WEBVTT captioned by hannah 00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:02.039 Hello everyone, I'm Vidianos. 00:00:02.040 --> 00:00:03.079 Today I'm going to show you 00:00:03.080 --> 00:00:04.079 how I write and organize 00:00:04.080 --> 00:00:06.439 my literature notes using Emacs. 00:00:06.440 --> 00:00:08.719 I take my notes using Zettelkasten, 00:00:08.720 --> 00:00:11.079 which you may or may not have heard. 00:00:11.080 --> 00:00:13.839 It is about taking small atomic notes 00:00:13.840 --> 00:00:14.999 and linking them one another 00:00:15.000 --> 00:00:17.599 to create your so-called second brain. 00:00:17.600 --> 00:00:19.159 Here is mine. 00:00:19.160 --> 00:00:20.719 This is a graph of all the notes 00:00:20.720 --> 00:00:22.879 I have accumulated the last few years. 00:00:22.880 --> 00:00:25.199 It has various types of notes, 00:00:25.200 --> 00:00:25.959 but we're mainly going to focus on 00:00:25.960 --> 00:00:28.319 literature notes today. 00:00:28.320 --> 00:00:29.639 Here are the contents of my talk. 00:00:29.640 --> 00:00:30.439 We're going to start 00:00:30.440 --> 00:00:31.919 with bibliography management, 00:00:31.920 --> 00:00:33.319 which is how I take bibliography 00:00:33.320 --> 00:00:35.959 from the web and import it to Emacs. 00:00:35.960 --> 00:00:37.079 Then we're going to talk about 00:00:37.080 --> 00:00:38.879 how I create literature notes 00:00:38.880 --> 00:00:42.759 using a custom org-roam-bibtex template I have. 00:00:42.760 --> 00:00:43.919 And after talking about that, 00:00:43.920 --> 00:00:46.359 we can talk about how I write literature notes, 00:00:46.360 --> 00:00:48.239 which is through annotating an article 00:00:48.240 --> 00:00:51.319 using org-noter. Org-noter is a package 00:00:51.320 --> 00:00:53.439 that allows you to annotate PDFs 00:00:53.440 --> 00:00:54.999 using the Org format 00:00:55.000 --> 00:00:59.559 and creates a supplementary Org file to your PDF. 00:00:59.560 --> 00:01:00.879 Then we're going to talk about 00:01:00.880 --> 00:01:03.519 adding the literature to your Zettelkasten, 00:01:03.520 --> 00:01:06.279 which is a simple but important topic, 00:01:06.280 --> 00:01:08.599 and how you can write permanent notes 00:01:08.600 --> 00:01:11.719 based on the info you obtain from this literature. 00:01:11.720 --> 00:01:13.319 Lastly, we're going to focus on 00:01:13.320 --> 00:01:14.999 the organization problem 00:01:15.000 --> 00:01:17.719 one might find when having a lot of literature 00:01:17.720 --> 00:01:21.439 for an assignment or an article or something, 00:01:21.440 --> 00:01:22.959 and how I have tried to solve this 00:01:22.960 --> 00:01:24.839 with my package Zetteldesk. 00:01:24.840 --> 00:01:26.359 This isn't the perfect solution, 00:01:26.360 --> 00:01:29.799 but it is what I have, and I really like it. 00:01:29.800 --> 00:01:30.839 Finally, we're going to talk about 00:01:30.840 --> 00:01:33.559 how to compose the final article 00:01:33.560 --> 00:01:35.199 that you want to produce 00:01:35.200 --> 00:01:36.799 using this literature 00:01:36.800 --> 00:01:38.639 with the technique described 00:01:38.640 --> 00:01:40.559 in the rest of this talk. 00:01:40.560 --> 00:01:42.239 So let's begin the talk 00:01:42.240 --> 00:01:44.239 with bibliography management. 00:01:44.240 --> 00:01:47.239 Zotero is the bibliography manager I use. 00:01:47.240 --> 00:01:49.399 It is very simple to store articles with it, 00:01:49.400 --> 00:01:50.679 and it exports to .bib, 00:01:50.680 --> 00:01:52.079 integrating with packages 00:01:52.080 --> 00:01:54.959 such as org-roam-bibtex and ivy-bibtex. 