From e96fce218b1e3c0a05a9cec94b946fc648d82ea0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Sacha Chua Date: Mon, 7 Nov 2022 07:37:44 -0500 Subject: schedule update --- 2022/organizers-notebook/index.org | 26 +++++++++++++++----------- 2022/organizers-notebook/schedule.svg | 2 +- 2 files changed, 16 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-) (limited to '2022') diff --git a/2022/organizers-notebook/index.org b/2022/organizers-notebook/index.org index 0be3ff59..2adde0e7 100644 --- a/2022/organizers-notebook/index.org +++ b/2022/organizers-notebook/index.org @@ -190,6 +190,10 @@ CLOSED: [2022-11-06 Sun 15:26] #+TOC: headlines 1 local Ordered by importance. +** Volunteer update 2022-11-07 + +- I just posted some notes on how I reflow and edit subtitles in case they're helpful: https://media.emacsconf.org/2022/backstage/editing-captions.html + ** TODO Record intro/outro for day-1 and day-2 :zaeph: :PROPERTIES: :CUSTOM_ID: rec-intro @@ -3928,8 +3932,8 @@ Sacha Chua :captioner-email (assoc-default "EMAIL" captioner-info) :captioner-volunteered (if (string= (plist-get talk :captioner) "sachac") - "I edited the captions, and here they are." - (format "%s volunteered to edit the captions for your video." (assoc-default "NAME_SHORT" captioner-info))) + "" + (format "%s volunteered to edit the captions for your video. " (assoc-default "NAME_SHORT" captioner-info))) :captioner-thanks (if (string= (plist-get talk :captioner) "sachac") "It was fun working on your captions. Thanks!" @@ -3950,15 +3954,15 @@ Sacha Chua Hi ${speakers-short}! -Because you sent in your video early, we were able to caption it so -that more people can find and enjoy your talk. ${captioner-volunteered} -I've attached -the caption text file in case you want to review it, suggest any -corrections, or use the text in a blog post or elsewhere. You can look -at the attached file or watch your video with closed captions at -${url} (username: emacsconf, password: ${password}). I've also -included the captions at the end of this e-mail for your convenience. -Thanks again for your contribution!${wrap} +Because you sent in your video before the conference, we were able to +caption it so that more people can find and enjoy your talk. +${captioner-volunteered} I've attached the caption text file in case +you want to review it, suggest any corrections, or use the text in a +blog post or elsewhere. You can look at the attached file or watch +your video with closed captions at ${url} (username: emacsconf, +password: ${password}). I've also included the captions at the end of +this e-mail for your convenience. Thanks again for your +contribution!${wrap} ${captioner-thanks} diff --git a/2022/organizers-notebook/schedule.svg b/2022/organizers-notebook/schedule.svg index 6a9f798f..a18f386c 100644 --- a/2022/organizers-notebook/schedule.svg +++ b/2022/organizers-notebook/schedule.svg @@ -1 +1 @@ - Saturday 9:00- 9:05 Saturday opening remarks sat-open 9:05- 9:25 Emacs journalism (or everything's a nail if you hit it with Emacs) journalism 9:45-10:05 Back to school with Emacs school 10:15-10:25 How to incorporate handwritten notes into Emacs Orgmode handwritten 10:55-11:15 Writing and organizing literature notes for scientific writing science 11:35-11:45 The Emacs Buddy initiative buddy 1:05- 1:25 Attending and organizing Emacs meetups meetups 1:45- 1:55 The ship that builds itself: How we used Emacs to develop a workshop for communities community 2:25- 2:50 Real estate and Org table formulas realestate 3:00- 3:20 Health data journaling and visualization with Org Mode and GNUplot health 3:40- 3:50 Edit live Jupyter notebook cells with Emacs jupyter 4:10- 4:20 orgvm: a simple HTTP server for org orgvm 4:50- 4:55 Saturday closing remarks sat-close 10:00-10:10 Tree-sitter beyond syntax highlighting treesitter 10:20-10:40 lsp-bridge: complete asynchronous LSP client lspbridge 10:50-11:07 asm-blox: a game based on WebAssembly that no one asked for asmblox 11:25-11:35 Emacs should become a Wayland compositor wayland 1:00- 1:20 Using SQLite as a data source: a framework and an example sqlite 1:45- 2:15 Revisiting the anatomy of Emacs mail user agents mail 2:50- 3:10 Maintaining the Maintainers: Attribution as an