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Awesome!

I especially look forward to trying Org mode with this. One of the biggest weaknesses of Org-mode as a planning tool is the situation on mobile.

Any tips for configuring Emacs to work well in this environment? E.g. with strokes-mode or gestures? I saw Emacs is getting some improvements to touchscreen support which is coming in Emacs 29 [1].

[1] https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/emacs.git/tree/etc/NEWS?id...


For the life of me I still do not understand the syncing model on Orgzly.

I love this app, I use it daily, I just do not understand why it needs it's own internal node model that it has to sync to file, instead of just.... reading the file, parsing it, and writing it....


My solution: orgzly syncs to a local file, the local file is synced with synching. Works flawlessly for my files.


I use Free File Fillable Forms together with excel1040.com. First I fill in the numbers in Excel, then into Free File Fillable Forms, and check that they get the same answers. It works well for me.


> I worked on tax software and have seen these kind of efforts. Noble, yes. Short lived, yes.

I've been using excel1040.com for several years now (2017 iirc), and I think it's been around for awhile before that as well -- so I don't think it's fair to call it short lived.

It's pretty amazing how thorough it is. Not perfect, but I found it much more comprehensive and flexible than the free/cheap version of Turbotax.

That said, it is maintained by one crazy guy in Kansas. I doubt the project will survive after he stops working on it.


Magit's wip-mode seems similar in some respects: https://magit.vc/manual/magit/Wip-Modes.html

I haven't tried it, but have been meaning to look into it. Would be curious to hear experiences of anyone who's tried it, and how it compares to the OP.


I really hope other GNU projects, in particular Emacs, follow suit, though I doubt it will happen.

In my experience it is a massive hassle to get the copyright disclaimer from my employers. I'm currently on hold from contributing to Emacs because my paperwork is working its way through the legal bureuacracy of my new employer. Also, I have former coworkers from previous companies who were enthusiastic about Emacs, but unwilling to go through the trouble of getting the paperwork to contribute.

I think getting this paperwork through is probably more difficult in my industry, than in others -- I do R&D at a large pharmaceutical.

Still, I think the copyright disclaimer is one of the biggest factors that is limiting the number and diversity of Emacs contributors. I also think it's unnecessary, as Linux does not have this requirement, and it has successfully enforced the GPL, for example on router manufacturers.


GNU Radio did this recently. Now they just have a CLA, I think.


`emacsclient -nw` in the terminal will open a terminal emacs that works with the same daemon.


You, sir, have made my day. Doom in the terminal makes life worth living. I've been using vim for several years and am loathe to leave the terminal so this is useful. Very.


This is yet another attack against immigrant students as noted in sibling comments.

But it is also an attempt to force universities to open in the Fall despite the dangers of doing so. Many universities depend on the tuition from foreign students. The timing shows this (right after Harvard announced plans to go online), as well as Trump's tweets that schools must open in Fall.


Emacs does this too -- I think it was the pioneer for this sort of functionality.

One thing I'm jealous of VSCode (as an Emacs user), is the Google Docs-style collaborative editing. Seems particularly useful for pair programming in the covid-work-from-home era.


Counterpoint: Twitter is the preferred social media among scientists, and a good place to keep up with the latest papers and developments. The quality of discussion on science twitter can be pretty good too, despite the character limit.


I'm skeptical that anybody's Twitter is on par with the quality and engagement you see from something like Terrance Tao's WordPress blog. Unless you're including the linked content for preprints and the like, I just don't see it. The depth just isn't there. As a way to survey news in a field, sure, twitter definitely has value but the content on Twitter itself isn't really what I'd consider quality.


> My suggestion is to prepare for the possibility of major disruption starting 2 to 6 months from now.

This is too optimistic. We're currently in the exponential growth phase of this outbreak. Things can change rapidly, much sooner than 2-6 months.

Self-interest aside, it's a moral imperative to do what we can to slow the spread of this outbreak. The mortality rate for COVID19 is highly correlated with overburdening of the healthcare system. I fear the US healthcare system is woefully unprepared.


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