Hey org-folk-- I originally included this in my questions to John and Carsten about the new attach system, but decided it deserved its own thread. Apologies if this seems like too much git-spam. Now that org and git are starting to be used in conjunction by more and more of us, would anyone else find it useful to have a custom link type for linking to git objects? I could imagine that calling org-store-link on a file or directory that is in a git repo could link to the current HEAD version, and we could have access to all of the information from calling git-log on the file (commit, author, date, message). Similarly, we'd want to be able to link to arbitrary objects in the repo's history (tags, particular commits, merge points, etc). I think most of this could be done via git.el that is distributed with git. One cool application of this would be a git post-commit-hook that called remember to create a link to the new commit in the relevant project file. This would be a really neat way to keep a timeline for a particular project's commits right alongside all of the other information stored in org. I can also see it being really useful to link to a particular version of a non-org file within some org notes. That file might change, making it difficult to interpret some notes or making specific line numbers irrelevant, but a link to the exact version being discussed would make such notes future proof. I think I could probably get at least a skeleton of these kinds of functions working myself, but I won't be able to get to it until the winter holidays. If these ideas scratch the itches of another org user who wants to code this up, I promise I'll a) use it b) praise your awesomeness, and c) buy you a beer if we're ever in the same city. Thoughts? Other features that could go into this? Thanks, /au -- Austin Frank http://aufrank.net GPG Public Key (D7398C2F): http://aufrank.net/personal.asc