I have a separate work wiki, which wasn't much of a question because I 
don't want to have company data mixed in with my personal stuff. Those two 
are 95% of my TiddlyWiki usage at the moment, though I have several other 
documentation and journal projects I'm considering bringing over at some 
point. I haven't decided whether those would get commingled or not.

On Wednesday, April 21, 2021 at 4:03:33 PM UTC-5 si wrote:

> Thanks for this Soren, really interesting. This is slightly off topic but 
> I'm curious, do you use TiddlyWiki for anything other than Zettelkasten? If 
> so why did you decide to use separate wikis over one super-notebook?
>
> On Thursday, 15 April 2021 at 04:15:49 UTC+1 Soren Bjornstad wrote:
>
>> For those who have been interested in my public Zettelkasten wiki 
>> <https://zettelkasten.sorenbjornstad.com> in the past (or might be 
>> interested in it now), I've just put up an extensive discussion of 
>> Zettelkasten and how I've implemented it in my TiddlyWiki on my YouTube 
>> channel:
>>
>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GjpjE5pMZMI
>>
>> Here are the segments if you're curious:
>>
>> *About Zettelkasten:*
>> 0:00 Welcome and introduction
>> 1:00 Public and private versions of my Zettelkasten
>> 2:08 What is a Zettelkasten?
>> 4:16 What idea tiddlers look like and how we navigate through them
>> 6:28 Implementation evolves with the content
>>
>> *Organizing my Zettelkasten and relating ideas:*
>> 7:06 Why I use CamelCase names
>> 8:12 Expressing relationships by linking
>> 9:40 Expressing memberships by tagging
>> 10:07 Tags serve in many roles – topics/indexes, publicity level, lists, 
>> types, pseudo-types, and maintenance
>> 15:42 Index tiddlers provide overviews of a topic area
>> 17:33 Transclusion can combine with the ‘description’ field to create 
>> overviews
>> 18:42 Why I don’t use tags for all overviews
>> 19:28 Stretchtext creates interactive, expandable overviews
>> 20:42 Subtiddlers aggregate tightly coupled content
>> 23:58 Bibliographies aggregate related sources
>> 25:38 The Write tab highlights fruitful areas for further work (stubs, 
>> missing, needing attention, needing excision, to-dos, open questions)
>> 29:58 The Reference Explorer shows related tiddlers (backlinks and 
>> forward links) in a concise table
>> 34:48 Graph theory and Zettelkästen; link graph
>> 37:11 Types of tiddlers; why I include non-idea tiddlers, unlike classic 
>> Zettelkasten
>>
>> *Plugins and custom TiddlyWiki logic:*
>> 41:04 Interesting TiddlyWiki plugins I use
>> 47:17 Publishing only part of a TiddlyWiki (public/private switch): 
>> Marking tiddlers
>> 49:05 Public/private: The PrivateChunk
>> 51:28 Public/private: The build process (shell script)
>> 54:18 Custom copy-title and permalink buttons
>> 55:38 GIS (mapping) support for places
>> 57:55 The missing-tiddler helper
>> 58:36 Quick reading-list import by pasting a URL
>> 59:30 Reading inbox
>> 1:00:15 Simple Analytics and raw markup snippets
>> 1:01:05 Sorting tags by color and putting them in columns
>>
>> *Philosophy:*
>> 1:03:01 Just get started and then continuously improve
>> 1:05:20 The Three-Links Heuristic for determining whether ideas are 
>> effectively linked together
>> 1:07:02 A Zettelkasten never walks backwards: consistency doesn’t matter 
>> that much
>> 1:08:56 Why I default to open and publish my Zettelkasten
>> 1:11:25 Polyspecialize your Zettelkasten, include variety
>> 1:13:34 Prioritize; you won’t have time to write about everything
>> 1:14:55 Using the flexibility and user-programmability of TiddlyWiki to 
>> your advantage
>>
>>

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