1 #+STYLE: <style> body {font-size:20px} </style>
2 #+STYLE: <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="http://orgmode.org/org.css" />
7 #+OPTIONS: H:2 num:t toc:t \n:nil @:t ::t |:t ^:t *:t TeX:t author:nil
8 #+EMAIL: carsten.dominik@gmail.com
11 #+TITLE: Org-mode Community People
12 #+INFOJS_OPT: view:info toc:1 path:http://orgmode.org/worg/code/org-info-js/org-info.js tdepth:1 ftoc:t buttons:0 mouse:underline
13 #+OPTIONS: H:3 num:nil toc:t \n:nil @:t ::t |:t ^:{} -:t f:t *:t TeX:t LaTeX:t skip:nil d:(HIDE) tags:not-in-toc
15 #+MACRO: person @<br style="clear:both;" />\n#+ATTR_HTML: width="300" #+ATTR_HTML: style="float:right;margin:0px 0px 20px 20px;"\n* $1\n[[$2]]\n
16 #+MACRO: person100 @<br style="clear:both;" />\n#+ATTR_HTML: width="100" #+ATTR_HTML: style="float:right;margin:0px 0px 20px 20px;"\n* $1\n[[$2]]\n
17 #+MACRO: person150 @<br style="clear:both;" />\n#+ATTR_HTML: width="150" #+ATTR_HTML: style="float:right;margin:0px 0px 20px 20px;"\n* $1\n[[$2]]\n
18 #+MACRO: person200 @<br style="clear:both;" />\n#+ATTR_HTML: width="200" #+ATTR_HTML: style="float:right;margin:0px 0px 20px 20px;"\n* $1\n[[$2]]\n
19 #+MACRO: person300 @<br style="clear:both;" />\n#+ATTR_HTML: width="300" #+ATTR_HTML: style="float:right;margin:0px 0px 20px 20px;"\n* $1\n[[$2]]\n
20 #+MACRO: person400 @<br style="clear:both;" />\n#+ATTR_HTML: width="400" #+ATTR_HTML: style="float:right;margin:0px 0px 20px 20px;"\n* $1\n[[$2]]\n
21 #+MACRO: person500 @<br style="clear:both;" />\n#+ATTR_HTML: width="500" #+ATTR_HTML: style="float:right;margin:0px 0px 20px 20px;"\n* $1\n[[$2]]\n
25 <a href="/worg/"><img src="http://orgmode.org/img/org-mode-unicorn.png" class="logo-link" /></a>
31 # To add a new person to this file, please use the "person" macro with
32 # two arguments, a name and a link to a picture. Like this:
33 # { { { person(First M. Last, http://link to picture) } } }
34 # call, insert the descriptive text
36 # Here comes a new person, please use the "person" macro to set name
37 # and image link. After the macro, write your text.
39 # Ian Barton ------------------------------------------------------------------
41 {{{person(Ian Barton,http://orgmode.org/img/people/ian_barton.jpg)}}}
43 I started out in a farming family before going into medical research
44 as a virologist and then into computing. I have now returned to
45 farming, where I hope I'll stay!
47 I have only been using Emacs for two or three years and had been
48 looking for something that allowed me to keep all my information in
49 plain text. When I discovered org I knew that I had found the Holy
52 Org develops so rapidly that every time I wonder if I can do "x" in
53 org, it's either already implemented, or one of Carsten's multiple
54 beings creates it overnight. However, despite rapid development and
55 many features org's core functions remain simple to use.
57 Outside farming and playing with computers I try to indulge my passion
58 for mountaineering, which I am trying to pass on to my three young
59 children, who are sometimes reluctant companions in our adventures!
61 # Charles Cave ----------------------------------------------------------------
63 {{{person200(Charles Cave,http://orgmode.org/img/people/charles_cave.jpg)}}}
65 I started using Emacs on Unix workstations in the early 1990s but now
66 I use Windows desktop machines.
68 I was using XEmacs for my Perl programming work in my role of a
69 software tester for a Sydney based software company. Around 2007 I
70 discovered David Allen's Getting Things Done methodology through web
71 sites such as [[http://www.43folders.com]] and
72 [[http://www.diyplanner.com/]]. I later created a portal of GTD resources
73 [[http://gtdportal.pbworks.com/]]
75 I stumbled upon the Planner mode for emacs, then did more research on
76 Emacs outliners and found org-mode. What attracted me to org-mode was
77 keeping all information in one file and the outlining commands were so
78 simple. The format of an org-mode was very logical and easy to
79 generate and parse using scripts in Perl or Python.
81 XEmacs soon gave way to GNU Emacs which is friendlier to org-mode and
82 in my opinion, a better Emacs. My other useful Emacs package is
83 mup-mode for typesetting music using the [[http://www.arkkra.com][MUP program]]. I also use
84 org-mode to publish articles for the web about GTD, org-mode and my
87 org-mode and Remember mode are another great combination of tools.
88 I capture my thoughts, ideas, notes, journal entries, and Internet
89 banking receipts into plain text files.
91 I want to tell the world about org-mode so I write articles on how I
92 have used org-mode in my daily life. I work as a technical writer of
93 training materials, and I naturally enjoy writing to help people
94 understand how to use technology. My articles can be found at
95 [[http://members.optusnet.com.au/~charles57/GTD/]]
96 I couldn't live without org-mode! Each new release
97 has exciting new features.
99 # Dan Davison -----------------------------------------------------------------
101 {{{person(Dan Davison,http://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/~davison/dan.jpg)}}}
103 I'm a university-based researcher in evolutionary biology/genetics. In
104 addition to using org-mode for all my task and project management, I
105 now use it as my working environment for programming and data
106 analysis, which I can highly recommend.
108 Although I'd used emacs for a few years beforehand, encountering
109 org-mode finally motivated me to learn emacs-lisp, which I have really
110 appreciated (I had previously found it strangely refractory). The
111 community of org users is providing a constant stream of high quality
112 new additions, and when you have any doubts about how to proceed
113 yourself, it is a spectacularly helpful and reliable source of
116 I am working with Eric Schulte on [[http://orgmode.org/worg/org-contrib/babel/index.php][org-babel]] which aims to extend
117 org-mode as an interactive environment for tasks involving
118 programming, by allowing source code blocks in many languages to be
119 executed. I have [[http://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/~davison/software/dbm/dbm.php][one other software project]] outside my work; its aim
120 is to use the large amounts of information about musical similarity
121 available online to organise and navigate a personal music
122 library. Speaking of music, I am [[http://www.last.fm/user/Myrmornis][Myrmornis]] on [[http://www.last.fm/][last.fm]].
124 When I get away from my computer I tend to try to go far from
125 computers in general. In the last few years my birding/camping trips
126 have been to the more remote areas of northern Finland, Romania,
127 western Ethiopia and Panama.
129 # Carsten Dominik -------------------------------------------------------------
131 {{{person(Carsten Dominik,http://orgmode.org/img/people/carsten_dominik.jpg)}}}
133 I am the main Org-mode author, being on this project since 2003.
135 Just like my earlier Emacs hacks [[http://www.gnu.org/software/auctex/reftex.html][RefTeX]], [[http://staff.science.uva.nl/~dominik/Tools/cdlatex/][CDLaTeX]], and [[http://idlwave.org][IDLWave]], writing
136 [[http://orgmode.org][Org-mode]] resulted from a direct need for it: I wanted to get organized
137 and wanted to do it in Emacs. There was nothing available that fit my
138 wishes, in particular no combination of outline-based note-taking with
139 task management in a single system.
141 With lots of help from the community around Org-mode, this project has
142 grown into a versatile toolbox, which is being used by a large number
143 of people, in various ways and to various ends.
145 Org-mode was largely written on the commuter train to Amsterdam, where
146 I [[http://staff.science.uva.nl/~dominik/][work]] as an [[http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html][Astronomer]] at the [[http://www.astro.uva.nl][Astronomical Institute]] of the
147 [[http://www.uva.nl][University of Amsterdam]].
149 # Thomas S Dye ----------------------------------------------------------------
151 {{{person200(Thomas S Dye,http://www.tsdye.com/images/tom.jpg)}}}
153 I am an archaeologist (http://www.tsdye.com/) who switched to Linux
154 almost 20 years ago when the demise of DOS made most of my little
155 Turbo Pascal utilities obsolete. My outrage at the irresponsibility
156 made possible by proprietary standards led me to discover the Free
157 Software Foundation and, of course, emacs, which has been central to
158 my computing life ever since.
