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Hi Jeremy & thanks for the warm words. I can't exactly remember, when I came across TW but it must have been around the time when TW5 just came out. I can remember that I tried to use it in a project at work, where I had to put together a big questionnaire. I also used it for personal documentation stuff while i was working on a project. When using TW extensively I noticed a few limitations which I worked around by implementing some extensions for TW and so landed up in contributing a bit. Unfortunately, for TW it is, not for me personally, my project and job completely changed in August 2019 and there was no real use anymore for TW in my work. I Just set up one small TW for noting down what to do if my colleague is on vacation and I have to take over a few of his tasks, but these are all not required anymore. During Corona I couldn't follow one of my hobbies anymore: Dancing. Our dance classes were cancelled for a few months. But thanks to the owner of the dance school we got a lot of small video clips showing all the figures we learn in his classes. So the final project I did with TW5 was, to put together for my classmates a TW which lists all the clips related to our program, which I have on tiddlyhost. But unfortunately it wasn't used very much. I have very fond memories of the time we had our Google Hangouts discussing some development with Jeremy and Mario. Unfortunately I think I won't be able to contribute any more because there are too many years of development I didn't follow. I still can remember that I always wanted to change the scripting part of TW because I find it to inconsistent, but I never had good alternatives. I think I thought about implementing something like LISP (https://lisp-lang.org) because I felt the scripting already has some resemblance to that, but I never found the time to elaborate on that. So Happy 20th anniversary to TW and congratulations to Jeremy and all the developers for this great program. BTW. @Jermolene You remember my little son when we once met in London? He is the same age as TW, becoming 20 this year. |
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How are you doing?Still doing well, and using TiddlyWiki regularly, though mostly for small personal projects. Has working on TiddlyWiki influenced your own way of working?I definitely learned a lot working on tiddlywiki, especially since it was my first real introduction to doing javascript development. However, my own professional work has moved in another direction, and I'm mostly doing sysadmin work now that doesn't overlap with Tiddlywiki very much. Is TiddlyWiki reaching the potential you saw when you were contributing?I do feel like TW is pretty amazing still, and regularly pull it out for different tasks. It continues to be one of the simplest to setup wikis, and yet I feel like it also provides incredible flexibility that outshines most other similar tools. It's still fantastic. Do you have any favourite memories of working on TiddlyWiki?I still fondly remember how many of us started to use TW for tabletop gaming around the same time. It was a lot of fun, collaboratively writing plugins to roll dice, manage combats, and track all the things in the imaginary game world. Seeing what other people wrote and being inspired to try using it as part of my game. |
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TiddlyWiki had an immeasurable, enduring influence not just on my career, such as it is, but also on my values: To this day, I regularly find myself referring back to fundamental concepts TiddlyWiki instilled in me - many of which are often forgotten or ignored elsewhere. Having this background thus helps me keep my bearings working in this industry, whether it's worshipping at the altar of technical complexity or even just remembering humans exist in the world of technology. By TiddlyWiki, I mean people. It was an immense privilege interacting with and learning from this community and the group Jeremy built around it. It also helps reminding myself that this privilege was afforded to me by sheer happenstance; I hope to be paying it forward. Every so often I get a little sad that I haven't managed to keep on top of the community's impressive development. However, I guess that's the natural order of things; passing the baton to the next generation and all. Jeremy also taught me there's value in being part of the diaspora. Even so, I still have and use a number of TiddlyWiki documents (classic, mostly, though not exclusively) - and trust they will remain operational longer than most files on my disk. |
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How are you doing?I am doing well thank you. Thank you for reaching out to me, to us 😊 Has working on TiddlyWiki influenced your own way of working?I started working on TiddlyWiki when i found this great Timeline plugin that had been discontinued and needed just a little work to be compatible with newer versions of TW5. I continued working on other plugins and then even offered a tiny little bit change to the core to match my needs. I am mostly interested and focused on bringing more time management tools and features to TW5. I have been thinking on contributing again in the past few years, and share some of the tweaks that are sitting on my system waiting to be shared with the community. I have been using TW in a professional context for almost 10 years now, and it helped a great deal with task management and as a personal knowledge base. TW also indirectly introduced me to Node.js and i got to learn to use that too in a broader manner. Is TiddlyWiki reaching the potential you saw when you were contributing?I found out about TW after v5 was released. I was looking for a self contained HTML file that could work as a journal, to keep track of what I was working on when and for how long, keeping detailed information about every day and even every task, as well as summarizing it on larger scales such as months and years, and being able to filter and sort the data. So in a way, it was up to the potential i was looking for even as it was when i found about it. Now i see TW as a mature tool, fit for professional use, and yet I have ideas for new plugins to add some features i would like to see there. As soon as I find the time to work on them, I will be sure to share these with the community. Do you have any favourite memories of working on TiddlyWiki?I enjoyed working with some other members of the community, and in particular @felixhayashi as we adapted our respective plugins to improve performance and reduce footprint as we used to have several backend JS libraries in common (some were split since, and some were deprecated) |
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I’m fine, thanks. After improving TiddlyWiki for some years, I try to improve the "real world" now. I am active in local politics, ordered a heat pump and will build a photovoltaic installation on the flat roof of our house in March or April. There is time for physical activities and some culture now and then, our children have become adults and in my job I inform people about saving energy and greenhouse gases. By the way: My successful application and CV was a TiddlyWiki mainly.
