Thanks for the feedback,

I think I will take this a bit slower, and build a blogging platform with 
the features I would like in a blog, keeping it inside tiddlywiki, and 
publish one with content in time. My key approach is to publish major 
releases, discussions and references to active forum activity and tips and 
tricks, many drawn from or inspired by the forums. I would acknowledge only 
by names given in the forum. Using tiddlywiki allows for direct examples, 
perhaps even for people to try things that were discussed, or copy text.

Anyway, in someways this thread has its answer, but regardless of if I use 
tiddlywiki comments, discord or DEV, *Feel free to comment on what you 
think is essential components of a blog.*

FYI: I recently made simple blog macro to list blog entries inside a given 
tiddler and discovered the joy of what I call *Blog to Self*, its a private 
blog for posting notes like a diary about things of concern, working notes 
or ideas I can harvest later. I will design one that stores posts according 
to the user name, so at some time in the future others may be 
imported/exported between wikis for collaboration.

Discus is a commenting thread we have a macro for and integrates with 
wordpress so perhaps I will revisit that.

Regards
Tony



On Wednesday, 6 May 2020 13:23:22 UTC+10, TonyM wrote:
>
> Folks,
>
>
> Although it is a real challenge at the moment, I try and work through 
> every post in the forum and keep track of tiddlywiki developments. I 
> collect plugins, and methods and macros and methods and are always looking 
> at tiddlywiki as a platform and building the resources for rapid software 
> development. In some ways this is why you see me contributing to questions 
> and problems by not independently publishing solutions, although I expect 
> this to change. 
>
>
> With this in mind and the rebirth of TiddlyWiki hangouts coming I thought 
> perhaps this is the time to start a Blog, one that follows the activities 
> in the forum and matters arising from the community, git hub and related 
> projects.
>
>
> I thought of a blog of my own based on tiddlywiki, which can also 
> demonstrate the things we are talking about and share code and ideas. I am 
> sure I could generate a lot of useful content but it could also eat my time 
> up when in fact I should be seeking an income. 
>
>
> *So I had this thought what about a blog with multiple contributors?*
>
>
> There are three approaches that come to mind
>
>
>    - I build a wordPress blog and invite authors who I give an account 
>    and we post that way
>       - Of course we would look at linking to tiddlywiki's and embedding 
>       them if possible
>    - I build a TiddlyWiki blog and accept content by email or forum post
>    - I build a Tiddlywiki blog editor edition, people prepare posts on 
>    and send me their completed tiddlers
>       - I then import them to a public tiddlywiki blog, adding static 
>       pages for seo.
>    
> *What are your thoughts?*
>
>
> In the long run I have being keen to build a community site where we can 
> collect and post on all aspects of tiddlywiki and my research suggests a 
> sophisticated implementation of wordpress with knowledge of all aspects of 
> tiddlywiki and with tiddlywiki integration, basicaly custom posts for 
> macros, plugins, themes, libraries.... But I am reluctant to do this unless 
> I build a team to do this.
>
> Regards
> Tony
>
>

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