I'd like to echo Jeremy's thanks!  I found it to be a fun and
informative evening...  Some pictures from the evening are posted
here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/mattlucht/sets/72157623790683699/

...Some video's will follow shortly!

Details for TiddlyChat #2 are up at:
http://upcoming.yahoo.com/event/5742946/gb/London/TiddlyChat-2-an-open-projector-evening/Osmosoft-Towers-Room-404/?ps=5

Looking forward to meeting people again on May 18th, and hopefully
some more new faces!

Thanks,

Matt


On Apr 23, 10:08 am, Jeremy Ruston <[email protected]> wrote:
> A big thank you from me to everyone who came along: Alex, Mark,
> Richard, William, Dickon, Peter, Miles, Chris and Osmosoft. It was a
> diverse group, whose interests in TiddlyWiki come from many different
> directions. There was much in common in terms of the techniques people
> were using, and interestingly, there were some common threads in the
> goals and vision.
>
> It was engrossing to drill down into some of the things people are
> doing with TiddlyWiki, and talk through some of our ambitions for the
> future. Richard's 16MB TiddlyWiki was a particular highpoint, as was
> Dickon talking about the rollout of TiddlyManuals to ordinary users.
>
> We're planning to hold these events regularly, with the next one on
> May 18th, and we'd love to see some more people. If you're interested
> in the TiddlyVerse, and able to get to London for an evening, mark the
> date in your diary.
>
> Matt Lucht will post some videos and photos of the event shortly,
>
> Cheers
>
> Jeremy
>
>
>
> On Thu, Apr 22, 2010 at 5:37 PM, Alex Hough <[email protected]> wrote:
> > First I'd like to thank the Osmosoft people for a very enjoyable day
> > yesterday at the TiddlyChat event.
>
> > It was interesting to meet other non-osmo TiddlyUsers in the flesh
> > too.  Unfortunately I was not astute enough to make notes of all the
> > names, I thought I'd start a thread, hopefully some gaps might get
> > filled in.
>
> > 'Dark-matter' is the term Paul and Jeremy seem to use for stuff which
> > is out there that you don't know exists, and the first presenter would
> > be tagged as such if he found his way into a TW.  Richard Drake would
> > also be tagged as an advanced user.  A wiki purist, enthusiast and
> > interviewer of Ward Cunningham, he's done away with tags in his huge
> > 16MB TW.  The size of the TW was of particular interest to the
> > audience. It is a topic that often crops up on this group. Jerm made
> > gestures that if printed off on A4 and stacked on the floor it would
> > be the height of small child.
>
> > Key to Richard's Tiddling technique is FNDs simple search plugin -
> > used on the TiddlyWiki.com site, but not shipped with your standard
> > issue TW.  The plugin produces a tiddler containing links to tiddlers
> > containing the search term.  But Richard has also made some other
> > modifications, including to how camel case text produces non existing
> > tiddlers and removes the need for double brackets. It was also
> > interesting that he's replaced the default 'this tiddler doesn't
> > exist' text to incorporate an external link to a google search based
> > on the title of the new tiddler.  He's said he's share his plugin -
> > code name whitespace - with the group at some point.
>
> > Chris Dent showed two of his projects based on TiddlyWeb.
> > Manifestopheles has a linking mechanism that doesn't require double
> > brackets, so text is stored as clean text. The second thing he showed
> > was a way of writing tiddlers to TiddlyWeb using a text editor. As a
> > non-technical person, it was good to see these projects being
> > explained.  I would not be able to evoke them on my machine, as they
> > both seem to make use of the terminal, an interface closer to the
> > computers internal workings.
>
> > I am more familiar with Dickon Bevington's Treatment Manual project
> > [3].  The project is an open source manual for mental health
> > practitioners. Its now in use in a handful of projects. Dickon
> > explained the interesting aspect enabled by TiddlyWiki is that  teams
> > can take the core of the manual and then adapt it to suit their
> > situation.
>
> > I showed OMM, my work on an organisational maturity model I've been
> > developing with SCiO, a systems practitioners group, and 64 Tiddlers
> > an experimental project involving non-linear thinking and the Knight's
> > move. Neither project is really ready to be put on the web, and the
> > opportunity to talk about a project beforehand and show it to a small
> > group was really valuable to me.
>
> > <Gap id='please help fill in'>
> > Mark came from Holand on the train - wow.
> > - he's intersted in serverside andhttp://wiki.tcl.tk
>
> > Ribit - phone your wiki!
>
> > Wiliam - social enterprise, evaluation of naratives, celicly
> > </gap>
>
> > apploogies for typos and spelling
>
> > Alex
>
> > [1]http://twitter.com/rdrake98
> > [2]http://github.com/cdent/manifestopheles
> > [3]http://tiddlymanuals.tiddlyspot.com/
>
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>
> --
> Jeremy Ruston
> mailto:[email protected]://www.tiddlywiki.com
>
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