On 02/03/16 02:33, Marcin Borkowski wrote:
I, for one, would definitely like an occasional update (say, once
a month or two) about the progress on this project. Even if I do not
want to leave Org, I might want to suggest OM to a friend, for
instance. And I definitely do not want to subscribe
On 02/03/16 10:15, Bingo UV wrote:
On Mon, 1 Feb 2016 15:15:03 -0700
luke call <luke...@onemodel.org> wrote:
I'm not org-mode power-user but what I recall from my use years ago
is that I moved away because of the # of keystrokes to do operations,
having to open different files for dif
On 02/02/16 00:23, Robert Klein wrote:
> So I have to actually pay for export (C-c C-e in org-mode and more
> formats to export to), searching (C-s and C-r in emacs,
> probably more in org-mode) and /maybe/ recent bugfixes? And probably
> no Emacs shortcut keys.
All features are in the
On 01/31/16 08:37, Ramon Diaz-Uriarte wrote:
> Thanks for the link. Good-faith question here: does it support spaced
> repetition such as provided by org-drill
> (http://orgmode.org/worg/org-contrib/org-drill.html) or Anki
> (http://ankisrs.net/), for memorizing some of the stored knowledge? I
>
On 01/31/16 05:32, Eric S Fraga wrote:
> I'll bite: so what does onemodel solve that org does not do? Serious
> question as I have gone through the web site and I cannot see the USP of
> this system.
Also a really good question. I'll state it as compared to what I
remember of org-mode, but
There's a program that org-mode users (as I have been) specifically
might be interested in, a personal "knowledge manager"/list
manager/organizer/etc called OneModel (Free/AGPL). Instead of storing
data as text, it puts *everything* in a single object model backed by
postgresql, but text