Economic Model for Open Source maint 3:35- 3:40 Bidirectional links with eev eev 3:50- 3:55 Short hyperlinks to Python docs python 4:05- 4:35 Haskell code exploration with Emacs haskell 9 10 11 12 1 2 3 4 5 Sunday 9:00- 9:05 Sunday opening remarks sun-open 9:05- 9:25 Results of the 2022 Emacs Survey survey 9:35- 9:45 This Year in Org orgyear 10:00-10:20 Build a Zettelkasten with the Hyperbole Rolodex rolodex 10:40-10:50 Linking headings with org-super-links (poor-man's Zettelkasten) orgsuperlinks 11:10-11:20 Linking personal info with Hyperbole implicit buttons buttons 1:00- 1:30 Powerful productivity with Hyperbole and Org Mode hyperorg 1:50- 2:10 Org workflows for developers workflows 2:30- 2:50 GRAIL---A Generalized Representation and Aggregation of Information Layers grail 3:20- 3:40 Putting Org Mode on the Indieweb indieweb 4:00- 4:05 Emacs development updates devel 4:15- 4:25 Fanfare for the Common Emacs User fanfare 4:50- 5:00 Sunday closing remarks sun-close 10:00-10:25 rde Emacs introduction rde 10:45-10:55 justl: Driving recipes within Emacs justl 11:05-11:35 Elisp and the TRAMP: How to NOT write code you don't have to tramp 1:00- 1:10 Getting detached from Emacs detached 1:35- 1:45 Top 10 reasons why you should be using Eshell eshell 2:10- 2:30 Emacs was async before async was cool async 3:05- 3:25 The Wheels on D-Bus dbus 4:00- 4:20 Pre-localizing Emacs localizing 9 10 11 12 1 2 3 4 5 \ No newline at end of file + Saturday 9:00- 9:05 Saturday opening remarks sat-open 9:05- 9:25 Emacs journalism (or everything's a nail if you hit it with Emacs) journalism 9:45-10:05 Back to school with Emacs school 10:15-10:25 How to incorporate handwritten notes into Emacs Orgmode handwritten 10:55-11:15 Writing and organizing literature notes for scientific writing science 11:35-11:45 The Emacs Buddy initiative buddy 1:05- 1:25 Attending and organizing Emacs meetups meetups 1:45- 1:55 The ship that builds itself: How we used Emacs to develop a workshop for communities community 2:25- 2:50 Real estate and Org table formulas realestate 3:00- 3:20 Health data journaling and visualization with Org Mode and GNUplot health 3:40- 3:50 Edit live Jupyter notebook cells with Emacs jupyter 4:10- 4:20 orgvm: a simple HTTP server for org orgvm 4:50- 4:55 Saturday closing remarks sat-close 10:00-10:10 Tree-sitter beyond syntax highlighting treesitter 10:20-10:40 lsp-bridge: complete asynchronous LSP client lspbridge 10:50-11:07 asm-blox: a game based on WebAssembly that no one asked for asmblox 11:25-11:35 Emacs should become a Wayland compositor wayland 1:00- 1:20 Using SQLite as a data source: a framework and an example sqlite 1:45- 2:15 Revisiting the anatomy of Emacs mail user agents mail 2:50- 3:10 Maintaining the Maintainers: Attribution as an Economic Model for Open Source maint 3:35- 3:40 Bidirectional links with eev eev 3:50- 3:55 Short hyperlinks to Python docs python 4:05- 4:35 Haskell code exploration with Emacs haskell 9 10 11 12 1 2 3 4 5 Sunday 9:00- 9:05 Sunday opening remarks sun-open 9:05- 9:25 Results of the 2022 Emacs Survey survey 9:35- 9:45 This Year in Org orgyear 10:00-10:20 Build a Zettelkasten with the Hyperbole Rolodex rolodex 10:40-10:50 Linking headings with org-super-links (poor-man's Zettelkasten) orgsuperlinks 11:10-11:20 Linking personal info with Hyperbole implicit buttons buttons 1:00- 1:30 Powerful productivity with Hyperbole and Org Mode hyperorg 1:50- 2:10 Org workflows for developers workflows 2:30- 2:50 GRAIL---A Generalized Representation and Aggregation of Information Layers grail 3:20- 3:40 Putting Org Mode on the Indieweb indieweb 4:00- 4:05 Emacs development updates devel 4:15- 4:25 Fanfare for the Common Emacs User fanfare 4:50- 5:00 Sunday closing remarks sun-close 10:00-10:25 rde Emacs introduction rde 10:45-10:55 justl: Driving recipes within Emacs justl 11:05-11:35 Elisp and the TRAMP: How to NOT write code you don't have to tramp 1:00- 1:10 Getting detached from Emacs detached 1:35- 1:45 Top 10 reasons why you should be using Eshell eshell 2:10- 2:30 Emacs was async before async was cool async 3:05- 3:25 The Wheels on D-Bus dbus 4:00- 4:20 Pre-localizing Emacs localizing 9 10 11 12 1 2 3 4 5 \ No newline at end of file -- cgit v1.2.3