"Tim O'Callaghan" <tim.ocallag...@gmail.com> writes: > Hi org (ab)users > > This is a kind of follow up to an earlier thread, because i think > there is some value in kicking off a discussion. > > I have suspicions that org-mode is essentially a solitary habit. I've > done a quick search in the manual or FAQ about how you might share > your org habit with others, but nothing seems to exist. > > So i thought I'd ask the users how they spread their org around. I'm > looking for ideas that are not the "fire and forget" publishing of > your org todo's method. I mean a method that you can meaningfully > involve others, even if the involvement is synced through an external > collaboration tool. > > Anyone? > > Tim.
Hi Tim. I don't think that at the moment org-mode can be more than solitary habit. The "problem" is that org-mode runs on emacs, and really a small percentage of people can/want to use emacs. If I ever will be able to work with emacs-(ab)users org-mode can be really great to centralize documentation/agenda and everything we could think of. But to communicate with "normal" people the only way that I see is some sort of program which understands org-files but don't let the user do nasty things. _______________________________________________ Emacs-orgmode mailing list Please use `Reply All' to send replies to the list. Emacs-orgmode@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode