Okay. 31 books. 15 days. Plus all the writing I still need to do. I
may have made a bit of a miscalculation. No problem, it’s the library,
I can always renew or request books.
The only books I probably won’t be able to renew are
(Yes, I wander all over…)
I can do that. =)
One of these days, I’m going to revise my OPAC reminder script to also
automatically deactivate all of my requests once I go over a certain
number of books… ;)
On Technorati: reading
Random Emacs symbol: table-narrow-cell – Command: Narrow the current cell by N columns and shrink the cell horizontally.
For January 2008, my assignment is to write a chapter on taking notes
with Emacs. Here are the blog posts that I plan to write, each around
1000-2000 words long. This should give me plenty of material to edit,
if I don’t go mad first. ;)
- [ ] Keeping Notes in Emacs
Structured vs Unstructured (outline, free-form)
Flat vs Hyperlinked
Private vs Public
File structure (one file, daily, snippets)
- [ ] Outline Notes with Org, Blorg
- [ ] Daily Notes with Planner
- [ ] Hyperlinked Notes and Muse
- [ ] Publishing Muse
- [ ] Publishing Planner, RSS
- [ ] Remember: quick note entry
- [ ] Snippets with Howm
- [ ] Blogging from Emacs - WordPress, LJ, Blogger,Muse-Blosxom, EmacsAtomAPI
- [ ] Encrypted Notes (full file, segments) - MOSTLY WRITTEN
I find that thinking of a book as a collection of articles works out
well for me. Starting with a rough outline like this, I’ll write
2000-word articles of the kind that I’d write for Linux Journal or
LinuxWorld, and then I’d put them into my outline and add transitions.
After I write all the pieces, then I can write the introduction and
the wrap-up sections.
Slowly getting the hang of this writing thing… =)
On Technorati: emacs, writing, wickedcoolemacs
Random Emacs symbol: message-narrow-to-headers-or-head – Function: Narrow the buffer to the head of the message.