Tones and all,

I'd love to hear from others if there's any cloud storage that offers as 
much portability as tiddlyspot.

If I'm on a public or institutional computer (like a library kiosk with a 
browser, or a university's lecture-hall computer), it seems dropbox can't 
work, because dropbox requires me to download the file before it can be 
properly loaded in a browser (and these institutional machines are not 
friendly to downloads).

I assume that's equally true of these other cloud solutions like sharepoint 
and AWS, yes? (Like dropbox, they may have one-click ways to "preview" html 
files, but not to actually open them.)

Is there any solution besides tiddlyspot that can work well in such 
situations -- at LEAST for read access on the road, if not for editing -- 
and that doesn't require me to have an Apache server at my disposal?

-Springer

On Wednesday, October 28, 2020 at 8:50:22 PM UTC-4 TW Tones wrote:

> Surya,
>
> Independent from tiddlyspot.
>
> If you have a php apache server you can upload and share tiddlywiki's as 
> simple files. If you want to edit on line you can use tw-receiver.
>
> Other use dropbox, one drive etc... I use sharepoint, some use AWS and 
> there are more.
>
> Regards
> Tones
>
> Regards
> Tones
>
>
> On Wednesday, 28 October 2020 12:27:18 UTC+11, Surya wrote:
>>
>> Hi :-)))))))
>>
>> @TW Tones: I know... But I couldn't reply privately to amreus- that 
>> possibility is grey for me :-(
>> But he found, how he can contact me :-)
>>
>> And, @amreus- it worked :-))))) I got your adress and replied just now.
>> So, I am really really happy for now!!
>>
>> But after that, is there no other possibility for uploading a TW?? I 
>> guess not, otherwise someone had written it here already...
>> Good luck to all!
>> Surya
>>
>> Mark S. schrieb am Dienstag, 27. Oktober 2020 um 17:54:10 UTC+1:
>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Tuesday, October 27, 2020 at 8:02:46 AM UTC-7, Eric Shulman wrote:
>>>>
>>>> On Tuesday, October 27, 2020 at 7:18:47 AM UTC-7, André Carvalho wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> There is, at least, a violation of good-faith and a right of accessing 
>>>>> my data under EU law that I'll exercise if there is no other solution.
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> In keeping with the "I'm not a lawyer but I play one on the Internet" 
>>>> theme...
>>>>
>>>>
>>> Continuing your "not a lawyer" theme, DH is a California company, so 
>>> it's likely EU laws won't apply. Even Prop 24 doesn't seem to provide "data 
>>> guaranteed" rights.
>>>
>>> Having read the Wikipedia page, I'm really hoping this is just a fluke. 
>>> They went to bat to fight for their customer's privacy rights, moving them 
>>> into the "good guy" category. Of course, maybe they wrote the wikipedia 
>>> page ;-)
>>>
>>>

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