On 2015-04-07, at 06:09, Eric Abrahamsen <e...@ericabrahamsen.net> wrote:
> At this point I have so much of my life (personal and professional) in > Org files that yes, checking the Agenda isn't an issue anymore. It's the > first thing I do in the morning, and the last thing I do before knocking > off at the end of the day. I second that, with the exception that I use something else this way (I cannot tell what on this list;-)), and one of the reminders in that-other-thing is "check the agenda for today before 12:00 am" (and I usually do it much earlier). As soon as I find some time to integrate this-other-thing with Org-mode, I might as well go the check-the-agenda-every-hour route. > If you're someone who restarts Emacs each morning, you could put a call > to `org-agenda' in your init file. The others have mentioned > `org-agenda-to-appt', but I find that if you're really using Org to > manage your time (checking where you are in the midst of longer > projects, clocking, surveying the week ahead, etc) then you'll want to > be looking at the Agenda every day. I used to do that, too, but (1) sometimes I started Emacs when e.g. making a presentation and having my laptop attached to an overhead projector and (2) some time ago I almost stopped "restarting Emacs", I just have it open all the time (well, I /did/ restart it sometimes, say, once a week or two). > Eric Hth, -- Marcin Borkowski http://octd.wmi.amu.edu.pl/en/Marcin_Borkowski Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science Adam Mickiewicz University