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WEBVTT


00:00:01.680 --> 00:00:01.880
[Speaker 0]: And he can hear us. Can you perhaps do it for

00:00:03.679 --> 00:00:03.760
me? Great. The little angels in the

00:00:04.640 --> 00:00:05.140
background have done it for me.

00:00:07.299 --> 00:00:07.759
So now, finally, that everything is ready.

00:00:08.559 --> 00:00:09.059
Hi, James. How are you doing?

00:00:10.559 --> 00:00:11.059
[Speaker 1]: Good morning. Hello.

00:00:15.200 --> 00:00:15.600
[Speaker 0]: Well, thank you for your talk.

00:00:17.160 --> 00:00:17.440
And sorry for the little hiccup at the middle

00:00:20.080 --> 00:00:20.380
we had to put out a fire with the audio

00:00:22.060 --> 00:00:22.560
going out in the middle and sorry about this.

00:00:23.560 --> 00:00:24.060
[Speaker 1]: It's no trouble.

00:00:28.220 --> 00:00:28.680
[Speaker 0]: So James, you've obviously told us about your

00:00:30.060 --> 00:00:30.220
very fancy setup with the green screen and

00:00:32.640 --> 00:00:32.800
I'm sad to see that you haven't put out the

00:00:35.440 --> 00:00:35.589
green screen for your BBB session right now.

00:00:36.880 --> 00:00:37.040
Do you have it in the background just for

00:00:39.880 --> 00:00:40.380
you? Right, okay. It wasn't that far.

00:00:43.860 --> 00:00:44.180
Great. No. So, I'm just going to ask.

00:00:47.260 --> 00:00:47.440
So, this is the first live Q&A that we have

00:00:49.080 --> 00:00:49.320
for this session, so things might be coming

00:00:51.480 --> 00:00:51.600
into place, so pardon us if we take a little

00:00:54.239 --> 00:00:54.340
bit of time to put the questions on the

00:00:55.320 --> 00:00:55.820
screen and all of this.

00:00:58.080 --> 00:00:58.260
What I'm gonna do, I'm just gonna load up the

00:01:02.720 --> 00:01:02.800
pad. I would invite James to also open the

00:01:03.820 --> 00:01:04.200
pad on his hand. Sorry,

00:01:05.580 --> 00:01:05.740
I've got people talking in my ears and it's

00:01:07.240 --> 00:01:07.740
been a while since I've last had this.

00:01:11.400 --> 00:01:11.869
Okay, so opening the talks right now.

00:01:13.780 --> 00:01:14.280
Opening the pad, if I can find it.

00:01:20.440 --> 00:01:20.740
Open the pad. Okay. Have you got the pad open

00:01:22.360 --> 00:01:22.860
[Speaker 1]: So I can read the question.

00:01:24.020 --> 00:01:24.280
[Speaker 0]: on your end, James? Okay,

00:01:26.720 --> 00:01:27.220
great. Opening it on my end as well.

00:01:28.380 --> 00:01:28.660
What I'm going to do, folks,

00:01:30.300 --> 00:01:30.800
I see some of you have joined us on,

00:01:32.560 --> 00:01:32.700
if I show you, some of the people that have

00:01:33.840 --> 00:01:34.340
joined us in the BBB room.

00:01:35.240 --> 00:01:35.540
You can join us as well,

00:01:37.860 --> 00:01:38.260
all the links are on the talk page or on ISE,

00:01:39.140 --> 00:01:39.520
you can find it very easily.

00:01:41.960 --> 00:01:42.240
But what I'm going to start doing is first

00:01:43.660 --> 00:01:43.860
taking questions in the other pad because

00:01:45.540 --> 00:01:45.700
it's a little faster to ask questions like

00:01:47.760 --> 00:01:48.080
this, and then as soon as we've finished,

00:01:49.760 --> 00:01:49.900
feel free to unmute yourself and ask your

00:01:54.020 --> 00:01:54.160
questions. All right, so I've got some

00:01:56.640 --> 00:01:57.140
reactions about OBS being cool and yes,

00:01:59.060 --> 00:01:59.180
both James and I will be able to tell you

00:02:00.600 --> 00:02:01.100
that it's very cool. We do very fancy stuff

00:02:05.540 --> 00:02:05.640
like when I need to talk to production in the

00:02:07.420 --> 00:02:07.540
background and all the stuff obviously that

00:02:09.020 --> 00:02:09.160
James has been able to show you with a green

00:02:12.600 --> 00:02:12.800
screen. So I don't see a whole lot of

00:02:15.780 --> 00:02:16.020
questions so far. I see a lot of reactions on

00:02:17.420 --> 00:02:17.780
publishing lectures book and a classic

00:02:19.280 --> 00:02:19.780
example is John Kitchens obviously.