00:01:54.960 --> 00:01:56.679 When researching, I typically find 00:01:56.680 --> 00:02:00.039 a long list of articles from a search engine. 00:02:00.040 --> 00:02:03.439 I open the titles which have interesting titles 00:02:03.440 --> 00:02:05.039 through their abstracts 00:02:05.040 --> 00:02:07.799 and save to Zotero those whose abstracts 00:02:07.800 --> 00:02:10.319 are the most relevant to what I want. 00:02:10.320 --> 00:02:11.799 From these articles, 00:02:11.800 --> 00:02:13.359 I typically won't read all of them 00:02:13.360 --> 00:02:14.519 because they're a lot, 00:02:14.520 --> 00:02:17.759 but I will select a few, 00:02:17.760 --> 00:02:21.639 once I have collected as many as I want. 00:02:21.640 --> 00:02:24.079 Zotero acts as a way to store everything 00:02:24.080 --> 00:02:25.479 that might be interesting, 00:02:25.480 --> 00:02:28.519 while Emacs and my Zettelkasten 00:02:28.520 --> 00:02:30.959 stores everything that is definitely interesting, 00:02:30.960 --> 00:02:35.199 and I have read it already. 00:02:35.200 --> 00:02:36.359 And then we can move to 00:02:36.360 --> 00:02:38.559 how I create literature notes. 00:02:38.560 --> 00:02:41.119 I set the default action of ivy-bibtex 00:02:41.120 --> 00:02:43.599 to ivy-bibtex-edit-notes, 00:02:43.600 --> 00:02:44.919 which will prompt-- which 00:02:44.920 --> 00:02:46.479 with org-roam-bibtex-mode active, 00:02:46.480 --> 00:02:48.839 prompts you for an org-capture template 00:02:48.840 --> 00:02:50.799 when selecting something 00:02:50.800 --> 00:02:52.319 if the node doesn't exist, 00:02:52.320 --> 00:02:54.959 or takes you to the existing node. 00:02:54.960 --> 00:02:58.439 And obviously you need to have this here, 00:02:58.440 --> 00:03:00.799 to set the default action 00:03:00.800 --> 00:03:02.599 that was already there 00:03:02.600 --> 00:03:04.959 to a letter. 00:03:04.960 --> 00:03:08.039 Then we can move to my org-roam reference template, 00:03:08.040 --> 00:03:11.159 using org-roam-bibtex. 00:03:11.160 --> 00:03:12.439 This isn't so complicated, 00:03:12.440 --> 00:03:14.119 but it has some important stuff 00:03:14.120 --> 00:03:14.879 I want to highlight. 00:03:14.880 --> 00:03:17.399 Save it to the ref directory, 00:03:17.400 --> 00:03:19.719 so I can remember where it is, 00:03:19.720 --> 00:03:23.559 and it's classified as a literature note. 00:03:23.560 --> 00:03:25.119 The file name is the cite key, 00:03:25.120 --> 00:03:27.759 which is easy and small, 00:03:27.760 --> 00:03:30.079 but the title is the actual article's title. 00:03:30.080 --> 00:03:32.319 Give it a tag of the entry-type; 00:03:32.320 --> 00:03:35.039 this is typically "article," 00:03:35.040 --> 00:03:37.479 but it's easy to sort things this way 00:03:37.480 --> 00:03:41.399 because not all literature notes are articles. 00:03:41.400 --> 00:03:43.159 And then give the keywords 00:03:43.160 --> 00:03:47.359 that are given by Zotero, because why not? 00:03:47.360 --> 00:03:51.479 Tags here are tags from Zettelkasten. 00:03:51.480 --> 00:03:53.639 These are the links to 00:03:53.640 --> 00:03:55.359 other files which are relevant, 00:03:55.360 --> 00:03:58.079 but its initialization is empty, obviously. 00:03:58.080 --> 00:03:59.839 And then this heading is where 00:03:59.840 --> 00:04:00.839 all the magic happens. 00:04:00.840 --> 00:04:04.719 The name is just not really so relevant; 00:04:04.720 --> 00:04:07.559 I just needed something that made sense. 00:04:07.560 --> 00:04:10.399 The properties are what matters, 00:04:10.400 --> 00:04:12.239 and mainly this one here. 00:04:12.240 --> 00:04:18.879 The ${file} attribute finds 00:04:18.880 --> 00:04:24.799 the file of this specific literature 00:04:24.800 --> 00:04:27.519 and makes sure that org-noter works 00:04:27.520 --> 00:04:29.639 by default here. 00:04:29.640 --> 00:04:32.559 As I'm going to show you in a moment, 00:04:32.560 --> 00:04:34.599 this way [of] initializing the literature note, 00:04:34.600 --> 00:04:36.999 org-noter works by default. 00:04:37.000 --> 00:04:40.159 That's all, basically, for the template. 00:04:40.160 --> 00:04:42.759 This is the point of the talk 00:04:42.760 --> 00:04:44.039 where we reach the first demo. 00:04:44.040 --> 00:04:47.079 This is about opening ivy-bibtex, 00:04:47.080 --> 00:04:50.239 selecting an article I want to annotate, 00:04:50.240 --> 00:04:52.999 initializing the literature note. 00:04:53.000 --> 00:04:54.999 We can see that everything 00:04:55.000 --> 00:04:56.479 is inserted in for me, 00:04:56.480 --> 00:05:01.079 and if I open org-noter on this heading, 00:05:01.080 --> 00:05:03.759 it opens the article, as expected. 00:05:03.760 --> 00:05:06.199 I can read the article, 00:05:06.200 --> 00:05:08.439 I can say I want to 00:05:08.440 --> 00:05:10.720 annotate something here. 00:05:20.720 --> 00:05:24.119 Obviously, annotation is not that simple as here, 00:05:24.120 --> 00:05:26.479 but I don't really have the time 00:05:26.480 --> 00:05:28.599 to actually annotate an article live. 00:05:28.600 --> 00:05:34.039 But you can keep going, and it's a good setup. 00:05:34.040 --> 00:05:39.879 Then close org-noter, 00:05:39.880 --> 00:05:40.839 and let's go presentation again. 00:05:40.840 --> 00:05:44.359 Moving on, this section is some stuff 00:05:44.360 --> 00:05:45.799 about my annotation process. 00:05:45.800 --> 00:05:49.479 As I said, there is not enough time for me 00:05:49.480 --> 00:05:51.119 to actually annotate an article live, 00:05:51.120 --> 00:05:52.999 but here are some things about it. 00:05:53.000 --> 00:05:55.479 First, is that I annotate with org-noter, 00:05:55.480 --> 00:05:56.719 which I absolutely love. 00:05:56.720 --> 00:05:59.599 It is great for annotations 00:05:59.600 --> 00:06:02.519 because you do them in org, 00:06:02.520 --> 00:06:03.879 which is an amazing format 00:06:03.880 --> 00:06:05.879 and gives you a lot of flexibility, 00:06:05.880 --> 00:06:07.839 such as adding to the Zettelkasten, 00:06:07.840 --> 00:06:11.319 being initialized by a capture template, 00:06:11.320 --> 00:06:13.119 and other things. 00:06:13.120 --> 00:06:15.959 But also, you don't need to look for 00:06:15.960 --> 00:06:17.359 the notes inside the PDF, 00:06:17.360 --> 00:06:19.519 which is a problem you can have 00:06:19.520 --> 00:06:20.959 if you annotate on the PDF, 00:06:20.960 --> 00:06:23.079 and it is very annoying in my opinion. 00:06:23.080 --> 00:06:26.439 So I prefer having these notes, 00:06:26.440 --> 00:06:27.879 and I can only focus on them, 00:06:27.880 --> 00:06:29.759 but I can also see where they refer. 00:06:29.760 --> 00:06:33.199 The other scenarios are not so good. 00:06:33.200 --> 00:06:35.519 Annotating on the PDF, 00:06:35.520 --> 00:06:36.479 you search for it, 00:06:36.480 --> 00:06:41.199 and if you don't know which section it refers to, 00:06:41.200 --> 00:06:42.759 then you need to look about it, 00:06:42.760 --> 00:06:44.239 and that is very tiring. 