1 #+TITLE: Org-Mode Survey Results
3 #+EMAIL: charles.cave@gmail.com
5 #+OPTIONS: H:3 num:nil toc:1 \n:nil ::t |:t ^:t -:t f:t *:t tex:t d:nil tags:not-in-toc
7 # Note to Worgers: please don't modify this file.
11 A survey was conducted of org-mode users duing November 2007. An
12 invitation was sent to the org-mode users list as well as announced on
13 the https://orgmode.org web site. About 80 people resonded. This file
14 contains a complete list of the answers, as the base of further
17 Survey created and summarised by Charles Cave
18 [[mailto:charlesweb%20AT%20optusnet%20DOT%20com%20DOT%20au][mailto:charlesweb AT optusnet DOT com DOT au]]
20 * 1. Which operating system, version and Linux distribution?
22 |----------+----+---------------------------------------------------------|
23 | Windows | 31 | ******************************* |
24 | Linux | 55 | ******************************************************* |
25 | Mac OS X | 12 | ************ |
27 The different Linux distributions:
29 | Distribution | N | bar |
30 |--------------+----+----------------|
31 | Arch Linux | 1 | * |
33 | Debian | 14 | ************** |
34 | Fedora | 7 | ******* |
36 | Gentoo | 7 | ******* |
38 | MagicLinux | 1 | * |
42 | Suse | 7 | ******* |
43 | Ubuntu | 9 | ********* |
44 | Unspecified | 2 | ** |
46 * 2. Which Emacs are you using (GNU/Xemacs, etc) and which version? Paste the result of M-x version.
49 | Emacs/XEmacs | Number of answers |
50 |--------------+-------------------|
57 The raw replies can be found [[Raw Emacs versions][here]].
59 * 3. When did you first start using org-mode and how did you find out about it?
61 - Org 5.04, Aug 2007 - Searching around the Web
62 - 2007, December found about in in emacs wiki
63 - November 2006, found it while googling GTD tools
64 - moved from planner about 6 months ago
65 - 2005, probably read about it on Sacha Chua's blog.
66 - August 2007? Heard of it a long time ago, maybe by following links
67 from johnh's notebook mode. Finally switched from planner after a
70 - about the begining of 2007. Heard about it on the internet I guess.
71 - I found it by way of emacswiki.org. I was an avid user of outline
72 mode, and found somebody's screencast (Scott Jaderholm's, I think)
73 showing off org mode. I've been using it for probably about six
75 - Oct. 2007. I think I was looking for an alternative to planner.el.
76 - august 27, 2006. I found it while looking for an alternative to
78 - Roughly 2005/6, through a friend.
80 - July 2007 after I saw the entry in Emacswiki
82 - 2007-06 thrrough Sacha Chua's blog
83 - Oldest entry in my archive file is June 2005, but I think I was
84 using org for a while before that. I don't remember when I heard
86 - Around version 4.76, don't remember when. Found about it on the
88 - 10/2006 by chance looking for pim tools for Emacs
89 - One month ago, found a link on a web site
91 - 02/2007 After getting annoyed with Muse-mode interaction with
92 outline-mode, I googled and found org-mode and never went back.
93 - Using for about 2 years. Found org-mode after searching for a better
94 version of outline-mode
95 - Sometime around Jan. 2005. Someone mentioned it on the 43folders.com
96 message board (probably Jason F. McBrayer) and I decided I'd check
98 - August 2007. I heard it about it on the planner mode mailing list.
100 - I read about org-mail from an email of a maillist ... dnon't know
102 - A year ago because someone mentioned it in #emacs on freenode as a
103 better planner-el solution
104 - 2 months ago when I started using Emacs. I was also looking for a
105 way to organize and found org-mode via blogs etc.
106 - 3 month ago. I was looking forward some emacs "PIM".
108 - Can't remember; at least two years ago? I think I would have first
109 heard about it from the Emacs Wiki.
110 - Around May 2007. I don't recall.
111 - No idea 6 months back probably; on the wiki site I think
112 - 2007-08 First heard mention in a GTD mailing list, but realised it
113 was going to be great after seeing screencast at
114 http://jaderholm.com/screencasts.html
116 - almost 2 years emacs newsgroups
117 - 2006-08 (version 4.50)
118 - approx. March 2006. I don't recall how I found out about it.
119 - I think I began using it in 2005. I found out about it on the
121 - it's been about a year, I can't remember how I found out about it,
122 maybe on the #emacs channel IRC.
123 - 2007-03 www.emacswiki.org
125 - In 2005, I found out about org-mode while googling for some kind of
126 outliner software. My search must have hit upon a listserv post. My
127 first try at using it was in June 2005, but I didn't like
128 it. Carsten made many improvements and in December 2005, he emailed
129 me to ask me what I thought. It thought it was pretty good, and I've
130 been using it almost every day since.
131 - October 2006. Saw orgmode mentioned in comments on 43folders.com
132 - 2007 july, emacs wiki
133 - Around September 2007. I first knew it from planner-mode mailing
134 list. I used to use planner-mode.
136 - 2007-09 NEWS in Gnu Emacs 22
137 - 21 april 2006 (was the oldest .org file I could find on my
138 system). Found out through... #emacs I think. dto was talking about
140 - I have a "org version 3.05" in my .emacs So it should be from spring
141 2005 (March? May?) I read an article in the web, a blog I think. so
142 I began using Emacs to use org (uh! :-)
143 - August 2007 Slashdot article on GTD Wired article on GTD Google
144 search for GTD found org-mode tutorial.
146 - June 2007. At may I started learning Emacs for the first time, and
147 together all its related modes. At #emacs at irc.freenode.org and at
148 EmacsWiki it was mentioned org-mode.
149 - 2007-04 I was into emacs learning and stumbled upon org-mode I don't
151 - 2007 February, emacswiki.org and discussions on the planner.el
153 - Sometime before April 2006
155 - April 2006 (ca org-mode 4.25) Switching from Planner after numerous
156 mentions of org on the planner mailing list.
158 - In june 2006. By reading the tutorial [[https://orgmode.org/worg/org-tutorials/orgtutorial_dto.html][here]].
159 - Aug 2005 After trying out Sacha's planning mode i knew it was close,
160 but not quite right for me. Googling around I found org mode.
161 - Probably 2004, before it had texinfo documentation or even before
164 - 2007-01 I think I've read a blog about it or I've stumbled across it
166 - I started to use org-mode a year ago. I found org-mode on the emacs
168 - 2007, September, read about it on the pages explaining how it was
170 - November-December 2006, after googling for "emacs pim". Or,
171 probably, there was an article (linux.com?).
172 - 5/2006, after emacswiki or web tutorial
173 - at least as long as the newsgroup has been gmane, as I submitted it
174 there. I must have found out on emacs wiki?
175 - ~March 2007. I was using planner and I think I saw references to it
176 there and checked it out.
