of work (e.g. org-mode has 120k lines of elisp). The importance of concurrency
and parallelism in the new language is also stressed.
-### Replacing Shell Scripts?
-
-One of the talks was about trying to automate tasks using Elisp as a replacement
-for shell scripts (Emacs as my Go To Script Language - Howard Abrams). The idea
-is interesting but probably wouldn't entice a Perl hacker to try and use Elisp.
-I have done this myself in the past but the speaker went a bit further in
-building a framework for doing ad-hoc text processing and piping using Emacs.
-The hard reality is that text processing using macros or Elisp is very slow as
-compared to using a Python or Perl script.
-
-### Miscellaneous
+## Miscellaneous
Most of the talks were about how people were using Emacs in their daily life and
about the cool applications they built on top of Emacs.
Just like the Quake-inspired terminals Guake and Yakuake, there's one called
[Equake](https://gitlab.com/emacsomancer/equake) that launches a drop-down eshell.
-You can also use the racket shell called rash, which is crazy powerful. This has
+You can also use the racket shell called Rash, which is crazy powerful. This has
very good integration with StumpWM.
+### Accessibility
+
There was a talk by Parham Doustdar, a blind developer who uses Emacs as his
daily driver. There were some interesting insights on how neglecting
accessibility in applications seriously impacts the productivity of
W3C is doing some work to improve accessibility in browsers, most HTML is
rendered by client-side JavaScript these days which makes life even more
difficult for blind users.
+
+### Replacing Shell Scripts?
+
+One of the talks was about trying to automate tasks using Elisp as a replacement
+for shell scripts (Emacs as my Go To Script Language - Howard Abrams). The idea
+is interesting but probably wouldn't entice a Perl hacker to try and use Elisp.
+I have done this myself in the past but the speaker went a bit further in
+building a framework for doing ad-hoc text processing and piping using Emacs.
+The hard reality is that text processing using macros or Elisp is very slow as
+compared to using a Python or Perl script.
+