00:06:44.240 --> 00:06:48.359 Also, I am always annotating in English. 00:06:48.360 --> 00:06:50.199 This is not my mother tongue, 00:06:50.200 --> 00:06:52.039 but it helps me avoid 00:06:52.040 --> 00:06:53.679 the necessary mental overhead 00:06:53.680 --> 00:06:55.199 of translating while reading. 00:06:55.200 --> 00:06:57.559 I want to pay attention to what I read 00:06:57.560 --> 00:06:59.679 and not to translate stuff. 00:06:59.680 --> 00:07:02.119 I will translate later. 00:07:02.120 --> 00:07:05.039 And when finishing an article, 00:07:05.040 --> 00:07:07.719 I write a mini-abstract myself, 00:07:07.720 --> 00:07:10.119 which contains what I think about the article. 00:07:10.120 --> 00:07:11.639 It doesn't need to be much, 00:07:11.640 --> 00:07:13.999 it's usually like 3 or 4 paragraphs, 00:07:14.000 --> 00:07:18.319 and it shows things that are useful in the article, 00:07:18.320 --> 00:07:21.159 and what is mentioned that matters to me. 00:07:21.160 --> 00:07:22.599 So I can look back at it, 00:07:22.600 --> 00:07:24.919 and it is very easy for me to find 00:07:24.920 --> 00:07:26.599 what I got from this article, 00:07:26.600 --> 00:07:30.199 so where I will cite it on my actual project. 00:07:30.200 --> 00:07:33.879 Then last thing you need to do 00:07:33.880 --> 00:07:35.479 is add a note to your Zettelkasten. 00:07:35.480 --> 00:07:38.039 This is very easy due to it being in an org format. 00:07:38.040 --> 00:07:41.799 You can just have it in the org-roam directory, 00:07:41.800 --> 00:07:43.639 which it automatically goes to, 00:07:43.640 --> 00:07:46.559 and link it to other relevant notes, 00:07:46.560 --> 00:07:48.519 which is its index 00:07:48.520 --> 00:07:50.559 because everything in my Zettelkasten 00:07:50.560 --> 00:07:51.719 (at least) has an index, 00:07:51.720 --> 00:07:54.519 but also every other permanent note 00:07:54.520 --> 00:07:56.759 whose contents are in one way or another 00:07:56.760 --> 00:07:58.079 mentioned inside the article. 00:07:58.080 --> 00:08:00.359 This way the article is in a network with notes 00:08:00.360 --> 00:08:02.039 that are similar to it. 00:08:02.040 --> 00:08:05.359 Then we move on to the second demo, 00:08:05.360 --> 00:08:08.039 which is about a full-fledged literature note. 00:08:08.040 --> 00:08:11.119 We can go on org-roam-node-find, 00:08:11.120 --> 00:08:13.159 search for references, 00:08:13.160 --> 00:08:15.559 go to this, and you can see 00:08:15.560 --> 00:08:17.759 it is linked to other notes. 00:08:17.760 --> 00:08:20.039 And here is the mini-abstract, 00:08:20.040 --> 00:08:21.479 and here are my notes on it. 00:08:21.480 --> 00:08:27.519 The last thing you need to do 00:08:27.520 --> 00:08:29.119 when creating a literature note, 00:08:29.120 --> 00:08:31.319 is obviously create permanent notes 00:08:31.320 --> 00:08:32.279 based on what you read. 00:08:32.280 --> 00:08:35.679 If you never create these literature notes, 00:08:35.680 --> 00:08:37.679 you will never get new information. 00:08:37.680 --> 00:08:40.439 So for your Zettelkasten to grow, 00:08:40.440 --> 00:08:42.359 you need to create such notes. 00:08:42.360 --> 00:08:45.879 This means that the subject you are researching 00:08:45.880 --> 00:08:47.799 is not just literature notes 00:08:47.800 --> 00:08:50.279 but has well-structured permanent notes, 00:08:50.280 --> 00:08:52.799 which is what you will actually read. 00:08:52.800 --> 00:08:55.159 You typically only read literature notes 00:08:55.160 --> 00:08:57.159 to see what gets cited where. 