177 - I subscribed to the list in 8/06. Maybe a month or two before that.
179 - 2007/01, by a org-mode tutorial.
180 - I can't remember that. I used to use planner-mode. When someone
181 mentioned org-mode on that mailing list, I decided to have a try.
182 - 2006-03 -- via your (Charles Cave) posting of 2006-03-10 to Getting Things Done
185 - Dunno. A while ago.
186 - 2006 found out indirectly from the Planner mode or maybe Emacs Wiki
189 * 4. What are your main uses of org-mode?
191 - daily task planing, private and at work documenting know-hows,
192 collecting informations (web searches etc.), contacts
193 - i plan to use it for GTD and (maybe) as replacement for LyX as
194 general writing tool (via LaTeX export)
195 - Project planning, task management
196 - todo list / scheduler
197 - TODO list management
198 - Task list and note taking
199 - Todo-list administration - Time tracking - Creating outlines
200 - write lists to keep track of projects and infomation
201 - I mostly use it as an extended version of outline mode, as well as
202 the agenda mode. Managing TODO lists and the like. I also really
203 like the integration with remember mode.
204 - TODO list, calendar/appointment app, note-taking, "digital junk
205 drawer" a la Yojimbo, minor mode for drafting documents,
206 org-publish.el, org-blog.el
207 - Planning and taking notes (with remember mode.)
208 - TODO lists (GTD methodology) and diary
209 - Planning, project, time and task tracking.
213 - Maintaining a GTD system for personal organization, tracking time
214 for work reporting and billing.
215 - Organizing my tasks and plans at work. Trying to implement GTD with
217 - Reporting (org-outline/exporter!), GTD
218 - GTD, weekly planner
219 - Managing software development todo lists
220 - Agenda, todo tracking, lecture notes, blogging
222 - 1) Maintaining my personal lists of projects and tasks 2)
223 Maintaining a "wiki" of reference material (org-mode doc that links
224 to external files and URLs) 3) Maintaining an archive of completed
225 projects 4) Keeping track of my agenda 5) Outlining and
226 brainstorming 6) Organizing journal entries
227 - Personal task lists.
229 - Organizing and managing projects
230 - gtd - project management - generating htmls - minutes, documentation
231 - notes, todo-lists, planner
232 - Agenda (GTD) Notes keeping Publishing tool
233 - Slowly it is becoming my desktop. I write, use it for email
234 composition, technical documentation. Slowly getting into planning,
236 - Project planning and task tracking.
237 - keeping track of things to do.
239 - Running my work and home todo lists and notes, but progressively
240 more and more using it for everything.
241 - TODO list and meeting minutes
242 - Task/Todo List information list some local hacks for finance
243 - todo lists and knowledge base
244 - Task management (TODO lists) * Note taking * Export/Publish (e.g.,
245 publish notes to website) * Personal web pages (via org-publish)
246 - I use orgtbl-mode most of the time in muse files, that's how I came
247 into contact with org-mode. I use it for writing (software)
248 documentation, (work related) project planning, and measuring the
249 time I work on projects.
250 - planning my TODO list and more recently my agenda GTD style
251 - Timeplanning, Timekeeping, Todo/Reminder
252 - replacement for time management system (todos, project organisation,
253 schedules) replacement for spreadsheet helper in LaTeX modes
256 - 1.) Note taking: web links, links to lines of code I'm working on,
257 bibtex entries. 2.) Brainstorming. When I'm trying to figure out how
258 to do something, I often fire up org-mode, dump a bunch of random
259 thoughts into it, and then organize it into something that makes
260 sense. 3.) Experiment logging. I use table node to store pretty much
261 all the results I've accumulated for my PhD thesis. 4.) TODO
262 lists. I thought I'd use the GTD capabilities on org-mode but can't
263 force myself to do it. But still, for little projects, I use the
265 - Action items Notes and lists Tables of passwords Publishing website
266 - maintain my thoughts, experimental results and agenda
267 - As a GTD tool to keep all aspects of my life organized.
269 - Just getting used to it. Try to organize primarily work stuff, maybe
270 later will get into private things.
271 - note taking, managing todo's, keeping track of time spent on a
272 project and making tables.
273 - Everything! :-) + keeping notes, + maintaining TODO lists +
274 exploiting the Agenda facilities (wow!) + doing project planning +
275 writing text and exporting in HTML + a 'database' for experiments
276 data (I'm "implementing" it (wow, wow!)
277 - Task list/agenda/calendar some "filing" of data, storage of links to
279 - Note taking for courses
280 - Learn more about organizing tasks - Trying to substitute little
281 papers with appointments - Publish works (thesis, articles, web
282 pages, ...) - Support a bit the process of writing an article
283 (TODOs, deadlines, sections, ...)
284 - documentation todo list management complete daily work organisation
285 private and at work planing of schedules for church and sports
286 create customer visit protocols (html for colleagues) I have access
287 to my org files via svn world-wide
288 - all aspects of GTD except calendar
289 - Outlining and Organising.
290 - Day to day planning. Constantly switching between gtd and John
291 Wiegly's setup to find out what suits me best.
292 - Todo List management. Task Scheduling. Note taking. Blogging
293 (Blorg). Simple Bug Tracking.
294 - Organizing my work.
295 - Managing all my projects and todo lists using GTD, and managing my
296 diary/calendar. Basically, I use it to manage my life - home, work,
297 social etc. Also use it for hierarchical editing of files etc, but
299 - day planner (in agenda view) - generation of hipsterPDA - easy
300 folding documentation tool (write text docu, use folding to hide
301 sections I'm not working on currently, and finally generate html or
304 - I organize all my projects and appointments with org.
305 - Mainly todos/tasks planning and follow up
306 - I use it to keep track of articles I have to write for clients (I'm
307 a journalist). I keep a page per client. I also use it to keep notes
308 on personal stuff, such as sport activities, todo things around the
309 house, garden and so on
310 - advanced todo list, reading diary, simple HTML authoring.
312 - note taking, task management, document creation, webpage publishing
313 - task management, notes about work and home projects, regular
314 journaling -- the list of things is expanding as I spend more and
315 more time in emacs/org.
316 - Project planning, scheduling. Information
317 gathering. Wishlists. Outlines. Todo lists (checkboxes). Data
318 munging (tables) Review planning (outline w/ links)
319 - For GTD and basic word processing
320 - Projects, Notes, Memorial days etc.
321 - single file for everything
322 - Amassing and sorting to-dos and reference information. (Recovering
323 from mild brain injury in 2005 that affected ability to categorize
324 and prioritize, need mechanical aids!)
325 - Handling notes. Displaying the calendar. Use the agenda view to
327 - Outlining and providing group TODO lists with explanations.
328 - To Do List and Project Tracking Writing articles for export to HTML
329 - Note taking, task management
331 * 5. New features and product maturity?
