Hi Dominik, hi everyone, Thank you for org-mode and thanks to all who contribute to this project. I am a newby to org-mode , I am an emacs user for LaTeX, mainly, and I would be happy to use more and more emacs, so org-mode seems very attractive. I imagine that writing a tutorial is a big work and I hope that I will not offend people who have taken this time. But I must say that the org-mode manual and the tutorials that I have tried to read are not enough progressive for beginners and do not take care of difference between interests of people. Example: I am presently mainly interested to see if it is possible to use gnus to write a scientific letter with all conveniences of texlive. Of course I can open a tex file with letter class and send to my colleague a pdf file. But it would be more convenient to write an email and using conversions to html and png images to send to him directly this email. I guess it is possilbe to do it with gnus. But the documentation is esoteric: I hear about links, but how it works concretly with example understanble by a newby ... mystery. It is therefore frustrating and quickly discouraging. So, in my opinion, a good tutorial is divided into precise tasks and speaks like that: "You need to do that? So, follow me , from step to step, I will going to show you how I succeed to do what you want to do, and by imitation, you will also succeed ! " A good tutorial avoids to suppose that the reader is already an expert. In a word, too much tutorial in org-mode lack of pedagogical efforts. Sorry to be speak so frankly, but I hope it will help. Waiting your help with gnus - latex and conversion in html , etc. etc. All the best Jo. 2013/9/28 Carsten Dominik > Hi everyone, > > today I looked at our tutorial page at > > http://orgmode.org/worg/org-tutorials/index.html > > and came away with the feeling that that this page has become > somewhat useless for people who are really new to Org. I think > the page should start with a section of true recommendations > for beginners, a path we tell every new users to take in order to > learn about Org mode. > > Can we have a discussion here on how this path should look like? > When you came to Org-mode as a newby, what were the three resources > that really made an impression on by being accessible and > providing feel and promise for digging deeper? > > - Carsten >