Interview with an Emacs Enthusiast in 2023 [Colorized]
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 6 มิ.ย. 2024
- Emacs OS
Interview with an Emacs Enthusiast in 2023 with Emerald McS., PhD - aired on © The Emacs.
org. air date 1990.
Programmer humor
Software humor
Elisp humor
Software tools
Retro computing
Vim vs emacs editor
Computerphile
Emacs humor
Emacs jokes
emacs vs vim
Programming memes
gnu emacs
spacemacs
emacs memes
lex friedman ide
VS Code
configuring emacs
melpa
evil mode emacs
emacs docs
Music by:
www.FesliyanStudios.com
#software #jokes #emacs - วิทยาศาสตร์และเทคโนโลยี
Emacs takes a lifetime to learn. So the sooner you start, the longer it will take
😂😂
😂😂
I don't know why I laughed so hard at this. 🤣
I thought it was more like "The sooner you start, the sooner you will die"
Only through death can one fully comprehend Emacs.
"People don't quit emacs. They just die at some point" LMAO
Hello
As a vim user....
@@Geolaminar I don't remember...
Everyone has been using emacs bindings perhaps without realizing it. They're most familiar to us as terminal commands, like ^C.
@@jacquesdevterminal stuff came way before Emacs. Some stuff was already in MULTICS etc
I'm in the 60+ crowd. In the earlier days of my career, I endured several variations of exactly this character. Decades later, I just would have assumed..., well..., he would have "retired". I guess some things never die..., or they never quite finish learning emacs.
This was brilliant, thank you!
:x
The bro force is strong ;)
Sadly, there are people under 30 who are variations of this character as well.
Do IT people actually retire?? I've worked in IT for 40 years. Obviously we were all young to start with but then I slowly started to notice I was the oldest guy on the floor. During 40 years I've never seen anyone retire. Do they turn them into Soylent Green? Does everyone over 40 go off to run organic vegan coffee bars? Perhaps being expected to listen to the deranged design proposals from top management, who all appear to be younger than your kids, just pushes sane folk over the edge.
I am in the 1949 proud. I am so high I can not spell Emacs.
@@dickpiano1802they're guys in ops post who reincarnated. For the indians in tech, so good deeds and you'll have several lifetimes to finish learning emacs.
My CS profs were either some sort of vi/vim wizard blasting through their files typing at 170wpm like they are competing in a speed run while they passionately explain the beauty of CS, or clunkily smacking their cursor back and forth with their touchpad using 5 year old version of IntelliJ or Visual Studio with two typos per line at 30wpm that everyone notices but doesn't point out until compiler spits back errors using a borrowed device from the institution and were only there to teach you the basics. No in-between. As long as you're teaching the material, we're cool, but man, those passionate CS profs were so inspiring.
The passionate ones are like artists that cast spells on their systems with arcane Vi/Vim motions.
One of the reasons I bit the bullet and switched from vscode to neovim. It really pushed my productivity to the dumpster for the first week but you learn the bindings really fast and then it becomes second nature.
@@juniorsundar I agree, but I am a dvorak user(as of quarantine, "for the memes") in a qwerty world, so the qwerty-centric binds are what keep me from attempting to learn.
I am fully bought into dvorak feeling much nicer than qwerty and refuse to let go of my 170wpm proficiency. It's unfortunate, but any benefits I would get from Vi would be less than a percent of my use case.
Now I just spend my days daydreaming about making the next sucky editor that overpromises being better than vscode, but actually falls short in many more important ways.
Bro its so true, my computer architecture professor hits 8 spaces in a row to get the indetation he wants when writing asm. And machine learning prof runs neovim and hyprland, he works faster than anyone can read.
Neovim
I had no idea Sia has such strong opinions on text editors.
her opinions are unstoppable
@@viraj_singh like titanium.
If you uninstall emacs from her computer, she'll jump from a chandelier
🤣🤣🤣🤣
"I spend more time customizing my computer than using it."
I feel attacked
That's why I use Windows.
on Top of Xen Server with pass-through of GPUs and 5 DOMs and lots of security domains and 5 other operating systems.
I keep adding to my Emacs customizations little by little, just as I need them. My published emacs-prefs repo is currently up to about 1500 lines of Elisp code, and it took over a decade and a half to reach that point.
