diff options
Diffstat (limited to '2023')
-rw-r--r-- | 2023/info/emacsen-nav.md | 3 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | 2023/info/extending-nav.md | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | 2023/info/flat-nav.md | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | 2023/info/llm-nav.md | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | 2023/info/mentor-nav.md | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | 2023/info/one-nav.md | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | 2023/info/ref-nav.md | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | 2023/info/sharing-nav.md | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | 2023/info/web-nav.md | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | 2023/info/windows-nav.md | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | 2023/info/writing-nav.md | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | 2023/talk-details.md | 12 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | 2023/talks/emacsconf.md | 25 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | 2023/talks/hyperdrive.md | 72 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | 2023/talks/nabokov.md | 42 |
15 files changed, 162 insertions, 18 deletions
diff --git a/2023/info/emacsen-nav.md b/2023/info/emacsen-nav.md index 9fd4d713..16abe79d 100644 --- a/2023/info/emacsen-nav.md +++ b/2023/info/emacsen-nav.md @@ -1,6 +1,7 @@ <div class="talk-nav"> Back to the [[talks]] -Next by track: <a href="/2023/talks/web">Emacs saves the Web</a> +Previous by track: <a href="/2023/talks/flat">A modern Emacs look-and-feel without pain</a> +Next by track: <a href="/2023/talks/extending">GNU Emacs for electronics, note-taking, and as lightweight IDE</a> Track: <span class="sched-track General">General</span> </div> diff --git a/2023/info/extending-nav.md b/2023/info/extending-nav.md index 8024576b..e7de442e 100644 --- a/2023/info/extending-nav.md +++ b/2023/info/extending-nav.md @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ <div class="talk-nav"> Back to the [[talks]] -Previous by track: <a href="/2023/talks/flat">A modern Emacs look-and-feel without pain</a> -Next by track: <a href="/2023/talks/windows">Windows into Freedom</a> +Previous by track: <a href="/2023/talks/emacsen">The Emacsen family, the design of an Emacs and the importance of Lisp</a> +Next by track: <a href="/2023/talks/mentor">Mentoring VS-Coders as an Emacsian (or How to show not tell people about the wonders of Emacs)</a> Track: <span class="sched-track General">General</span> </div> diff --git a/2023/info/flat-nav.md b/2023/info/flat-nav.md index 1d021ccc..ccc3aec9 100644 --- a/2023/info/flat-nav.md +++ b/2023/info/flat-nav.md @@ -2,6 +2,6 @@ <div class="talk-nav"> Back to the [[talks]] Previous by track: <a href="/2023/talks/lspocaml">Writing a language server in OCaml for Emacs, fun, and profit</a> -Next by track: <a href="/2023/talks/extending">GNU Emacs for electronics, note-taking, and as lightweight IDE</a> +Next by track: <a href="/2023/talks/emacsen">The Emacsen family, the design of an Emacs and the importance of Lisp</a> Track: <span class="sched-track General">General</span> </div> diff --git a/2023/info/llm-nav.md b/2023/info/llm-nav.md index 8cee9c69..72fd754a 100644 --- a/2023/info/llm-nav.md +++ b/2023/info/llm-nav.md @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ <div class="talk-nav"> Back to the [[talks]] -Previous by track: <a href="/2023/talks/sharing">Sharing Emacs is Caring Emacs: Emacs education and why I embraced video</a> +Previous by track: <a href="/2023/talks/windows">Windows into Freedom</a> Next by track: <a href="/2023/talks/voice">Improving access to AI-assisted literate programming with voice control</a> Track: <span class="sched-track Development">Development</span> </div> diff --git a/2023/info/mentor-nav.md b/2023/info/mentor-nav.md index 152419f3..ee327a1e 100644 --- a/2023/info/mentor-nav.md +++ b/2023/info/mentor-nav.md @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ <div class="talk-nav"> Back to the [[talks]] -Previous