It's a bit of needle to thread, but checkout Github web pages. Github 
allows you to set up a repository where it will serve up your file, or to 
designate a branch of a repository from which it will serve up your file.

Once you have it set up, you can load your page like a web page from 
github, and then save back to github. So the main thing you need is an 
always-on connection. Also, you will probably need some way of transferring 
to yourself the token (not password) that you will want when saving from 
your work computer. Make your tiddlywiki encrypted, and it should be 
reasonably private.

So, assuming you consistently save back to GH, you will just go to work and 
load the page on GH like any other web page, enter your password, and have 
the same file you've been working on. Back at home, repeat.




On Wednesday, March 31, 2021 at 7:11:32 AM UTC-7 [email protected] wrote:

> I want to create a wiki that I can use from work and at home. Because it 
> will have work stuff on, it needs to be stored somewhere private.
>
> I don't want to use Dropbox because it's not technically approved by my 
> employer for work use. And I don't want to use Google Drive because I have 
> a different Google account for work, so don't want to have to switch 
> accounts.
>
> I thought a private GitHub repo would be the answer, but I can't figure 
> out how that works across multiple machines - do I check out the repo on 
> each machine and work on the local file, pulling the latest version at the 
> start of each day?
>
> What is the current best method for a private, secure page I can use on 
> multiple machines?
>

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