A new update for my favorite game dropped on Wednesday--I've been so excited to play it. So what have I been doing since Wednesday? Updating all of my mods and configurations to work with the new version. And when I was done with my own stuff I started opening PRs to update _other people's_ mods.
Still haven't actually played the new game.
It's pathological.
@@monad_tcp _gasp_
"People never quit emacs. They just die at some point." Yep, I started using Emacs at work in 1988 and I still use it each day, but I will never die. I wrote the "M-x immortal" command and I also use that daily. Emacs gives you eternal life.
wait emacs actually exists? i thought this is a joke video :P im clueless on this haha
@ppsarrakis an ancient text editor but it was so customisable that it's lived on to this very day. It's almost entirely navigated with keyboard shortcuts with no mouse.
@JoeyClover that's vim you just described
@@michalsvihla1403 I've used and explored Vim fully, and as great as it is an extremely stripped down version of emacs, as mention in the video it's more like an os but in reality i'ts an elisp based shell with the text editor is built in that environment so it lends to a whole suite of software packages and programmable options since it comes with it's own language e-lisp
you can emulate vim, bash, games, not great ones but still games, and the text based rogue ones are pretty good. run it as a server although it's not a very good one, but the list goes on, but from what I've done and learned so far you have your entire system at your finger tips by reading the holy scriptures which is the manual, get it in print. Good luck on your journey.
Have fun in the eternal limbo on your single thread.
“i can send it to you by ftp”
every cut was so perfect😂
Emacs!
Although, it seemed strange for him to say he'd "send" it via FTP, given how that service works. :D. Emacs and Vim are my mortal enemies. I tried Vim very early on and probably spent an hour or two trying to figure out how to save and close the freakin program. Uhg.
"I used to spend hours trying to get the image on the right page. Now I use org-mode LaTeX and just accept that it's impossible." Im dying.
This is known as the Emacs-OrgMode-LaTex paradox: It's impossible to write with it yet somehow still easier than using Microsoft Word.
Impossible-mode centres pictures 😂
That's the line that almost caused me to burst out laughing in work while I should have been quiet
Lol, also my fav line in the video
I remember searching for a LaTex problem once and the top result was a blog post, "Another day wasted thanks to LaTeX."
“Emacs is not that hard, you can learn it in one day…. Everyday…”
Man this is my favorite video of all your series, keep it going.
i don't think that's what he meant
@@RickMyBalls i don't know why you think that isn't what he meant. The whole point of the video is to say shit like this to get a rise out of the audience.
he said 'every day', not 'everyday'@@homelessrobot
*takes 45 minutes to blink once*
the binders, the rolodex, the wired peripherals, the monotone colour scheme of the set. great cinematography. i'm sure wes anderson would approve of this
Yeah, there's something about the ... lifted blacks? Lifted black point? Reduced contrast of the whole color space.
The modern laptop was a bit jarring, though. I would expect something like a 80386, or even 80286.
I'm looking at all the wires coming from my USB hub
@@TheEudaemonicPlague What's a laptop?
I still use wired peripherals and Ethernet.
The maybe German, maybe Belgian, maybe swedish, but actually secretly Dutch accent is perfect here
Doesn't sound Dutch at all.
If Richard Stallman ever figures out how to watch TH-cam in Emacs you are gonna be in big trouble😂😂😂
I'm sure with a combination of curl, ffmpeg with the AA filter, and some spicy lisp that's doable (I suspect you can do that pretty easily with yt-dlp, but I digress)
Depends if you count exwm as "inside" emacs
@An Obscure Tenet what ?
@@-Engineering01- Stallman was friends with a guy from MIT that frequented J.Epstein's isle, that guy died and Stallman refused to badmouth his late friend, becoming the target of people willing to believe any half assed lie on the internet in order to feel the sweet, sweet dopamine rush of fingerwagging.
Nah, the emacs guy didn't eat something out of his toe crud.
“EMACS cured my autism” might be the funniest and most complex throwaway joke I’ve seen on YT
Lmao peak comedy, peak emacs user. Rare joke indeed
I have autism and I'm laughing at this. "I only think in Elisps."💀
@@caleballen4721 i dont get it
@@gabe7296 That’s cuz you don’t use emacs.
@@nasonguy so if i dont use emacs and don't have autism, does that mean if i use emacs i will get autism?
"I used to spend hours trying to get the image on the right page. Now I have accepted that it is impossible." I have never used Emacs, but I can completely relate to this sentiment.
I started learning emacs in 1993. Started tracking my config in CVS around 1999, migrated it to git in 2011, published it on GitHub at some point in the last 10 years (aspiers/emacs if you are curious). My love for emacs grows deeper every day, but I still feel like I haven't scratched the surface. Thanks for this excellent documentary which captures the beauty of emacs perfectly ;-)
i use vim btw
@@StaringLongingly I don't remember.
In Poland we got this phrase "with emacs through sendmail" because of this line from some polish movie when hacker says "I'm in!" and the other one asks "How did you do it?", and he replies "With emacs through sendmail" 😆
I set up an MTA for a client that identified itself to a HELO as “Sendmail 8.8.8”. Of course it wasn’t really Sendmail, let alone such an ancient version.
The security auditors even made a comment when they saw that, but of course there was no actual vulnerability, so nothing they could really complain about.
Can you write the movie name and the exact quote? (In Polish)
@@37kuba It is the movie "HAKER" from 2002.
There actually was a famous hacking incident that exploited a vulnerability in sendmail. There's a book about it, "The Cuckoo's Egg".
As I remember history this was de facto a vulnerability. You could compromise a sendmail server through it's unencrypted socket plain text interface and gain root access on the server since most email servers at the time ran with root credentials.
Emacs is a great OS, it's a shame it doesn't have a good text editor
I didn't have any strong feelings about space until this comment sent my sides into orbit. ☠️
With M-x ansi-term you an run other editors inside it. :)
There ist M-x vi-mode though.
Just checking the comments to make sure this 30 year old gag was represented. As you were.
This is brillant.
I've been using emacs since 1978. I'm still learning. Im not a purist, I'll use
other editors when setting up emacs would be too much of a hassle, such as
inside an IDE, or a Linux VM with a life expectancy of only a day.
Ive met people like this guy within the past few years - they're still around,
and I am on nodding terms with RMS.
The main hassle with EMACS is that you still have to know Vi because it’s everywhere.
I did an on site client call once. They were running some ancient version of hpux and didn't even have vi. Fortunately I knew ed (learned accidentally from learning sed).
"Im not a purist" ... pity!
This is absolutely perfect. This is how I got sucked into EMACS. Now I'm stuck for life.
The best life ever:)
When I was attending University of Maryland back in 2014, I discovered Emacs as a part of the C programming course. While everyone else was figuring out how to edit over SFTP with sublime text, i just went full tilt into Emacs. I read basically the entire manual, wrote my own C syntax highlighter, wrote my math homework in Emacs using Latex, and basically became the Emacs guru. I'd feel pretty safe to say i was the most proficient Emacs user on the entire campus. To this day i still win thumb wrestling with my pinky.
Unfortunately, the ending of this video is accurate. You never stop using emacs, you just die. Even if only in spirit.
Shame you never learned how to spell at any point.
Are you the script writer for the video? You sure read like one ;)
>I'd feel pretty safe to say i was the most proficient Emacs user on the entire campus.
you should not feel safe saying this, especially at a decent CS school with grad students..
That's pretty cool. Do you find that the mandatory use of Ring and Pinky fingers, esp stretching across to press CTRL gives you carpel tunnel syndrome? I do that for a few minutes and my hand is in pain and I have large hands too.
use both hands.
Dude, you are so spot on with these characters! Every time I watch one of your videos I swear you are only like 20 percent more extreme than a person I met in real life. You're so funny, keep it up!
Literally, even that two fingers lifted, with a pensive pause before giving 2 reasons for something. It’s literally something I’ve experienced from an eMacs enthusiast in the past
@@misterrpink1 I'm just nervous about when he does a character that is basically me... Not sure what those characteristics are but when I see it I'll be like......DAAAAAAANNNGGGG!
Met? Dude, I AM a lot of these guys.
@@Mojken_yakionigiri congratulations?
I don't remember asking your opinion
“I spent more time customizing my computer than actually using it”
I relate to this, but I in no way find it shameful.
