On Fri, Feb 10, 2012 at 8:03 PM, Bernt Hansen wrote:
> John Hendy writes:
>
>> I got food feedback as far as the "snapshots" inquiry, but am still
>> not settled on the time vs. topic hierarchy strategy (definite thanks
>> to Bernt and Eric Fraga!). I thought of a specific situation that
>> might
John Hendy writes:
> I got food feedback as far as the "snapshots" inquiry, but am still
> not settled on the time vs. topic hierarchy strategy (definite thanks
> to Bernt and Eric Fraga!). I thought of a specific situation that
> might help with receiving feedback.
>
> I think were I solely work
I got food feedback as far as the "snapshots" inquiry, but am still
not settled on the time vs. topic hierarchy strategy (definite thanks
to Bernt and Eric Fraga!). I thought of a specific situation that
might help with receiving feedback.
I think were I solely working as an individual, the struct
John Hendy writes:
> On Mon, Jan 23, 2012 at 3:00 AM, Eric S Fraga wrote:
[...]
>> In terms of the original questions, I use a combination of hierarchical
>> structure that is filled in as a project develops, with
>> revision control to allow me to see progress, together with a log based
>> re
John Hendy writes:
> On Mon, Jan 23, 2012 at 3:00 AM, Eric S Fraga wrote:
>>
>> The key, as John has already stated, is to record everything! With
>> emacs, I can usually pull out what I want *if* the information was
>> recorded in the first place.
>>
>> Finally, tags can be very useful for qui
On Mon, Jan 23, 2012 at 3:00 AM, Eric S Fraga wrote:
> Max Mikhanosha writes:
>
>> At Fri, 20 Jan 2012 12:04:51 -0600,
>> John Hendy wrote:
>
> [...]
>
>> Generally I think the way to tackle this is to take advantage that you
>> are working with plain text and not with Word document, and use
>> s
Max Mikhanosha writes:
> At Fri, 20 Jan 2012 12:04:51 -0600,
> John Hendy wrote:
[...]
> Generally I think the way to tackle this is to take advantage that you
> are working with plain text and not with Word document, and use
> standard Emacs/Unix tools for working with text.
Agreed!
> Some i
At Sat, 21 Jan 2012 07:59:38 -0500,
Max Mikhanosha wrote:
>
> Go to Project 1, press, C-c C-x b (this will create indirect buffer
> "Project 1-1"), then go to draft 2 tree, and do same thing. If you did
> not edit the title, it will reuse the indirect buffer name, since its
> titled after the head
At Sat, 21 Jan 2012 07:59:38 -0500,
Max Mikhanosha wrote:
> If you do this "copy the project" thing once a week or so, you can
> have a nice ediff of the project's progress along the time-line.
>
> Actually it may not be a bad idea to implement M-x
> org-ediff-subtree-with-sibling command, that w
At Fri, 20 Jan 2012 12:04:51 -0600,
John Hendy wrote:
>
> I use org-mode for all of my work notes. For the most part, I'm very
> happy with it. I know everything is in there somewhere and I can find
> it. I currently have one file for my projects organized something like
> this:
>
>
> * Project
I use org-mode for all of my work notes. For the most part, I'm very
happy with it. I know everything is in there somewhere and I can find
it. I currently have one file for my projects organized something like
this:
#+begin_src org
* Tracking
This is for misc todos. It's just a repo for holding
11 matches
Mail list logo