![]() Tricky tasks on remote servers, editing files on remote servers? Most places prefer immutable servers, which run peer reviewed remedial scripts via Ansible/Puppet/Chef/Salt. Patches over email or chat? I've only seen that use at any scale with Linux kernel development. Respectfully, you're describing workflows that very few people use today. * Replace tmux and tmuxinator with emacs-server. * Use emacsclient -tramp when you're SSH'd on a remote box to transparently edit in your local emacs. * Use org mode with org-babel and TRAMP to create interactive notebooks carrying out tricky tasks directly on the remote server from within emacs. Generate snippets on the fly in your team's chat from the currently selected text. * Use one of the IRC clients or emacs-slack to do the same thing. * Use mu4e and magit integration to seemelessly send and apply patches and pull projects and todo items directly from email. * Organize your tasks and projects with org-mode and work seemelessly with your team by syncing with org-trello. I mean if all you want is a text editor, some SCM integration, some build tool integration, syntax highlighting, and code completion then going with a specialized tool just for that is a good choice.īut the power of Emacs is that it can do nigh-anything and everything is a few lines of elisp away from being tightly integrated. Spacemacs, Prelude, and Scimacs are all good options depending on your use-case. You're ignoring distributions of Emacs which are designed to solve this problem by bundling and pre-configuring everything. I'm surprised more people don't do the same. I find myself more eager to write things down. If Gollum stops being maintained, I can use whatever the next best markdown renderer is. If there's a feature I wish it had, I can write a quick bash script to implement it. Edited with vim and a few bash scripts, rendered with a custom deployment of Gollum. Plain timestamped markdown files linked together. It's silly to use software that isn't making that same investment.Īfter trying Evernote, Workflowy, Notion, wikis, org-mode, and essentially everything else I could find, I gave up and tried building my own system for notes. When you write things down, you're investing in your future. At best it's open source and the maintainers will lose interest in a few years. ![]() Take a look at the pros and cons of upgrading.I've given up on using any sort of branded app for notetaking. Note: Growly Notes 2 is not free, and is available only from the Mac App Store-and version 1 is no longer supported. All the open notebooks are shown in one window, for easy navigation and quick jumps. ![]() Notebooks are organized into sections (the larger tabs on the left in the image above), each of which contains as many pages as you like. Put two snippets of text right next to each other. There are no rules for where things have to go: put an image beside text, or under it. Pages can contain almost anything: formatted text, images, movies, audio clips, PDF files, tables, lists, Web and file links, and drawings you create in Notes. Scrapbook your images, Web links, and video clips. ![]() Organize research projects, trips, to-do lists, or journals. Growly Notes lets you capture everything you're interested in, all in one place. ![]()
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