160 With no formal computer science training and a wide range of other
161 interests that keep me from doing anything more than dabbling at
162 programming, I typically stumble across cool emacs features by
163 accident rather than design. Sometimes these features change the way
164 I conceptualize a problem and the space of possible solutions. A
165 short list, roughly in the order I discovered them, includes regular
166 expression search and replace; emacs as an interface for other
167 applications, like python and R; reftex, whose manual (written by
168 Carsten, I believe) suggests generating an index by creating a list of
169 unique words over a certain size found in a document, then letting
170 reftex guide the markup process, one unique word at a time (!); and,
171 most recently, org-babel, which seems to this non-programmer as equal
172 parts simplicity and magic.
174 I'm currently integrating org-mode + org-babel into my research
175 workflow. Here, org-mode is an organizer (thanks to Bernt Hansen's
176 terrific how-to) and a laboratory notebook. The org file is structured
177 with an eye to creating a meta-document that describes the conduct of
178 the research, from the mundane practical details of the lab work,
179 through the reasoning behind analytic decisions, and on to choices
180 behind presentation of results.
182 I'm using org-babel to tangle two LaTeX source files -- the document
183 I'll submit for publication, and a beamer presentation. Org-babel's
184 ability to tangle (and weave) source code from several languages at
185 once means that my meta-document can record most of what I do, as I do
186 it: SQL queries and my reasons for believing they yield correct
187 results with respect to some specific goal; short statistical analyses
188 in R and my reasons for believing their results answer particular
189 questions; creation of graphics with ggplot2 and the design decisions
190 behind them; and of course the LaTeX source, along with my reasons for
191 presenting particular content in the order that I choose.
193 I think I'm using the literate programming facilities of org-babel to
194 create a piece of reproducible research, but the workflow is still
195 developing. All I can be certain of at this stage is that org-babel
196 has me thinking in new ways. What fun!
199 # Eric S. Fraga ---------------------------------------------------------------
201 {{{person200(Eric S. Fraga,http://www3.imperial.ac.uk/pls/portallive/docs/1/27579696.JPG)}}}
203 I am a computer scientist working with chemical engineers, doing
204 research in optimisation and automated design methods. Org-mode is a
205 key tool in the management of both my research programme and my
208 Being based on simple text files and being open source, Org-mode is
209 attractive for being future-proof. It allows me to no longer worry
210 about whether I'm locked in to some software vendor's changing view of
211 what is important or necessary and I know that all the information I
212 have put into my org files is and always will be accessible.
214 Org-mode provides me with an excellent framework for collaborative
215 work. As it is available on a very wide range of devices, including
216 hand-held computers, the full power of the system is at hand no matter
219 My [[http://www.homepages.ucl.ac.uk/~ucecesf/][web pages]], describing my research activities and interests, are all
220 written in Org. Lately, I have been experimenting with literate
221 programming using Org with the recently added org-babel framework!
223 My contribution to the Org-mode project is mostly as an enthusiastic
228 {{{person(Peter Frings,http://orgmode.org/img/people/peter_frings.jpg)}}}
230 I'm part of a software team in Mortsel, Belgium, as a requirement
231 analyst, conceptual designer, interaction designer, graphic designer
232 and spec writer ---or whatever the titles are---; i.e., the whole
233 shebang except programming. I do miss programming a bit, which I did
234 professionally during the first 10 years of my career. That itch
235 sparked my current interest in functional programming, but I lack the
236 time to do anything serious with it.
238 Although I'm not an artist, I like photography ('grepe' on Flickr),
239 and I play the double bass in a couple of folk bands.
241 Being an avid emacs user, I stumbled upon Org-mode and never looked
242 back. I use it mainly to start writing ideas and concepts, to-do list
243 and scheduler and to track the time I spend on the various tasks. I'm
244 pretty sure I'm only using 5% of what it can do, especially given the
245 furious pace of development in the last year. Nothing compares to the
246 Org community, with Carsten et all on top (how can people fix a bug
247 faster than you can read the problem report?).
249 I <3 Org-mode. Spread the word!
251 # Bastien Guerry --------------------------------------------------------------
253 {{{person(Bastien Guerry,http://api.ning.com/files/LwgxVloM62IRf1TIIH3rC*v9UqiIHkYEb0DQcxOqOIc_/bastien_guerry2.jpg)}}}
255 Over the past decade, I have been studying philosophy, cognitive
256 sciences and educational theories. I'm interested on how to use
257 computers for education, and I'm a consultant in this field.
259 I'm not a programmer but I've been raised in Emacs, so I can read
260 some elisp code, fix some bugs and sometimes write a function.