00:02:24.020 --> 00:02:24.240
Pedagogy first developments macros are a cool

00:02:28.340 --> 00:02:28.820
idea. Okay questions so how do you overlap

00:02:30.860 --> 00:02:31.360
yourself with a presentation it's so cool.

00:02:39.540 --> 00:02:40.040
[Speaker 1]: It's quite simple OBS provides filters for

00:02:42.080 --> 00:02:42.480
you can have a separate filter for each video

00:02:44.260 --> 00:02:44.760
feed. And 1 of the filters that's available

00:02:47.200 --> 00:02:47.520
is chroma key. You just choose a color to

00:02:51.560 --> 00:02:52.040
make transparent and just make sure that the

00:02:55.640 --> 00:02:56.140
webcam is at the top of the composition.

00:03:00.660 --> 00:03:00.900
And the thing that surprised me the most was

00:03:04.920 --> 00:03:05.380
how quickly my brain was able to mirror

00:03:07.200 --> 00:03:07.360
everything and control my body from a

00:03:10.360 --> 00:03:10.740
separate point of view like the way weather

00:03:15.200 --> 00:03:15.360
broadcasts are done. It took seconds to be

00:03:16.720 --> 00:03:16.920
able to do that. Well,

00:03:19.700 --> 00:03:20.200
and now I have years of practice because that

00:03:22.720 --> 00:03:22.960
setup that you saw that I used to record this

00:03:26.960 --> 00:03:27.460
video, I used for years during the pandemic

00:03:30.040 --> 00:03:30.540
for 4 or 5 semesters to,

00:03:33.520 --> 00:03:33.820
because my courses are all have 2,

00:03:36.480 --> 00:03:36.900
3, 400 students, except for the English class

00:03:40.160 --> 00:03:40.460
which has you know 30 students and so during

00:03:43.520 --> 00:03:43.700
the pandemic and even after lockdowns were no

00:03:45.780 --> 00:03:46.020
longer mandated I taught online just because

00:03:48.180 --> 00:03:48.320
I didn't want to have so many students in the

00:03:49.000 --> 00:03:49.500
room at the same time.

00:03:53.640 --> 00:03:54.120
So I've yeah I'm it I have a lot of practice

00:03:54.360 --> 00:03:54.860
doing that.

00:03:57.780 --> 00:03:58.200
[Speaker 0]: But it pays off because it looks so natural

00:03:59.960 --> 00:04:00.140
you know it feels like it's the same thing

00:04:02.200 --> 00:04:02.660
with weather casters you know it sounds very

00:04:04.440 --> 00:04:04.700
it looks very easy to do but it also takes

00:04:05.280 --> 00:04:05.780
quite a bit of practice.

00:04:08.220 --> 00:04:08.400
1 of the things that you also need to

00:04:09.840 --> 00:04:10.160
remember if you're using a chroma key that

00:04:11.680 --> 00:04:11.880
James has explained is that you need to have

00:04:14.380 --> 00:04:14.680
very good lighting basically for the color to

00:04:16.320 --> 00:04:16.640
pop out in the background and for your body

00:04:17.779 --> 00:04:18.279
to be easily highlightable.

00:04:20.760 --> 00:04:21.260
Okay, were you finished with this question?

00:04:24.440 --> 00:04:24.940
[Speaker 1]: Yeah, let's take another 1.

00:04:28.020 --> 00:04:28.520
[Speaker 0]: Sure. So how do you deal with video in Beam?

00:04:30.060 --> 00:04:30.560
I found it so hard to do that.

00:04:32.600 --> 00:04:33.100
PPT on the other end is easier to achieve.

00:04:41.120 --> 00:04:41.520
[Speaker 1]: Yeah, so remember that the slides get

00:04:46.420 --> 00:04:46.920
produced from Org Mode as PDFs.