00:08:57.160 --> 00:08:58.759 What you will mostly read 00:08:58.760 --> 00:08:59.839 is these permanent notes 00:08:59.840 --> 00:09:01.679 that you create from this knowledge. 00:09:01.680 --> 00:09:05.239 So finally we are at the last part of the talk, 00:09:05.240 --> 00:09:07.359 which is about organizing literature notes. 00:09:07.360 --> 00:09:09.559 And this is in my opinion 00:09:09.560 --> 00:09:10.879 the most interesting part 00:09:10.880 --> 00:09:12.199 because it is very unique. 00:09:12.200 --> 00:09:14.719 It uses a package I wrote myself, 00:09:14.720 --> 00:09:18.319 and it doesn't have as much usage 00:09:18.320 --> 00:09:21.519 as the rest of the things I described so far. 00:09:21.520 --> 00:09:24.799 So what is the problem you might find? 00:09:24.800 --> 00:09:27.959 Indeed, if you read a lot of things, 00:09:27.960 --> 00:09:30.959 you have a large collection of notes, 00:09:30.960 --> 00:09:33.919 and it's not the only thing you will think about. 00:09:33.920 --> 00:09:36.079 However, you do need to 00:09:36.080 --> 00:09:37.799 justify everything with citations, 00:09:37.800 --> 00:09:39.879 so you need to remember everything 00:09:39.880 --> 00:09:41.119 you read in these notes. 00:09:41.120 --> 00:09:43.519 You have done a lot of work, 00:09:43.520 --> 00:09:45.919 but there is still a lot for you 00:09:45.920 --> 00:09:47.319 to reach your final manuscript. 00:09:47.320 --> 00:09:50.359 Except if there was a handy little way 00:09:50.360 --> 00:09:52.879 to combine everything 00:09:52.880 --> 00:09:55.879 and sort it in a very easy way. 00:09:55.880 --> 00:09:56.959 Well, there is, 00:09:56.960 --> 00:10:00.119 and I think it came out pretty well. 00:10:00.120 --> 00:10:01.799 It's zetteldesk.el. 00:10:01.800 --> 00:10:05.039 It was inspired by this quote here 00:10:05.040 --> 00:10:06.479 from How to Take Smart Notes. 00:10:06.480 --> 00:10:09.799 Sönke Ahrens here talked about a desktop, 00:10:09.800 --> 00:10:13.079 which you have all the literature 00:10:13.080 --> 00:10:16.239 you want in that desktop, 00:10:16.240 --> 00:10:20.079 and you try to bring it in order. 00:10:20.080 --> 00:10:22.599 And by doing that, 00:10:22.600 --> 00:10:24.839 you can improve your ideas 00:10:24.840 --> 00:10:27.519 and have a structure 00:10:27.520 --> 00:10:30.919 so that your manuscript will then be 00:10:30.920 --> 00:10:33.879 very, very easy to write. 00:10:33.880 --> 00:10:36.279 And as I say here, in trying to do this, 00:10:36.280 --> 00:10:38.919 I made something much more general 00:10:38.920 --> 00:10:41.559 than it needed to be, so yeah, 00:10:41.560 --> 00:10:43.599 you can use it for many other things. 00:10:43.600 --> 00:10:46.959 But before I show you some things about it, 00:10:46.960 --> 00:10:49.879 I want to introduce you to what a desktop is. 00:10:49.880 --> 00:10:53.159 It's essentially a collection of the knowledge 00:10:53.160 --> 00:10:54.839 you want to be able to see. 00:10:54.840 --> 00:10:57.999 You add things to your Zetteldesk, 00:10:58.000 --> 00:11:01.679 and using filter functions, 00:11:01.680 --> 00:11:04.919 you only see these notes and nothing else, 00:11:04.920 --> 00:11:07.359 which in my opinion is very handy. 00:11:07.360 --> 00:11:10.319 So having said that, 00:11:10.320 --> 00:11:12.479 we can see these things in action 00:11:12.480 --> 00:11:14.399 for the final demo of the talk. 00:11:14.400 --> 00:11:15.839 This is the third one. 00:11:15.840 --> 00:11:20.879 I will go to an index file of mine. 00:11:20.880 --> 00:11:21.959 This is 3D printing, 00:11:21.960 --> 00:11:23.479 an assignment I had last semester. 