335 What new features (if any) would you like to see in org-mode or do you
336 think the product has reached maturity?
338 - case sensitive search in tag completition - multilingual day name
339 input product has reached maturity in my opinion
341 - A way to make it more Gnome friendly would be nice. In the case that
342 you don't have emacs started, you lose your ideas until you can note
344 - I still haven't learnt enough to fully customize my environment.
345 - Nothing specific, but I love the current state of development.
346 - Syncing todos to other devices such as cellphones and palms, I know
347 it would not be very easy to do but would be extremely useful
348 - No idea, sorry. I think it has enough features at present that seems
349 a bit intimidating, really. (Minor quibble -- I changed some of the
350 keybindings. I prefer M-left/right to hide/show subtrees, rather
351 than cycling with tab, and use # instead of * for outline
352 levels. This is mostly habits from a "todo-mode" used on emacs
353 in-house where I work.)
354 - I'm on the lookout for a cell phone that runs Emacs, but... I haven't
355 found any mechanisms for remotely adding/editing timestamps,
356 changing the state of TODO items, etc. Neither have I found a way to
357 trigger reminder sounds, e-mails, phone calls, or IM messages. I'm
358 not sure about the best way to approach "mobile org-mode"... A
359 web-interface like Webjimbo? More robust import/export/sync to iCal
360 or GData? If we can find a way to usefully sync org-mode with mobile
361 devices, it'll be just about perfect.
362 - Current features are enough for me.
363 - It is certainly mature. However I would also like to be able to use
364 it as a wiki and general-purpose document authoring/publishing
365 tool. In an ideal (and possibly unrealistic) world I would love to
366 see unification with muse-mode. To what extent is this possible?
367 - I am still too new to it to comment on this.
368 - It's quite mature and I surely don't master it. What I'd like to see
369 is easier manipulation of the agenda export.
370 - Compatibility with other wiki syntax (importer or exporter)
372 - Basically mature; I'd like to see refinement within the current
374 - You can always add new features! I would like to see an easy way to
375 tell how old my entries are. I would like to be able to derive a
376 task order based on importance and age (for tasks that don't have a
377 deadline but must be completed eventually). Also I would like to see
378 it integrated with other tools. I think a MindMap converter (for
379 FreeMind) would be cool - although it probably could be an external
381 - Export to WordprocessingML would be perfect. Currently I export to
382 HTML and read the reports into Word, saving them as *.doc. But you
383 loose some features and details doing this.
384 - Integration out-of-the-box with remote calendar systems like Google
386 - Close to maturity. Some new features would be nice, but not terribly
387 important: Keeping root to leaf tree structure when archiving part
388 of a subtree. Simple dependent todos (i.e. dependent todo moves into
389 "NEXT" state when previous todo is marked "DONE"). Exporting entries
390 in HTML in monospaced font by default (i.e. without specially
391 marking individual entries). Auto-sorting of entries within a single
392 parent node (e.g. when a node is marked "DONE", move it lower in the
393 parent's list of todos). Integration with project management
395 - Some kind of resolution to the line wrapping issue with headlines.
396 - Simpler ways of doing things (perhaps with mouse commands)
397 - I'd say it's pretty close to maturity. I haven't used most of the
398 more recently-added advanced features.
399 - I'd like easier customization of "workflow" steps that would make it
400 easier to update states and record notes related to state changes
401 (and skip these notes when the state transitions are obvious in
403 - No immediate demands. I do not think the project has reached
405 - This product has reached maturity since long! In my point of view
406 this is. Excellent work!
407 - depending tasks - integrated pdf-generation (especially for
408 windows) - visualisation for tasks (like gantt) - a minor mode for
409 contacts like vcard.el
410 - I think it reached maturity. It would be nice to have some minor
411 things, like a posibility to insert todo's right inside your project
412 source code and then have them added in agenda automatically.
413 - Instead of new features, I'd much prefer keeping XEmacs
415 - Wishlist - Adding arbitrary (user specified) relations between nodes
416 with a specific relation name. for example, x <part of> y; where x
417 and y are two nodes. - Making the above functionality work between
418 files - making the above work between nodes published on a
419 distributed server In the GNU project GNOWSYS, we do this, where it
420 is a web application. We are now exploring how org mode can be used
421 as a client to manage the data published in GNOWSYS. Out team would
422 be more than willing to collaborate, but our team members are all
423 Python hackers, and use Emacs only for coding
424 - I am having trouble keeping up with the many new features of the
426 - I think it is mature enough for me
427 - automatic reminders in Emacs as pop ups?
428 - I'm quite content as it is. I guess I could probably think of one or
429 two things, but I wouldn't want to spoil its power/simplicity
431 - planing times for tasks and compare them to actuel used times (and
432 also give out a warning if to many hours are planed for one day) -
433 agenda export to latex - simple project management
434 - a gtd framework would be a killer feature!! more visual effects with
435 overlays However, it's "déjà " a very good work. Thanks.
437 - Nearing maturity, but then again, maybe I'm just out of ideas.
438 - I would like org-mode (or other parts of it like orgtbl) to become a
439 minor mode so I can turn it on/off in other buffers (mainly
440 muse). For example I would love to use todo list editing features in
442 - I don't understant all the features yet :)
444 - New features, in order of importance to me: 1.) A way to select a
445 chunk of text in firefox and paste it into org-mode, along with a
446 nicely formatted URL link. I would use this many times a day. MS
447 OneNote does this well. 2.) A way to link to email in an IMAP
448 folder. Preferably, this link would point directly to the email on
449 the IMAP server. The link should look like all the other links, and
450 you should be able to just drag it from, say, Thunderbird, into
451 org-mode, although a Thunderbird keyboard shortcut would be nice. I
452 would use this every day. 3.) More flexible outline prefixes. You
453 should be able to make headlines of this type: I. asdlfk i. asdfj
454 ii. asdlfkj II. ... Or 1. Introduction 1.1 asdfkj 1.2
455 asdfkl 2. Background ... Emacs hyperbole:
456 http://directory.fsf.org/project/hyperbole/ did this
457 beautifully. 4.) Internal links search in a way consistent with
458 emacs search (Ctrl-s). When you click on a link, it should go
459 towards the end of the buffer for the next match. When there's
460 nothing towards the end, it should wrap to the top. 5.) Fix the
461 underline/bold/italic stuff (if that is a new feature) 6.) Better
462 formatted html table export
463 - Better support for working with others.
