

This last part will break with 2 factor, but found oauth2ms to set up the OAuth to work with O365 SMTP. I use isync/mbsync to receive email, goimapnotify to get pushed new email, read/reply/etc with mu4e and org-msg and org-mode, and until recently just plain SMTP to send mail. I have my (work) O365 email forwarded, so I do have normal IMAP access. With moving to 2 factor authentication you need to use OAuth 2 to do anything with it. Totally stable and ready for prime time.įunny, just dealt with the whole O365 authentication just this week. The latter has nice features like double buffering that make Emacs, while not modern feeling, quite presentable.įor such a huge change, the elisp native compilation works extremely nicely with every package I’ve thrown at it. I’m using the Emacs 28.1 test release on Windows and the Emacs-Mac Port on Mac. After trying a ton of web/electron based tools for these purposes, going back to Emacs makes me think of this scene from Star Wars: Ironically, writing a bit of glue to get everything into Emacs offers better integration between email, calendar, todos, and notes, than just using Office 365’s own tools. Power Automate is just about the worst programming environment ever devised, but because UNIX systems like RFC 2822 (email) and maildir are so simple it didn’t take much fiddling at all! I also use Power Automate flows to grab my calendar and store it to Org files, and watch for queued emails and send send them. So I used a couple of Power Automate flows to store incoming emails into a maildir format directory in OneDrive, which I then read from mu4e: Unfortunately I can’t get it to interface properly with Office 365, which has heavily locked down POP/SMTP. More recently I switched my email over to mu4e.
#BEUTIFUL EMACS FOR MAC PDF#
I started with using Org Mode and PDF tools for note taking and reviewing PDFs and task management. Over the past month or two however I’ve moved more and more of my workflow over to Emacs.
#BEUTIFUL EMACS FOR MAC SOFTWARE#
I was an Emacs user back in my software writing days, but I thought I had left it behind when I became a lawyer.
