Ryan, to mastodon
@Ryan@mastodon.mackners.com avatar

Now I have , and in . Funny how communications on computers are easier to focus on without all the intense animations, colors and ads. I feel much more relaxed and ready to work when it's all texted based.

debacle,
@debacle@framapiaf.org avatar

@Ryan

👍 for in (in my case ) and sometimes I read longer blog posts in .

Too bad, that .el fell behind and does not support modern features 😞

(I'ld love to help, but my .el is far too basic to do any good.)

roygreenhilt, to vim

How to start a fight with old-school nerds everwhere.

"The editor wars are over. VScode won."

debacle,
@debacle@framapiaf.org avatar

@CrashCarroll @roygreenhilt

Around the 1990s the winner was vim.
Around the 2000s the winner was Eclipse.
Around the 2010s the winner was Sublime Text.
Around the 2015s the winner was Atom.
Now the winner is VS Code.

Who cares which editor will be the next winner? I just keep using , esp. as none of all the winners can read my email () or be my window manager () 🙂

meedstrom, to emacs
@meedstrom@emacs.ch avatar

I can't figure out how to automatically filter mail in into specific folders... Like take everything from the mailing list emacs-orgmode@gnu.org into its own maildir.

znpy, to random Italian

So a couple of weeks ago I played a bit with emacs, offlineimap, mu and mu4e on my work laptop. Yesterday I had to find an email and guess what, the company outlook wasn't being any helpful... I was surprised to fire up emacs, load and performing a very basic offline query... Found the email thread immediately and in a couple of minutes I found the email i was looking for.

phundrak, to emacs
@phundrak@emacs.ch avatar

Can someone explain to me why Microsoft still doesn’t warn its users when they send an email which may miss an attachment based on its content when in does?

p0nt1ff, to emacs

I was always intimidated by the task of installing and configuring , to have my emails inside (on macOS). It's not just geeky, but it's also a good idea to have all your email messages (synced) on your local machine; for backup purposes, but also to have access to all your emails while being offline.

Apparently, it's not that difficult to have a working configuration (maybe using Fastmail helps in this endeavor, since Fastmail plays nice with standards).

After reading, fiddling with, and adapting a few guides I found on the internet, I wrote my own, available here: https://rotfl.weblog.lol/2024/01/using-mu4e-for-reading-emails-in-emacs-on-macos-a-fastmail-setup

jxself, to random
@jxself@mastodon.social avatar

What's the most important lesson you've learned this year? #YearInReview

jameshowell,
@jameshowell@emacs.ch avatar

Over the past ten years or so, I experienced a gradual shift from (a frustrated) "to get the most out of free software, I'm going to HAVE TO LEARN TO CODE!" to (a gratified) "the more I learn to code the more I get out of free software."

In short, it was the cumulative, very high-feedback, very low-barrier-to-entry list of idiosyncratic desires for tweaking my #Org mode workflows, then customizing my #mu4e workflows ... before I knew it I had written a couple of major and minor modes to mitigate my own #ADD.

Nothing impressive, but incalculably useful to me. A qualitative change in productivity. https://git.sr.ht/~jamesendreshowell/

#code #learntocode #FreeSoftware #Emacs #EmacsLisp
@dekkzz76 @jxself

ajroach42, to random
@ajroach42@retro.social avatar

It is cheesy as all getout but I love the way cool retro term looks on the gpd win.

jgoerzen,
@jgoerzen@floss.social avatar

@dpflug @ajroach42 @beto As the original author of , it's always fun to see it mentioned. I'm no longer an active developer on the project, but I still use it for all my mail.

Speaking of which, my other suggestions are and . also; it's one of the few things that works well with the XON/XOFF that some real vt220 and such require. I do own a WY55, vt220, vt420, and vt510 and periodically work from them. Amazing focus mode.

jgoerzen,
@jgoerzen@floss.social avatar

@dpflug @ajroach42 @beto Here are photos of my in action.

  1. The login prompt to the Raspberry Pi it's connected to.

  2. Reading debian-devel in in .

  3. Browsing this thread in toot.

  4. The was their first terminal to accept a PC keyboard with a PS/2 port. Here I have an IBM clicky keyboard hooked up, because I never liked the DEC layout. Also on the vt510, I can remap keys, so ctrl is where it is supposed to be - left of A.

A vt510 terminal from the 1990s connected to a Raspberry Pi running Linux. The screen is showing a summary of emails in mu4e, a mail reader for Emacs.
A vt510 terminal from the 1990s connected to a Raspberry Pi running Linux. The screen is showing this thread in the toot CLI client.
A vt510 terminal from the 1990s connected to a Raspberry Pi running Linux. Connected to it is an IBM keyboard.

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