Just signed up to the event, thank you! And I recently discovered fed.wiki 
— definitely can see the inspiration. Andy is known for his passion for 
tools for thoughts so his notebook is probably a mix of all of these + his 
own ideas.

On Tuesday, April 21, 2020 at 11:44:03 PM UTC+1, Chris Aldrich wrote:
>
> I'm sure it's prior art, but Ward Cunningham, the godfather of wikis, 
> created the Smallest Federated Wiki <http://2011/Smallest+Federated+Wiki> 
> at IndieWebCamp 2011, which looks and acts a lot like Andy's wiki. Here's 
> an example: http://fed.wiki/. If I recall correctly a lot of it was 
> written in node.js and it's available on GitHub for those interested.
>
> Incidentally, for those interested in wiki UI and blue sky ideas, I'm 
> hosting a wiki-related IndieWebCamp session this weekend: 
> https://events.indieweb.org/2020/04/gardens-and-streams-wikis-blogs-and-ui-a-pop-up-indiewebcamp-session-j9bg0pJDBgBD
>  
> Everyone is welcome to join and it should be an interesting group of 
> people.
>
> On Tuesday, April 21, 2020 at 3:33:47 PM UTC-7, Anne-Laure Le Cunff wrote:
>>
>> I just saw it! Looks amazing. Let's talk about it but I want to include 
>> this in my TW static website generator tutorial, much easier to implement 
>> than the way I went about it. Thank you!
>>
>> On Tuesday, April 21, 2020 at 11:20:13 PM UTC+1, David Gifford wrote:
>>>
>>> oh and I just sent you a clunky version I whipped up this afternoon!
>>>
>>> On Tuesday, April 21, 2020 at 5:13:26 PM UTC-5, Anne-Laure Le Cunff 
>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> @David Thanks to a good friend who's very talented, I'm actually making 
>>>> progress <https://mentalnodes.netlify.app/lorem-ipsum.html>!
>>>>
>>>> On Tuesday, April 21, 2020 at 9:37:17 PM UTC+1, David Gifford wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> I do like the transclude tiddler in popup upon hovering over a link. I 
>>>>> know Anne-Laure Le Cunff was trying to replicate that feature.
>>>>>
>>>>> Sliding the story river horizontally is kind of neat and over all 
>>>>> fairly intuitive, but in one aspect is confusing - I clicked on a number 
>>>>> of 
>>>>> links, but then some were no longer open when I slide the scrollbar at 
>>>>> the 
>>>>> bottom. I think the idea is, notes opened from links in a note only open 
>>>>> one at a time. If you click another link from the original note, the 
>>>>> first 
>>>>> note you opened from there will close and the second will replace it. The 
>>>>> rule makes sense, it is just my years working with tiddlywiki that makes 
>>>>> it 
>>>>> confusing to me.
>>>>>
>>>>> I do like the 'clean' feel to it as a reading experience. No sidebar, 
>>>>> just a minimal top bar. Feels like a 'dynamic' html produced by whatever 
>>>>> app he is using.
>>>>>
>>>>> For my money, I would prefer the flexibility of TW. But I do admit it 
>>>>> is nice-looking.
>>>>>
>>>>> On Tuesday, April 21, 2020 at 3:01:42 PM UTC-5, Mohammad wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Sorry to ask this question. Recently I see in twitter and also here 
>>>>>> there is a talk on Andy notes page https://notes.andymatuschak.org/ 
>>>>>> <https://www.google.com/url?q=https%3A%2F%2Fnotes.andymatuschak.org%2F&sa=D&sntz=1&usg=AFQjCNG8lPLN4x-rLjcrRChRflILSqP-yw>
>>>>>> ,
>>>>>> Some people say it is very impressive. As a basic user of Tiddlywiki, 
>>>>>> I think  vanilla TW is better than Andy notes!
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Can anyone simply explain, what it has, TW does not have in 
>>>>>> empty.html (vanilla version)?
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> --Mohammad
>>>>>>
>>>>>

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