00:11:23.480 --> 00:11:27.039 And this has 28 backlinks, 00:11:27.040 --> 00:11:30.399 so a lot of things that I looked at 00:11:30.400 --> 00:11:31.799 for this assignment. 00:11:31.800 --> 00:11:33.519 I can say I want to add 00:11:33.520 --> 00:11:35.799 the current note's backlinks to the Zetteldesk, 00:11:35.800 --> 00:11:38.239 and now I have a filtered version 00:11:38.240 --> 00:11:40.119 of org-roam-node-find defined, 00:11:40.120 --> 00:11:41.999 which only lists these 29 notes. 00:11:42.000 --> 00:11:45.039 Very nice, right? 00:11:45.040 --> 00:11:49.159 I can also filter just the literature notes, 00:11:49.160 --> 00:11:55.999 which can also use other UIs beside org-roam, 00:11:56.000 --> 00:11:57.439 such as, for example, 00:11:57.440 --> 00:12:00.039 one I use a lot is the ivy-bibtex command. 00:12:00.040 --> 00:12:03.239 This takes a lot of time, 00:12:03.240 --> 00:12:04.599 much longer than the org-roam one, 00:12:04.600 --> 00:12:06.479 but has them in this UI, 00:12:06.480 --> 00:12:09.839 which in a lot of cases is more useful for me. 00:12:09.840 --> 00:12:15.719 The other very important thing is inserting these. 00:12:15.720 --> 00:12:19.999 For example, say I want to insert a permanent note, 00:12:20.000 --> 00:12:21.759 such as this. 00:12:21.760 --> 00:12:25.399 Its title will become a top-level heading, 00:12:25.400 --> 00:12:29.319 and everything else will be inserted as expected. 00:12:29.320 --> 00:12:35.399 But the most important thing for us 00:12:35.400 --> 00:12:37.159 is inserting literature, right? 00:12:37.160 --> 00:12:39.519 This is done with this command, 00:12:39.520 --> 00:12:42.719 and let's say I want to insert this. 00:12:42.720 --> 00:12:48.239 The title again becomes a heading, 00:12:48.240 --> 00:12:50.839 and this is the article title also. 00:12:50.840 --> 00:12:53.039 I store the cite key here, 00:12:53.040 --> 00:12:56.319 and everything else about it is also here. 00:12:56.320 --> 00:12:58.239 And I can add others, 00:12:58.240 --> 00:13:01.199 for example, this and this. 00:13:01.200 --> 00:13:09.039 And we have all of them here. 00:13:09.040 --> 00:13:11.279 I see it says this is the basic, 00:13:11.280 --> 00:13:12.799 so let's put it at the top. 00:13:12.800 --> 00:13:18.839 And then maybe I want to put this last. 00:13:18.840 --> 00:13:24.159 And this way, you can sort things, 00:13:24.160 --> 00:13:26.319 and typically, on the other side, 00:13:26.320 --> 00:13:27.719 I have a manuscript, 00:13:27.720 --> 00:13:29.999 and I look at what order 00:13:30.000 --> 00:13:31.159 I want to have things in 00:13:31.160 --> 00:13:34.799 and sort the articles and the permanent notes 00:13:34.800 --> 00:13:38.359 in a way so that each section can have 00:13:38.360 --> 00:13:41.799 its own citations and its own notes, 00:13:41.800 --> 00:13:46.199 which makes writing, again, very easy, in my opinion. 00:13:46.200 --> 00:13:53.719 Finally, let's go to composing the final article. 00:13:53.720 --> 00:13:57.279 This is our goal: we wrote and organized 00:13:57.280 --> 00:13:58.359 all these literature notes 00:13:58.360 --> 00:14:00.399 to put them in your final project. 00:14:00.400 --> 00:14:01.879 This might be an assignment 00:14:01.880 --> 00:14:04.439 or an actual scientific article. 