1 #+TITLE: Quotes about Org-mode
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10 * Quotes about Org-mode from the mailing list and the web.
12 :ID: 70F3B7D4-3EE9-4518-900D-D1D20434F2C2
16 I honestly don't know how I ever lived without org-mode @@html:<div
17 align="right"><i>@@Luke Gaudreau on [[http://twitter.com/infosoph][Twitter]].@@html:</i></div>@@
21 I'm having the same feeling for org-mode that I did when I first
22 learned to really program and use emacs. @@html:<div
23 align="right"><i>@@Jeffery Travis on [[http://twitter.com/travisjeffery][Twitter]].@@html:</i></div>@@
27 Org-mode is one of those tools that change the way you work and think
28 forever. @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Kaluza
29 [[http://twitter.com/#!/kaluza/statuses/40810643061874688][Twitter]]@@html:</i></div>@@
33 This handy system uses a fairly simple, single-file outlining
34 paradigm, upon which it overlays concepts like due dates and
35 priorities. I find its method both non-intrusive and easy to edit by
36 hand, which are absolute necessities for me. @@html:<div
37 align="right"><i>@@John Wiegley in 2007 in his [[http://newartisans.com/2007/08/using-org-mode-as-a-day-planner/][blog
38 post]].@@html:</i></div>@@
42 I've passed 2500 tasks logged with Org-mode! This has been, by far,
43 the most consistently I've used any organizational tool on any system,
44 ever. :) @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@John Wiegley in 2009 in an
45 Email to the Org-mode author.@@html:</i></div>@@
50 Someone mentioned that org-mode is a bit like perl. I agree. Way back,
51 someone described perl as "the Swiss army chainsaw of UNIX
52 programming". Over the last 12 months, I think org mode has evolved
53 into something akin to the "Swiss army JCB of organisational software"
54 (to stretch a metaphor until it screams for mercy!). @@html:<div
55 align="right"><i>@@Pete Phillips in a [[http://article.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/754][post on
56 emacs-orgmode]].@@html:</i></div>@@
60 I think a main reason for [Org-mode's] utility is that basic use
61 requires little thought. When I'm using it for brainstorming, it's
62 almost like I'm not aware that I'm using any program --- I'm just
63 thinking. @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Someone, in Charles Cave's
64 [[http://orgmode.org/survey.html#sec-11][survey of Org users]]@@html:</i></div>@@
68 Org-mode bends the definition of outliners until you realise that
69 outlines are text and text is outline. [...] In org-mode, I'm... not
70 editing a document. I'm editing a piece of fiction, one piece at
71 a time. On a computer. In a way that makes sense. @@html:<div
72 align="right"><i>@@Urpo Lankinen in a [[http://beastwithin.org/users/wwwwolf/fantasy/avarthrel/blog/2011/05/lets-just-use-emacs.html][blog post]].@@html:</i></div>@@
76 I'm continually amazed by what org can do, and also by how intuitive
77 it is. It's not at all unusual that I find myself thinking that it
78 would be great if Org/Emacs did "x", trying what seems to me to be the
79 way that it would do "x" if it could, and discovering that it
80 functions just as I expect. @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Someone,
81 in Charles Cave's [[http://orgmode.org/survey.html#sec-11][survey of Org users]]@@html:</i></div>@@
85 I love Org's timeclocking support, and I think you will too. Because
86 it's integrated with your task list, you don't have to switch to
87 separate application or reenter data. @@html:<div
88 align="right"><i>@@Sacha Chua in a [[http://sachachua.com/wp/2007/12/30/clocking-time-with-emacs-org][blog post]].@@html:</i></div>@@
92 I've been trying lots of different Web-based GTD task managers like
93 Remember the Milk, Toodledo, and GTDAgenda. I'm slowly coming to the
94 conclusion that there's nothing quite like Org for Emacs. @@html:<div
95 align="right"><i>@@Sacha Chua in a [[http://sachachua.com/wp/2009/04/06/nothing-quite-like-org-for-emacs/][blog post]].@@html:</i></div>@@
99 *BG:* We’ve got a lot more books coming out in the pipeline. [...]
