PMario,

I really like the idea of creating our own "community" within TiddlyWiki, 
because it's a fact that many pull requests get stuck because simply Jeremy 
doesn't have enough time (I'm not saying this as a hurt, but as a fact).

On the other hand, over time, I realized that a lot of things Jeremy didn’t 
fuse into the core because he somehow foresaw that the pull request would 
only ruin the core, or that it wouldn’t add enough elementary feature to 
Tiddly. I had a pull request that I sacredly thought was the place in the 
core, but Jeremy didn’t fuse it and I only saw over time that he was right.

"Community projects within a project" are usually remind me of Vim vs 
NeoVim, where the original Vim develops slowly but is very stable, while 
community driven NeoVim has more and more features but no longer runs on so 
many platforms and is a bit unstable in sometimes.

I support the idea, only these thoughts came to mind.

Personally, I love GitLab because it’s really convenient to be able to 
perform automatic generation without third party software (Travis CI for 
example), but few people have a GitLab account compared to GitHub. It is 
also true that you can log in with a GitHub, Google or Twitter account, so 
even non-developer users can easily contribute without explicit 
registration.

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