Hi all, Thanks for all your responses! They were a great help when putting together my talk. I’ve posted my slides from EmacsConf 2015 here:
http://www.e6h.org/talks/emacsconf-2015/index.html I think the planners are planning to post videos as soon as they can get them edited to http://emacsconf2015.org/ EmacsConf 2015 was a lot of fun. Almost everyone there was an Org mode user, which was no great surprise. One thing that I came out of the conference thinking was that a curated meta-package for Emacs (like elpy) that brought together tools for scholarly writers (in LaTeX and markdown and org-mode) might be a great help for Emacs beginners. best, Erik On Mon, 24 Aug 2015 22:38:30 -0700, Erik Hetzner <e...@e6h.org> wrote: > > Hi all, > > I am going to be giving a talk on how Emacs can help support scholars, > especially those who are using plain text and doing reproducible > research, at “Emacsconf 2015” in San Francisco this Saturday (the > 29th). > > I have done some work on managing references using Emacs & pandoc, but > what I’d like to focus on in this talk is why Emacs is a great tool > for scholarly writers (both scientists and humanists) and what Emacs > developers should be concentrating on to make it an even better tool > for the scholarly community. > > I’m wondering if you any of you might have any suggestions about what > you would like to see Emacs do better to support the scholarly writing > community. > > Thanks for any help you can provide! > > best, Erik Hetzner > -- > Sent from my free software system <http://fsf.org/>. > >