Yes (see above), and from the other side my work influenced my way of using TiddlyWiki. When I joined the TiddlyWiki community (Google Groups, March 2015) I had been looking for a note taking tool with superpowers. Steve Schneider and the SUNYpoly MOOC showed me what was possible then. For my job in sales and consulting at that time, ToDoNow was very valuable (https://tid.li/tw5/tdn.html) – I had lots of tasks and managing deadlines and priorities was important. It was also very time consuming to build it, so I am not sure it was a time saver all in all ... Nowadays I rely on taking notes for different activities in different wikis, all pimped with my own collection of plugins (https://tid.li/tw5/plugins.html). ToDo lists are not important any more. Working on TiddlyWiki stuff helped me to stay in touch with HTML and CSS and motivated me to learn SVG. GitHub on the other hand is something I did not take the time to learn properly, so I needed help from others and got frustrated about abandoned pull requests like the cats I tried to donate to the project (#2981).
When I started contributing I felt like a dwarf standing on the shoulders of giants only capable to throw in a thought here and there to keep the discussion alive. There were only few active members and some of them disappeared, so I was a bit afraid that TiddlyWiki would lose too much momentum. — That has changed completely. When I became a listener (I still follow some threads on https://talk.tiddlywiki.org/) I was sure that the community was healthier than I had ever seen it before and it grew and flourished even more since then. Congratulations to all of you, especially to @Jermolene for building and being such a great and helpful and inspiring team!
My first favourite "hack" was TextStretch. I did not expect it to survive for a long time, so I am really pleased to see it still works in my newest wikis, even if I never use it. https://tid.li/tw5/test/TWnews.html#TextStretch — Recently I was reminded of this when I stumbled upon http://www.kevinsteele.com/smackerel/black_white_00.html that has a similar effect. One of the best features of TiddlyWiki is live hacking in an edit-text widget. This allows us to create tiny apps like my SVG Editor (https://tid.li/tw5/apps/svg.html) or to tune CSS tiddlers very efficiently. Just type and see the result immediately. Fantastic! |
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I only briefly used TiddlyWiki for some project planning many years ago (and shelved the project), and wrote some documentation after figuring out how to do something relatively advanced. So I don't have the same perspective as other contributors here, but I do enjoy responding to these sorts of prompts. More recently, I've been working (mentally) on a design for a system for collaborative writing and editing - something like a Markdown-based wiki, but with taggable, explicitly-connected "nodes" rather than pages related only by HTML hyperlinking. I think I can say TiddlyWiki inspired the idea that - with a web app - I could display multiple nodes simultaneously rather than attaching the page "wrapper" boilerplate to everything, and that I could have an option to organize the node divs into a "storyline" view as well as just a bunch of nodes connected with lines (like a stereotypical conspiracy theorist's bulletin board). (I probably won't be working on this project any time for a while if ever; but I am planning to publish a more detailed design fairly soon.) |
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Thank you Jeremy for the prompt! Many thanks as well to past and present developers, and to each active member of the community. I have been contributing to the fr-FR translation since TW5 started, about 10 years ago, and my company sponsored the development of the quite ambitious TWPUB, although on both fronts, I haven't been able to devote any serious time for several months. I also fancy that I may one day contribute two TW5 "books" back to the community: one about serving TW5 documents from your pocket —your mobile phone, that is— and another about building user interfaces for maintaining and querying smallish databases within TW5. Unfortunately, retirement is still a few years ahead! I believe my fondest memories about working with TiddlyWiki were the few meetings we had with @Jermolene and @jdjdjdjdjdjd, aka JD, around an early version of TWPUB, which my company is still using 5 years later. For many reasons, having the opportunity to collaborate with these two outstanding people together over 8 time zones on a project of mine was very striking. Eventhough I didn't develop anything recently, I use TiddlyWiki every single day, whether to maintain our knowledge bases at work, or to add some notes to my personal wikis, or to test in a sandbox any wikitext construct that comes to mind out, of curiosity. All these wikis are served either by the NodeJS mode, or via WebDav thanks to the recent work of @saqimtiaz. My best achievement so far as a TiddlyWiki power user has been to set up a wiki server on my wife's phone 5 years ago, which she uses anytime to write down and categorise her thoughts about exhibitions, readings, or movies. Several hundred tiddlers later, she fully owns it, and never