So after my struggles getting this setup going I’m really enjoying this setup.

Thought I’d post here as there is quite a bit of intersectionality between the emacs, Arch, Steamdeck, Nix and Mechboards communities.

Spec as follows:

  1. Steamdeck (LCD);
  2. SteamOS 3.5 Preview (Arch based and compatible with Nix packages);
  3. Emacs 29 (via Nix package);
  4. DooM config + some tweaks of my own; and
  5. Corne Light v2 with random DSA caps.

Ambitions for this setup are:

  1. Better emacs-fu (thanks to everyone here with their help so far);
  2. RGB underglow on the keyboard for 90s vibes;
  3. Printed keycaps in jazzy colours;
  4. Better keymap (maybe Miryoku or something with homerow mods)
  • thephatmasterOPB
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    1 year ago

    100% cargo cult / “I use Arch linux” mindset

    I’m an office worker who is way more productive in Office365 than emacs. And for that purpose OneNote poops all over org.

    That said, for home-life orgaisation and project tracking, org works pretty well for me.

    Setup suggestions are totally welcome, I do run emacs on all my devices.

    • paretoOptimalDevB
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      1 year ago

      I’m an office worker who is way more productive in Office365 than emacs. And for that purpose OneNote poops all over org.

      That said, for home-life orgaisation and project tracking, org works pretty well for me.

      I’d be super interested to hear why you’re more productive in onenote given you presumably have experience with both org and one note.

      • thephatmasterOPB
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        1 year ago

        I’ll do my best to explain.

        I have given work presentations using org / reveal.js, and taken conference notes in org, but in a nutshell I find OneNote just easier to use and more flexible in a Windows / knowledge work environment:

        I have 3 or so years experience using org (daily on Android, weekly in emacs), and 5+ with OneNote. I learned OneNote when I learned GTD, and org came later.

        So I do have greater experience with OneNote, and find it does much of what org does (tags, todo / calendar tasks). A lot of the features are comparable.

        I heavily use “find tags” in OneNote, to find todo, awaiting etc tasks from among my projects and find that an effective tag-based search. It’s not an org-agenda replacement, but

        In my work environment OneNote does a few things out the box my current org setup doesnt:

        • Is installed by default on pretty much any knowledge workers work machine, no admin requests etc required;

        • Integrates with O365, so I can:

          • add tasks to Outlook and easily send / assign them to others in Planner;
          • deal directly with Outlook / exchange items (most of my inputs and outputs are email or pdf);
          • add a OneNote note to any MS Team
        • Accepts any input and will display it WYSWIG. So I can treat each project as a page, and dump documents in there (either embedded or “printed”), screenshots, diagrams etc, in whatever way I need to - and even scribble all over that with diagrams, arrows etc using a windows ink pen. All the while using tags to give context to items;

        • as a result of the above, OneNote allows a note to be very flexibly formatted. Many of mine are 2 columns:

          • the first a table containing a running timeline of actions (with or without embedded emails / pdfs etc); and
          • the second various documents, parts of documents, screenshots / drawings etc - displayed right there, not a link away.

        That said I’ve had WSLg a week or so now, and that level of integration between emacs and Windows is really nice, so things might change.

        I hope that helps explain - if I’m doing things in ON that org could do for me with a setup change I’m all for learning how