This is hysterical! BTW I’m 65 and I still use emacs. Old habits die hard.
“Emacs reduces anxiety. Emacs cured my autism!”
Another hidden banger on TH-cam
"Yeah, I fought in the vim-emacs wars" this one got me in stitches 😂
yes, me too! ...I was in a cs student back in the '90s,
Must be a youngster.
'vim'.
@@HenkLangeveld I feel attacked. I still call it VI and still start it by typing vi.
@@nasonguy everyone starts it like that rofl
Another vet here. Emacs forever!
I ❤ emacs.
Emacs is like life. There is more to life than efficiently completing tasks. People often get a sense of fulfillment from creatively finding new ways to get things done, or how to do things that we never needed to do in the first place. Our tools then become more than tools, they become media for self-expression and discovery.
I think this video makes this point, although cynically. Emacs, like life, can be something to enjoy for its own sake, not just as means to an end.
Sure, it is geeky to care about finding new ways to use an editor, but then life is for the geeks.
Agree. It's still an amazing tool.
i absolutely love this channel. it perfectly captures all programming idiosyncrasies. love love love it.
"Emacs is powerful than any OS." got me!
"Lex doesn't use Emacs anymore! Where's my death note" ROFL 😂
Best line!!!!!!!
Amazing, really fun vid, congrats. I used Emacs in college and during my very first programming jobs, 20 years ago. I remember dreaming nightmares with it, the text cursor switching from panel to panel, and having pain editing and copy-pasting stuff.
Omg man, this is one of the most brilliant satire sketches I've ever seen. I laughed out loud for real on my office and the humor is about things so obscure it's even hard to understand for most developers I know. Absolutely loved your video, first time I see one of your videos also.
Who says this is satire?
Oh my....I remember an older comp.sci instructor in university that was obsessed with Emacs (and Gnu-Emacs), and would get frustrated when we didn't "understand" that Emacs was more than just an editor --- hahaha.
We would do everything in Emacs and LaTex, including note handouts, exams, and simple posters.
Totally blew his mind when MS Word was force-installed on all faculty computers, and people started sending him .doc files to open & look at.
He passed away a decade ago, but I wonder what he would think of Notepad++, VS Code, IntelliJ and alike.
Poor guy, I wonder how easily one can directly edit whatever weird markup scheme ms word is using
@@parad0xheart I never switched over to .docx. Just didn't buy the gimmick.
I mean, forget Emacs but LaTeX is usually just the straight-up superior choice than Word for any real long form writing (if you've ever heard of formatting just EXPLODING in Word when you make a tiny change in a big document, you know why) - and also for math, which in CompSci is a huge factor. Doing at all complex formulas in Word is less "writing stuff" and more "performing interpretative art about the casual despair lurking just beneath the surface of the human condition"
@@parad0xheartJust doing advanced formatting in Word without using predefined templates gives me ptsd. It's so time intensive, that in retrospect I should've started with LaTeX right from the beginning. Sure it has quite the learning curve, and I forget how to do things easily, but at least it's easier to troubleshoot since it's plaintext and you don't have to find a wrong setting in a jungle of windows.
Or I just could keep it simple, stick to Mark Down in Emacs, I mean in Kate or Obsidian, and ignore high level typesetting and office text editors all together.
@@abdulmasaiev9024this is PROSE....🥹 i think i teared up a little reading this. i'm going to print out your comment and frame it above my desk at the office.
That man is absolutelly right and genius, true patriot of Emacs
Seriously, the key is that emacs isn't an editor, it's a LISP machine DISGUISED as an editor. It's essentially an OS with a huge suite of internal tools.
I had no idea what eMacs is and I I’ve never typed a line of code in my life but I’ve watched this randomly recommended video twice now. It’s so strangely melancholic. I love it.
"Emacs is more powerful than any OS" - well delivered, just like a freudian slip - loving it!
it's not a slip
Indeed not a slip, and also oddly implying Vim could be considered an OS.
Yeah, that's not a slip. I don't think you understand the joke. Emacs is not an OS, but with emacs you don't need any OS. Now, off my grass.