by track: <a href="/2023/talks/windows">Windows into Freedom</a> -Next by track: <a href="/2023/talks/ref">Org-Mode workflow: informal reference tracking</a> +Previous by track: <a href="/2023/talks/extending">GNU Emacs for electronics, note-taking, and as lightweight IDE</a> +Next by track: <a href="/2023/talks/hyperdrive">hyperdrive.el: Peer-to-peer filesystem in Emacs</a> Track: <span class="sched-track General">General</span> </div> diff --git a/2023/info/one-nav.md b/2023/info/one-nav.md index 1bf05156..f00ddbde 100644 --- a/2023/info/one-nav.md +++ b/2023/info/one-nav.md @@ -2,6 +2,6 @@ <div class="talk-nav"> Back to the [[talks]] Previous by track: <a href="/2023/talks/uni">Authoring and presenting university courses with Emacs and a full libre software stack</a> -Next by track: <a href="/2023/talks/writing">Emacs Turbo-Charges My Writing</a> +Next by track: <a href="/2023/talks/nabokov">Why Nabokov would use Org-Mode if he were writing today</a> Track: <span class="sched-track General">General</span> </div> diff --git a/2023/info/ref-nav.md b/2023/info/ref-nav.md index ec5241de..d87f0447 100644 --- a/2023/info/ref-nav.md +++ b/2023/info/ref-nav.md @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ <div class="talk-nav"> Back to the [[talks]] -Previous by track: <a href="/2023/talks/mentor">Mentoring VS-Coders as an Emacsian (or How to show not tell people about the wonders of Emacs)</a> +Previous by track: <a href="/2023/talks/emacsconf">EmacsConf.org: How we use Org Mode and TRAMP to organize and run a multi-track conference</a> Next by track: <a href="/2023/talks/uni">Authoring and presenting university courses with Emacs and a full libre software stack</a> Track: <span class="sched-track General">General</span> </div> diff --git a/2023/info/sharing-nav.md b/2023/info/sharing-nav.md index 0d8040a5..a30799c8 100644 --- a/2023/info/sharing-nav.md +++ b/2023/info/sharing-nav.md @@ -2,6 +2,6 @@ <div class="talk-nav"> Back to the [[talks]] Previous by track: <a href="/2023/talks/hn">The many ways to browse Hacker News from Emacs</a> -Next by track: <a href="/2023/talks/llm">LLM clients in Emacs, functionality and standardization</a> +Next by track: <a href="/2023/talks/windows">Windows into Freedom</a> Track: <span class="sched-track General">General</span> </div> diff --git a/2023/info/web-nav.md b/2023/info/web-nav.md index 71f1f79f..f7bb7280 100644 --- a/2023/info/web-nav.md +++ b/2023/info/web-nav.md @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ <div class="talk-nav"> Back to the [[talks]] -Previous by track: <a href="/2023/talks/emacsen">The Emacsen family, the design of an Emacs and the importance of Lisp</a> +Previous by track: <a href="/2023/talks/sat-open">Saturday opening remarks</a> Next by track: <a href="/2023/talks/hn">The many ways to browse Hacker News from Emacs</a> Track: <span class="sched-track General">General</span> </div> diff --git a/2023/info/windows-nav.md b/2023/info/windows-nav.md index cd296abc..0af8b499 100644 --- a/2023/info/windows-nav.md +++ b/2023/info/windows-nav.md @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ <div class="talk-nav"> Back to the [[talks]] -Previous by track: <a href="/2023/talks/extending">GNU Emacs for electronics, note-taking, and as lightweight IDE</a> -Next by track: <a href="/2023/talks/mentor">Mentoring VS-Coders as an Emacsian (or How to show not tell people about the wonders of Emacs)</a> +Previous by track: <a href="/2023/talks/sharing">Sharing Emacs is Caring Emacs: Emacs education and why I embraced video</a> +Next by track: <a href="/2023/talks/llm">LLM clients in Emacs, functionality and standardization</a> Track: <span class="sched-track Development">Development</span> </div> diff --git a/2023/info/writing-nav.md b/2023/info/writing-nav.md index 33be2487..2852a715 100644 --- a/2023/info/writing-nav.md +++ b/2023/info/writing-nav.md @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ <div class="talk-nav"> Back to the [[talks]] -Previous by track: <a href="/2023/talks/one">one.el: the static site generator for Emacs