464 - I would like to see different way to view or summarize ageda. Like
465 progress, next possible todo
466 - I think org-mode is quite mature now except there may be still some
467 bugs in it and some features may need more polish
468 - Too novice a user yet to comment
470 - I like to be surprised more than wishing
471 - I'd like better integration with calendar mode of
472 emacs. Specifically, when using the calendar, the command 'i d' to
473 insert an appointment, the diary file is used. I'd like to set a
474 headline in my orgmode buffer for that insert, for consistency with
475 the calendar entries I make by hand while processing my inbox Also,
476 navigation from agenda to org-file is easy. navigating back is
478 - possibly nested numbered lists: 1. head 1 1.1 sub-head 1 1.2
479 sub-head 2 Also lettered lists: a. point a b. point b but I'm
480 already quite satisfied
481 - implement all features of muse-mode. Ex: list of pages, backlinks,
482 following links with Enter, ... - consistent and clear syntax for
483 formatting text, which doesn't require memorizing use cases or
484 exceptions (ex: *a* isn't bold)
485 - syncing with my palm would be the greatest need. (syncing with
486 outlook would do the job as outlook is snced with the palm)
487 - mostly small things like an isearch mode that only matches headlines
488 (and doesn't auto expand), an allout-copy-exposed-to-buffer
489 equivalent, hipster pda publishing
490 - I've too many ideas to write here. The only thing i can think of is
491 not quite org related. A published bison or antlr grammar, so people
492 can write org parsers/processors in other languages, and extend its
493 integration into other systems.
494 - Org mode is fairly mature. Only the remaining inconsistencies should
496 - Hard to say, every so often I think of a feature that might be nice
497 to have. I have a feeling that alternate views (like the agenda) to
498 allow other ways of exploring your information would be handy, but I
499 have no concrete ideas yet as to what they might be.
500 - Better exporting (for example better LaTeX export).
501 - The only thing I need is better integration with mh-e (I suspect it
502 is already there - just need to find the time to sort it out). Other
503 than that I am very content!
504 - I always wanted to be able to schedule a task for a specific week
505 (as oposed to a date) - I would like to improve the hipsterPDA
506 generation (export the agenda view as nice LaTeX, improve the
508 - Org grows faster than I can learn all those nice features. One
509 feature I'd love to see was that the HTML export created docs that
510 could be outlined like in an org buffer. I guess that's possible
512 - Task dependency for project planing
513 - At the moment, I'm still on the learning curve. Org-mode has
514 soooooooooo many features I have not even discovered yet. I almost
515 daily open the manual pages to see I there is something I can use.
516 - Probably, customization of built-in agenda view. But I'd rather see
517 org-mode streamlined and cleaned of unnecessary
518 complications. Properties should be either integrated more tightly
519 to replace tags/priorities/etc, or removed.
520 - Looking forward to some of the dependency ideas.
521 - Import tasks from .ics files, include .ics files in agenda,
522 eventually include remote .ics files in agenda. Would like an
523 updated blogging tool that takes advantage of recent developments.
524 - I'm working on integration with my email client and web browser --
525 it's a slow process because I'm not a programmer, but I'm learning
526 bits and pieces about bash shell scripts and grabbing what I can
527 from experts already using org.
528 - I'd like a way to set project (outline item) dependencies and to
529 easily list those projects in dependency order. I could do it now
530 with properties, a dynamic block and some elisp. I'd use markup more
531 if it were more reliable in the emacs buffer. It might be nice to
532 have a mode where rigid outline style indenting is enforced while
533 editing outlines and lists. Perhaps as a buffer option or subtree
534 property. None of this is necessary or worth calling org-mode
536 - Not new features. But perhaps splitting org.el into different
537 modules: one for outlining, one for doc format (Wiki engine), one
539 - block quote text support. like wiki {{{ This is quote text }}}
540 Currently only putting ':' at beginning of text or heading.
541 - I hope a better archive mechanism using C-c C-x C-c, which could
542 keep the structure in my org file.
543 - Seems mature; new features always interesting but can add a layer of
544 too-many-choices distraction. (See prioritizing problems above ;) )
545 - New summary type {%} for progress status. Real comment syntax.
546 - I use only a fraction of its features.
549 * 6. Additional tutorials, documentation and screencasts would you like?
552 Which topics or "how-to" guides would you like to see in the
553 documentation or as a tutorial or screencast?
555 - none. documentation is excellent
556 - how to prepare/export/print GTD file to A7(index cards hPDA (hipster
558 - Everything should be a screencast for new users.
559 - I'd love to see more examples (with code) of how people use org,
560 especially for implementing GTD.
561 - More detailed information about blogging would be great, especially
562 motivation for using org.
563 - The manual and refcard usually have me covered. An in-depth
564 screencast on table/calc might be nice.
565 - More stuff about methodology to use it.
566 - Screencasts are most helpful to me. I would like to see material on
567 publishing and blogging in particular
568 - Project lifecycle. Timesheet reports.
569 - Exporting to other formats and customizing that
570 - lot of screencast showing new features of org (such as one already
572 - The documentation is actually rather good as it is, haven't found
573 anything lacking yet.
574 - Integration with remember
575 - Integrating org-mode with pine/alpine mailer.
576 - Not sure who you want to target. Advanced users are your bread and
577 butter and probably are OK. Beginners should get some screencasts
578 that describe a common problem and just focuses an how org mode can
579 help them. A good example is something like when someone's todo list
580 gets too long and complex and they want to split it, but maintain
581 connections between items on various lists, or perhaps view a
582 chronological list of all items in one location. Org mode is the
583 only program I know of the handles this kind of complexity
585 - In depth explanation of using the agenda to its fullest
586 - I'd love to see one on setting up column views. A tutorial on
587 publishing files would be great. And one about creating custom
589 - Changing the keybindings to make specific state transitions easier
591 - don't know as of yet ...
592 - using the spreadsheet with merged cells, calculation for rows and
593 columns - showing the true meaning of the properties stuff - over
594 all there should be examples - i really dislike the manual form
595 orgmode.org because it is technical oriented not for the simple
596 user - more howtos for gtd -> learning from each other
597 - Different usages of org-mode. From GTD to other ways ...
598 - I find the manual well written and sufficient.
599 - Use of drawers and properties.
600 - HOw to organize multiple projects; auto-archival.
602 - Since Org-mode is (to me) a collection of "orthogonal" features, but
603 doesn't much impose structure, I'd be interested in seeing how
604 others organise their data and "bring it to life" with the Org-mode
607 - more documentation for org's lisp functions (in fact more examples
608 with org's lisp funtions!!)
609 - remember mode integration
610 - I prefer the documentation and experimentation. Need drives my
612 - I don't have any preferences.
614 - I think a new user would benefit from a screencast showing basic
615 hierarchy creation and navigation
616 - Remember Practical uses of properties
617 - I would like to see more people to share their ways of using org
619 - The documentation is already very good and it seems the manual is
620 never out of sync from the latest org-mode version. I found the
621 mailing list is the best source of "how-to" as people's individual
622 situations are so much different.
