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WEBVTT


00:00:00.060 --> 00:00:01.400
[Speaker 0]: All right, I've started the recording,

00:00:01.400 --> 00:00:03.240
so Sasha, you don't need to worry about this.

00:00:03.240 --> 00:00:04.500
Hi Jeremy, how are you doing?

00:00:04.779 --> 00:00:07.160
[Speaker 1]: I'm doing great, how about you?

00:00:08.039 --> 00:00:09.380
[Speaker 0]: I am also doing great,

00:00:09.380 --> 00:00:11.780
I am feeling replenished after this lunch

00:00:11.780 --> 00:00:14.179
break and I am happy to go back for 4 more

00:00:15.900 --> 00:00:16.940
[Speaker 1]: Me too. Let me

00:00:14.179 --> 00:00:17.303
[Speaker 0]: hours of conferences. just,

00:00:17.303 --> 00:00:20.200
yeah great, Let me just put up the questions.

00:00:20.660 --> 00:00:22.440
So Jeremy is going to read the questions and

00:00:22.440 --> 00:00:24.380
answer them and I will be doing jazz hands in

00:00:24.380 --> 00:00:26.599
the background or provide any bits of

00:00:26.599 --> 00:00:28.860
information I may, considering that Orgrim

00:00:28.860 --> 00:00:30.080
has been mentioned during the presentation

00:00:30.080 --> 00:00:31.980
and everyone's going to want to ask me.

00:00:35.640 --> 00:00:37.940
at... Show me? Yeah, go.

00:00:35.080 --> 00:00:39.280
[Speaker 1]: So I'm looking I'm looking at the,

00:00:39.280 --> 00:00:41.160
do you think the line numbers for writing

00:00:41.160 --> 00:00:43.220
documents is kind of a distraction,

00:00:43.260 --> 00:00:47.280
especially for notes? No,

00:00:47.860 --> 00:00:50.300
I do software development and that left

00:00:51.180 --> 00:00:53.160
fringe is kind of invisible,

00:00:53.680 --> 00:00:56.260
but I do like to use jump to line.

00:00:56.320 --> 00:00:59.580
So I just bind that to control L and it's

00:00:59.580 --> 00:01:01.200
helpful to just see that.

00:01:02.980 --> 00:01:04.900
So no, I haven't noticed that.

00:01:05.500 --> 00:01:07.540
There are other ways to jump around in Emacs,

00:01:07.540 --> 00:01:10.140
but I like to have many different ways.

00:01:11.000 --> 00:01:17.120
So, yeah. Then how do you manage private and

00:01:17.120 --> 00:01:18.840
public data with your Zettelkasten?

00:01:20.820 --> 00:01:23.440
1 of my blockers on putting my Zettelkasten

00:01:23.600 --> 00:01:26.240
on the web is I don't want everything to be

00:01:26.240 --> 00:01:28.860
public, especially fleeting notes.

00:01:31.360 --> 00:01:36.500
So 1 thing is I only explicitly export a file

00:01:36.560 --> 00:01:39.380
to Hugo and I have that,

00:01:39.380 --> 00:01:41.500
I can like, I can export this.

00:01:41.520 --> 00:01:43.380
That doesn't show up very well.

00:01:44.540 --> 00:01:50.280
So it's export probably export org to take on

00:01:50.280 --> 00:01:52.860
rules and we'll export the buffer.

00:01:53.760 --> 00:01:57.040
And then any that I referenced,

00:01:57.080 --> 00:01:58.300
like these are all links,

00:01:58.660 --> 00:02:04.380
any notes that are not public will be

00:02:04.380 --> 00:02:06.480
exported as the text, but there won't be a

00:02:06.480 --> 00:02:10.160
link to it. So it's having the very

00:02:10.160 --> 00:02:12.140
deliberate, this is going up.

00:02:13.040 --> 00:02:15.080
And so I send it over into Hugo,

00:02:15.900 --> 00:02:17.200
which is its own repository,

00:02:18.700 --> 00:02:21.300
and either massage it there or whatnot.

00:02:22.800 --> 00:02:25.760
Is that any further questions on that 1?

00:02:27.980 --> 00:02:30.200
[Speaker 0]: I don't think so.

00:02:33.940 --> 00:02:36.940
[Speaker 1]: Is there anything special you're using from

00:02:36.940 --> 00:02:38.960
org to Hugo markdown? This looks like a

00:02:38.960 --> 00:02:41.520
really nice setup. I like to give it a try.

00:02:43.840 --> 00:02:47.420
Yes, there I have a bespoke build process.

00:02:48.900 --> 00:02:50.100
Having started in WordPress,

00:02:50.280 --> 00:02:51.320
working through Jekyll,

00:02:51.460 --> 00:02:54.200
going to Hugo, and then switching from

00:02:54.200 --> 00:02:57.740
Markdown to org mode, I've backed into this

00:02:57.740 --> 00:02:59.180
private public Zettelkasten,

00:03:00.140 --> 00:03:04.840
which is really nice. And I have added quite

00:03:04.840 --> 00:03:08.000
a bit of code. There's my dog.

00:03:15.520 --> 00:03:16.020
[Speaker 0]: blogging.

00:03:10.640 --> 00:03:20.720
[Speaker 1]: In my So I have, how do I export like side

00:03:20.720 --> 00:03:22.800
notes because I want I have marginalia

00:03:23.200 --> 00:03:24.780
instead of like the footnotes,

00:03:24.940 --> 00:03:27.080
but I still use org mode footnotes.

00:03:27.520 --> 00:03:29.700
And so I've got a bunch of these things and

00:03:29.700 --> 00:03:32.800
this is all available up on GitHub And I'll

00:03:32.800 --> 00:03:34.700
provide a link in the document.

00:03:36.740 --> 00:03:42.280
Yeah, so there's quite a bit of making the

00:03:42.280 --> 00:03:44.440
export work how I want it.

00:03:45.040 --> 00:03:48.840
And I've been kind of fiddling with also

00:03:48.840 --> 00:03:51.560
improving like LaTeX or PDF export.

00:03:54.720 --> 00:03:59.080
So yeah, I have a long running to do item to

00:03:59.480 --> 00:04:02.880
fully lay out my bespoke build process.

00:04:02.920 --> 00:04:04.680
Because once it gets to Hugo,

00:04:04.960 --> 00:04:07.440
there's also additional work that I do to

00:04:07.440 --> 00:04:11.820
compile what is kind of a personal,

00:04:12.340 --> 00:04:13.620
like a digital garden-ish,

00:04:15.160 --> 00:04:16.940
it's really a blog focused 1.

00:04:18.160 --> 00:04:28.080
So yeah, it's at Jeremy F on GitHub at dot

00:04:28.080 --> 00:04:33.060
Emacs. And you'll be looking for JF

00:04:33.200 --> 00:04:36.300
blogging.l that has some of this.

00:04:37.360 --> 00:04:42.580
Also jforgmode.l will have some of that.

00:04:45.400 --> 00:04:49.540
Yeah, I wanna circle back to that,

00:04:49.540 --> 00:04:51.560
anything to prevent private links from

00:04:51.560 --> 00:04:54.220
getting accidentally being made publicly

00:04:54.560 --> 00:05:02.440
accessible. Yes. So previous to using denote,

00:05:02.440 --> 00:05:06.480
I also used org-roam. So I have this idea of

00:05:06.480 --> 00:05:12.560
a node in org-roam has roam refs.

00:05:13.360 --> 00:05:15.660
And org-roam is much more robust about that.

00:05:15.660 --> 00:05:17.880
So anytime you mention a ref,

00:05:18.740 --> 00:05:20.300
it will count it as a backlink.

00:05:20.820 --> 00:05:23.700
So for example, if my node was my blog,

00:05:23.860 --> 00:05:25.700
take on rules, anytime,

00:05:26.000 --> 00:05:30.420
anywhere in my org Rome repository,

00:05:30.700 --> 00:05:32.120
I mentioned takeonrules.com,

00:05:33.280 --> 00:05:34.980
it would treat it as a backlink.