100 The one which is my favourite is the Emacs Org-Mode Reference
101 Manual. [...] Honestly, it’s the greatest Emacs mode in 20
103 *CW:* /Would you say Org-Mode is one of the more exciting projects in
104 the Free Software world at the moment?/ \\
105 *BG:* Definitely. Maybe it’s even /the/ most exciting. Certainly it’s
106 transformed the way that I organise my work, and I think it has for
107 a lot of other people as well, so it’s software that can revolutionise
108 your life, not just perform a function. @@html:<div
109 align="right"><i>@@Brian Gough of [[http://www.network-theory.co.uk/][Netork Theory Limited]] in an
110 interview by Chris Woolfrey, published in this [[http://blogs.fsfe.org/fellowship-interviews/?p%3D156][blog
111 post]].@@html:</i></div>@@
115 By far my favorite featureset in org-mode that muse lacks[fn:1] is the
116 table support, which piggybacks on calc to form more of a spreadsheet
117 than table support. Insanely cool. @@html:<div
118 align="right"><i>@@Patrick Hawkins in a [[http://article.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.wiki.general/5760][post on
119 emacs-wiki-discuss]].@@html:</i></div>@@
123 Org is a new working experience for me and there is nothing comparable
124 to working with emacs AND Org-mode. @@html:<div
125 align="right"><i>@@Sebastian Rose in his [[http://orgmode.org/worg/code/org-info-js/][org-info.js
126 documentation]].@@html:</i></div>@@
130 Org-mode definition:\\
131 Org-mode is an emacs mode for doing anything you dream of. If it can't
132 do it yet, post a message on the mailing list at night, go for
133 a sleep, and grab in the morning a fresh copy with your features
134 implemented. @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Paul Rivier in an email
135 message to the Org-mode author.@@html:</i></div>@@
139 From: Christian Moe\\
140 Re: Copy/Search Outline \\
142 I post a howto over my morning coffee at 8:38am. By 11:30am, Florian
143 has encapsulated it into a neat function with added goodies. Within 40
144 minutes, Carsten reports
146 > there is a key (C-c C-x v) and a menu entry,\\
147 > and documentation in manual and refcard for it.
149 Gotta love this community.
151 Yours, Christian @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Christian Moe in
152 a [[http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/44750/focus%3D44952][message]] to the Org-mode mailing list.@@html:</i></div>@@
158 [...] Org-mode [...] continues to amaze me with its power and utility
159 each and every day. @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Bernt Hansen in
160 a [[http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/9213][post on emacs-orgmode]].@@html:</i></div>@@
164 PT> Damn! Org is again a step ahead of me. :D\\
165 Nick> Yup - get used to it ;-) @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@PT and
166 Nick Dokos [[http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/17130/focus%3D17156][on emacs-orgmode]].@@html:</i></div>@@
170 Org-mode has changed my life! @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Jonathan
171 E. Magen in a [[http://yonkeltron.com/blog/2008/11/10/org-mode-has-changed-my-life/][blog post]]@@html:</i></div>@@
175 If humans could mate with software, I'd have org-mode's babies.
176 @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Chris League on
177 [[http://twitter.com/chrisleague][Twitter]].@@html:</i></div>@@
181 If I hated everything about Emacs, I would still use it for
182 org-mode. [...] @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Avdi on
183 [[http://twitter.com/avdi][Twitter]]@@html:</i></div>@@
187 Org-mode is like half the awesomeness of emacs @@html:<div
188 align="right"><i>@@Pavel on [[http://twitter.com/#!/Pavel_92/statuses/93245405906747393][Twitter]]@@html:</i></div>@@
192 [...] It's fascinating. I'm still dubious as to the mental sanity of
193 the developer, but intriguing. [...] @@html:<div
194 align="right"><i>@@Carlo Piana on [[http://twitter.com/#!/carlopiana/statuses/37160201652011009][Twitter]]@@html:</i></div>@@
198 Org-mode is so awesome because everything is ultimately still plain
199 text files. @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Philip J. Hollenback on
200 [[http://twitter.com/philiph/statuses/21019501383][Twitter]]@@html:</i></div>@@
204 The sheer elaborated insanity of the org-mode spreadsheet is
205 a distilled microcosm of all that is wonderful and brain-damaged about
206 emacs. @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Zenoli on
207 [[http://twitter.com/zenoli][Twitter]].@@html:</i></div>@@
211 If Emacs is an operating system, Org-mode is the office/productivity