@@princeofcupspoc9073 Not sure who you are talking to here, but FWIW that's why I said *like* a slip. The Emacs = OS joke is ages old (as am I) and even seasoned Emacs users know it well, but still could become carried away by the power of their highly portable toy and slip a sentence like the character. That's how I read it, anyway. I may be reading too much into it though.
@@ovi1326 it's a lisp
"I don't code, I just read papers"
Don't forget demoralizing a few hundred first year CS students on the side. Per year.
Hmm why code in low level languages why not read academic papers about programming in the year 2040?
I don't know how I ended up here, but thank you for this work of art.
This hilarious!! And clearly the guy knows his emacs. Very inspiring
Vim: "My OS is my text editor"
Emacs: "My text editor is my OS"
"my whole life is a text buffer"
- this one hit me hard
I'm literally😂😂🤣
Can I ctrl-zed? Just kidding. I couldn't figure out how to undo in emacs, so I fixed it by running "M-& vim"
I see the inspiration for your latest vid xD good stuff!
the guy who made me use emacs is here good lord!
go back to making videos, not watching them! and vi is the best!
The strong pinky finger bit got me. So esoteric and perfect.
In emacs' defense, it was featured in one of the most realistic movie hacking scenes (Tron: Legacy).
Though, probably half the film's budget was spent configuring it...
Huh, I missed that. Just watched the movie. I'm pretty sure I saw him launch vi though
You're unbelievable! You even got my keyboard in your film. I am a baby boomer, and half of your text could be quoted from my last 36 years with emacs.... "People don't quit emacs, they just die.". Very well observed, thumbs up! Keep up the good work!!!
INTERVIEWER: I think Vim has quite a nice tutorial.
INTERVIEWEE: I don't remember...
INTERVIEWER: Remember what?
INTERVIEWEE: I don't remember asking your opinion.
________________________________________
That has to be the best line in the video 😂
Yeah I agree, I'm dying on it🤣
I liked how the wall troubleshooting tutorial involved using vim to fix it.
I'm definitely stealing that one!
Emacs tutorial is way better
agreed, "I don't remember" is the best comment ever
This is the first video that showed up in my feed. I think it may be the best. The thumbnail caught my attention. Thanks. I use vim, I can't do the emac chords.
Fantastic, in a world of shades of ever darker greys you truly are a shining beacon of (colorized) light!
Its apparently possible to control a Nintendo Switch from Home Assistant. AND there is a plug-in for Emacs to control Home Assistant. So you’re prayers are answered: you can operate that Switch from inside Emacs!
I need a t-shirt that says, "You know? Emacs has a package for that."
So... have you found an Emacs package for ordering a t-shirt which says that?
I've never heard of Emacs, and this channel was pushed to me by TH-cam. But I'm downloading fkng Emacs right now.
Oh my god, everything backwards.. I'll stick with Notepad++
Got news for you. Notepad++ is written in emacs.😮
As an Emacs person (one is not merely a "user", "consumer", or "developer" of Emacs) everything in this video is completely accurate. Also, the time has come for our final showdown with the barbarian Vim hoard.
Concurrency? You don't need concurrency, you just need to be patient and enjoy the little breaks that Emacs gives you
LOL! Thanks for taking me back. That was me from mid eighties to mid-nineties, working exclusively in HP-UX. But I eventually got sick and tired of having *none* of my essential customizations handy when working on another computer, such as the products I helped develop. I decided to bite the bullet and force myself to become reasonably adept at using VI, just for those times. Then I had to teach it, and I learned important and powerful capabilities in VI that makes it almost as nice as emacs. Then "vim" came along, which was available everywhere and even an improvement over VI. The biggest impediment to continuing to use emacs, besides my dependence on some customize Gosling bindings, was having to switch from an HP ITF keyboard to a standard PC keyboard, which put the control key in the wrong place, making emacs use non-ergonomic, to say the least. The disappearance of keyboards with reasonably-positioned control keys eventually killed my emacs use once and for all. This video is so bittersweet.
Yeah, vi is ok if you're just editing something in /etc
That's why our pinkies are so strong.
@@ColinMcCormack or you can pick the sane choice and use nano.
THIS is why I could not get to use the Dvorak keyboard layout throughout my life.
sigh.