00:04:49.820 --> 00:04:50.040
Well, and in fact, even before when I was

00:04:52.580 --> 00:04:52.740
using other software to produce slides I

00:04:55.600 --> 00:04:55.760
produced them as PDFs precisely because I

00:04:58.440 --> 00:04:58.580
wanted to be able to mark them up on on the

00:05:03.960 --> 00:05:04.160
screen with the stylus And so I don't do

00:05:07.580 --> 00:05:07.840
video in the slides. I use OBS to switch from

00:05:09.900 --> 00:05:10.400
static slides that I mark up with the stylus

00:05:14.540 --> 00:05:14.800
over to some kind of video viewer and then

00:05:17.320 --> 00:05:17.820
back. And again that's how I can use Firefox.

00:05:21.360 --> 00:05:21.860
I use OBS to switch between Firefox and video

00:05:26.820 --> 00:05:27.040
and the Shornal++ program where I can mark up

00:05:31.280 --> 00:05:31.780
slides. So those functionalities are...

00:05:35.140 --> 00:05:35.320
That's why I use different software and pull

00:05:37.480 --> 00:05:37.980
it all together with OBS so that I can have

00:05:41.240 --> 00:05:41.740
lots of functional flexibility.

00:05:47.360 --> 00:05:47.660
[Speaker 0]: Great. Do you ever use things like

00:05:50.320 --> 00:05:50.820
org-present and stay for the PowerPoint

00:05:53.040 --> 00:05:53.200
slides? I'm not sure exactly how to read this

00:05:54.340 --> 00:05:54.520
particular question, but at least we can

00:05:56.120 --> 00:05:56.520
focus on org-present. Are you familiar with

00:05:56.820 --> 00:05:57.320
what it is?

00:06:00.060 --> 00:06:00.560
[Speaker 1]: I've played around with org-present,

00:06:06.740 --> 00:06:07.240
And again, I guess you could use OrgPresent

00:06:11.440 --> 00:06:11.680
to show images and to show headings as

00:06:16.820 --> 00:06:17.220
slides. But again, Because it's such a

00:06:20.440 --> 00:06:20.640
crucial functionality to be able to mark them

00:06:25.180 --> 00:06:25.360
up with a stylus. I didn't really show this

00:06:27.040 --> 00:06:27.180
very much, but I also highlight things the

00:06:29.320 --> 00:06:29.600
way I would highlight using a laser pointer

00:06:31.960 --> 00:06:32.460
on the screen. And again,

00:06:37.160 --> 00:06:37.380
I don't see Emacs being able to do that for

00:06:38.560 --> 00:06:39.060
another couple of generations.

00:06:43.220 --> 00:06:43.540
So really the only thing I use Emacs for

00:06:48.900 --> 00:06:49.400
during presentations is to narrow headings

00:06:51.600 --> 00:06:52.100
that we can focus on particular text

00:06:52.600 --> 00:06:53.100
excerpts.

00:06:59.020 --> 00:06:59.180
[Speaker 0]: Right, yeah. A lot of our presentations at

00:07:00.060 --> 00:07:00.380
EmacsConf are usually,

00:07:01.320 --> 00:07:01.720
especially the Org Mode ones,

00:07:02.520 --> 00:07:03.020
are done with Org Present.

00:07:08.480 --> 00:07:08.980
Sorry, I had someone talk to me in the ear.

00:07:10.960 --> 00:07:11.460
You know the problem with EmacsConf is that

00:07:13.620 --> 00:07:13.780
every year, you have to relearn a lot of

00:07:15.840 --> 00:07:16.340
skills, and by the time we finish,

00:07:18.720 --> 00:07:19.220
by Sunday evening, we are masters of it.

00:07:21.460 --> 00:07:21.600
And then we forget everything by the time the

00:07:22.260 --> 00:07:22.760
next year comes around.

00:07:24.440 --> 00:07:24.940
What I was going to say is that org-present

00:07:28.660 --> 00:07:29.160
is often used by people inside Emacs,

00:07:30.440 --> 00:07:30.940
Conf, presenting about org-mode.

00:07:32.660 --> 00:07:32.780
But yeah, whenever you need to do something a

00:07:34.200 --> 00:07:34.360
little more visual, it gets a little more

00:07:36.360 --> 00:07:36.500
complicated. Some people have tried to do

00:07:39.020 --> 00:07:39.160
fancy stuff with SVG, which is probably the

00:07:40.640 --> 00:07:41.140
path forward for this type of stuff.