212 suite. @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Eric Schulte in his [[http://orgmode.org/worg/images/screenshots/org-mode-publishing.jpg][screenshot]]
213 on [[http://orgmode.org/worg/][Worg]]@@html:</i></div>@@
217 I think I understand the difference between /org-mode/ and
218 /planner.el/ now. The former is more like an outline with dates and
219 hypertext and lots of other features, while the latter is more like
220 a schedule with outlines and hypertext and lots of other features.\\
221 @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Samuel Wales in
222 [[http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.planner.general/1279/focus%3D1283][a
223 post on the planner mailing list]]@@html:</i></div>@@
227 Org-mode seemed like a way to tame the text file beast and ride it off
229 @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Joey Doll in a [[http://www.guyslikedolls.com/set-phasers-to-org-mode][blog
230 post]]@@html:</i></div>@@
234 I have no idea how long [these files] are, probably 1000 lines each,
235 but it doesn't matter. I can combine long winded notes about my latest
236 fabrication process with that thing that I have to do on it next week,
237 fold everything back up, and then keep easy tabs on everything using
238 the agenda view. @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Joey Doll in a [[http://www.guyslikedolls.com/set-phasers-to-org-mode][blog
239 post]]@@html:</i></div>@@
243 If you're like me, over the years you'll have had your todo lists
244 scattered over multiple programs and places. First a simple text file
245 with homebrewn format, then various Windows programs, then various
246 Linux GUI programs, then back to Notepad and joe/gedit/kate, then
247 various apps on cellphones, then pencil & paper (due to cellphones
248 keep getting lost/stolen), then some cloud apps, then todo.txt, then
249 finally org-mode. And if you're anything like me or many others,
250 you'll find that org-mode is *it*. @@html:<div
251 align="right"><i>@@Stephen Haryanto in a [[http://blogs.perl.org/users/steven_haryanto/2011/03/orgparser.html][blog post]]@@html:</i></div>@@
255 Org-mode is a note taking tool unparalleled in it's simplicity and
257 @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Shrutarshi Basu in a [[http://bytebaker.com/2009/06/23/too-many-formats/][blog
258 post]]@@html:</i></div>@@
262 Org-mode is like doubling the RAM in your brain.\\
263 @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Casey Brant on
264 [[http://twitter.com/BaseCase/statuses/10127206552][Twitter]]@@html:</i></div>@@
268 Org-mode is like heroin. After the first hit. You're addicted. Then,
269 that's all you can think about.\\
270 @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Sergio T. Ruiz on
271 [[http://twitter.com/sergio_101/statuses/21851630268][Twitter]]@@html:</i></div>@@
275 Org-mode; gestalt of The One True Editor. Sentience is close at
277 @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Richard Hoskins on
278 [[http://twitter.com/RichardHoskins/statuses/25090314533][Twitter]]@@html:</i></div>@@
282 Ceiling Cat, bestow your benevolent purring upon the authors of
283 Org-mode for #Emacs, as I'm not sure how I'd manage my life without
285 @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Tom X. Tobin on
286 [[http://twitter.com/tomxtobin/statuses/25381303142][Twitter]]@@html:</i></div>@@
290 Emacs org-mode makes my geek heart flutter. [...]\\
291 @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Sacha Chua on
292 [[http://twitter.com/sachac/statuses/25553224867][Twitter]]@@html:</i></div>@@
296 It looks like it's from 1983, and it feels like taking a course in 7D
297 geometry but org-mode is truly (and I use this word rarely) awesome.\\
298 @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@David Griffiths on
299 [[http://twitter.com/dgriffiths/statuses/25812307488][Twitter]]@@html:</i></div>@@
303 Once again found what looked like a door to a sub-basement actually
304 leads to a cathedral: emacs org mode\\
305 @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Neal Ford on [[https://twitter.com/#!/neal4d/statuses/145905694791565312][Twitter]]@@html:</i></div>@@
309 Org-Mode is without a doubt the most useful piece of software that
310 I have ever installed.\\
311 @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Christopher Dolan on
312 [[http://twitter.com/codingstream/statuses/26326566388][Twitter]]@@html:</i></div>@@
316 While on-topic, just want to clear up misconceptions of org-mode. It
317 is different from all the software/website task managers mentioned
318 here. You can think of it as a meta-organization tool. A org software