262 My first Emacs contribution was [[http://directory.fsf.org/project/BHL/][BHL]], a mode to convert plain text to
263 HTML, LaTeX, etc. When I discovered Org I thought: "Wow. This is the
264 perfect tool for playing with ideas I'm too lazy to implement in BHL."
265 And it turned out to be much more than that: Org has been a matrix for
266 many new ideas that I couldn't have dreamt for with BHL.
268 Org is to Emacs what Emacs is to computers.
270 And nothing compares to the Org community.
272 # Bernt Hansen ----------------------------------------------------------------
274 {{{person(Bernt Hansen,http://www.norang.ca/pics/Bernt.jpg)}}}
276 I am a freelance software designer working from my office near Toronto,
277 Ontario, Canada. I use Org-mode to track all of my personal and
280 Org-mode was the end of my long quest to find a better organizational
281 toolkit. I had tried many other systems over the years in an attempt to
284 I started using Org-mode in August 2006 after trying out planner for a
285 year. I needed something to track time spent on tasks and a note filing
286 system where I could actually find the notes back again and in a
287 reasonable amount of time. Being able to actually read the note was an
288 added bonus -- my handwriting is awful - especially when I'm in a hurry
289 such as making notes during a client conversation. Fortunately for me I
290 can type faster than I can write.
292 Since then Org-mode has continued to evolve and it has many more
293 features than I will ever need from my organizational software suite.
294 I'm no longer searching for a better organizational toolkit.
296 # Wes Hardaker ----------------------------------------------------------------
298 {{{person(Wes Hardaker,http://www.hardakers.net/images/wes-tammerack.jpg)}}}
300 I like to bite off more than I can chew on a regular basis. I'm
301 actively involved in a ton of things. I'm an avid
302 [[http://www.capturedonearth.com/][Photographer]], a
303 [[http://www.ws6z.com/][Amateur Radio]] enthusiast, and Community
304 Emergency Response Team supporter. I love hiking
305 ([[http://www.openstreetmap.org/][making maps of everywhere I go]])
306 and enjoy finding [[http://yamar.geoqo.org/][Geocaches]]. All of this
307 takes coordination, organization and careful tracking of the things
308 that I have yet to accomplish. I think faster than my fingers can
309 frequently write down [[http://pontifications.hardakers.net][my ideas and thoughts]].
311 Org-mode has certainly made managing my overwhelming
312 list of things I need to do, want to do or simply thinking of much
313 easier. I don't feel nearly as lost since I've started using it.
315 I participate in a [[http://www.hardakers.net/][large number]]
316 of [[http://www.hardakers.net/][open source projects]]
317 (both for work and pleasure) and have contributed at least
318 [[http://orgmode.org/worg/org-contrib/org-export-generic.php][at least
319 a little bit to org]] via my org-export-generic functionality.
321 Thanks a bunch to Carsten and everyone else for writing such a
324 # Manuel Hermenegildo --------------------------------------------------------
326 {{{person(Manuel Hermenegildo,http://www.software.imdea.org/images/manuel_hermenegildo.jpg)}}}
328 I am a researcher (and the director of) a research institute and a
329 university research group, both in Computer Science. Org has had a
330 huge positive impact in the way I organize my (unfortunately many)
331 tasks --and in fact my life as a whole. It is also used by many people
332 in the institute and the research groups I am part of. Here is how:
334 We participate in a large number of projects, from research projects
335 to taskforces regarding many organizational aspects of our institute,
336 and we make extensive and collaborative use of org to get organized
337 within them. We used /shared/ org files, essentially one per project,
338 to gather our notes, tasks, deadlines, etc. for that project. These
339 files are kept in a server and we edit them collaboratively using svn
340 or git. People include as their org-agenda-files only the org files of
341 the projects they are involved in. We use tags to assign tasks to
342 people (e.g., my tag is :MH:). We also have of course private org
343 files, where we use FILETAGS to assign all the tasks in the files to
344 the owner of the file. Then, we use tag filters to generate agendas
345 and TODO lists that only have our tasks. This is far simpler and more
346 flexible than any of the other methods of getting organized that we
347 have seen so far! And it is all in simple ASCII files and through
350 I have also contributed a bit to org development, mainly some aspects
351 that help support the model described above, some issues related to
352 the generation of web pages, and minor things here and there.
354 I cannot say as others that org is the main reason I use emacs: in
355 fact, it is scary to think about when I started using emacs (1983?).