623 - more of org for gtd
624 - how to deal with the calendar and insert dates quickly - two-way
625 backends for groupware-like behavior - calender functionality for
626 scheduled events (receive popups or emails or sms or the like) -
627 probably more but it's too early to say
628 - drawers + table calculations
629 - Using org-mode as a calendar/planner. Perhaps a best practice around
630 where date- and time-stamps belong (in the headline? in a SCHEDULED:
631 property? DEADLINE: property?) Also, it would be helpful to be shown
632 the best practices around Categories (since they show up so
633 prominently in the agenda) I wanted them to be like David Allen's
634 "Contexts", but that's hard for me to manage.
635 - All the variables that you must configure to be able to write and
636 export an article successfully and without unexpected results - How
637 to move from {muse,kwiki,reST,planner,...} to org-mode: how to adapt
639 - examples of how to columns view
640 - real examples of different ways of using org-mode
641 - Scope projects? integrate Org into a software development
642 process/project? Handle <not at computer> org interactions?
643 - Daily use of agenda
644 - I'm still not familiar with the more advanced features of org-mode,
645 so I'm keen to see these areas explored in tutorials and guides.
647 - None that I would be interested in, although I accept that new users
648 would benefit from them.
649 - I think column-view is a great feature. Bastiens tutorial is good,
650 but I'm thinking a tutorial focused more on the use case as opposed
651 to the config option might be better. If I find time :-)
652 - I don't know if it's just me, but currently I make no use of
653 tags. So any how-to or screencasts of how to use categories and tags
654 together in a senseful way would be nice. Most usages of tags I've
655 seen so far where tags like :phonecall: or :appoitment:, but when I
656 have a TODO "Call Jim" or "Meet Jim" those are superluous...
657 - I would welcome such how-to's and offer to help. The drawback of
658 screencasts is they take a long time, and there is no way a viewer
659 can tell it will be usefull to sit it all out. A guide giving
660 examples (and using short screencasts, if necessary) gives the
661 reader an overview, he/she can skip sections and browse to a
662 chapter/paragraph deemed usefull. I would like to learn howto tweak
663 my custom built todo-lists so that some of the statuses show up in
664 the agenda, and others don't. Example WRITE should be on the agenda,
665 but INVOICE not really. But the intermediate VERIFY should.
666 - More on GTD. Agenda customization.
667 - More on column mode and new uses of properties.
668 - I know there are books and howtos about lisp, but it would be great
669 to see some smaller howtos that are specific to org applications,
671 - The remember mode stuff scares me. I need to take some time learn
672 it. I also know agenda can do a lot more than I do with it. I'd like
673 to see screen shots of of column mode to drool over since I'm not
674 running emacs 22 yet.
676 - Spreadsheet examples.
677 - how-to setup a gtd style system is always my favorite.
678 - Some experienced users' detailed explication of pros and cons of the
679 newer TMTOWTDI (There's More Than One Way To Do It) choices like
680 archiving methods, task states, etc. leading to -- you
681 guessed it -- prioritizing problems
682 - Building complex agenda views.
684 - Setting up a publishing/blog environment
686 * 7. Which features of org-mode do you use? (Spreadsheet, LaTeX, HTML, Remember, etc)
688 - Document Structure, Tables, Spreadsheet, Hyperlinks, TODO items,
689 Tags, Properties and Columns, Dates and Times, (Custom) Agenda Views
691 - Use the agenda/tags views heavily. Tables, but not really
694 - remember, agenda views.
695 - I'm sure I will use everything at some point. I've finally started
696 using remember recently, about to start using HTML for blogging I
697 think, and can imaging using LaTeX to print index cards even.
698 - Todo-list, agenda - remember
699 - Remember, agenda, I learned to use the tags / priorities, but they
700 don't seem to fit my style of use.
701 - Publish to HTML and LaTeX (although I'd prefer ConTeXt), dynamic
702 blocks, orgstruct minor mode, and hyperlinks. I'm not sure if they
703 count as a "feature", but I use deadlines, scheduling, and repeated
705 - remember, clock summary.
706 - TODO keywords, tags, timestamps (inc. deadlines/scheduling),
707 priorities, export to HTML/ics, tables, archiving, remember, custom
709 - Still exploring.. starting out with fundamentals as described in
710 John Weigly's excellent write-up.
712 - Basic planning, some html export, Wannt to use more features of org
715 - Much use of Remember, agenda, agenda todo lists. Some use of HTML
716 and LaTeX. A little use of spreadsheet.
717 - Starting to use spreadsheets and tables. I use the [/] feature to
718 keep track of task counts a lot. I like the "radio" links too. Don't
720 - Export2HTML, Remember, Agenda
721 - Remember, LaTex, ical export, Agenda and Diary integration
722 - HTML. My usage is pretty basic.
723 - LaTeX, HTML, Agenda, diary integration, Todo, outlining like crazy
724 - Spreadsheet (for tables)
725 - I use Remember, HTML, agenda views, hyperlinks, time-tracking,
726 timestamps, and tags. I occasionally use tables, and plan on using
727 the PROPERTIES drawer in the future. I don't currently use any
728 advanced table formulas or column view, but I'm glad they're there.
729 - Remember, basic task lists, and mostly the Agenda views.
730 - LaTex, HTML, Remember, Cal, diary
732 - agenda - html - spreadsheet
733 - Spreadsheet, remember, time logger and outlines.
734 - Document structure + hyperlinks, agenda + remember, exporting and
736 - writing documents, LaTeX, HTML.
738 - Remember, and the todo features.
739 - simple to do listing
740 - A lot: Outlines, Tables, Spreadsheets, TODOs, Links, Tags,
741 Timestamps, Clocking Time. A little: Agenda views, Properties and
742 Columns Not at all: LaTeX, HTML, Remember I plan to increase my
743 usage of all the above, apart from LaTeX, which I'll probably never
746 - Remember, Latex, spreadsheet (with calc)
747 - just to basic features
748 - * TODO's, including ** Scheduling ** Deadlines ** Archiving (both
749 tag and function) * Remember * LaTeX * export/HTML * Tables *
750 org-publish * Agendas
752 - remember, agenda, priority
755 - Basic outlining with tons of links of most types allowed. * Tables *
757 - Tables, HTML, Remember
758 - table, agenda, remember
759 - Probably the question is bettered asked with "which features of
760 org-mode do you not use?" :-) It seems I have almost used everything
761 except properties and drawers. Although I did not go into depth of
762 many of them, like I never used a formula in the built in org-mode
764 - tags, todos, links, timestamps
766 - tables, HTML, ToDo stuff/agenda, column mode, clock features,
768 - Agenda, time tracking, HTML, latex, spreadsheet
769 agenda export to ics (iCalendar) file TODO proper- ty drawers
770 - headings, tags, links, drawers & properties, table (& occasionally
771 spreadsheet), remember, todo's
772 - outlining - basic spreadsheet - org-export-as-latex - HTML -
773 org-publish - marking TODO/DONE (or equivalents) - agenda
775 - HTML, Remember, custom agenda views, tags matches, custom keyword
776 states, diary integration, recurring tasks, scheduling and
777 deadlines, org-nnml, hyperlinks, categories
778 - Agenda, Remember, Tags, Ascii Export, Tables, Outlining
780 - sometimes Spreadsheet remember extensively LaTeX/Html export
781 - Remember, Blorg, org-publish, Tables, Lists, Checkboxes, TODO
783 - LaTeX, html, remember, spreadsheet
784 - Tags, Remember, Diary integration, Logging, sometimes spreadsheet
786 - folding, TODOs, Agenda view, HTML generation, column-view
787 - Spreadsheet, HTML, Remember, fast selection of TODO keywords, links
788 to everywhere, extended timestamps and intervals
790 - I use remember very often. I have not really touched the
791 spreadsheet, don't need to. I use the deadline feature all the time
792 and the [/] todo list type. I have experimented with export to html,
793 in order to transport stuff to a very smart smart phone (iphone) but
794 that requires more tweaking on my side.