319 factory if you will. You can customize it to exactly how you want your
320 thoughts, tasks, notes, etc organized. See
321 http://doc.norang.ca/org-mode.html for an idea of the sheer breadth of
322 options available to make it work exactly for you. This may sound
323 like a lot of work, but there are a lot of sensible defaults, which is
324 why most org-mode tutorials that scratch the surface make it seem like
325 a sibling to other task management software. [...] If I may pilfer
326 a quote, org-mode "outshines other [task management solutions] in
327 approximately the same way the noonday sun does the stars." (Neal
328 Stephenson on Emacs)\\
329 @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Someone in a discussion on [[http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id%3D1230716][Hacker
330 News]]@@html:</i></div>@@
334 I've spent a few days reading the manual, and looking at various
335 guides/tutorials on using it, especially with GTD approach -- and it
336 does everything I want, and so easily (once I've understood what to
338 @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Michael Maloney by
339 email@@html:</i></div>@@
343 TODO lists in #orgmode is the best thing that happened to creative
344 writing since the metaphor.\\
345 @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Keith R. Potempa on
346 [[https://twitter.com/#!/keithrpotempa/status/143407790130597888][twitter]]@@html:</i></div>@@
350 Little by little org-mode will take over my life. @@html:<div
351 align="right"><i>@@Mehul Sanghvi@@html:</i></div>@@
355 The best thing that happened to Emacs since Emacs itself: Org Mode.
356 @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Tomas S. Grigera on
357 [[https://twitter.com/#!/grigeratomas/status/151737481333710849][twitter]]@@html:</i></div>@@
361 Every time I go to use Org-mode, I find something new and helpful.
362 @@html:<div align="right"><i>@@Katherine Cox on [[https://plus.google.com/b/102778904320752967064/100662126766165980060/posts/cE2J1SYUhPi][Google+]] @@html:</i></div>@@
366 What makes me so excited about org mode is that it's the
367 first time I've seen literate programming move a tick up into the
368 realm of actually creating a tellable Story.
369 @@html:<div align="right"><i>Lawrence Bottorff on @@[[http://article.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/82801][the mailing list]]@@html:</i></div>@@
372 * Some 24/7 lectures about Org-mode
374 The famous 24/7 lectures are part of the ceremony for handing out the
375 [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ig_Nobel_Prize][Ig Nobel Prizes]]. All speakers have to give a 24/7 lecture on their
376 subject. This means, they have to give a /complete technical
377 description/ of their work in /24 words/ (may be totally cryptic), and
378 then a /7 word/ explanation that is more or less /understandable for
379 the public/, and it may be either tongue in cheek or serious. In
380 summer 2008, a few people tried to [[http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/7599][formulate]] such lectures about
383 ** Technical description in 24 words
385 These was only a single entry in the "24" category:
387 - Org-mode does outlining, note-taking, hyperlinks, spreadsheets,
388 TODO lists, project planning, GTD, HTML and LaTeX authoring, all
389 with plain text files in Emacs (/Carsten Dominik/)
391 ** Simple summary in 7 words
393 This is only a selection of the submitted entries. My loose
394 criterion was to use entries that are either a good description or
395 are funny - both valid approaches to the "7" part of 24/7 lectures.
396 I also left a few entries which are not exactly seven words,
397 because I liked them a lot.
399 - Organize and track everything in plain text (/Bernt Hansen/)
401 - Organize outlines, lists and table in text. (/Eddward DeVilla/)
403 - Emacs Org Mode: your life in text (/Matthew Parker/)
405 - Do work and play in plain text (/Kene Meniru/)
407 - Madness? This is org-mode! [[http://www.youtube.com/watch%3Fv%3DUgrsNBu51nU][*Real Spartans use emacs!*]] (/Russell
410 - Plain text with frickin' lasers. [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dr._Evil][*pinky to lips*]] (/Russell
413 - It is the text that binds us. [[http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php%3Fterm%3Dshikaka][*Shekaka!*]] (/Russell Adams[fn:2]/)
416 - Org-mode --- lifehacker's orgy :-P (/Dmitry Dzhus/)
418 - Back to the future for plain text (/Carsten Dominik/)
420 [fn:1] Muse now understands the syntax of Org-mode tables, so you can use
421 Orgtbl-mode to get the same tables in Muse.
423 [fn:2] The linked text is from Adam, but the link itself has been added