felt the need for one of those dedicated apps that may disappear any day ;-) In addition to witnessing every day the power of individual and collective intelligence, one of the great thing about Open Source efforts such as TiddlyWiki is that the solutions to a problem are often more ambitious and visionary than the time-constrained ad hoc solutions we typically see in industry. For example, the MultiWikiServer plugin recently announced by Jeremy renewed my interest for TW once again as it promises to bring in new powerful features without altering the product nor making it more complex to use. Since TiddlyWiki always seems to push the boundaries of expectations, it does influence my thoughts about what makes the Web truly useful nowadays: my fantasy about TW infinite possibilities is what drives my desire of (net)working differently. For instance, I was frustrated at work by the fact that the main ebook format was EPUB, no more than a static collection of HTML pages. For 20 years, I had instead wanted fully interactive web books and it seemed obvious that TiddlyWiki was the only format that could possibly fulfill this role. This lead me to sponsor the development of an EPUB ehancer based on TiddlyWiki, aka TWPUB. Once it is complete, il will allow us to automatically convert the EPUBs that our publishing customers entrust to us into true read-write, interactive and multimedia web books that final customers can enjoy as they enjoy rich websites today. |
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Thank you @Jermolene for thinking of us. :) Personally, it is always a great pleasure to use and develop TiddlyWiki, but I like the community built around it even more: lots of smart, broad-minded people who solve their own tasks in incredibly diverse ways and this gives inspiration and encouragement to others. Whatever direction my note-taking habit or even my programming career takes, I will always think of the TiddlyWiki era with gratitude and happiness.
Thank you, luckily my life is going well. My relationship didn't turn out the way I wanted, but I'm very happy that my ex-partner and I found each other, because I think we raised each other to a higher level. My professional life is also moving in the right direction, I am finally a full-fledged devops / programmer in a place where I can learn a lot and where I can ask my questions (before that I was the only developer at a small company, which has its own beauty, but the there were many obstacles to professional development).
I think the answer is yes, because in addition to TiddlyWiki's programming solutions, I was also influenced by its philosophy: all data should be as minimal and general as possible, and special solutions should only be used in very justified cases. When I get a task in which I have to structure data, I try to use the solutions I learned in TiddlyWiki to figure out how I would organize them if the data were tiddlers.
Definitely yes. I remember the time when I was developing the https://bimlas.github.io/demo/tw5/property-comparison.html solution and that made me aware of the true nature of TiddlyWiki: it is a framework for objects. In fact, each tiddler is an object that has some exceptionally handled properties (title, text, tags), but it can easily handle a music collection, family tree, schedule, anything in which objects have properties and a relationship between them needs to be represented. Filters, macros and widgets are so well abstracted that they can be used for everything due to their generality. I really like that TiddlyWiki is so flexible and that note management is really just one example of how it can be used, but it's best used as a framework. I would add that wiki syntax is not always easy to work with, but it is a necessary part of flexibility. :)
One of these is the above-mentioned relevation, but in reality there is no such specific moment. I like when we come up with solutions together with the community, but I also find joy when I experience the sublime moment of reaching a solution alone. I wish you much success and happiness in your personal life as well, and thank you for giving the community the energy, knowledge and wisdom you have invested in TiddlyWiki! This thanks goes to all contributors as well! 👏 |
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Hello there! BTW I finally made Tiddloid 2.5.0 last week (after an absence of a year (:зゝ∠)) |
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A big thank you for the responses, which I have very much enjoyed and much appreciate. It is great to hear from everyone. @Telumire – I'm glad to hear that things are improving, and I hope your upward trajectory continues apace. Very pleased to hear that TiddlyWiki is still part of your life. @grayeul - delighted to hear you're still enjoying TiddlyWiki, and I hope you'll continue. Absolutely no problem about your contributions not materialising, it was still a useful learning experience for me. @Skeeve - I hope your son is thriving, I remember meeting you both very well. Your contributions definitely helped stretch the core, and are still much appreciated. @sukima - thanks for your thoughtful reflections, which remind me how much I enjoyed your perspective. I'm glad you are still on