| ▲ | noufalibrahim 8 hours ago | |
I generally agree. I look at Emacs like a lisp interpreter with text editing primitives on which someone has built a decent editor. There was a "community" about a decade or two ago. On Freenode IRC, there were regulars who hung around in #emacs and it was quite nice. There were no corporate sponsors or random startups trying to hire from there so it was genuinely just a bunch of people who enjoyed using Emacs and were chatting about it. It's a part of the reason I got really hooked into it. I still use Org heavily for meeting minutes etc. | ||
| ▲ | michaelanckaert 8 hours ago | parent [-] | |
There is still a "community" on platforms such as Mastodon, reddit, various repo's. But I don't think there is a single community that can be pointed to as "The Emacs community". This would also be "wrong" from a Libre Software point of view. | ||