00:05:35.740 --> 00:05:37.980
So from that Rome refs,

00:05:39.780 --> 00:05:45.640
I have a, I will interrogate,

00:05:45.720 --> 00:05:47.800
and this is not the function for I will look

00:05:47.800 --> 00:05:50.940
at the node to see does it have a Rome ref

00:05:51.040 --> 00:05:53.760
and if it does I will treat it as a public

00:05:53.760 --> 00:05:58.180
link. So I don't I haven't bled out any

00:05:59.060 --> 00:06:01.620
private information because again going back

00:06:01.620 --> 00:06:06.000
to I only publish a document and the document

00:06:06.340 --> 00:06:09.060
I'm explicitly doing so and then my process

00:06:09.220 --> 00:06:12.720
filters out any links that do not have public

00:06:12.720 --> 00:06:17.140
URLs. It will just dump it in there as maybe

00:06:17.140 --> 00:06:20.640
a span with a ref class of it so that I can

00:06:20.640 --> 00:06:22.840
kind of know that that came from there.

00:06:29.600 --> 00:06:33.740
Yes, So the font I am using is,

00:06:36.820 --> 00:06:38.460
so this is another font.

00:06:38.620 --> 00:06:41.140
What font were you using in EWW?

00:06:42.940 --> 00:06:50.420
I think I'm using IOS Becca and ET Bembo.

00:06:51.700 --> 00:06:53.180
[Speaker 0]: Okay, show me your EWW.

00:06:53.560 --> 00:06:55.360
If we are doing full ricing setup,

00:06:55.440 --> 00:06:58.440
I can recognize Yosefka just by looking at

00:06:58.440 --> 00:06:58.940
it.

00:06:50.640 --> 00:07:01.300
[Speaker 1]: So let's... Yeah, so yeah,

00:07:01.300 --> 00:07:06.240
ET Bembo, I'm using these 2 fonts as kind of

00:07:06.240 --> 00:07:09.260
my anchor. So the variable pitch is ETBembo.

00:07:10.240 --> 00:07:13.640
My blog started off with a Tufta style CSS

00:07:14.100 --> 00:07:16.360
and I really pared it down and got rid of any

00:07:16.360 --> 00:07:19.940
of the additional fonts because they can be

00:07:19.940 --> 00:07:21.580
used as trackers. And I'm like,

00:07:21.580 --> 00:07:24.020
nope, you decide what font you want for your

00:07:24.020 --> 00:07:26.420
browser. I don't need to tell you what looks

00:07:26.420 --> 00:07:33.680
good for you. Yeah, so the story of Take On

00:07:33.680 --> 00:07:37.480
Rules, I have to thank my partner and lovely

00:07:37.480 --> 00:07:41.180
wife for that. She kind of nudged me to do

00:07:41.180 --> 00:07:43.080
some blogging, and we spent some time

00:07:43.080 --> 00:07:45.160
thinking about it. And originally,

00:07:45.160 --> 00:07:48.220
it started off as writing about rules for

00:07:48.700 --> 00:07:51.060
role-playing games or tabletop games.

00:07:51.820 --> 00:07:54.860
And it has extended far beyond that.

00:07:54.960 --> 00:07:56.760
The blog, as I've shifted,

00:07:56.920 --> 00:07:58.660
as I think I mentioned in the presentation,

00:07:59.060 --> 00:08:01.640
as I've shifted towards an everything and

00:08:01.640 --> 00:08:05.180
nothing approach, the blog is anything I want

00:08:05.180 --> 00:08:06.240
to write about anymore.

00:08:06.980 --> 00:08:09.440
There's haikus up there with some regularity.

00:08:10.080 --> 00:08:17.280
So the name is now a relic of a past.

00:08:18.340 --> 00:08:21.680
So yeah, the thing and nothing is,

00:08:22.360 --> 00:08:24.640
and I put that in the about on my blog.

00:08:25.640 --> 00:08:29.440
So it's, I highly encourage like,

00:08:29.440 --> 00:08:34.440
I feel great. Once I like said,

00:08:34.440 --> 00:08:36.740
oh, I don't have to write this towards a

00:08:36.740 --> 00:08:40.100
topical blog post or like what the topic is,

00:08:40.380 --> 00:08:44.120
it freed it up. And I know that it comes at a

00:08:44.800 --> 00:08:47.500
potential compromise because it's very much

00:08:47.500 --> 00:08:51.960
me being a voice up there instead of

00:08:51.960 --> 00:08:53.760
something that is curated and filtered

00:08:53.760 --> 00:08:56.060
through a specific channel like I could have

00:08:56.060 --> 00:08:59.340
a technical blog but I decided I'm just gonna

00:08:59.340 --> 00:09:02.420
tag it as programming or emacs and let you

00:09:02.420 --> 00:09:04.840
find it and you can subscribe to the rss

00:09:04.920 --> 00:09:07.360
feeds of each tag that you find applicable

00:09:10.120 --> 00:09:13.840
[Speaker 0]: right thank you so we are we are at the last

00:09:13.840 --> 00:09:16.100
question on the pad but I see that some

00:09:16.100 --> 00:09:18.480
people have joined us on the blue button.

00:09:18.480 --> 00:09:22.420
So, hi everyone! We have about 6 minutes

00:09:22.420 --> 00:09:24.220
until we need to go to the next talk,

00:09:24.220 --> 00:09:26.460
but if anyone has a question on the blue

00:09:26.460 --> 00:09:28.780
button, I'm thinking about James who's joined

00:09:28.780 --> 00:09:32.780
us and who was kind enough to drop a thank

00:09:32.780 --> 00:09:33.940
you line on the blue button.

00:09:33.940 --> 00:09:35.460
Do you want to unmute yourself and ask a

00:09:35.460 --> 00:09:39.520
question maybe? I'm not putting pressure by

00:09:39.520 --> 00:09:41.680
the way, I don't feel like you need to but it

00:09:41.870 --> 00:09:44.060
just... I speak all the time otherwise I'm

00:09:44.060 --> 00:09:45.720
very happy to spend time with our speakers

00:09:45.720 --> 00:09:48.700
you know but you know EmacsConf it's about,

00:09:49.400 --> 00:09:51.300
as Sasha told you during the intro,

00:09:51.540 --> 00:09:54.180
it's about making people take things,

00:09:54.240 --> 00:09:56.100
brilliant things out of their mind and put

00:09:56.100 --> 00:09:57.840
them outside in the public.

00:09:57.940 --> 00:10:00.660
And for us, you know, we get to see the talk

00:10:00.660 --> 00:10:01.720
evolve, we talk with people.

00:10:01.720 --> 00:10:03.840
So for us we are already quite cognizant of

00:10:03.840 --> 00:10:06.260
the topic and the point is not for us hosts

00:10:06.360 --> 00:10:09.780
to ask questions, it's mostly for you to ask

00:10:09.780 --> 00:10:11.580
questions and then we worry about all the

00:10:11.580 --> 00:10:12.940
fancy stuff in the background.

00:10:13.900 --> 00:10:16.080
Otherwise you damn well know I will ask

00:10:16.080 --> 00:10:18.660
questions about org-roam,

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about links, and nodes in general,

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because that's my bread and butter.

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[Speaker 1]: Yeah, I should add, like,

00:10:27.440 --> 00:10:31.820
the process of migrating the data from a

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WordPress export to markdown to org mode by

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way of Pandoc was, it was really insightful

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to help me understand how I want the data to

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flow and how I could create a repository for

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me of information and 1 that I could then

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send out into the world,

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the public information,

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while not having to worry about the private

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things that I might want to keep.

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So it was that process of just working

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through it to reflect on how I'm writing and

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what I started using writing for.

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I think Richard Feynman said,

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no, writing is my thinking.

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What I wrote is thinking.

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So it has helped to really frame that.

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[Speaker 0]: Yeah, I mean, there's an interesting

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ambivalent relationship because it feels like

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writing helps thinking and thinking helps

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writing in a way and nowhere have I

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personally been more aware of this than when

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coming up with networks of notes because it

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really I mean you use whichever word you want

00:11:43.860 --> 00:11:45.900
you know a second brain a collection of notes

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a slip box a repository of notes whichever

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the tool you use the point at the end is to

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resonate with you. It's kind of like

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extending those moments of consciousness that

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you have when you take your notes,

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and you make the entire gradient available.

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Sorry, I heard Sasha whispering in my ear

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sometimes. It's pretty pleasant.

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It's really shocking.

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[Speaker 1]: Yeah, Aaron, you had a question.

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Do I use denote just for my blogs or do I use

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it for other purposes?

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I use denote for all of my note taking and

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almost, I think it's exclusively org mode

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that I, that I use it in.

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But what I really appreciated in the

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consideration that Proc put forward was the

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file name encodes the information that's

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relevant. So it has helped me be able to

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query by using things like ripgrep,

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well not ripgrep, tree or I forget any more

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what I use. But having that the file encodes

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useful information. And it's so much more

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relevant when I look at having worked at a

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university that rolled out Google Drive to

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everyone without any guidance on how to

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organize stuff. And I worked at a library and

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it was just a nightmare watching things show

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up where you could never find it again.

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So, file name, the file name having the date,

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having the title and having tags just made so

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much sense to be findable.

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And yeah, I really do just use org.

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But if I am going to make txt files or other

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files, I have started adopting that structure

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and format.

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[Speaker 0]: Right. Well, Jeremy, we have about 1 minute

00:14:00.900 --> 00:14:03.080
and 30 seconds left until we go on to the

00:14:03.080 --> 00:14:05.140
next talk. Do you have any final words

00:14:05.140 --> 00:14:06.740
regarding your presentation or maybe where

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people can find you? I know you've already

00:14:08.400 --> 00:14:09.240
mentioned this but...

00:14:09.240 --> 00:14:13.160
[Speaker 1]: Yeah, take on rules. I'm also on dice camp

00:14:13.440 --> 00:14:18.080
dice.campmastodon at take on rules and I've

00:14:18.080 --> 00:14:22.080
thought about emacs.h but we federate well So

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I appreciate that. And I can stay on and

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answer any further questions if folks have

00:14:29.680 --> 00:14:30.180
it.

00:14:31.420 --> 00:14:34.860
[Speaker 0]: Sure. So sorry. Sorry,

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I confused myself with the buttons talking to

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production and all. Well then,

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what I'm going to do is that the stream is

00:14:41.260 --> 00:14:43.740
going to move on to the next talk in about 50

00:14:43.740 --> 00:14:46.160
seconds. If people want to join and ask any

00:14:46.160 --> 00:14:49.160
questions, feel free to join on the blue

00:14:49.160 --> 00:14:51.380
button. The link is on the talk page or on

00:14:51.380 --> 00:14:54.480
IRC. And feel free to hang out as long as you

00:14:54.480 --> 00:14:56.160
want to ask as many questions as you want to

00:14:56.160 --> 00:14:58.180
Jeremy. We are recording all of this and

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we'll be publishing this later on once again.

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And all that's left for me to do is to thank

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you so much, Jeremy, for your presentation

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and your answers. And I will see you another

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time.

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[Speaker 1]: So yeah, plasma strike.

00:15:15.560 --> 00:15:18.500
I'm not able to grant speaking powers.

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So if you wanted to type up something

00:15:22.160 --> 00:15:22.660
question-wise.

00:15:24.000 --> 00:15:26.000
[Speaker 0]: Oh, okay. I'll manage this in the background.

00:15:26.000 --> 00:15:28.220
So we're moving on to the next talk.

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We'll figure out the things about VBB,

00:15:30.240 --> 00:15:32.940
But in the meantime, enjoy the next talk.

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Bye. All right, Jeremy.

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We are now on the next talk.

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Sorry about having to mention multiple things

00:15:39.240 --> 00:15:42.500
at the same time. Speaking rights.

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I will try fixing this in the background.

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I need to get moving for the next talk,

00:15:46.120 --> 00:15:48.040
but I'll do it in the background and we'll

00:15:48.040 --> 00:15:49.660
let you know as soon as it's ready.

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[Speaker 1]: We're doing great. Okay.

00:15:51.220 --> 00:15:52.320
[Speaker 0]: Alright, bye bye Jeremy.