That sounds good, but an important question is: How can I search across different lists? There's already two lists: emacs-devel@gnu.org and bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org. There's also emacs-tagnent@gnu.org but rarely used. Searching answer for a existing question in maillist will be very inefficient and may result in duplicated discussion. Paul W. Rankin via Emacs development discussions. writes: > During EmacsConf 2020 it became clear that there is a sizeable number of people > who use Emacs outside of a programming context, specifically in the Humanities, > and there was support for a mailing list dedicated to this group. > > The benefit of such a list would allow those using Emacs within the Humanities a > way to become more directly involved with the project without committing to the > emacs-devel or help-gnu-emacs lists, which are much more programming-focused > than the average Humanities user may be comfortable with or interested in. > > I would be happy to administer this list, and could surely bring on others of a > similar background and interest. (I'm a member of the Savannah Emacs group.) > > Proposed address: > emacs-humanities@gnu.org > > Proposed description: > This list is for general discussion and help for using GNU Emacs in the > Humanities. Participants are assumed to be non-programmers and respected > as such. -- Retrieve my PGP public key: https://meta.sr.ht/~citreu.pgp Zihao