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WEBVTT

00:00.880 --> 00:02.720
[Raymond Puzio]: Hello, I'm Raymond Puzio.

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I first learned about Emacs and Lisp

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at an enrichment program

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for high school students.

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When I studied physics at the university,

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I used Emacs and Tex

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to write mathematical documents.

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Later on, I became active

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in Emacs and Lisp user groups where,

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among other things, I learned about

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Org mode for reproducible research.

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Nowadays, I am working on

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synthesizing Emacs and other programs

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into an end-to-end platform

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for scientific research and collaboration.

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[Joe Corneli]: I'm Joe Corneli.

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I also started using Emacs in high school

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in a course on C programming,

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and now I'm technically

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a computer scientist.

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My research background

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is in mathematics and online communities.

00:43.120 --> 00:45.039
[Noorah Alhasan]: Hi, I'm Noorah Alhasan.

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I'm a member of the ERG group

00:46.719 --> 00:49.600
and a PhD student at UT Austin

00:49.600 --> 00:51.760
studying climate policy.

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So for this talk, the four of us

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met at EmacsConf 2020 last year

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with a common interest

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in Emacs and research.

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we've met almost every week since then

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because we wanted to

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keep the conversation going.

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In this short talk,

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we share information

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about the methods we use.

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Here's the outline of our talk.

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First, we'll tell you

01:10.560 --> 01:12.320
about the technologies we use

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and show a short demo video

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from one of the meetings.

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We'll then focus on

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the time and content structuring methods

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we use in our live sessions.

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Finally, we'll talk about

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what came out of all this work.

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For example, we wrote a paper for the

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Pattern Languages of Programs conference,

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and we designed a workshop

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using the knowledge we created together.

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Very practically,

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this has improved the quality

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of our own collaboration

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and we have some lessons

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about how you can create

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a research community similar to ours.

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[Joe]: You'll have noticed that we all have

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different research backgrounds

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and we do think that transdisciplinarity

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is important for solving big problems.

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However, if you have people

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from different research backgrounds

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working together,

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they need some scaffolding,

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both in terms of tools and methods,

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to have good conversations.

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And of course, as Emacs users,

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we wanted to have Emacs

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at the center of that.

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Being in a meeting,

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taking real-time notes

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collaboratively with Emacs

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realizes a dream that some of us

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have been entertaining

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(and experimenting with)

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for a while. The package crdt.el

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by Qiantan Hong makes this easy.

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We take notes in our meetings

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using Org Mode.

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Since we've seen this before

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in talks on reproducible research,

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and since Leo is the maintainer of org-roam,

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it was a natural choice for us.

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It allows us to

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put our notes online using git

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and the static state generator Firn.

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And lastly, of course, we need

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a real-time meeting tool.

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For that purpose,

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we use BBB in our weekly sessions

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(in fact, we use the same server

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that's used by EmacsConf,

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thanks again to Leo).

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All of these tools are

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free/libre/open source.

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However, BBB does have

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some intensive hardware requirements.

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Next up, here's a

02:54.800 --> 02:56.239
short pre-recorded snippet

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from one of our recent meetings

02:57.680 --> 03:01.840
so you can get a sense of how they go.

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[Demo - Leo Vivier]: Are we okay

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pushing the demo to the end?

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That kind of presupposes

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a different structure

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that you would usually have

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in a presentation.

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Generally you have...

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You introduce the demo, you do the demo,

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and then you do the conclusions,

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or what was good about the demo.

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Does that make sense to everyone?

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[Ray]: Let's see.

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When you usually do that,

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that's because whatever you're demonstrating

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is the main point of your talk,

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so if this was a talk about action reviews,

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that would make sense, but isn't it not ERG?

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[Leo]: But it's because we are telling...

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For me, I think it's a compound element.

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Yes, we are demonstrating the power,

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but we are also demonstrating

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how we're working together by...

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Yes, we might have introduced CRDT before

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in the presentation itself,

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but if we need to be doing the power,

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and also showing tools like CRDT,

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obviously, we're not... probably not going

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to be talking about... oh by the way,

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here we are using CRDT

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and stuff like this.

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It feels like cramming a lot of stuff

03:57.280 --> 03:58.720
into this demo at the end.

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[Joe]: So I think demo to me

04:00.159 --> 04:02.159
is less about demoing one of the methods,

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because then people will get

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a bit hung up on that.

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I think the demo...

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You know, to be honest,

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here's another thing.

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What we could do--

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this would be very clever--

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we could make this the demo,

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what we're doing right now,

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writing this talk is the demo,

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and just go back into the video

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and just get out a two-minute section,

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so we say, look we tried to write this talk,

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we went around, had a discussion,

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we had these things and then we just take...

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We're going to pick two minutes

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out of this video

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and show you that

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as a demo of how we actually work

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and then we'll go back to the talk.

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I mean, it'd be very funny,

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and then we've already done the demo.

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It's just, like... uh yeah,

04:34.560 --> 04:35.280
then we're good to go.

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And it's got neural lines on the floor.

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It's like a perfect writer's room.

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It's a total amazing writer's room scenario,

04:41.199 --> 04:43.120
specifically because she's lying on her back

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on the floor. Anyway. I mean,

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I think this would be fine.

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[Leo]: I think I particularly like the idea

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of taking the snippet,

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the two minutes before the realization

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that we could be using this as the demo,

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and then seeing the... well my face light up

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because it feels like a good idea,

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and Joe gets excited about this.

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I think this could be a good demo,

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and I think this would be

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a very genuine demonstration

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of how we work here

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and how we get excited about

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some of our ideas sometimes.

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[Noorah]: In the demo,

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you saw a very improvised

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free-flowing conversation.

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In order to have this kind of conversation

05:19.840 --> 05:20.960
and still get things done,

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we need a pretty rigorous structure in place

05:23.520 --> 05:26.000
at the bigger scale of the meetings.

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This involves both

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a timetable for the meetings

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and some review and planning processes.

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[Joe]: Just to say a little bit more

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about the timetable, if you could go back,

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the meetings are generally following

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a structure as we have up on the screen

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of informal check-ins

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followed by any announcements,

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and then two topics, at most two topics,

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with a break in the middle.

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The whole thing takes about two hours,

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and we meet weekly.

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The consistency of these meetings

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is really important

05:58.800 --> 00:06:00.719
for how the group works.

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[Ray]: At at the end of every meeting,

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we ask and answer

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a series of questions

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adapted from the ‘After Action Review’

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developed by the United States Army

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in their training programs,

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and also used in some business contexts.

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The adaptation we use here

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came out of the Peeragogy project,

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which some of us have been involved with

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since 2012, and it's designed to be

06:22.160 --> 06:24.560
less hierarchical than the army's review.

06:24.560 --> 06:26.960
By writing down and sharing these reviews,

06:26.960 --> 06:28.240
we create a resource

06:28.240 --> 06:29.600
for further peer learning

06:29.600 --> 00:06:32.239
later down the line.

06:32.240 --> 06:33.280
[Joe]: So, specifically,

06:33.280 --> 06:34.560
every six weeks or so,

06:34.560 --> 06:35.840
we look at the transcripts

06:35.840 --> 06:37.360
from the previous action reviews

06:37.360 --> 06:39.120
using a four-layered framework

06:39.120 --> 06:41.199
that comes from future studies,

06:41.199 --> 06:42.560
and we use this to better understand

06:42.560 --> 06:43.759
the underlying themes

06:43.759 --> 06:44.880
that surface in the reviews

06:44.880 --> 06:46.479
and to develop the deeper motivations

06:46.479 --> 06:48.160
for ongoing work together.

06:48.160 --> 06:49.680
This helps us get a big-picture sense

06:49.680 --> 06:50.720
of where we're going,

06:50.720 --> 06:51.840
and we can keep that up to date

06:51.840 --> 06:52.720
at a slower pace

06:52.720 --> 06:54.479
than we do in the weekly meetings.

06:54.479 --> 06:55.759
This also helps us tie our work

06:55.759 --> 06:56.880
into a broader context

06:56.880 --> 06:57.759
and gives us some hope

06:57.759 --> 06:59.919
that over time we can contribute to

06:59.919 --> 00:07:02.318
solving big problems.

07:02.319 --> 07:02.880
[Ray]: Going back

07:02.880 --> 07:04.880
to solving larger problems.

07:04.880 --> 07:06.560
When we carry out the analysis,

07:06.560 --> 07:08.400
we don't just think about what happened

07:08.400 --> 07:09.440
at previous meetings,

07:09.440 --> 07:11.520
but we also take a longer view,

07:11.520 --> 07:12.960
thinking about things such as

07:12.960 --> 07:15.680
structuring a community of collaborators,

07:15.680 --> 07:16.960
or building platforms

07:16.960 --> 07:18.720
for scientific research.

07:18.720 --> 07:20.080
We want to think about how

07:20.080 --> 07:21.120
what we have been doing

07:21.120 --> 07:23.599
fits into broader historical patterns

07:23.599 --> 07:24.720
and trends.

07:24.720 --> 07:27.120
In the past, the pattern is a

07:27.120 --> 07:28.240
historical pattern;

07:28.240 --> 07:30.000
in the present, we contextualize

07:30.000 --> 07:32.400
what we learned about designed futures;

07:32.400 --> 07:34.639
towards the future, we use these patterns

07:34.639 --> 07:37.440
to augment our big-picture analysis

07:37.440 --> 07:38.800
with the next steps.

07:38.800 --> 00:07:42.879
This helps keep us on track.

07:42.880 --> 07:44.720
[Noorah]: Okay. So we have been working on

07:44.720 --> 07:46.160
several projects: a paper

07:46.160 --> 07:47.280
for the pattern conference

07:47.280 --> 07:48.240
mentioned earlier,

07:48.240 --> 07:50.080
a workshop, and a user study,

07:50.080 --> 07:51.280
and we'll say a little bit more

07:51.280 --> 00:07:53.598
about these.