Lisp Programmers</a> +Previous by track: <a href="/2023/talks/nabokov">Why Nabokov would use Org-Mode if he were writing today</a> Next by track: <a href="/2023/talks/adventure">An Org-Mode based text adventure game for learning the basics of Emacs, inside Emacs, written in Emacs Lisp</a> Track: <span class="sched-track General">General</span> </div> diff --git a/2023/talk-details.md b/2023/talk-details.md index ccab98b6..50aebbd7 100644 --- a/2023/talk-details.md +++ b/2023/talk-details.md @@ -1,16 +1,20 @@ -<table><thead><th>Duration</th><th>Title</th><th>Speakers</th></thead><tbody><tr><td>10</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/adventure">An Org-Mode based text adventure game for learning the basics of Emacs, inside Emacs, written in Emacs Lisp</a></td><td>Chung-hong Chan</td><tr> +<table><thead><th>Duration</th><th>Title</th><th>Speakers</th></thead><tbody><tr><td>10</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/sat-open">Saturday opening remarks</a></td><td>nil</td><tr> +<tr><td>10</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/adventure">An Org-Mode based text adventure game for learning the basics of Emacs, inside Emacs, written in Emacs Lisp</a></td><td>Chung-hong Chan</td><tr> <tr><td>10</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/writing">Emacs Turbo-Charges My Writing</a></td><td>Jeremy Friesen</td><tr> +<tr><td>10</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/nabokov">Why Nabokov would use Org-Mode if he were writing today</a></td><td>Edmund Jorgensen</td><tr> <tr><td>20</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/one">one.el: the static site generator for Emacs Lisp Programmers</a></td><td>Tony Aldon</td><tr> <tr><td>20</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/uni">Authoring and presenting university courses with Emacs and a full libre software stack</a></td><td>James Howell</td><tr> <tr><td>20</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/ref">Org-Mode workflow: informal reference tracking</a></td><td>Christopher Howard</td><tr> +<tr><td>20</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/emacsconf">EmacsConf.org: How we use Org Mode and TRAMP to organize and run a multi-track conference</a></td><td>Sacha Chua</td><tr> +<tr><td>20</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/hyperdrive">hyperdrive.el: Peer-to-peer filesystem in Emacs</a></td><td>nil</td><tr> <tr><td>10</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/mentor">Mentoring VS-Coders as an Emacsian (or How to show not tell people about the wonders of Emacs)</a></td><td>Jeremy Friesen</td><tr> -<tr><td>40</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/windows">Windows into Freedom</a></td><td>Corwin Brust</td><tr> <tr><td>20</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/extending">GNU Emacs for electronics, note-taking, and as lightweight IDE</a></td><td>Anand Tamariya</td><tr> +<tr><td>20</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/emacsen">The Emacsen family, the design of an Emacs and the importance of Lisp</a></td><td>Fermin</td><tr> <tr><td>10</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/flat">A modern Emacs look-and-feel without pain</a></td><td>Pedro A. Aranda</td><tr> <tr><td>10</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/lspocaml">Writing a language server in OCaml for Emacs, fun, and profit</a></td><td>Austin Theriault</td><tr> <tr><td>20</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/voice">Improving access to AI-assisted literate programming with voice control</a></td><td>Blaine Mooers</td><tr> <tr><td>20</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/llm">LLM clients in Emacs, functionality and standardization</a></td><td>Andrew Hyatt</td><tr> +<tr><td>40</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/windows">Windows into Freedom</a></td><td>Corwin Brust</td><tr> <tr><td>20</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/sharing">Sharing Emacs is Caring Emacs: Emacs education and why I embraced video</a></td><td>Jacob Boxerman</td><tr> <tr><td>10</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/hn">The many ways to browse Hacker News from Emacs</a></td><td>Mickael Kerjean</td><tr> -<tr><td>40</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/web">Emacs saves the Web</a></td><td>Yuchen Pei</td><tr> -<tr><td>20</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/emacsen">The Emacsen family, the design of an Emacs and the importance of Lisp</a></td><td>Fermin</td><tr></tbody></table>