00:07:42.680 --> 00:07:43.180
But yeah, if you need to draw,

00:07:43.940 --> 00:07:44.440
if you need to highlight,

00:07:45.820 --> 00:07:46.320
it is pretty complicated.

00:07:48.220 --> 00:07:48.340
Perhaps something that you might want to be

00:07:50.500 --> 00:07:50.980
interested, James, in checking out is PDF

00:07:53.740 --> 00:07:54.240
Tools, which is a way to open up a PDF in

00:07:59.100 --> 00:07:59.480
Emacs. And this allows you to have basic PDF

00:08:01.320 --> 00:08:01.560
annotations, like putting a little bit of a

00:08:03.960 --> 00:08:04.200
Nikon on it. Perhaps you've already played

00:08:04.360 --> 00:08:04.860
with it.

00:08:09.440 --> 00:08:09.940
[Speaker 1]: I have used that. PDF Tools is an incredible

00:08:14.260 --> 00:08:14.540
package but until it allows me to make a mark

00:08:17.860 --> 00:08:18.260
on the screen that shows up in a video

00:08:20.540 --> 00:08:21.040
compositor. It's not going to replace

00:08:21.360 --> 00:08:21.860
Shornal.

00:08:25.200 --> 00:08:25.440
[Speaker 0]: Definitely. Alright, moving on to the next

00:08:31.580 --> 00:08:31.592
question. Is the triple-accolade syntax an

00:08:31.682 --> 00:08:31.695
[Speaker 2]: Org Mode core feature that I missed so

00:08:31.760 --> 00:08:32.220
[Speaker 0]: far, or did you program that?

00:08:33.080 --> 00:08:33.580
And thank you for the great talk.

00:08:38.100 --> 00:08:38.360
[Speaker 1]: Thank you very much. No,

00:08:42.700 --> 00:08:43.200
it's just part of all of the export backends.

00:08:44.860 --> 00:08:45.060
Actually, I think the way it works is it

00:08:46.560 --> 00:08:47.040
precedes all of the export backends.

00:08:49.820 --> 00:08:50.280
When you export, the first thing that happens

00:08:51.880 --> 00:08:52.380
is expansion of macros.

00:08:55.680 --> 00:08:56.180
And that's a built-in org mode feature.

00:08:59.280 --> 00:08:59.760
It's definitely beyond my Emacs Lisp powers

00:09:01.160 --> 00:09:01.360
to be able to have made something that

00:09:06.440 --> 00:09:06.940
powerful. That's right.

00:09:08.040 --> 00:09:08.540
I have come a long way.

00:09:10.460 --> 00:09:10.760
[Speaker 0]: For now, for now. You know,

00:09:12.800 --> 00:09:12.980
we always, you know, most of the people who

00:09:14.680 --> 00:09:15.060
show up to Emacs, especially talking about

00:09:17.080 --> 00:09:17.300
stuff that has to do with presentations or

00:09:18.420 --> 00:09:18.900
what they do in academia,

00:09:19.600 --> 00:09:19.780
you know, they always say,

00:09:22.240 --> 00:09:22.440
oh, but, you know, I couldn't have done all

00:09:23.940 --> 00:09:24.280
this, you know, it's just far away.

00:09:26.120 --> 00:09:26.280
And then they come back 1 year or 2 years

00:09:27.660 --> 00:09:27.980
later, and then, oh, I've made my entire

00:09:29.540 --> 00:09:29.700
library for presentation and stuff like this.

00:09:32.800 --> 00:09:32.980
So Be hopeful about what the future holds for

00:09:34.760 --> 00:09:34.920
you in terms of coming up with crazy new

00:09:36.300 --> 00:09:36.800
features for the entire ecosystem.

00:09:38.560 --> 00:09:39.060
[Speaker 1]: Well, let me tell you,

00:09:42.040 --> 00:09:42.540
since the pandemic, I have written,

00:09:44.340 --> 00:09:44.700
I wrote my first major mode.

00:09:46.520 --> 00:09:47.020
It's trivial, but it provides functionality

00:09:49.580 --> 00:09:50.080
that is very useful to me.

