From acae3202780198626d0445b4d98cf206efcdd0a8 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Sacha Chua Date: Fri, 3 Dec 2021 20:36:40 -0500 Subject: copy Youtube comments --- 2021/talks/babel.md | 5 +++++ 2021/talks/design.md | 2 ++ 2021/talks/forever.md | 11 +++++++++++ 2021/talks/frownies.md | 1 + 2021/talks/imaginary.md | 7 +++++-- 2021/talks/invoice.md | 2 ++ 2021/talks/nangulator.md | 4 +++- 2021/talks/native.md | 1 - 2021/talks/news.md | 5 +++-- 2021/talks/org-outside.md | 4 ++++ 2021/talks/teach.md | 3 +++ 2021/talks/unix.md | 4 ++++ 12 files changed, 43 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) (limited to '2021/talks') diff --git a/2021/talks/babel.md b/2021/talks/babel.md index 91ce2813..742f8b40 100644 --- a/2021/talks/babel.md +++ b/2021/talks/babel.md @@ -91,6 +91,11 @@ IRC: - some very nice examples of wicked-cool org stuff there :) - I also use python to generate latex from babel so that I don't mess things up +From [YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Ooi4KAd2FM&feature=em-comments): + +- Cool talk! I suggest to export your diagrams to some vector format (PDF, SVG, etc.) if you (as you say) embed it in LaTeX/PDF later. Otherwise, you can see blur on a large enough scale. + + Links: - diff --git a/2021/talks/design.md b/2021/talks/design.md index 3ff29daf..da09177b 100644 --- a/2021/talks/design.md +++ b/2021/talks/design.md @@ -103,6 +103,8 @@ alternatives using GNU Emacs. - hmmm maybe Emacs needs to be able to handle WOFF! sounds like a job for fontconfig, I might look at it some day - Nano Emacs + modus-themes would be a perfect combination, as it were. +- From [YouTube](www.youtube.com/watch?v=7OTe26RZH9A&feature=em-comments): Great efforts & I'm rooting for you! but you might consider rebranding, because of the GNU nano text editor (22 years of recognition) + # Contact information * Contact [nicolas.rougier@inria.fr](mailto:nicolas.rougier@inria.fr) * Follow my work at [github.com/rougier](https://github.com/rougier) diff --git a/2021/talks/forever.md b/2021/talks/forever.md index e8ef7772..f8c29489 100644 --- a/2021/talks/forever.md +++ b/2021/talks/forever.md @@ -20,6 +20,7 @@ regardless of mainstream popularity. # Discussion + Pad: - Q1: In your opinion, what is Emacs achilles heel? It's obviously a powerful tool, but no tool is perfect. What would make your life easier in day to day use with Emacs (either a package you wish existed, or a core Emacs infrastructure change). @@ -91,6 +92,16 @@ IRC: - The concurrent pushes for reproducible science, literate programming, literate devops, and so on, also contribute to making the case for Emacs & Org-mode - the performance point is spot on. That is one of the main reason why the neovim community is thriving +- From [YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ahR5K_wkNQ&feature=em-comments): + - Emacs has changed the way I use my computer. It is absolutely + amazing. I use Emacs to: write latex files, write code, organize my life + (with the help of org mode), check my email, use git , use terminal etc. + Actually I have recently switched my desktop environment to exwm and it is + perfect for my workflow. I guess nothing can beat this tool. + - What I noticed from one graph you showed was that most people using stack overflow also use visual studio code, is there a correlation there I wonder. + - As for Google analytics ranking, some other factors to consider: - What percentage of emacs users search via Google? I may be wrong, but I think emacs users are more likely to use alternative search engines like Duck Duck Go. - There is so much help info built into emacs compared to other editors that is easy to look up right from inside our editor, I wonder what percentage of the searches on Google for the other editors are basic usage questions of the kind emacs users wouldn't need to search online for? I don't know how much weight these factors have in skewing results, but as you said, it doesn't really matter! + - This goes too show in 2004 less people where on the internet