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Re: [O] Represent *everything* in Org-mode
From: |
Rainer Stengele |
Subject: |
Re: [O] Represent *everything* in Org-mode |
Date: |
Mon, 18 Jul 2011 08:34:39 +0200 |
User-agent: |
Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; de; rv:1.8.1.17) Gecko/20080914 Lightning/0.8 Thunderbird/2.0.0.17 Mnenhy/0.7.5.666 |
Hi Karl,
nice idea!
My first thoughts are a warning about big org files which can be quite slow to
be processed as agenda files.
Please check this thread: http://article.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/44286
Best regards,
- Rainer
Am 18.07.2011 01:54, schrieb Karl Voit:
> Hi!
>
> I need your thoughts and feedback on this idea:
>
> I am thinking of letting student(s) implement a (Python[1]) script
> that imports[2] all kinds of data sources to generate simple (and
> reduced) Org-mode heading entries and links to the original
> information in order to represent the users digital life as complete
> as possible.
>
> Imagine, you have got one (additional) «archive.org» (or
> «mylife.org_archive»[8]) which contains lots of small entries that
> represent many things you are doing on your computer:
>
> * emails you send and receive
> * tweets you write
> * weblog entries you write
> * usenet postings you send
> * files you are creating (with a datestamp in its filename)
> * bookmarks you save (in delicious?)
> * SVN/git commits you are committing
> * SMS you send and receive (via smartphone)
> * ... and much more
>
> With this system, you can visit any day in the past to see, what
> happened in your (digital) life that time. You can reconstruct
> pretty much anything you were thinking, working, ... that day.
>
> If you happen to know MyLifeBits[3] from MS Research, the papers
> from Gemmell et al or the book «Total Recall»[4] you already know
> what I am writing about: researchers implemented a (MS Windows only)
> system to capture your digital life even with digital cameras and
> screenshots of your desktop.
>
> With Org-mode and a bunch of «connectors» this should be a fairly
> easy job to do. Nothing proprietary here, the amount of data is not
> that much as with those binary information from MyLifeBits.
>
> I am thinking about a central management tool that writes the
> Org-mode file(s), lets you add tags to specific sources and correct
> time zone deltas caused by timestamps of services out of sync with
> the time zone you are living at.
>
> Then there are those «connectors»: one will parse through my
> maildir[5] to collect sent (and received?) emails in order to
> generate something like:
>
> * [[file:/my/maildir/the_email][Urgend: Server just died]] :email:work:
> <2010-01-17 Tue 08:12>
> :PROPERTIES:
> :FROM: address@hidden
> :END:
>
> Another «connector» parses my monthly backup of tweets[6] in order
> to generate entries like:
>
> * [[http://twitter.com/status/0815][I hate dying hardware]] :tweet:
> <2010-01-17 Tue 08:15>
>
> Parsing a source like «locate» I can filter out files I am putting
> an ISO datestamp into and generate:
>
> * [[file:/albums/2010-01-17T08:21_rat.jpg][The rat that ate the \
> server cable]] :file:
> <2010-01-17 Tue 08:21>
>
> With another «connector» I am parsing my weekly delicious[7] backup
> and generate entries like following for all my bookmarks:
>
> * [[http://killrats.com][How to kill rodents]] :delicious:animals:
> <2010-01-17 Tue 09:35>
>
> Without such a combined agenda view, you would possible never know
> which different things you were «using» that day when a rat was the
> source of a hardware downtime.
>
> This is not a new idea but as far as I know, it was never
> implemented that complete outside of MyLifeBits.
>
>
> So: is there something similar out there? Probably using Org-mode
> already?
>
> And: what do *you* think of this idea?
>
>
> I'd like to have a central tool that manages the connectors as
> mentioned above and small and easy to implement connectors for each
> data source.
>
>
> 1. I know that you guys would like to see that in ELISP but here
> at my side is sadly no ELISP knowledge available :-(
> 2. Currently, only one-side-import (and no two-side sync) is
> planned.
> 3. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MyLifeBitso
> 4. http://totalrecallbook.com/ (I'll have to read it soon)
> 5. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maildir
> 6. I am using http://grabeeter.tugraz.at/
> 7. http://delicious.com
> 8. In order to keep daily agenda small/fast and only «Archive mode» complete