00:09:53.720 --> 00:09:53.940
And it's going to sound like I'm just trying

00:09:54.760 --> 00:09:54.960
to butter everyone up,

00:09:57.620 --> 00:09:58.120
but seeing a lot of the names in the IRC

00:10:01.360 --> 00:10:01.860
channel, people who have taught me so much on

00:10:05.220 --> 00:10:05.640
their YouTube channels and in their blog

00:10:07.400 --> 00:10:07.900
posts and on Reddit and on Mastodon.

00:10:11.720 --> 00:10:12.220
Without many of the people who are here today

00:10:14.820 --> 00:10:15.320
watching my talk, it's very fun to have

00:10:17.920 --> 00:10:18.120
people who have helped me learn so much about

00:10:19.640 --> 00:10:20.140
Emacs. So thanks to all of you.

00:10:23.820 --> 00:10:24.140
[Speaker 0]: Well, and yeah, and now you're becoming part

00:10:26.940 --> 00:10:27.380
of this crew of people inspiring others to do

00:10:28.860 --> 00:10:29.180
very much the same. So thank you for joining

00:10:32.020 --> 00:10:32.520
[Speaker 1]: Thank you very much.

00:10:34.780 --> 00:10:35.020
[Speaker 0]: the crew. Great. Moving on to the 2 last

00:10:36.500 --> 00:10:36.660
questions and then we'll open up the mic to

00:10:37.400 --> 00:10:37.900
other people on BigBlueButton.

00:10:40.760 --> 00:10:40.920
What kind of comparative feedback are

00:10:42.280 --> 00:10:42.780
students giving you regarding your approach?

00:10:47.560 --> 00:10:48.060
[Speaker 1]: Oh my gosh. Students were ready to,

00:10:49.120 --> 00:10:49.620
during the pandemic especially,

00:10:54.100 --> 00:10:54.600
when most of the courses were just being

00:10:56.660 --> 00:10:56.820
taught over Zoom by people sharing their

00:10:56.820 --> 00:10:57.320
screens.

00:10:58.520 --> 00:10:58.660
[Speaker 0]: Just a second, sorry, sorry for the

00:10:59.440 --> 00:10:59.800
interruption, very rude interruption,

00:11:00.840 --> 00:11:01.040
but I've got the intro for the next talk

00:11:02.200 --> 00:11:02.440
playing and I'm not sure what's going on.

00:11:03.120 --> 00:11:03.620
Give me just a second.

00:11:04.440 --> 00:11:04.940
Sasha?

00:11:19.840 --> 00:11:20.340
So... Yeah, I think it's started.

00:11:37.020 --> 00:11:37.300
Sure. I got the times wrong,

00:11:38.900 --> 00:11:39.100
apparently, because of the little delay we

00:11:41.880 --> 00:11:42.380
had getting the audio fixed up.

00:11:44.220 --> 00:11:44.720
The good news is that we're still recording

00:11:46.400 --> 00:11:46.680
the talk right now and we still have James

00:11:47.560 --> 00:11:47.800
around. Obviously, James,

00:11:50.280 --> 00:11:50.440
you're no longer on being broadcast on

00:11:53.040 --> 00:11:53.440
General, but if you want to keep answering

00:11:55.200 --> 00:11:55.520
questions or if you want to,

00:11:57.240 --> 00:11:57.360
anyone in the room right now wants to ask you

00:11:58.440 --> 00:11:58.940
questions, feel free to do so.

00:12:00.920 --> 00:12:01.080
I'm going to need to hop off because I need

00:12:02.560 --> 00:12:03.060
to get other things ready for the next talks,

00:12:04.820 --> 00:12:05.320
[Speaker 1]: But James,

00:12:08.860 --> 00:12:09.120
[Speaker 0]: sadly. great. And sorry,

00:12:10.040 --> 00:12:10.380
I'm a little tense, obviously,

00:12:12.680 --> 00:12:13.180
because I was not expecting this to happen.

00:12:15.960 --> 00:12:16.160
And that led to a very abrupt end to this

00:12:18.340 --> 00:12:18.480
discussion. But people afterwards on

00:12:21.860 --> 00:12:21.980
emacsmo.org slash 2023 slash talks will be

00:12:23.600 --> 00:12:24.020
able to find all the content here.

00:12:24.920 --> 00:12:25.420
So I'll have to leave now.

00:12:26.660 --> 00:12:26.980
Thank you so much, James,

00:12:29.020 --> 00:12:29.180
for doing the difficult task of opening up

00:12:31.480 --> 00:12:31.980
emacs-conf, And I'll probably see you later.