356 But org has done something truly amazing: make emacs even more useful
357 (and very much so!) than it already was for me. Try it for yourself
358 --you will not be disappointed!
360 # Tassilo Horn ----------------------------------------------------------------
362 {{{person(Tassilo Horn,http://www.tsdh.de/~heimdall/tsdh.jpg)}}}
364 I started using Emacs about the same time I've switched to GNU/Linux
365 around 1999. When people are saying they switched to Emacs because of
366 org-mode, for me it was the Gnus newsreader, which I'm still using
369 Over the time, I've learned elisp and gotten my hands dirty in several
370 projects, like EMMS, Gnus, and Circe. And I'm the author of doc-view,
371 which is integrated in Emacs 23. In org-mode, I'm in charge of the
372 linking stuff between Org and Gnus.
374 Org has become the most important part of my workflow: if I didn't
375 org-remember it, it won't be done!
377 In my free time, I'm trying to do as much crazy stuff as possible:
378 parachuting, hang gliding, rock climbing, snowboarding, and cooking!
379 Believe me, the last thing's the most dangerous.
381 On my day job, I'm a researcher at the Institute for Software
382 Technology at the University Koblenz-Landau, where my main interests
383 are MDA and especially model transformations.
385 You can find me as tsdh on IRC in #emacs, #gnus, and #org-mode.
387 # Andrew Hyatt ----------------------------------------------------------------
389 {{{person400(Andrew Hyatt,http://lh5.ggpht.com/_JOGKg1oOsqk/Su2mDWjG1SI/AAAAAAAADYE/G0sRrzjpvIw/DSC_0021.JPG)}}}
391 During my first year of college, I was introduced to emacs, and I've
392 been increasing my usage of it ever since. I use it to read mail,
393 chat, code in C++, Java, and Python, and of course organize my work
396 Previous to org-mode, I tried out many different GTD-style systems,
397 but found them all annoyingly inflexible or inefficient. Now I use
398 org-mode to plan out my tasks in my own quasi-GTD system, show me what
399 there is to work on, take notes while I'm working on tasks, and time
400 how long I spend working on tasks. My contributions to org are the
401 org-screen module (for linking to screen sessions), and schedule-based
402 tracking in org-depend. I have some ideas for further contributions
403 that will have to wait until my next long flight (which is when I tend
404 to do all my org-mode hacking).
406 Right now, I'm spending most of my emacs hacking time working to
407 [[http://code.google.com/p/wave-client-for-emacs/][integrate emacs with Google Wave]]
409 I've been working as a software engineer since 1997, both around
410 Silicon Valley and currently in New York City. Besides work, I hang
411 out with my family, eat out at interesting restaurants, try and
412 perfect my pizza-making and cappuccino-making skills, exercise, and
413 read interesting books. For current activities, see
414 http://twitter.com/andrewhyatt.
416 # Shidai Liu (aka Leo) ------------------------------------------------------------------
418 {{{person(Shidai Liu (aka Leo),http://orgmode.org/img/people/leo.jpg)}}}
420 =Planner= got me started on =Emacs= in late 2005 after seeing some of
421 it's cool features. One year later (October 2006) I moved to =Org=,
422 realising how much more powerful it was, plus the vibrant community is
423 has. From then on =Org= has been the focal point of my pure
424 emacs-based personal information manager (=Org=, =Gnus=, =BBDB=,
425 =Calendar=, =Diary=, etc.). Here is a list of things I use Emacs for:
427 |-------------------------+-------------------|
428 | TASKS | EMACS SOLUTION |
429 |-------------------------+-------------------|
430 | Email/News | Gnus |
431 | Version control systems | Magit + VC |
432 | Calculator | Calc |
434 | Task/time management | Org |
435 | Common lisp development | SLIME |
436 | LaTeX/TeX authoring | AUCTeX |
437 | Notes taking | Org + AUCTeX |
439 | Addressbook | BBDB |
440 | Calendar | Calendar |
441 | Bibliography database | BibTeX |
442 | Spell checker | Ispell + Flyspell |
444 | File manager | Dired |
445 | Playing music | EMMS |
446 | Inputting Chinese | Eim |
447 | Dictionary | Dictem |
449 |-------------------------+-------------------|
451 I am currently living and studying in Cambridge UK. I enjoy my
452 experience here and value the opportunities it gives me. Post my study
453 I'd like to take a break travelling while reflecting on what I should
454 focus in the future. But whatever I do I will use Emacs + Org!
