From 99d7320ddafd1c3eb9a64f9d26d5366d2da0ce21 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Sacha Chua Date: Thu, 7 Dec 2023 22:26:49 -0500 Subject: processed gen-sat IRC log and pads --- 2023/talks/nabokov.md | 75 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 75 insertions(+) (limited to '2023/talks/nabokov.md') diff --git a/2023/talks/nabokov.md b/2023/talks/nabokov.md index 3f768f11..593f444d 100644 --- a/2023/talks/nabokov.md +++ b/2023/talks/nabokov.md @@ -42,6 +42,81 @@ of its own subplots, org-mode's powerful blending of structure and prose rescued it. I'd like to show you how that worked, and how much of org-mode's power for writing comes from its similarity to Nabokov's famous index-card-based writing process. +# Discussion + +## Notes + +- It looks like the Zettelkasten slipbox for nabokov +- James Howell also like the idea using small slide to convey single + idea to the reader. In emacs, we have \`narrow\` function. Yes! I + use various narrow functions to present text with Emacs. (I use + narrow a bunch when editing, it really helps focus on a chapter or + scene) + - The funny thing about narrow functions, I mean the first time I + saw it in the manual, there is a warning to the new user.  That + would be afraid of this kind of functionality, and you have to + be careful, haha\... + - I saw that warning too and avoided narrow for a long time as a + result!  But it\'s not really that bad\... + - Exactly, I use narrow a lot, you know, every time I\'m + working on any single type of writing or writing a code or + writing a piece of manuscript. It\'s really helped me to + narrow down my attention and to kind of release any other + thoughts that is not directly connected to the current + things I\'m working on. And that really is an underestimated + functionality for the Emacs. +- The most valuable thing that Org will bring to the writer is the + structure, how we can navigate between different structures of + thoughts. +- The idea is using tag to narrow down a single person\'s timeline in + the whole context of stories. It\'s something very interesting. +- ewj.io/emacs +- 👏 I'll start writing my masterpiece tomorrow! +- I need to use tags more, org-sparse-tree is handy + + +## Questions and answers + +- Q: Does the index really matter here? I mean, his colleague is also + using some A4 paper, and do you think that the index card is the + most important thing here? + - A: + - portbablity win! +- Q:How do you export the second level headings (scenes in this + example) without the heading itself, just the content?  + - A:3 ways for this: ox-ignore (it was visually annoying), dumb + awk script, pandoc filters in lua + - I would say the org-transclusion works very well for this + kind of demand. +- Q: Slightly offtopic: where can we see your novels? + - A: there are on Amazon: two of them, and a book of short-stories + - Links: + - +- Q: Have you looked at the Denote Signature features. The + hierarchical nature of luhman IDs and index cards work well with + Denote Signatures + - A:I haven\'t, but I will take a look! + - + - The part that I like with signatures is they can be optional + with your zettelkasten as another way to use it. +- Q: Do you have a workflow combining hand-written index cards and org + mode? + - A: + - Maybe just take a picture and OCR for your small index + cards, but at the end of the day you always have to go back + to your main Org files. + - Ooh, I have a workflow for using Google\'s OCR to grab + the text from my sketches (esp. the ID) so that I can + link to my sketches in Org with ID and completion - + sachac + - haha, nice to see different approach, I personally + didn\'t do that because I still most of my work is + on the computer so yeah in the future if i have lots + of handwriting notes in my working I will reconsider + Google solution +- Q: + - A: + [[!inline pages="internal(2023/info/nabokov-after)" raw="yes"]] -- cgit v1.2.3