00:12:34.660 --> 00:12:35.160
[Speaker 1]: Thank you, Leo. Bye-bye.

00:12:54.380 --> 00:12:54.880
[Speaker 3]: On your, the external,

00:12:59.920 --> 00:13:00.340
the journal You were, you,

00:13:03.040 --> 00:13:03.520
you were using the tablet as a monitor,

00:13:04.540 --> 00:13:05.040
right? Touchscreen monitor,

00:13:05.380 --> 00:13:05.880
what's that?

00:13:07.160 --> 00:13:07.480
[Speaker 1]: program. Yes. That's exactly right.

00:13:10.040 --> 00:13:10.540
So it's a tablet, so it has a touchscreen.

00:13:15.360 --> 00:13:15.580
And so basically the functionality that that

00:13:20.220 --> 00:13:20.560
program provides is to be able to just mark

00:13:21.660 --> 00:13:22.160
up PDFs with a stylus,

00:13:25.080 --> 00:13:25.280
you know, in the way that you would use any

00:13:30.440 --> 00:13:30.640
other tablet. And to be able to take that

00:13:32.920 --> 00:13:33.420
video signal and put it into another machine.

00:13:35.640 --> 00:13:36.100
That was the that was the key.

00:13:36.900 --> 00:13:37.400
That's the killer app.

00:13:41.460 --> 00:13:41.940
[Speaker 3]: I've thought about grabbing 1 for the purpose

00:13:45.120 --> 00:13:45.420
of like changing my laptop into a tablet to

00:13:47.640 --> 00:13:48.140
read manga, browse the web,

00:13:50.860 --> 00:13:51.020
and I'm kind of curious if it works well like

00:13:53.100 --> 00:13:53.600
as a wireless monitor with a tablet?

00:13:59.820 --> 00:14:00.060
Or how well it like you can use Emacs with it

00:14:04.020 --> 00:14:04.200
in a tablet mode? Or were you just or you

00:14:04.400 --> 00:14:04.900
just use

00:14:11.680 --> 00:14:12.040
[Speaker 1]: the tablet that I use is this is it it's just

00:14:14.820 --> 00:14:15.020
the Microsoft Surface and so it comes with a

00:14:18.200 --> 00:14:18.700
keyboard So you can take the keyboard off.

00:14:22.760 --> 00:14:23.260
But I use it with the keyboard as well.

00:14:25.240 --> 00:14:25.740
And I just.

00:14:31.000 --> 00:14:31.500
[Speaker 3]: You're cutting off right now.

00:14:33.680 --> 00:14:34.180
Audio.

00:14:45.660 --> 00:14:46.160
Your audio is cutting off right now.

00:15:31.740 --> 00:15:32.240
How about now? Now I can hear you.

00:15:33.820 --> 00:15:33.960
[Speaker 1]: How about now? I bumped the mute button on

00:15:37.420 --> 00:15:37.740
the mic. Yeah, so again,

00:15:38.680 --> 00:15:38.940
this is... I'm trying to figure out which

00:15:41.020 --> 00:15:41.520
[Speaker 3]: of the 16 mute buttons you used.

00:15:45.700 --> 00:15:46.200
[Speaker 1]: It's just the Surface Pro 3 that I got used.

00:15:52.920 --> 00:15:53.300
And it runs Emacs, I mean it runs GNU Linux

00:15:58.740 --> 00:15:58.980
really well. And the trouble is that the hard

00:16:01.900 --> 00:16:02.220
drive, you know, the SSD drive is small and

00:16:06.260 --> 00:16:06.420
the RAM is small, but it works for the

00:16:09.340 --> 00:16:09.640
purposes. Basically, if I had a couple

00:16:13.080 --> 00:16:13.260
thousand dollars, I could probably buy a

00:16:16.320 --> 00:16:16.560
touch screen machine or I could run

00:16:18.960 --> 00:16:19.200
everything on it and do the streaming and do

00:16:24.960 --> 00:16:25.460
the video capture and do the PDF markup.

00:16:27.980 --> 00:16:28.480
But since both of these are so,

00:16:31.720 --> 00:16:31.960
the hardware that I use is so old and cheap

00:16:33.640 --> 00:16:33.840
and weak, I'd have to split it across 2

00:16:33.840 --> 00:16:34.340
machines.

