John Kitchin <jkitc...@andrew.cmu.edu> writes: > unless those services have some kind of API, and you have the desire to > implement it in emacs, you might be out of luck. > > I am trying to figure out a way to do collaborative work via email, > where I am the project coordinator. The idea is to use my email.el code > to send headlines to people I need information or action from, and then > to have them reply to the email. Then, I would have some easy way to get > information out of the reply back to the heading (e.g. TODO state > change, info etc...). Probably I would embed some org-id link in the email, > and "train" the users not to delete it. This is only a half-baked idea > so far. > > It would integrate org-contacts, mu4e, and org-mode in my setup.
Sounds exactly like Gnorb! Except org-contacts instead of BBDB, and mu4e instead of Gnus :( > depending in your role in the project, you might get something like that > to work too. > > Tory S. Anderson writes: > >> I've relied on Orgmode heavily for over half a decade, and I'm >> loathe to leave it. But what solutions have been found out there >> for using it collaboratively (where others are not using emacs), >> rather than just for personal task management (where it excels)? >> It has some integration with Trello, I know; some of my co-workers >> are advocating BaseCamp (...) and PivotalTracker. PivotalTracker >> looks pretty good, but I would rather find a way to leverage >> orgmode in a way that facilitates collaboration. What has worked >> for you? > > -- > Professor John Kitchin > Doherty Hall A207F > Department of Chemical Engineering > Carnegie Mellon University > Pittsburgh, PA 15213 > 412-268-7803 > @johnkitchin > http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu