You would go to the site, the landing page is a wiki, on that wiki you can 
login or create an account. Once you do that you can use it like Bob, so 
you create wikis from within the wiki itself. So setup would be simpler 
than tiddlyspot because you can just make a wiki on the site without having 
to upload from anywhere.

Community governance would cover rules for use, if quotas exist, who has 
administrator access, and how server costs are handled. The specifics of 
how the governance is handled would need to be worked out. Something like 
voting by people who have wikis, or people who are active making up a 
committee to make decisions, or something like that. Governance doesn't 
need to be done by people who are necessarily technically proficient.

I should have the demo working soon and the use part may be more clear.

On Tuesday, December 22, 2020 at 9:50:54 PM UTC+1 Mat wrote:

> Jed, this is certainly interesting.
>
> Regarding
>
> >I am not interested in hosting and running this myself, it would be a 
> > community with community governance supported by donations. 
> > [...] maintenance and operation must be a group effort 
>
> What does this practially mean? By "community governance" I'm guessing you 
> mean a few individuals who are proficient with "ocean droplets, Linux, json 
> web tokens... etc, etc", right?, who set up servers and that other less 
> technical people can then put wikis on, right?
>
> Would a "set up" (for lack of better word) provide a front that is as 
> simple as the TiddlySpot front face? Because one biggie with TiddlySpot was 
> the super ease with which users could put up a new wiki.
>
> Thank you!
>
> <:-)
>

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