00:16:37.160 --> 00:16:37.660
[Speaker 3]: There's also a beauty in making the stuff,

00:16:39.720 --> 00:16:40.120
having specific purposes for specific things

00:16:43.840 --> 00:16:44.160
where it's just not, yeah,

00:16:47.980 --> 00:16:48.320
it's like, I don't want a smart TV that plays

00:16:52.360 --> 00:16:52.540
Netflix. I want a Smart TV that has all the

00:16:55.520 --> 00:16:55.760
smarts that I turn my smart TV into a TV

00:16:56.120 --> 00:16:56.620
monitor. I

00:17:01.020 --> 00:17:01.520
[Speaker 1]: Don't want to yeah Really?

00:17:04.526 --> 00:17:04.540
I I totally feel that ethic I totally feel

00:17:04.859 --> 00:17:05.359
that ethic.

00:17:13.619 --> 00:17:13.940
[Speaker 3]: Oh, on the some other things,

00:17:16.319 --> 00:17:16.440
like if you want you To do highlighting in an

00:17:18.560 --> 00:17:19.060
org mode document you can use org web tools.

00:17:20.680 --> 00:17:20.880
I wrote this in the notes But you can use org

00:17:23.560 --> 00:17:23.720
web tools to download a web page And then you

00:17:26.480 --> 00:17:26.980
can use org remark to start highlighting in

00:17:29.440 --> 00:17:29.700
the org mode web page And then because it's

00:17:30.600 --> 00:17:30.740
an org mode document now,

00:17:32.600 --> 00:17:33.100
[Speaker 1]: right

00:17:36.200 --> 00:17:36.280
[Speaker 3]: you can just edit it directly If you have If

00:17:38.300 --> 00:17:38.760
you want other people to join in on an emacs

00:17:40.520 --> 00:17:41.020
session you could use a package like,

00:17:44.540 --> 00:17:45.040
what's it called, crdt.el

00:17:49.920 --> 00:17:50.160
That will allow 2 people with 2 different

00:17:52.320 --> 00:17:52.820
Emacs configurations to edit the same buffer.

00:17:58.460 --> 00:17:58.580
What? And you have a host that can host a

00:18:00.620 --> 00:18:01.120
[Speaker 1]: Interesting.

00:18:05.500 --> 00:18:06.000
[Speaker 3]: buffer too. And they have 1 optional

00:18:07.700 --> 00:18:08.200
extension for org mode that will synchronize

00:18:10.140 --> 00:18:10.640
the folding of the org drawers.

00:18:14.260 --> 00:18:14.760
[Speaker 1]: Interesting, I will look into that.

00:18:21.620 --> 00:18:22.120
[Speaker 3]: Like having I don't like if you want students

00:18:24.780 --> 00:18:25.280
like you have H highlight line mode.

00:18:26.120 --> 00:18:26.620
These are just some ideas.

00:18:28.100 --> 00:18:28.420
It's like you can have like highlight line

00:18:31.040 --> 00:18:31.540
mode so people can easily see which line

00:18:32.900 --> 00:18:33.400
you're on cursor tracking.

00:18:36.680 --> 00:18:37.180
And then you can have other people join in,

00:18:40.960 --> 00:18:41.320
students, or yeah, that's just a possible

00:18:41.320 --> 00:18:41.820
idea.

00:18:49.660 --> 00:18:50.000
[Speaker 1]: Is there anyone else in the big blue button

00:18:51.680 --> 00:18:52.180
room who has a question?

00:19:03.000 --> 00:19:03.280
All right, I'm going to go over to the pad

00:19:05.140 --> 00:19:05.280
and see if there are any pending questions I

00:19:11.280 --> 00:19:11.780
can address. Thanks PlasmaStrike.

00:19:12.980 --> 00:19:13.480
Yep.

00:19:29.640 --> 00:19:30.060
[Speaker 2]: To be tangled into source code or woven into

00:19:32.720 --> 00:19:33.220
a documentation file, which could be PDF,

00:19:36.140 --> 00:19:36.640
could be Markdown, could be OpenOffice,

00:19:39.600 --> 00:19:40.100
could be a notebook format.