07:53.599 --> 07:56.319
We co-authored a paper

07:56.319 --> 07:57.919
that touches on all of the topics

07:57.919 --> 07:58.960
we mentioned earlier

07:58.960 --> 08:01.120
and presented it at the leading conference

08:01.120 --> 08:02.080
on Design Patterns

08:02.080 --> 08:04.000
for programs and programming.

08:04.000 --> 08:09.520
One of the case studies in the paper

08:09.520 --> 08:12.960
sums up the way we work in ERG.

08:12.960 --> 08:16.000
The paper puts ERG in context

08:16.000 --> 08:17.520
with other peer learning communities,

08:17.520 --> 08:18.960
and we aim to describe

08:18.960 --> 08:20.160
our way of working

08:20.160 --> 08:22.720
in a way that others would find accessible

08:22.720 --> 00:08:24.559
and potentially useful.

08:24.560 --> 08:25.680
We are also developing

08:25.680 --> 08:27.039
an interactive workshop

08:27.039 --> 08:28.800
based on the ideas in the paper,

08:28.800 --> 08:31.039
which we piloted at the PLoP conference.

08:31.039 --> 08:32.479
Our intent with the workshop

08:32.479 --> 08:34.800
was to build a method

08:34.800 --> 08:36.240
for rapid problem solving,

08:36.240 --> 08:37.839
which could, at least in principle,

08:37.839 --> 08:40.159
expand beyond the workshop setting

08:40.159 --> 08:41.839
to distributed networks.

08:41.839 --> 08:44.080
The workshop involves made-up roles,

08:44.080 --> 08:45.440
like a kaiju communicator

08:45.440 --> 08:46.800
who helps understand problems

08:46.800 --> 08:47.839
as they arise.

08:47.839 --> 08:49.760
We also realize that it has given us

08:49.760 --> 08:51.279
a lot of wealth for thinking about

08:51.279 --> 00:08:57.518
the roles we take on in our weekly meetings.

08:57.519 --> 08:59.920
[Ray]: Free software may be lacking

08:59.920 --> 09:01.200
on ‘user’ aspects.

09:01.200 --> 09:02.720
People too often program

09:02.720 --> 09:04.320
to scratch their own itches,

09:04.320 --> 09:06.720
and assume others will do the same.

09:06.720 --> 09:09.360
To deal with this, we did several things.

09:09.360 --> 09:11.040
We looked at user experience

09:11.040 --> 09:12.160
and development together

09:12.160 --> 09:13.760
to see how the process went

09:13.760 --> 09:15.440
and where the gaps might be.

09:15.440 --> 09:17.600
We compared Emacs with other platforms,

09:17.600 --> 09:19.279
not just a technical level,

09:19.279 --> 09:21.440
but also at the user experience level.

09:21.440 --> 09:22.640
We had guest sessions,

09:22.640 --> 09:25.440
where we've started to gather user stories.

09:25.440 --> 09:26.880
Building on these conversations,

09:26.880 --> 09:28.480
we would like to do more research

09:28.480 --> 09:29.839
in all these topics,

09:29.839 --> 09:30.959
and eventually be able to

09:30.959 --> 09:32.160
say something like:

09:32.160 --> 09:34.160
‘If you are someone who does X,

09:34.160 --> 09:35.279
these are the packages

09:35.279 --> 00:09:38.479
that would work for you.’

09:38.480 --> 09:40.640
[Joe]: Putting these ideas into practice,

09:40.640 --> 09:42.880
our PLoP paper and the plans it contains

09:42.880 --> 09:43.680
become a /template/

09:43.680 --> 09:44.720
for some of the other things

09:44.720 --> 09:45.600
we want to work on

09:45.600 --> 09:46.880
as we go forward.

09:46.880 --> 09:49.120
If we imagine things in 2-3 years,

09:49.120 --> 09:49.920
what would it actually take

09:49.920 --> 09:52.240
to realize the vision from that paper?

09:52.240 --> 09:53.200
Thinking about the future:

09:53.200 --> 09:54.480
this is one of the main reasons why

09:54.480 --> 09:55.839
we want to share these ideas

09:55.839 --> 09:56.800
and invite other people

09:56.800 --> 09:58.160
into this way of working.

09:58.160 --> 09:59.600
There's no way we can actually achieve

09:59.600 --> 10:00.560
everything in our vision

10:00.560 --> 10:02.160
if we work all by ourselves.

10:02.160 --> 10:03.200
What we've been focusing on

10:03.200 --> 10:05.120
in Season Zero of the Emacs Research Group

10:05.120 --> 10:06.640
is methods that people can use

10:06.640 --> 00:10:08.559
to organize their own research groups.

10:08.560 --> 10:10.000
We decided to share this talk

10:10.000 --> 10:12.079
so that folks can learn from our community.

10:12.079 --> 10:13.040
Our goal has been to share

10:13.040 --> 10:14.000
how we've been doing things,

10:14.000 --> 10:14.959
and we hope this information

10:14.959 --> 10:16.079
is useful for you

10:16.079 --> 10:18.800
in your own communities and collaborations.

10:18.800 --> 10:19.262
Thank you.

10:19.262 --> 10:20.279
[captions by speakers and sachac]