the same journey. @mklauber - great to hear from you. You made a big impact very swiftly, I think really helping to coalesce a community that was latent and inchoate. I still feel an enormous kinship for the rpg mindset and consider it a mark of honour to have made an impact in that space. @FND - thank you – as you know, I admire your writing enormously, and enjoyed your recent post about browser file system access. It is very gratifying that you credit TiddlyWiki, and I much appreciate it. @kixam – thank you for the thoughtful comments, I like the idea that TiddlyWiki's most important and useful characteristics have been there from the beginning. @telmiger - great to hear of your journey, and I admire the environmental work that you are doing tremendously. I'll have a look at #2981 again. @zahlman - that sounds interesting. Maybe TiddlyMap could help you prototype your ideas? @xcazin - thank you, great to hear your perspective. I also enjoyed working with @jdjdjdjdjd. The TWPub work was very productive from my point of view, and will influence the core for some time to come as we integrate the navigation improvements to the core. I am also delighted that we got the basic EPUB-to-tiddlers conversion going so well, it makes TWPub useful for a wide audience. @bimlas - thank you for the kind words and the interesting reflections, the data model of TiddlyWiki is something we take for granted but its success at modelling a wide range of data deserves wider analysis. @donmor - good to see you back. I know a lot of people depend on Tiddloid, so it's great to have an update. By the way, this response is not intended to close this discussion. I'd love to hear from more contributors, and continue this discussion. |
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How are you doing? Has working on TiddlyWiki influenced your own way of working? Is TiddlyWiki reaching the potential you saw when you were contributing? Do you have any favourite memories of working on TiddlyWiki? In conclusion long live TiddlyWiki and its community! |
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How are you doing?
The current 'useful' project is working on a project to pitch to the US department of agriculture for helping handle avian flu outbreaks. Has working on TiddlyWiki influenced your own way of working? Is TiddlyWiki reaching the potential you saw when you were contributing? Do you have any favourite memories of working on TiddlyWiki? Edit: Writing the simple interactive fiction engine in tiddlywiki was also a lot of fun. |
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I don't have much to add to this other than a quick thank you to @Jermolene for Tiddlywiki - I use it daily, and a short answer to this question:
Yes, Tiddlywiki had influenced how i work - and the work i have wanted to do influenced my (very minor) contributions to the project. At a company I used to work for I kept notes in the original tiddlwiki for many years, someone else in that company had setup a nice little .hta webpage as a quick way of deploying simple tools to non programmers. Tiddlywiki 5 came out just after i left that company, and around that time I had the lightbulb moment of combining these two resulting in my https://github.com/welford/twexe plugin. Being able to write batch/cmd scripts directly in tiddlywiki then run those script from buttons embedded in other tiddlers that themselves document how they should be used is, in my opinion, a very powerful concept. I now have a lot of handy batch files and documentations (including a button that will export tagged tiddlers to a blog) all bundled up in one 10 year old wiki.
Personally yes - though I think some aspects of it could be simpler. I always find myself going back to the docs when i need to write new filters, something about the syntax doesn't stick with me. |
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A chance conversation with @bimlas here on GitHub a few days ago prompted me to wonder if we can bring about a virtual reunion of past TiddlyWiki contributors.
Over the years, many people have become highly valued and trusted contributors to the core. For different personal and professional reasons, inevitably sometimes people move on to other things. (Occasionally, people come back after an extended absence with renewed enthusiasm (and skills) to bring to bear on TiddlyWiki).
This year marks the 20th anniversary of the first release of TiddlyWiki which seems like a great opportunity to invite these past contributors to share some of their recollections.
In a comment below I'll tag people who have made contributions to the core in the past, but haven't been active here or in the forums in the last twelve months. Do please reply here if I've missed anyone.
If you are one of these contributors, I first of all would like to say a heartfelt thank you. From my own perspective, these twenty years have been like working with a sparkling, intertwined river of talented people. You have devoted your time and attention to something that I care about immensely, and I couldn't be more privileged than to have fallen into this position.
There are a few questions that might be fun if you felt like sharing.
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