Thanks Daniel for posting I have used and loved the TW work you have done,
thanks for posting and for creating with TW.
>From your post
> Anyway the lessons there for winning new users are maybe:
>
> - find a clear, real-world use case (or more than one) and show how TW
> satisfies that use
> - approach blogs and review sites and ask for coverage, or even better
> write a story yourself and ask blog/review sites to publish it or adapt it
> - go to the trouble to do pretty screenshots, and be MUCH less technical
> than you want to be
>
> And to return to the topic: Even having a share-a-tiddler feature isn't a
> usecase, it's just a feature. You'd have to show how it makes "activity X"
> awesome / possible / fun / useful.
Brilliant suggestions and help.
1. So having tutorials based on usage cases would be very helpful for
new and existing users on TW5.
1. Instead of just having generic TW5 tutorials, So TiddlyWiki 5
Recipes, Notebook, GTD, ect. Since TW can be used for anything it can be
overwhelming and exciting as the possibilities are limitless.
2. Possibly the Level 1 Learning that I discuss in another thread
stays the same and then around Level 2 or Level 3 you get specific.
1. Everyone using TW needs to create a Tiddler as an example and
understanding formatting basics.
2. Getting our different usage cases into bloggers hands that way
they can review them. So we send GTD TW5 to GTD people.
3. Create Tutorials with good screenshots and less technobabble to be
more inviting to new users
4. I think easy to follow videos help everyone. When TW started posting
videos was more complicated. Now it is much easier and should be easier
for all to do if you want too.
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