Sacha: Do you know about Artist mode?
Carsten: I have tried it. It's extremely cool. I actually started writing extensions to artist mode to make it a bit… See, I have these ideas when I sit in the colloquium in our institute as a guy is discussing something. I'm taking notes. Then I would like to make… He has a beautiful image. I just would like to make a drawing with a few lines.
I've tried to use Artist mode for this but I couldn't get it fast enough so that it would actually be feasible to do this.
Sacha: Yes. It actually surprisingly works well with a tablet PC.I have a screen that swivels around and becomes a tablet. So when you're drawing on the screen, that actually draws in Artist mode]]Artist mode as well.
Carsten: Oh, so maybe I should throw away my iPad and get an Android. What are you using then?
Sacha: No, no. I have a tablet PC. So it's a Lenovo X220. It's a proper computer and I can run Emacs on it. It's heavy.
Carsten: That's like as if you would sort of take your mouse in order to draw in Artist mode and just follow these lines?
Sacha: But you're drawing on the screen, so it is more convenient. I came across that because I was giving a talk on Emacs to the local Linux users group. Naturally, we got derailed by people joking about, “Oh, can you do this?” It was like, “Yes, there's a mode for that. Let's give it a try.”
Carsten: There's always a mode for this.
Sacha: And I was surprised it worked.
Carsten: Yes. That is great. Even xkcd has realized that Emacs has it for everything. I think one or two xkcd jokes are about Emacs, I remember.
Sacha: Yes. There was the butterfly one which actually made its way into Emacs as a command. Then there was the one that you'd linked to recently, with the workflow.