and most of then where hard core programmers, and now with more an more people coming into tech , new peeps just want to code and don't care about tools as much . So yeah , I am grateful to you david for introducing me to emacs even though I am too in this new wave + # Outline - Discuss the core thesis, the features that make Emacs diff --git a/2021/talks/frownies.md b/2021/talks/frownies.md index 396c76d4..8a69963e 100644 --- a/2021/talks/frownies.md +++ b/2021/talks/frownies.md @@ -68,6 +68,7 @@ teeth into. - So I want to contribute to Emacs, but I don't know enough elisp. Perhaps I could contribute some documentation? But I have no idea what that would be... - From the speaker: i'd love to hear more about licensing, basically i don't care how my stuff is used at all +- From [YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CZn_H93wc5A&feature=em-comments): Hey Case! Thanks for the great talk. I feel like I have had a similar experience to yours by also learning from vanilla Emacs. I like how you're showcasing how easy it is to scratch your own itch in Emacs. Feedback: diff --git a/2021/talks/imaginary.md b/2021/talks/imaginary.md index 82895374..0ae7d9d7 100644 --- a/2021/talks/imaginary.md +++ b/2021/talks/imaginary.md @@ -31,6 +31,8 @@ GPL. Please keep an open mind. # Discussion +IRC nick: libertyprime + Pad: - Q1: Do you have a site we can follow more of your writing on? @@ -55,8 +57,6 @@ Pad: - A: idefun will infer computation and short-circuit the code. Given either 'function name', alone, function name + args, or function name, + args + docstring, or function nae + args + docstring + function body, it will make use of the context you have provided and imagine evaluation. It will create functions which infer rather than properly evaluate, based on merely the name of the function, for example. - A (re: ambiguity): If you had an imaginary defun for this, you'd need to send the final list -IRC nick: libertyprime - BBB: - libertyprime: What kinds of software is IP (imaginary programming) not suitable for? @@ -163,7 +163,10 @@ IRC: - is it still invite only? - no, it's been opened recently +From [YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pJm4TaCyDnk&feature=em-comments): +- Is this Emacs with smooth scrolling? How is that possible? I tired that really hard. Or is it just a PDF reader? +- Lets go!!!!! Imaginary Programming all the way. # Outline diff --git a/2021/talks/invoice.md b/2021/talks/invoice.md index 43e8a845..1ed5fb37 100644 --- a/2021/talks/invoice.md +++ b/2021/talks/invoice.md @@ -50,6 +50,8 @@ We will use the following packages: - The accounting system transactions are a nice touch - it's really hard to tell that came from org :) - European format would be DD.MM.YYYY and not with dashes which can be mixed up with ISO or other formats. in the UK it's often with slashes: DD/MM/YYYY +- From [YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b__d04aHEbI&feature=em-comments): This looks great! Much better than my amateurish attempts. Thanks!!! + [[!inline pages="internal(2021/captions/invoice)" raw="yes"]] diff --git a/2021/talks/nangulator.md b/2021/talks/nangulator.md index 2d328b11..c6dc42b5 100644 --- a/2021/talks/nangulator.md +++ b/2021/talks/nangulator.md @@ -41,7 +41,6 @@ IRC nick: N-Angulator it from the orphaned XEmacs into FSF and promote it at all. - - - N-Angulator: I wrote it 10 years ago and am no porting it to GNU emacs - is this a graph-as-filesystem - I'd much rather work with keybindings rather than clicking things. Is there support for that? @@ -50,6 +49,9 @@ IRC nick: N-Angulator - This is weirdware in the best sort of way. - Are you familiar with tagstore/TagTrees (by me) or Semantic File System (Gifford et al) or SemFS (Mohan at al) or TagFS (Blöhdorn et al)? my work: https://karl-voit.at/tagstore/en/papers.shtml -> preferably the PhD document that summarizes everything +- From [YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ggmfWPmse_w&feature=em-comments): Any chance you can explain what this package can actually do? I don't want to be critical. It looks interesting but I just don't know what to do with this. + + [[!inline pages="internal(2021/captions/nangulator)" raw="yes"]] [[!inline pages="internal(2021/info/nangulator-nav)" raw="yes"]] diff --git a/2021/talks/native.md b/2021/talks/native.md index 3395e56e..b35b6e7c 100644 --- a/2021/talks/native.md +++ b/2021/talks/native.md @@ -9,7 +9,6 @@ Andrea Corallo - [[!inline pages="internal(2021/info/native-schedule)" raw="yes"]] Emacs Lisp (Elisp) is the Lisp dialect used by the Emacs text editor diff --git a/2021/talks/news.md b/2021/talks/news.md index 81e1baf3..c01353c1 100644 --- a/2021/talks/news.md +++ b/2021/talks/news.md @@ -14,17 +14,18 @@ Quick overview of Emacs community highlights since the last conference You can find the links and images at -# Questions, answers, and community-provided links +# Discussion - how do I "type" an emoji? I know how to copy them from ~/bigsrc/emacs28/admin/unidata/emoji-test.txt, but there must be better ways... - you could use emojify-mode (there's M-x emojify-insert-emoji) - - Other notes: - Oh wow, I didn't actually know about embark - Yeah, switch to "smaller" turned out to be quite nice - but noticed projectile greps faster than consult/counsel in a lot of cases - Oh wow, the color picker!!! - a huge thank you for such an understandable yet detailed summary of what\'s happening in the Emacs world! + - From [YouTube](www.youtube.com/watch?v=270ljvW6UrA&feature=em-comments): Excellent summary!! Thanks for the timestamps as well. + [[!inline pages="internal(2021/captions/news)" raw="yes"]] [[!inline pages="internal(2021/info/news-nav)" raw="yes"]] diff --git a/2021/talks/org-outside.md b/2021/talks/org-outside.md index c10cd761..95884e06 100644 --- a/2021/talks/org-outside.md +++ b/2021/talks/org-outside.md @@ -113,6 +113,10 @@ IRC: (nick: publicvoit) - I tend to use "org syntax" at the moment, but it isn't catchy enough +From [YouTube](www.youtube.com/watch?v=JLuTYkhFDQY&feature=em-comments): + +- Great idea! I’m not sure about the name though. To me it implies it has something syntactically to do with Markdown (which it doesn’t). In my view OrgMode markup is far more expressive than Markdown. It’s almost a new markup language in and of itself. So, how about OrgMark or Org Mode Markup Language aka OMML. + Links and other notes: - The article from 2017 that started the whole discussion: \"Org Mode diff --git a/2021/talks/teach.md b/2021/talks/teach.md index 18ff6b00..bed5850c 100644 --- a/2021/talks/teach.md +++ b/2021/talks/teach.md @@ -51,6 +51,9 @@ BBB: - GitLab.com is just as bad (and unlike GitHub, you can't sign in without nonfree JS), but GitLab CE is fine. - Do you think org-mode+git could be used for students' assignments? +From [YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bmi9AAaqegY&feature=em-comments): + +- this is by far one of the most motivating talk about Org. I feel sorry about all my teaching colleagues that still use WYSIWYG presentation tools. my life, as a trainer, literally changed with Org, even without literate programming. # Outline diff --git a/2021/talks/unix.md b/2021/talks/unix.md index 17cd176c..33d87029 100644 --- a/2021/talks/unix.md +++ b/2021/talks/unix.md @@ -45,6 +45,10 @@ Feedback: - yes, nice perspective. Saying that I am struggeling with that is overstating it, but sometimes it does make me think. thank you Daniel! - Nice talk, I feel like some Emacs purists could complain but let's be honest, this is a reasonable take on actually getting stuff done +From [YouTube](www.youtube.com/watch?v=kXVjCRIqS4c&feature=em-comments): + +- Right on. For most of these reasons I’ve went back to Vim and just accepted it’s limitations rather than try and torture it into a Frankenstein IDE that half works. When I need to do $LANG work especially debugging, I use vs code or Xcode etc and most of the big IDEs have Vim keybinding emulation that is good enough to get to work. + # Outline - How can one limit their usage of CLI tools while still maintaining -- cgit v1.2.3