00:19:42.860 --> 00:19:43.260
This methodology was conceived by Donald

00:19:51.460 --> 00:19:51.940
Knuth in 1984. The main purpose of literal

00:19:54.480 --> 00:19:54.660
programming is not only to make code or

00:19:56.720 --> 00:19:57.220
documentation or output more manageable,

00:20:01.020 --> 00:20:01.220
but to allow humans to create a data story to

00:20:02.960 --> 00:20:03.460
be pieced from a single source.

00:20:06.140 --> 00:20:06.340
What you see on the slide on the left hand

00:20:08.880 --> 00:20:09.380
side is the story and code inside an org-mod

00:20:14.220 --> 00:20:14.440
file. The file starts with some

00:20:17.260 --> 00:20:17.760
documentation, then you write back down the

00:20:21.660 --> 00:20:22.080
code, and at the bottom you see an output

00:20:26.040 --> 00:20:26.500
file, which is not shown in the slide itself.

00:20:28.140 --> 00:20:28.440
In the middle, you have the source code,

00:20:33.840 --> 00:20:34.000
which is the result of tangling or opening a

00:20:36.400 --> 00:20:36.900
buffer inside offload.

00:20:38.680 --> 00:20:38.940
On the very right-hand side,

00:20:42.540 --> 00:20:42.840
we have a PDF. Actually,

00:20:44.100 --> 00:20:44.600
this is HTML, random.org.

00:20:48.120 --> 00:20:48.420
The very same file that you see in the memory

00:20:52.360 --> 00:20:52.600
language. So the humans look at some of this

00:20:54.600 --> 00:20:54.720
code, and the machines look at other parts of

00:20:57.600 --> 00:20:58.040
the code. I actually did all my programming

00:20:59.760 --> 00:21:00.260
in the literate way even in the early 1990s,

00:21:02.720 --> 00:21:02.980
not using OrgMode, which didn't exist yet,

00:21:05.660 --> 00:21:06.160
but using Norman Ramsey's NoWeb preprocessor.

00:21:09.220 --> 00:21:09.720
They still use it inside Org Mode today.

00:21:11.400 --> 00:21:11.900
This preprocessor, NoWeb,

00:21:14.260 --> 00:21:14.480
allows you to tangle code from within an Org

00:21:16.020 --> 00:21:16.360
Mode file that is a self-standing file,

00:21:18.320 --> 00:21:18.820
much like Org Mode's edit functions,

00:21:21.520 --> 00:21:21.860
which export code blocks into buffers in

00:21:23.100 --> 00:21:23.600
whatever language the code blocks.

00:21:28.260 --> 00:21:28.760
In data science, these interactive notebooks,

00:21:30.900 --> 00:21:31.400
in 1 of the interpreted languages,

00:21:32.980 --> 00:21:33.400
like Julia, Python, or R,

00:21:36.900 --> 00:21:37.040
dominate. The basic technology is that of

00:21:39.120 --> 00:21:39.340
Jupyter notebooks, which take their name from

00:21:42.540 --> 00:21:42.900
Julia, Python, and R. And these notebooks use

00:21:43.780 --> 00:21:44.200
a spruce-stuffed shell,

00:21:47.440 --> 00:21:47.860
for example, IPython, and an option to add

00:21:52.540 --> 00:21:52.940
SQL cells. Alt mode inside Emacs has a large

00:21:55.840 --> 00:21:56.260
number of advantages. Some of them are listed

00:21:56.980 --> 00:21:57.480
here over these notebooks.

00:21:59.160 --> 00:21:59.660
2 of these stand out particularly.

00:22:02.860 --> 00:22:03.360
Different languages can be mixed,

00:22:05.140 --> 00:22:05.640
as shown in the image.

00:22:07.200 --> 00:22:07.700
While in Jupyter notebooks,

00:22:10.680 --> 00:22:10.880
a notebook is limited to running a kernel in

00:22:13.940 --> 00:22:14.440
1 language only. The content of the notebook,

00:22:16.240 --> 00:22:16.560
its document code or output part,

00:22:18.520 --> 00:22:18.680
can be exported in a variety of forms.

00:22:18.735 --> 00:22:18.790
[Speaker 3]: We are

00:22:19.640 --> 00:22:19.840
[Speaker 2]: currently the only person in this

00:22:21.020 --> 00:22:21.520
conference... ...To share with others,

00:22:23.660 --> 00:22:24.160
to use one's work in different reports...