00:14:04.440 --> 00:14:07.479 It is apparent that you have done 00:14:07.480 --> 00:14:09.079 a lot of work for this so far, 00:14:09.080 --> 00:14:12.279 but you don't need to do a lot more. 00:14:12.280 --> 00:14:14.079 In my opinion, this is the easiest part 00:14:14.080 --> 00:14:15.519 of the whole workflow. 00:14:15.520 --> 00:14:19.279 People consider final article composition hard, 00:14:19.280 --> 00:14:21.239 but if you've done all these steps, 00:14:21.240 --> 00:14:23.439 you already have everything you want 00:14:23.440 --> 00:14:25.639 to add in the article from your notes. 00:14:25.640 --> 00:14:27.719 It's already there, 00:14:27.720 --> 00:14:30.759 a lot of things are copy-pasted, 00:14:30.760 --> 00:14:34.039 it's all in a coherent order, 00:14:34.040 --> 00:14:38.439 connections are to an extent already there, 00:14:38.440 --> 00:14:41.599 and you know what citation goes where, 00:14:41.600 --> 00:14:44.199 so you can justify everything you write. 00:14:44.200 --> 00:14:46.799 The actual draft isn't there, 00:14:46.800 --> 00:14:48.519 but it is very easy 00:14:48.520 --> 00:14:52.599 because now you just write things as you see them 00:14:52.600 --> 00:14:54.439 in your desktop and connect them. 00:14:54.440 --> 00:14:56.959 Connections are basic-- 00:14:56.960 --> 00:14:59.439 connections and making the article good, obviously, 00:14:59.440 --> 00:15:02.399 are basically the only thing you need to worry, 00:15:02.400 --> 00:15:05.919 but those are very important 00:15:05.920 --> 00:15:09.039 because others will only see the final manuscript, 00:15:09.040 --> 00:15:11.079 so if that's not good, 00:15:11.080 --> 00:15:14.079 then the whole assignment is not good, obviously. 00:15:14.080 --> 00:15:17.519 So it's not like your work is done, 00:15:17.520 --> 00:15:19.159 it's just very easy. 00:15:19.160 --> 00:15:23.279 And with that, I hope you liked my talk 00:15:23.280 --> 00:15:25.519 because it is coming to an end now. 00:15:25.520 --> 00:15:27.919 I want to thank you for your time; 00:15:27.920 --> 00:15:29.679 I hope you enjoyed it. 00:15:29.680 --> 00:15:32.519 You can feel free to email me at this address; 00:15:32.520 --> 00:15:35.639 it has also been on every slide since the beginning. 00:15:35.640 --> 00:15:40.239 I also have the GitHub for zetteldesk.el here, 00:15:40.240 --> 00:15:42.519 and I will be available for questions. 00:15:42.520 --> 00:15:44.999 I will be viewing both the pad and the IRC 00:15:45.000 --> 00:15:49.159 and will do a live Q&A after this. See you. 00:15:49.160 --> 00:15:51.279 Actually, before I go, 00:15:51.280 --> 00:15:54.199 let's show you the GitHub for zetteldesk.el. 00:15:54.200 --> 00:15:57.119 Here's the README; if you're interested on it, 00:15:57.120 --> 00:15:58.519 you can see more about it, 00:15:58.520 --> 00:16:02.559 and also I have a very in-depth wiki about it 00:16:02.560 --> 00:16:06.519 with 11 pages, and talking about everything 00:16:06.520 --> 00:16:08.079 that happens here. 00:16:08.080 --> 00:16:11.759 A lot of what we discussed is in this section 00:16:11.760 --> 00:16:12.919 about literature notes. 00:16:12.920 --> 00:16:17.199 These documents go a lot more in-depth 00:16:17.200 --> 00:16:22.799 in how Zetteldesk works, and also how to use it, 00:16:22.800 --> 00:16:27.719 so if you're interested, feel free to read them, 00:16:27.720 --> 00:16:30.239 and if you have any problems, 00:16:30.240 --> 00:16:31.839 you can open an issue about it; 00:16:31.840 --> 00:16:44.480 I will be very active. Thank you.