@natharari oh, and picture (added the (1)--(9) to the tab format characters to make jumping between them based on numbers easier)
@ctietze Very interesting setup. Thanks! 👍
@natharari I launch with 2 tabs (Mail and Org, named thus) in tab-bar-mode.
I open a 3rd tab for everything else. Sometimes more to get contexts quickly. Usually, I have some Magit buffer open at all times in the 3rd during work.
⌘1--⌘9 for quick tab switching (default Mac shortcuts)
Also bound my leader key + `t` to use the tab key map.
@natharari See here for the config:
https://gist.github.com/DivineDominion/e15c152f2fad785f4e1167b9a4df548b#tabs
Also search for `display-buffer-alist' for my overrides to dedicate stuff to tabs
@CEMedia@union.place @Jedigirl I think that was extremely well said. Thank you for writing this piece.
‘The Godfather of A.I.’ Quits Google and Warns of Danger Ahead
#AI
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/01/technology/ai-google-chatbot-engineer-quits-hinton.html
@ramin_hal9001@emacs.ch I use the same C-x b as well. 👍
I just like static access points for some files (such as todo.org, repeat.org, chatgpt, dashboard, etc...) things I refer to many times a day. I set it so that I can flip through the tabs very quickly back and forth so it's generally faster than C-x b and typing a few letters to bring up the relevant buffer. Also, flipping through them, I realise I lose track of things sometimes in my head and a visual reminder when I'm flipping through allows me to remember to do something on that buffer.
#Emacs tabs questions:
1) How many tabs (not buffers) do you usually have open?
2) Are there a certain amount that you name for buffers you refer to several times a day?
3) What keybinds (if any) did you set to flip through them quickly?
4) Which tab system/package do you use?
5) If you use Mastodon.el, do you have a dedicated tab? More than one?
Slate: How the Streaming Era Turned Music Into Sludge
https://www.wired.com/story/plaintext-how-the-streaming-era-turned-music-into-sludge/
It's a point of view that a lot of people can agree with.
One thing: Endel is mentioned in the piece. The author uses it and I actually also use it. I've been using it to help me sleep and block out the city noise for about a year and a half. Honestly, it's been fantastic. I actually love it. I've tried their "focus" stuff, but that just doesn't do it for me. In fact, I don't usually ever have background music. Last night, I was listening to music and it's all that I was doing. I was focused on it. I wasn't reading, or writing, or checking Mastodon - nothing like that. I was simply listening to music. It was an experience. The whole "background music" while I work thing isn't for me. I can't concentrate and it just sounds confusing.
Let's see: I've lived in 9 US states (Mass, NY, Pennsylvania, Washington DC, Virginia, Maryland, California, Arizona, Vermont) and England, Belgium, France, Israel, and Japan.
I used to be a news photographer in Washington DC during the Clinton years. I've worked for Congressional Quarterly, UPI, Scripps Howard News Service.
Now I live again in Paris.