@@ColinMcCormacknah, vi / vim is incredibly powerful, when used correctly. I’m not sure if you can find any videos of the vi olympics on TH-cam (I did a quick search and couldn’t find any), but people who know how to use it really well can reformat a file in seconds. At the end of the day, it’s whatever you start and learn with and become proficient with that you’re likely to stick with.
Dude, I had no clue what emacs was before watching this, but now I know like one grain of sand about it, and this video made me binge watch all your other ones in one day. Great stuff!
Did you install Emacs though?
As someone who knows nothing of Emacs beyond what I learned from reading The Unix Hater's Handbook some time in the late 90's, this is some Deep Lore shit right here.
👔merch: posix.store
💀 VIM: th-cam.com/video/9n1dtmzqnCU/w-d-xo.html&lc=UgyQ46uW4hQzRdgPqbN4AaABAg
🚀 Twitter: twitter.com/kailentit
Consider joining George Hotz @ tinygrad.org (non-affiliated)
Neither Swift
Rust is the second coming of C. C++ is the false prophet, the antiC.
c
Omg looking forward to rust! 😂
EMACS SUXX, THIS POST WAS MADE BY VIM GANG
"I can send it to you by ftp" ahaha
That was beautiful LOL
“I’ll uuencode it and upload it to Usenet” would have been better. :)
Had a good chuckle, good stuff!
I like this skit better than the ones before it because in this one you're not just saying the same thing over and over again. You can see that more effort went into this skit and it's paying off!
Skit? I thought it was a historical document.
The amount of joy this video gives me is insane.
This popped into my brain at random times the last days and i had to giggle like an idiot, making people around me turn their heads to see what's so funny.
I had a professor in college that used EMACS like two years ago, he sounded like this lol
I'm a web dev and for me the funniest was the JS Interview but I shared this with a friend I uses Emacs and he was cracking up in laughter.
You are really good ! As a developer, I really like your videos. Very Funny and educative.
The "et al" in his title was such a fantastic idea! You do great work!
That's what got me to click on the video.
"You're a law professor?"
"No, I'm a Zen monk"
Hahaha
So, I was at a CCC event that one time. Some guy asked me who I was and what I was doing, I told him I'm a programmer. He asked me about my latest project, which was some AI playground I was setting up. He was intrigued, asked me what IDE I'm using. Told him "Well, emacs, of course". He was excited and asked me to show him my work. So I typed *nvim aiplayground* and he just cussed and walked away. Great day. I don't use nvim either, by the way.
This whole video is pure gold.
Big fan here, please do Rust, Golang, AWS, Docker, CNCF, and all the fluffs that have become the norm.
P.S. My favorite video by far is the interview with Senior JavaScript Engineer!
He needs to be wearing programming socks for the Rust video
Rust enthusiast would be amazing. Another one I want to see is a Kubernetes (and/or Docker) enthusiast, for very different reasons lol.
Love the interviewer interactions on this one!
Sauciest I've ever heard the interviewer. But then there's nothing that can get an otherwise level-headed person into a rage than attacking their preferred text editor.
@@GSBarlev OS*
I used eMacs, LaTeX and Ghostscript when I wrote my university papers. I was really good at it. It’s many years ago. I don’t know if it is still used. You basically programmed and compiled your documents, lol. Such a pain, but incredibly flexible and consistent. Never any “Word, why is this figure jumping to the next page?!”. You knew exactly what you were going to get because you specified it.
LaTeX is still the standard for typesetting. So good scientists use LaTeX, and evil ones use Microsoft Word. It's just easier to change some configuration of your document to appease to someone else's tastes. But it's harder to get the first draft done.
I never used something but dedicated LaTeX editors for it though.
LaTeX is still very much used, but pdfTex has supplanted ghost script.
I published a paper around 2015 that I wrote entirely in Emacs org-mode and exported as LaTeX.
Figures jumping to the next page is still a problem in LaTeX unless you painstaking control the penalties.
Stuff does jump, well mostly floats away, in LaTeX. Did you mean to say TeX? But indeed, after having written some tens of thousands of pages in LaTeX now, for text-dominated structured information-centric (as for example vs. a photography-centric magazine) page layout published works LaTeX is the way to go, and it is not a close call.
Fantastic! In reality I have talked to "that" emacs guy in Switzerland...hilarious thank you!
Back in the day, people used to say that Emacs stood for "Eight megabytes and constantly swapping". These days people don't understand the joke - back then it was funny.
Escape Meta Alt Control Shift...
it was always “Emacs Makes All Computers Slow”.
this was especially true when the source code to emacs was larger than all the source code to an entire linux distribution (early SLS days)
I love your videos so much. All the characters are amazing, I would watch all of them again and again.
Pure class! I'm still chuckling.
This is the best, most original emacs humor I've ever seen... "quirks and misdemeanors"..
This guy really knows his shit
True veteran of vim/emacs wars 😎
Wrote my first web site in emacs! Tried vi once, didn't inhale
I thought you were producing humorous satiric videos here, poking fun at various programmer preferences and industry trends. Not documentaries.
This is a work of art, I am a neovim user and loved this haha.
Vim is the disease
I've watched this clip at least ten times in the last few days, hilarious!
It never gets boring. Please make a part 2.
♥
"People never quite emacs... they just die at some point" - I love it.
Aaaaand now I have the urge to write a novelty program in Emacs Lisp. :P
Hilarious video!
I actually went and looked up stuff on Emacs and Vim (or VI as I'm told) just to understand the jokes in this better. Great, great vid and I've never programmed in my life.
Absolutely hilarious. Keep it going.
1:39 "Diagnosed with severe hostility towards vim users" - this kills me 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I was waiting this for a long time! That monitor reflects the real power of emacs :))
Only CRTs can render an Emacs buffer as it was meant to be.
@@nimbusco8956 don't forget the emacs mug 😄
@@nimbusco8956 Don't forget the mug! Without the mug we cannot taste the emacs in 90s 😄
emacs almost became self aware at one point
I am an Emacs user but I also use other editors/IDEs. tbh, after you get comfortable with Emacs - it becomes a good friend. But I am agreeing on this video lol. too many people make it ultimate choice like Coke vs Pepsi. Thank you for great video! had a good laugh 😂
Emacs is the greatest text editor of all time.
Emacs is not a text editor, it’s a lifestyle :)
This is so spot on. I've had so many people online tell me I should use emacs... and what I was doing had nothing to do with text editing.
Man, you are an amazing talent. Gold every time.
Now I wish, back when I was 7 and I was told to learn Slackware; I was also told to learn Emacs instead of Vi. Hated Vi, basically got to the point that I memorised enough of it's functionality to compile Nano.
I put up with vi for many years, while the main part of my sysadmin work was on proprietary Unix systems. Once those went extinct and were replaced with Linux, I could now depend on having Emacs available wherever I went, so I switched to that.
@@telleva7890 You stumbled onto a question I had on a completely different video. Someone who must've been at least 10 years younger than me, mentioned he finally tried VIM after avoiding it because of all the Vi memes and he didn't understand the memes any more afterwards.
Which made me wonder, "Wait, does that mean VIM is actually usable?" Or maybe better put, is intuitive now?
I guess what I'm really wondering is, is it still a game of memorising all the keyboard shortcuts? As that is the real reason I hate VI. It is definitely a featured and useful text editor, if you memorise all the keyboard shortcuts. It's also designed to utilise all of the terminal space for the text document. Sacrificing zero lines to UI, as those were limited in the 70s. Thus making it unintuitive. And there was definitely a lot of, "just memorise the shortcuts, trust me it's great", back then; but when all you're doing is random edits of config files, and you're not spending all day in the text editor programming or something, you don't use it frequently enough or even full featured enough to memorise those damn shortcuts. Especially when you came from DOS to Linux in the 90s, and you were used to Microsoft Edit. You didn't mind sacrificing 4 lines to UI, as it made for a better UX. Which is exactly what GNU Nano was born out of, make an M$ Edit clone.
@@nikdog419 Of course you have to learn the keyboard shortcuts - that's all there is to it. But once you learn them, (or at least most of them), it becomes addictive.
Lol that thumbnail made me do a double take. This content is amazing.
I LOVE these videos! and I love emacs!
Very rich colorizing. Good job!
Brilliant. No other words for it. Had a look at Emacs once, and immediately thought of a character like this.
can confirm, I learn a new Emacs every day
OMG I LOVE THIS! I've watched it 5 times and laugh everytime
So many gems in this. Really funny stuff!!!