795 - todo and logging state changes, tags, priorities, hyperlinks,
796 remember, timestamps, agenda, export to HTML.
797 - Folding, spreadsheet, column mode, properties, schedule/agenda,
798 org-remember, html export, todo, tags
799 - I use everything except radio stuff and dynamic blocks, and I think
800 I will use those soon. Don't use XOXO export either, I guess.
801 - remember, tables, tasks, tags, archiving, calendar, html export, and
802 I'm learning a bit about LaTeX.
803 - In no particular order: tables, plain list folding, checkboxes and
804 checkbox counting [/], multiple todo sequences, tags, properties,
805 inactive dates, elisp formulas, html export, text export, in-buffer
806 markups (*/_), subtree in indirect buffer, links
807 - latex, html, remember
808 - spreadsheet, remember, agenda, outline, property, column view
809 - remember, archive, appointment, diary, timeclock
810 - Remember for fast to-do adds; use tables occasionally but mostly use
811 dedicated spreadsheet s/w for such functions. Hope to learn LaTeX at
813 - Agenda views Table editing Properties drawers HTML export LaTeX
815 - HTML. Remember. Tables.
816 - Mainly time stamps, agendas and HTML export
817 - LaTeX, Spreadsheet, Remember
821 | Age range | N | bar |
822 |-----------+----+-----------------------|
824 | 21 - 25 | 5 | ***** |
825 | 26 - 30 | 15 | *************** |
826 | 31 - 35 | 21 | ********************* |
827 | 36 - 40 | 11 | *********** |
828 | 41 - 45 | 13 | ************* |
829 | 46 - 50 | 3 | *** |
830 | 51 - 55 | 3 | *** |
833 * 9. Which country do you live in?
835 | Country | N | bar |
836 |-------------+----+-------------------------|
837 | Australia | 3 | *** |
841 | France | 5 | ***** |
842 | Germany | 17 | ***************** |
847 | Netherlands | 3 | *** |
848 | New Zealand | 1 | * |
857 | Switzerland | 1 | * |
859 | USA | 23 | *********************** |
861 * 10. Are there any other comments you would like to make about org-mode?
863 - Thanks for this great software, I've waited for years for such a
864 tool. I've wrote some tools around org in Perl, hopefully I'll find
865 some time to contribute. Thanx a lot
866 - Great tool to stay even longer in emacs OS :-)
868 - Great App, Great Support, Great Community
869 - org-mode is all-the-way cool.
870 - With the possible exception of Emacs itself, org-mode is my very
871 favorite bit of software. It has inspired me to learn LISP, so I'm
872 looking forward to contributing in the near future.
873 - It's fantastic and the maintainership and community are both second
876 - Great mode and very useful. Thanks a lot for your effort and time!
877 - Great Work ! Felicitation to its author
878 - It's indispensable for my current work and lifestyle.
879 - It is a great package, thanks for making it available and keeping
881 - Thanks for the org-mode. I just love it! Do all my personal and job
883 - Great tool, thanks thanks thanks :)
884 - It's fantastic -- thanks for the great tool. I'm getting older and
885 it's the only way I can "remember" everything. It's not just a great
886 todo list manager, but I use it to document almost everything about
887 my job (e.g. my original intentions about a
888 project/implementation). I can bury a TODO right down in the place
889 where I have most of the surrounding documentation.
890 - I cannot overstate how valuable this mode is. It single handedly has
891 the potential to make laypeople aware of Emacs. Thanks so much for
893 - Love it. Love it. Love it. Carsten is awesome.
894 - It's changing very fast, and I'm worried that my muscle memory will
895 start to fight against the changes. Still, it's good to see an Emacs
896 package with such active interest and support.
897 - I'm a happy user. Thanks to Carten and all contributors
898 - great guys on the mailinglist, great spirit, excellent product :-)
899 - Carsten, many thanks for this great piece of software! Keep it
900 simple and usuable - not everybody follows the power user discussion
902 - Keep up the great work! :)
903 - Thanks to Carsten and to people on emacs-orgmode !!
904 - Been a user of GNU Emacs for the last 18years, never seen such a
905 fascinating major mode. I like this kind of apps since I work in
906 knowledge organization, and would like to contribute in some
907 way. Our lab gnowledge.org would like to develop a java applet that
908 provides org mode kind of editing. The buffer thus produced will be
909 converted into html when the page is being served in the
910 background. This will encourage the community to do structured
911 documentation. Our lab is now engaged in developing
912 beta.selfplatform.eu, where in we would like to provide this
913 feature. Do you think, orgmode developers would like to help us or
914 contribute in this endeavor. Orgmode can be very useful for
915 furthering semantic computing.
916 - It is a great product. I does not need to grow. It might risk
919 - Thank you, Carsten!
920 - Has increased my productivity a lot!
921 - Really a great thank to the author "Carsten Dominik", "chapeau" as
922 they say in France!!!!
923 - Org-mode was relatively immature when I started using it, and I have
924 kept with it for 2 simple reasons: 1. The maintainer (Carsten) is
925 friendly, fast, accurate, and thorough 2. It works -- it does what
926 it claims to do, and does it well
927 - Org mode keeps me organized, it's outstanding!
928 - hmmh, org-mode is the first thing I start in the morning and the
929 last I close in the evening, I guess this tells it all.
930 - Org mode has been an incredibly useful tool that is fun to use. I
931 think a main reason for its utility is that basic use requires
932 little thought. When I'm using it for brainstorming, it's almost
933 like I'm not aware that I'm using any program -- I'm just
934 thinking. Any changes to org-mode should preserve this
935 simplicity. Thanks a ton to Carsten and all the others who have
936 contributed to this great project!
938 - Maybe we should consider a separate package or maintainer for
940 - Thanks, thanks and thanks.
942 - It's Fun. ASCII is usually the only interface I can get used to,
943 because it's so fast.
944 - org-mode makes me look organised (though a bit quirky). That's
945 enough reason to use it.
