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Re: [emacs-wiki-discuss] Complexity of computing w/ Emacs


From: Allen Halsey
Subject: Re: [emacs-wiki-discuss] Complexity of computing w/ Emacs
Date: Wed, 06 Jul 2005 16:17:38 -1000
User-agent: Mozilla Thunderbird 1.0.2-6 (X11/20050513)

Interesting, thanks.

Perhaps, then, the key is: the more one moves their computer interaction to be fully within emacs, the easier it will become. My current hybrid approach of having one foot in the GUI Desktop Environment and the other foot in Emacs is less optimal than committing fully to one or the other. That make sense. That explains why my current transition period is frustrating, but I can look forward to a more efficient environment as more of my computing activities take place in the emacs universe. That's encouraging.

Your WorkFlow webpage (http://twb.ath.cx/wiki/Workflow.xhtml) is a great resource, btw. I picked up a couple of tricks already. Looks great too! I like that you include a link to the wiki source at the bottom.

Allen

Trent Buck wrote:
Allen Halsey <address@hidden> writes:

In a GUI world, I have a buttons on my task bar for the applications I am
currently running:

  - Thunderbird Mail Client,
  - A Java IDE
  - Mozilla Sunbird Calendar Application
  - A couple of terminals
  - An IRC client
  - A text editor with multiple tabs for keeping notes and TODO lists.

To read mail, I click the button on my task bar for Thunderbird. Likewise for
the other apps.  Simple.

Emacs can subsume the functionality of all these apps in a single
instance. That's one button on task bar. But I hesitate to embark on this
approach because I am absolutely terrified that I'll click that one button
and drown in a sea of buffers.


Simple.  Move the window bar into emacs as well.


I think maybe I just haven't learned the right tricks yet. Should I run each
major app in separate frames? In separate instances? Is using an alernate
Window Manager like RatPoison the answer?


Before I dropped X altogether I was using RP.  Now I live on the console, with
a screen window for each host.  Each host runs screen, within which there is
generally one window -- emacs.  Apart from switching between hosts, pretty much
everything is done in Emacs.

I often have a separate frame for Gnus (yes, you can have multiple Emacs frames
on the console), but I don't bother for w3m-el or planner or emacs-wiki --
usually it's only a keypress or two to get Emacs to DTRT.






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