456 # Pete Phillips -------------------------------------------------------------
458 {{{person(Pete Phillips,http://www.petephillips.me.uk/images/pete-karen-italy2009_medsize.jpg)}}}
459 (I'm the one on the left btw.)
461 I started using org-mode in Aug 2005. Before that I had used 3
462 different models of Psion organisers (II/II XP, Psion 3a, Psion 5mx),
463 and a Sharp Zaurus) to organise my lists/things to do. Analog-wise, I
464 also used a DayRunner for about 8-10 years as well as a HPDA.
466 In Summer/Autumn 2005 I did a [[http://ccgi.philfam.co.uk/wordpress/2005/10/05/4][blog post about moving to org-mode]] after
467 trying out planner mode from [[http://sachachua.com][Sacha Chua]]. During my initial period it
468 became clear that I needed some method of dealing with [[http://www.flippingheck.com/GTD---Back-to-basics-3---Context-and-Next-Actions][Contexts]]. I
469 tried various ways of using the TODO keywords with some success, but
470 eventually Carsten solved the problem by adding the TAGS
471 functionality. I tried this out for a few days and on 19th Dec 2005 I
474 : On Dec 19, 2005, at 1:53 PM, Pete Phillips wrote:
478 : Just one word - Awesome!
480 ... the combination of TODO keywords to record the status of the
481 item/action (Waiting, Next, Done etc) plus the use of tags to record
482 the context (:Home: :Laptop: :Jim: etc) was the 'Aha!' moment which
483 made org-mode the answer to my needs.
485 I have org-mode up in emacs 24 hours a day, in a frame next to my mh-e
486 buffer. I organise just about everything with these two emacs
487 tools. Whilst I use firefox/chrome for web browsing, my mail reading,
488 list making and diary/calendar management are all done through emacs.
489 [[http://ccgi.philfam.co.uk/wordpress/category/gtd][I have some blog posts about GTD and org-mode]] which may be interesting
492 I manage a [[http://www.smtl.co.uk/][UK NHS testing lab]] (yes - new website on the way,
493 honestly), with a team of scientists providing pharmaceutical QA and
494 medical device testing services to the Welsh NHS. Whilst I used to be
495 very active on the org-mode mailing list, my workload these days
496 doesn't allow me that luxury. However, org-mode is more important to
497 me now than ever - basically I manage my life with it - work and home.
498 In my spare time I play jazz, and even use org-mode to keep lists of
499 numbers I would like to try out, contacts for jazz venues, lists of
500 forthcoming gigs etc.
502 A big thank you to Carsten for this superb tool.
504 [[http://www.petephillips.me.uk][Pete Phillips]]
507 # Giovanni Ridolfo ------------------------------------------------------------
509 {{{person200(Giovanni Ridolfi,http://www.isof.cnr.it/nanochemistry/picGR.jpg)}}}
511 I started using Emacs just to use Org-mode. Then Emacs began to be my
512 second operating system; the first is [[http://www.debian.org][Debian GNU/Linux]], and the last
513 is Windows XP (bleah!).
515 I am a chemist, working in Bologna, Italy.
516 When I am not in the laboratory, I am at the
517 computer writing and reading reports and also the Org-mode
518 mailing list. I pay particular attention to the posts
521 I am also active in my LUG: [[http://erlug.linux.it/main/][Emilia-Romagna LUG]], since I think that
522 when spreading free software /the more the merrier/.
524 I love reading. The books I have just finished
525 are [[http://www.wumingfoundation.com/english/about_our_books.htm][Q]] and [[http://www.enricobrizzi.it/inattesapiega/index.htm][L'inattesa piega degli eventi]].
527 # T.V. Raman ------------------------------------------------------------------
529 {{{person(T.V. Raman,http://lh4.ggpht.com/_3FmCG50jehg/R2l7StSQVII/AAAAAAAAA44/tLI0crQJaG4/s512/%20009.JPG)}}}
531 I am a Computer Scientist with over 11 years of industry
532 experience in advanced technology development. During this time, I
533 have authored 3 books and filed over 25 patents; my work on auditory
534 interfaces was profied in the September 1996 issue of Scientific
535 American. I have leading edge expertise in Web standards, auditory
536 interfaces and scripting languages. I participate in numerous W3C
537 working groups and authored Aural CSS (ACSS); in 1996 I wrote the
538 first ACSS implementation. I have led the definition of XML
539 specifications for the next generation WWW including XForms, XML
540 Events, and Compound Document Formats such as X+V.
542 T.V. Raman is blind and uses Emacs for much of his interaction with
543 his computer system, because he has taught Emacs to [[http://emacspeak.sourceforge.net/raman/][speak]]. I
544 (Carsten) have seen him using his system, and it is amazing. You can
545 see him introducing Carsten Dominik during his [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oJTwQvgfgMM][Google Tech Talk]]. The
546 picture shows him with his dog /Bubbles/.
548 # Andreas Roehler -------------------------------------------------------------
550 {{{person150(Andreas Roehler,http://orgmode.org/img/org-mode-unicorn.png)}}}
552 Studying economics in former GDR until 1975, my diploma
553 thesis has been rejected as I proposed a cure employing
554 free speech, free press, independent unions etc.
556 Turned towards literature later, wrote plays, prose and
557 poetry. Former Bertolt Brecht Theater Berliner
558 Ensemble staged 1993 my adaption of Aischylos "The
561 Crossed the Berlin Wall in 1984 and proceeded - next
562 turn of life came with lecture of a book by french
563 sociologist Serge Thion: Historical Truth or Political
566 Translated the book with the help of friend and
567 finally, as no one would do it in Germany, published it
568 in 1994. A lot of things stirred up, we started a
569 journal too. Refusing the common power play we
570 invited people with quite different ideas, religions
571 etc., published articles from right-wing settlers as
572 from muslim activists, published Norman Podhoretz and
573 Noam Chomsky likewise.
575 Things got hot, service took action, the computers and
576 all the equipment being seized again and again; seizures,
577 which have been forbidden by german press law beside.
579 Detected GNU Linux at this occasion - not to pay
580 licenses repeatedly. Detected Emacs - free software is
581 a kind of free speech.
584 Literatur- und Kunstpreisträger im Karin Fischer Verlag ...
585 , Andreas Röhler (W.-Hasenclever-Preis) ...
586 [[http://www.karin-fischer-verlag.de/sites/preistraeger.html]]
589 Aischylos. DIE ORESTIE Schauspiel 5 D 7 H Stand: 27.03.01 ·
590 DIE PERSER (Ü: Andreas Röhler) Schauspiel 1 D 3 H Stand:
592 [[http://www.theater-verlag-desch.de/autoren/showAuthor?autor=Aischylos]]
594 Gedichte. Grafik von Thuur Camps Röhler, Andreas Berlin,
595 Mariannepresse. 1986. Gedichte. (Graz) 1943. 136 S., 2 Taf.
596 23 cm. OPp Goll, Ernst Verlag: Leykam. ...
597 [[http://ade.bookmaps.org/g/e/ged_69.html]]
600 ... Dirk Kurbjuweit, Katja Lange-Müller, Harry Mulisch,
601 Albert Ostermaier ... Peter Piwitt, Hans Pleschinski,
602 Andreas Röhler, Dieter Schmidt, Eva ...
603 [[http://www.poetenfest-erlangen.de/archiv/teilnehmerliste.htm]]
606 eingereicht von Andreas Kölling. Wissenschaftliche Betreuung:
607 Professor Stephan .... Christa Moog, Hans (Chaim) Noll,
608 Andreas Röhler, Karl Hermann Röhricht, ...
609 [[http://www.textbatzen-andreas.de/magister/magister.html]]
611 Bis 2003 Herausgeber der
612 Zeitschrift für Kultur Geschichte und Politik, Sleipnir
613 [[http://www.sleipnir.netfirms.com]]
616 # Eric Schulte ----------------------------------------------------------------
618 {{{person400(Eric Schulte,http://www.cs.unm.edu/~eschulte/me.png)}}}
620 After a liberal arts education in Mathematics and Philosophy -- my
621 studies having deliberately excluded the applicable and computational
622 sciences -- I left school and spent the next 5 years working in the
623 research and development of computational tools. I have now come full
624 circle and am [[http://www.cs.unm.edu/~eschulte/][pursuing my graduate studies]] in computer science at the
625 [[http://www.cs.unm.edu/][University of New Mexico]].