946 - Amazing!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :-)
947 - Even if org-mode stands right where it is, it has been enormously
948 helpful. Thank you very, very much.
950 - Yes: org-mode progresses very well and improves with each version
951 - for me its the greatest found treasure since I "dicovered" Emacs.
952 - Great work! Wish I had time to contribute more.
953 - Keep up the good work :)
954 - It's a great software project and community. Thanks again to
956 - Excellent piece of software!
957 - I'm very very happy with it.
958 - org-mode is fantastic :-)
959 - The best feature of Org are its two maintainers Carsten and Bastien
960 and its helpful community.
961 - Great mode for emacs. I wish I was using it more
962 - It is great tool. Uncluttered. Thanks to Carsten et al.
964 - favorite piece of software I use.
965 - I'm continually amazed by what org can do, and also by how intuitive
966 it is. It's not at all unusual that I find myself thinking that it
967 would be great if org/emacs did "x", trying what seems to me to be
968 the way that it would do "x" if it could, and discovering that it
969 functions just as I expect. And when it doesn't, there are ways to
970 figure it out. (And Carsten is a great developer who shines at
971 hearing what his users are doing, responding to expressed needs, and
972 even being clear if/when he decides not to do what someone would
973 like him to do. Other heavy users and scripters are great as well.
974 - I started using Org-mode as an outliner. It is the best outliner
975 I've used an much more. The community is valuable but Carsten's
976 skill and judgment has made org-mode what it is.
977 - It's a killer tool that I could not live without.
978 - org-mode is great, I hope it can keep clean text file when adding
980 - I forced myself to learn emacs after 25+ years in the vi camp in
981 order to use org-mode. Loving it. Carsten's enthusiasm and support
982 are a joy, and the mailing list is always refreshing.
983 - I plan to run a website where users could share Org files and edit
984 them together. I plan to write a better exporter (and more formats!)
985 I think the Org syntax is mature enough to get more programs
986 interacting with it outside Emacs. Org is *great* :)
987 - It's wonderful. Thanks!
988 - org-mode is a fantastic program, supported by a lively helpful email
989 list. Carsten is very responsive to feature requests and helping.
994 * Appendix: Raw data for some questions:
996 ** Raw Emacs versions
997 Here are the detailed responses, for reference.
999 : GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (powerpc-unknown-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.10.13) of 2007-07-08 on malo, modified by Debian 2. GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-06-02 on RELEASE
1001 : 22.0.96.1 on Windows CVS from the unicode2 branch on Linux
1002 : Emacs 22.1 GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i686-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.10.11) of 2007-09-16 on zen
1003 : Emacs 22.1. Where I happen to be sitting, M-x version says: GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (sparc-sun-solaris2.8, X toolkit) of 2007-06-15 on sa
1005 : Emacs from CVS GNU Emacs 23.0.60.1 (i486-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.0) of 2007-10-31 on samarium
1009 : GNU Emacs 22.0.50.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2006-03-21 on YAMALOK
1010 : GNU Emacs 22.0.91.1
1011 : GNU Emacs 22.0.95.1 (i486-pc-linux-gnu, X toolkit, Xaw3d scroll bars) of 2007-03-02 on pacem, modified by Debian
1012 : GNU Emacs 22.0.96.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-03-24 on NEUTRINO
1013 : GNU Emacs 22.0.990.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-05-23 on LENNART-69DE564 (patched)
1019 : GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i386-apple-darwin9, Carbon Version 1.6.0)
1020 : GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i386-apple-darwin9.0.0, X toolkit) of 2007-11-05 on selenium. dmg
1021 : GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-06-02 on RELEASE
1022 : GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-06-02 on RELEASE
1023 : GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-06-02 on RELEASE
1024 : GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-06-02 on RELEASE
1025 : GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i486-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.8.20) of 2007-07-22 on nautilus, modified by Debian"
1026 : GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i486-pc-linux-gnu, X toolkit, Xaw3d scroll bars) of 2007-08-22 on raven, modified by Debian
1027 : GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i486-pc-linux-gnu, X toolkit, Xaw3d scroll bars) of 2007-11-03 on pacem, modified by Debian
1028 : GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i486-pc-linux-gnu, X toolkit, Xaw3d scroll bars) of 2007-11-03 on pacem, modified by Debian - Gnu Emacs 22.1 windows version
1029 : GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i586-suse-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.0) of 2007-11-06 on balada
1030 : GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i686-pc-linux-gnu) of 2007-09-27
1031 : GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i686-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.10.4)
1032 : GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i686-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.10.6) of 2007-09-14, in an Eterm
1033 : GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (powerpc-apple-darwin7.9.0, Carbon Version 1.6.0) of 2007-07-22 on applecore.inf.ed.ac.uk - Aquamacs Distribution 1.
1034 : GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (powerpc-apple-darwin8.10.0, Carbon Version 1.6.0) of 2007-10-04 on malibu.local
1035 : GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.0) of 2007-11-06 on king, modified by Ubuntu
1036 : GNU Emacs 22.1.2 (i386-unknown-openbsd4.1, X toolkit) of 2007-06-10 on lucien.my.domain
1037 : GNU Emacs 22.1.50.1
1038 : GNU Emacs 22.1.50.1 (i386-apple-darwin8.10.1, Carbon Version 1.6.0) of 2007-10-02 on plume.sr.unh.edu - Aquamacs Distribution 1.2a
1039 : GNU Emacs 22.1.50.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-07-07 on NEUTRINO
1040 : GNU Emacs 22.1.50.1 (i686-pc-linux-gnu, X toolkit) of 2007-06-18 on ...
1041 : GNU Emacs 23.0.0.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-07-10 on BREP
1042 : GNU Emacs 23.0.0.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-08-18 on TPAD
1043 : GNU Emacs 23.0.0.1 (i686-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.8.20) of 2007-03-18
1044 : GNU Emacs 23.0.0.1 (i686-pc-linux-gnu, X toolkit, Xaw3d scroll bars) of 2007-08-13 on cera" (emacs-unicode2), Emacs 22.1 under Windows.
1045 : GNU Emacs 23.0.50.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-11-13 (via CVS, compiled with GnuWin32 native tools rather than cygwin)
1046 : GNU Emacs 23.0.50.1 (i486-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.1) of 2007-11-11 on elegiac, modified by Debian
1047 : GNU Emacs 23.0.50.1 (i486-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.8.20) of 2007-10-14 on elegiac, modified by Debian"
1048 : GNU Emacs 23.0.50.1 (i686-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.1) of 2007-11-15 on baldur
1049 : GNU Emacs 23.0.60.1
1050 : GNU Emacs 23.0.60.1 (i486-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.0) of 2007-10-31 on samarium
1051 : GNU Emacs 23.0.60.1 (i686-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.10.14) of 2007-10-29
1052 : GNU Emacs 23.0.60.1 (i686-suse-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.0)
1053 : GNU Emacs 23.0.60.1 (i686-suse-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.0)
1054 : GNU Emacs 23.0.60.1 (x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.1)
1055 : GNU Emacs CVS (~23.0.50.1)
1056 : GNU Emacs CVS 20071101
1057 : GNU Emacs CVS 23.0.0
1058 : GNU Emacs On Windows XP: GNU Emacs 22.0.990.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-05-23 on LENNART-69DE564 (patched) On Linux: GNU Emacs 22.1.50.1 (armv5tel-unknown-linux-gnu) of 2007-06-22 on homehub
1059 : GNU Emacs and Carbon Emacs, both 22.1
1060 : GNU. On Debian: GNU Emacs 23.0.50.1 (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.1) of 2007-11-11 on elegiac, modified by Debian The other isn't available right now.
1061 : Gnu Emacs 22.1.1 and 21.4 (patch 20) "Double Solitaire" XEmacs Lucid
1062 : Gnu Emacs v22.1.50.1
1063 : Gnu/Emacs GNU Emacs 23.0.60.1 (x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.0) of 2007-11-11
1064 : Carbon Emacs, an OS X distro of GNU Emacs 22.1.50
1065 : XEmacs 21.4 (patch 19) "Constant Variable" [Lucid] (i486-linux-gnu, Mule) of Fri Nov 3 2006 on penell
1066 : XEmacs 21.4 (patch 20) "Double Solitaire" [Lucid] (i486-linux-gnu) of Fri Oct 19 2007 on penell
1067 : XEmacs 21.4 (patch 20) "Double Solitaire" [Lucid] (i686-pc-cygwin, Mule) of Fri Dec 15 2006 on vzell-de
1068 : XEmacs 21.4 (patch 20) \"Double Solitaire\" [Lucid] (i686-pc-cygwin, Mule) of Fri Dec 15 2006 on vzell-d
1069 : XEmacs 21.4.20 (distributed with Cygwin)
1070 : XEmacs 21.5 (beta28) "fuki" [Lucid] (i686-pc-linux, Mule) of Wed Jun 13 2007 on n2
1071 : XEmacs Lucid 21.4 (patch 19) "Constant Variable" - on Windows, Similar on linux (not at machine)
1073 : Emacs 21.4.1 emacs 21.?.? (at work, I'm not certain)
1077 : GNU emacs 22.1.50.1 (snapshot)
1078 : GNU emacs GNU Emacs 22.0.97.1 (i686-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.4.13)
1082 : 22 Sun, 11/25/07 6:38 PM
1083 : 22 Thu, 11/15/07 11:55 PM
1084 : 24 Fri, 11/16/07 4:15 AM
1085 : 25 Sun, 11/18/07 10:05 PM
1086 : 25 Sun, 11/25/07 12:04 PM
1088 : 26 Mon, 11/19/07 10:29 AM
1089 : 26 Sat, 11/24/07 4:38 AM
1090 : 26 Thu, 11/15/07 2:45 PM
1091 : 26 Thu, 11/15/07 7:22 PM
1092 : 27 Fri, 11/16/07 9:20 AM
1093 : 27 Wed, 11/28/07 3:20 AM
1094 : 28 Sun, 12/2/07 5:32 AM
1095 : 28 Thu, 11/15/07 10:06 PM
1096 : 28 Thu, 11/15/07 12:04 PM
1097 : 28 Thu, 11/15/07 12:17 PM
1098 : 29 Mon, 11/19/07 8:06 PM
1099 : 29 Thu, 11/15/07 11:27 AM
1100 : 30 Fri, 11/16/07 3:26 AM
1101 : 30 Thu, 11/15/07 10:07 PM
1102 : 30 Thu, 11/15/07 3:01 PM
1104 : 31 Fri, 11/16/07 2:30 AM
1105 : 31 Sun, 11/18/07 3:14 PM
1106 : 31 yrs. Fri, 11/23/07 7:04 PM
1107 : 32 Fri, 11/23/07 10:11 PM
1108 : 32 Thu, 11/15/07 12:02 PM
1109 : 33 Fri, 11/16/07 12:54 PM
1110 : 33 Sat, 11/17/07 4:41 AM
1111 : 33 Sat, 11/24/07 2:28 AM
1112 : 33 Thu, 11/15/07 11:23 AM
1113 : 33 Thu, 11/15/07 11:34 PM
1114 : 33 Thu, 11/15/07 12:27 PM
1115 : 33 Wed, 11/21/07 11:57 PM
1116 : 34 Fri, 11/16/07 1:24 AM
1117 : 34 Mon, 11/19/07 7:31 PM
1118 : 34 Thu, 11/22/07 6:59 AM
1119 : 35 Fri, 11/16/07 3:23 AM
1120 : 35 Fri, 11/16/07 7:53 AM
1121 : 35 Mon, 11/19/07 10:03 AM
1122 : 35 Sun, 12/9/07 2:40 AM
1123 : 35 Thu, 11/22/07 6:47 PM
1124 : 35 Tue, 11/27/07 11:04 AM
1126 : 36 Fri, 11/16/07 3:19 AM
1127 : 37 Fri, 11/16/07 12:11 PM
1128 : 37 Fri, 11/16/07 12:36 AM
1129 : 37 Fri, 11/23/07 1:13 AM
1130 : 37 Thu, 11/15/07 9:09 PM
1131 : 37 Thu, 11/22/07 3:39 AM
1132 : 37 Tue, 11/20/07 10:55 PM
1133 : 38 Sun, 12/23/07 1:43 AM
1134 : 39 Sun, 11/18/07 9:52 PM
1135 : 39 Thu, 11/15/07 4:53 PM
1136 : 40 Thu, 11/15/07 6:00 PM
1138 : 41 Fri, 11/16/07 7:36 AM
1139 : 41 Sat, 11/17/07 9:27 AM
1140 : 42 Fri, 11/23/07 7:58 AM
1141 : 42 Mon, 11/19/07 9:18 AM
1142 : 42 Sat, 11/17/07 2:31 AM
1143 : 42 Sat, 11/17/07 4:32 AM
1144 : 42 Thu, 11/15/07 11:45 PM
1145 : 42 Thu, 11/15/07 8:23 PM
1146 : 43 Mon, 12/10/07 12:58 AM
1147 : 45 Fri, 11/16/07 3:21 AM
1148 : 45 Fri, 11/16/07 4:40 AM
1149 : 45 Fri, 11/16/07 4:40 AM
1150 : 45 Sun, 11/18/07 7:39 PM
1152 : 46 Fri, 11/16/07 4:18 AM
1153 : 47 Thu, 11/15/07 8:42 PM
1154 : 49 Thu, 11/15/07 11:15 AM
1156 : 52 Mon, 11/19/07 12:40 AM
1157 : 54 Thu, 11/15/07 11:38 AM
1158 : 54 Thu, 11/15/07 12:27 PM