31.839,0:35:35.440
-ether pad be archived somewhere on
-
-0:35:34.040,0:35:37.920
-imageconf.org
-
-0:35:35.440,0:35:38.960
-um and the answer is yes I think sasha
-
-0:35:37.920,0:35:41.800
-is answering
-
-0:35:38.960,0:35:43.200
-um yes it will be linked under
-
-0:35:41.800,0:35:46.400
-imanxconf.org
-
-0:35:43.200,0:35:47.680
-2020 um that page will contain all the
-
-0:35:46.400,0:35:50.880
-resources about
-
-0:35:47.680,0:35:54.880
-everything um you know
-
-0:35:50.880,0:35:57.599
-uh about imsgufton20 2020 sorry
-
-0:35:54.880,0:35:59.119
-um yeah now you see some people saying
-
-0:35:57.599,0:36:02.320
-early happy birthday to me
-
-0:35:59.119,0:36:02.800
-um thank you so very much um I think
-
-0:36:02.320,0:36:05.760
-this
-
-0:36:02.800,0:36:06.160
-uh this conference was an incredible um
-
-0:36:05.760,0:36:09.200
-I guess
-
-0:36:06.160,0:36:12.880
-prelude to to my birthday um
-
-0:36:09.200,0:36:15.599
-so thank you all and on that note
-
-0:36:12.880,0:36:15.920
-I will end the stream and say goodbye
-
-0:36:15.599,0:36:19.680
-and
-
-0:36:15.920,0:36:23.040
-beat you very well bye
-
-0:36:19.680,0:36:23.839
-bye everyone and then you're going to
-
-0:36:23.040,0:36:27.119
-play the
-
-0:36:23.839,0:36:30.960
-devils yep exactly okay
-
-0:36:27.119,0:36:30.960
-bye bye
-