627 In 2006 I began using Emacs and roughly a year later started using
628 [[http://orgmode.org][Org-mode]]. Initially I used Org-mode solely for note taking. It has
629 since turned into both my research laboratory and my main document
632 I've had the pleasure of working on a couple of Org-mode related
633 projects -- [[file:org-tutorials/org-plot.org][org-plot]], [[file:org-contrib/org-exp-blocks.org][org-exp-blocks]], [[file:blorgit.org][blorgit]] and [[file:org-contrib/babel/index.org][org-babel]]. Writing
634 emacs-lisp in Emacs is a pleasure which is greatly amplified by the
635 thoughtful construction of Org-mode. It's readable design, and
636 numerous strategically placed hooks and control variables make it the
637 most hackable framework I have ever encountered.
639 Through Emacs I realized the benefits of a truly customizable
640 environment, and as a result Emacs took over my OS; now Org-mode has
641 blurred the lines between customization and development and it is
642 preceding to take over my Emacs.
644 # Manish Sharma ---------------------------------------------------------------
646 {{{person300(Manish Sharma,http://www.vyom.org/media/manish-org.jpg)}}}
648 I had tried dozens of task management tools of various kinds
649 (web-based, browser-based, wiki-style, MS Excel-based, paper-based, MS
650 Outlook-based, plain text file based, Post-It based... you get the
651 idea) between 2003 and 2007. I really tried to like them... but
652 something or the other was always amiss. Planner was the first system
653 that I kept going back to after trying every fancy new system; I kept
654 looking around until I found Org-mode around August 2007 and that was
655 the end of my journey. It was like finding out who you are going to
656 spend the rest of your life with. :)
659 I initially thought Org was awesome and could not be improved further
660 but I had underestimated Carsten, various contributors and the amazing
661 community of users who keep pushing the envelope of what is possible
662 without sacrificing the deceptive simplicity of the system.
664 It morphs into the perfect system to suit any new-fangled ideas I
665 might have about organizing and approaching work. To me, Org is like a
666 DIY-kit of organizers -- it scales as you grow and discover and tune
667 how you would like to organize your life. I doubt if I will ever need
668 or use full power of Org.
672 {{{person(David O'Toole,http://orgmode.org/img/people/dto.jpg)}}}
674 David O'Toole is a Lisp programmer living in Massachusetts, USA.
675 Interests include GNU Emacs, Ubuntu, and independent games development.
677 His website is http://dto.github.com/notebook
680 # Stefan Vollmar --------------------------------------------------------------
682 {{{person300(Stefan Vollmar,http://www.nf.mpg.de/mitarbeiter/stefan-vollmar_c.jpg)}}}
684 I started using Emacs on large Unix systems when I was still a physics
685 student, but I confess to have strayed from the Path in later years,
686 as I had been disappointed with its lack of integration into the other
687 platforms I needed to use for my [[http://www.nf.mpg.de/index.php%3Fid%3D66&L%3D1%2Fresearch%2Fboar...z.de%2Fcms%2F%2Fpr.txt%3F%2F%2Fresearch%2Fboards%2Fencapsbb-0.3.2_fixed%2Findex_header.php%3Froot%3D&tx_spdirectory_pi1%5Bmode%5D%3Ddetail&tx_spdirectory_pi1%5Bmodifier%5D%3Dcatorder&tx_spdirectory_pi1%5Bvalue%5D%3D164&cHash%3D4c5c9b6c1d][work]] at the
688 [[http://www.nf.mpg.de][Max-Planck-Institute for Neurological Research Cologne]].
690 This has changed with [[http://aquamacs.org/][Aquamacs Emacs]] and
691 newer versions of Emacs in general. Org-mode is a very (very) good
692 reason on its own to re-consider Emacs - in my case, it was "love on
693 first sight" with Org-mode's conceptual beauty, even before I found out about
694 the astonishing Org community and the torrent of continuous
697 Org-mode was instrumental for planning our
698 [[http://www.nf.mpg.de/kinderuni/kinderuni_en.html][Looking into Brains]] project,
699 also to generate its [[http://www.nf.mpg.de/kinderuni][HTML]] documentation. We have started to use
700 Org-mode for the software documentation of my group's
701 platform-independent [[http://www.nf.mpg.de/vhist][VHIST]] and
702 [[http://www.nf.mpg.de/vinci][VINCI]] projects and are working on an
703 integration with their [[http://qt.nokia.com/][Qt]]-based frameworks.
705 My only remaining problem with Org-mode is to communicate properly
706 my very own list of favorite features: it just takes too long to
709 # Keep the following line at the end of the buffer
710 @<br style="clear:both;" />