\ No newline at end of file +<tr><td>40</td><td><a href="/2023/talks/web">Emacs saves the Web</a></td><td>Yuchen Pei</td><tr></tbody></table>
\ No newline at end of file diff --git a/2023/talks/emacsconf.md b/2023/talks/emacsconf.md new file mode 100644 index 00000000..c08bbe01 --- /dev/null +++ b/2023/talks/emacsconf.md @@ -0,0 +1,25 @@ +[[!meta title="EmacsConf.org: How we use Org Mode and TRAMP to organize and run a multi-track conference"]] +[[!meta copyright="Copyright © 2023 Sacha Chua"]] +[[!inline pages="internal(2023/info/emacsconf-nav)" raw="yes"]] + +<!-- Initially generated with emacsconf-publish-talk-page and then left alone for manual editing --> +<!-- You can manually edit this file to update the abstract, add links, etc. ---> + + +# EmacsConf.org: How we use Org Mode and TRAMP to organize and run a multi-track conference +Sacha Chua (she/her) - IRC: sachac, <https://sachachua.com>, Mastodon: @sachac@emacs.ch, <mailto:sacha@sachachua.com> + +[[!inline pages="internal(2023/info/emacsconf-before)" raw="yes"]] + +Go on a whirlwind tour behind the scenes to see how we've been using +large Org Mode files and a bunch of Emacs Lisp functions to organize +and run EmacsConf. You might be able to pick up some ideas about Org +Mode navigation, image and video manipulation, captioning, publishing, +and remote command execution, and then check out the notes to find out +more. + +[[!inline pages="internal(2023/info/emacsconf-after)" raw="yes"]] + +[[!inline pages="internal(2023/info/emacsconf-nav)" raw="yes"]] + + diff --git a/2023/talks/hyperdrive.md b/2023/talks/hyperdrive.md new file mode 100644 index 00000000..1a092fa4 --- /dev/null +++ b/2023/talks/hyperdrive.md @@ -0,0 +1,72 @@ +[[!meta title="hyperdrive.el: Peer-to-peer filesystem in Emacs"]] +[[!meta copyright="Copyright © 2023 ${speakers}"]] +[[!inline pages="internal(2023/info/hyperdrive-nav)" raw="yes"]] + +<!-- Initially generated with emacsconf-publish-talk-page and then left alone for manual editing --> +<!-- You can manually edit this file to update the abstract, add links, etc. ---> + + +# hyperdrive.el: Peer-to-peer filesystem in Emacs +Joseph Turner, <https://ushin.org> xmpp:discuss@conference.ushin.org (XMPP MUC for USHIN discussion), <mailto:joseph@ushin.org> + +[[!inline pages="internal(2023/info/hyperdrive-before)" raw="yes"]] + +This talk explores [hyperdrive.el](https://ushin.org/hyperdrive/hyperdrive-manual.html), an Emacs interface to [hyperdrive](https://docs.holepunch.to/building-blocks/hyperdrive), a +peer-to-peer shared filesystem. + +Peer-to-peer networks give you the freedom to choose your sources of +information and to communicate directly with them. Emacs is a +[freedom-respecting](https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-software-even-more-important.html) text editor/operating system that puts you in the +driver's seat. By bringing these two worlds together, hyperdrive.el +aims to inspire deliberation about digital communication freedom. + +Hyperdrives are peer-to-peer shared folders, well-suited for data that +changes over time, like personal blogs. It complements Bittorrent and +IPFS, which work best with unchanging data, like journal archives. + +Here's a scenario: Alice creates a new hyperdrive and adds some files. +Her computer returns a public key URL that uniquely identifies the +hyperdrive. Alice shares that URL with Bob, who can then download +Alice's files directly from her computer. No third-party servers are +required to route the connection. + +Data is distributed among peers; once Bob has loaded Alice's files, +Carol can get them from Bob (or anyone else who has a copy) even when +Alice is offline. Drives are mutable; when Alice adds/removes/changes +files in the drive, Bob can refresh her drive on his machine to get +the latest changes. Drives are versioned; anyone with the URL can +"check out" prior versions of Alice's drive to see what her files used +to look like. + +Currently supported features in hyperdrive.el include: + +- [directly edit hyperdrive files](https://ushin.org/hyperdrive/hyperdrive-manual.html#Write-to-a-hyperdrive) +- [dired-like directory view](https://ushin.org/hyperdrive/hyperdrive-manual.html#Directory-view) +- [org-mode link support](https://ushin.org/hyperdrive/hyperdrive-manual.html#Org-mode-links) +- [version history navigation/diffing](https://ushin.org/hyperdrive/hyperdrive-manual.html#View-the-hyperdrive-version-history) +- [built-in bookmark.el integration](https://ushin.org/hyperdrive/hyperdrive-manual.html#Bookmark-a-hyperdrive) +- [local directory mirroring](https://ushin.org/hyperdrive/hyperdrive-manual.html#Mirror-a-whole-directory) +- [audio/video streaming](https://ushin.org/hyperdrive/hyperdrive-manual.html#Stream-audio-and-video) + +Planned features include: + +- peer discovery (swarming) +- diffing directories between versions + +Check out [the manual](https://ushin.org/hyperdrive/hyperdrive-manual.html#Installation) for installation instructions! + +You're welcome to join our public XMPP chat room! + +- xmpp:discuss@conference.ushin.org ([Join anonymously from your browser](https://anonymous.cheogram.com/discuss@conference.ushin.org)) +- \#\_bifrost\_discuss\_conference.ushin.org:aria-net.org (Matrix bridge) + +Bugs can be submitted to the [ushin issue tracker](https://todo.sr.ht/~ushin/ushin). Patches, comments or +questions can be submitted to the [ushin public inbox](https://lists.sr.ht/~ushin/ushin). + + + +[[!inline pages="internal(2023/info/hyperdrive-after)" raw="yes"]] + +[[!inline pages="internal(2023/info/hyperdrive-nav)" raw="yes"]] + + diff --git a/2023/talks/nabokov.md b/2023/talks/nabokov.md new file mode 100644 index 00000000..1832fd3d --- /dev/null +++ b/2023/talks/nabokov.md @@ -0,0 +1,42 @@ +[[!meta title="Why Nabokov would use Org-Mode if he were writing today"]] +[[!meta copyright="Copyright © 2023 Edmund Jorgensen"]] +[[!inline pages="internal(2023/info/nabokov-nav)" raw="yes"]] + +<!-- Initially generated with emacsconf-publish-talk-page and then left alone for manual editing --> +<!-- You can manually edit this file to update the abstract, add links, etc. ---> + + +# Why Nabokov would use Org-Mode if he were writing today +Edmund Jorgensen (he/him) - <https://tomheon.com>, <mailto:ewj@inkwellandoften.com> + +[[!inline pages="internal(2023/info/nabokov-before)" raw="yes"]] + +I've written several novels in Emacs. One of them grew into a monster with a +baker's dozen twisty, interconnected subplots. + +When I started to revise that novel, I had to use an outline to keep all the +subplots straight, but I found it nearly impossible to keep that external +outline consistent with the prose. + +Finally I landed on a workflow using org-mode to keep the outline and the +prose together, which significantly reduced the burden of keeping the two +consistent as I moved and modified sections. I also found a way to use tags +and sparse views over them to enable quick read-throughs of subsets of the +book for continuity checks (which I plan to demo). + +Later--long after finishing the book--I realized this process was essentially +the Emacs update to the writing process that Nabokov used: he wrote on index +cards that served as both prose and outline, so that he could move them around +(which he did incessantly). + +There's something deeply beautiful about org-mode's refusal to treat structure +and prose as different things in a piece of writing--something I think Nabokov +would have appreciated, and something I definitely appreciate, because it +saved my novel. + + +[[!inline pages="internal(2023/info/nabokov-after)" raw="yes"]] + +[[!inline pages="internal(2023/info/nabokov-nav)" raw="yes"]] + + |