Bastien writes: > | Key | Command | Proposal | Status | > |-------+-----------------------------------+------------------+--------| > | C-c # | Checkboxes | C-c x | Free | > | C-c ~ | Cooperation | C-c C-~ | Free | > | C-c , | Priorities | C-c C-, | Free | > | C-c ? | Editing and debugging formulas | C-c C-? | Free | > | C-c ! | Creating timestamps | C-c C-! | Free | I tried C-c C-! in my environment, and it fails, no noticing the C-! (which involves shift) keypress (with ^H k; I get it that this is proposed). I have C-1 bound in my window manager to switch desktops, since that binding doesn't take away the ability to generate any ASCII character. I'm running "emacs -nw" under tmux on one machine (netbsd), connected via ssh from a mac using Terminal. While one can argue that various emulations are broken, org should be fully usable with a 7-bit terminal connection, and non-kludgy with an 8-bit connection. In general, I find that emacs works fine with that, although one has to prefix with ESC instead of the meta key. I've always been bothered by keybindings like C-S-left, which while useful, cause there to be no available keystroke sequence to perform the function. I find this surprising; I'd expect within emacs/org culture there to be more people using terminal-mode emacs.