Hi

I would love to be able to sell content on iOS using TiddlyWiki ecosystem.

Not too long ago posted a suggestion to Eric. Then removed it cos I don't 
know how the implementation should be.

Anyways, IMHO
You can't expect everyone in the world to donate money to you for your 
projects using Credit cards.
Besides, There are more good people in the world than there are people with 
credit cards. 
I would donate money in cash to a project if I can buy a 'tangible asset' 
like an 'iTunes card' from Bookstore or Shop.
I might also be able to sell such cards to well wishers in my 'network' who 
might not know much about these amazing projects.
It will work to spread word about tiddlywiki and get people to donate money 
without the need for a credit card.

--
Rainbow
I would if I could, but I can't so I won't.
മതം ഏതായാലും ഗുണം ഉണ്ടായാൽ മതി 
മദാമ്മയുടെ ഗുണം ഒളിച്ചിരിക്കില്ല 


On Friday, January 30, 2015 at 3:59:01 PM UTC+4, Jeremy Ruston wrote:
>
> Do you have an idea for TiddlyWiki content that you think people might pay 
> for?
>
> Perhaps a technical manual? Or a guide for your city? Training materials 
> for your company's field engineer force? Or maybe a manualisation of mental 
> health intervention techniques?
>
> Would you be interested in working together to create your multimedia 
> TiddlyWiki content and wrap it up as an app that can be distributed and 
> sold on the iPhone/iPad app store?
>
> Here's the background for this invitation: I've recently finished my work 
> with CTRLio. I'm very grateful to them for the support they've shown to my 
> work on TiddlyWiki over the last 18 months. But now I need to find new 
> sources of income to replace my salary. There's a few weeks in which I can 
> consider some radical options, and this is one of them.
>
> I want to explore the idea of building a commercial TiddlyWiki ecosystem 
> on top of the Apple platform of iOS, the Mac and iCloud. I'm not making any 
> moral or philosophical judgement about Apple's place in the world. I'm 
> considering this plan just because the App Store is one of the places that 
> someone like me may be able to make money.
>
> This first step is simple: we create a framework for building iOS apps 
> that provide a terrific, read-only user experience for interacting with 
> TiddlyWiki documents. I'd want to support free or paid apps, with the 
> possibility of using in-app purchases for premium content. It would be a 
> way to deliver a highly custom, interactive user experience around 
> multimedia content. We would be able to deliver free updates to the app and 
> content via the app store update process.
>
> Such a simple application would be the quickest way to get into the app 
> store - I believe in just a few weeks. The aim would be for the app to be 
> invisible without much of a discernible user interface, just providing the 
> mechanisms for the content to take centre stage. It certainly shouldn't 
> resemble the familiar default TiddlyWiki editing interface.
>
> I'm open to suggestions about how to structure this from a business 
> perspective. I'd need some upfront payment to fund the development, but 
> hopfully we'd find a big enough handful of people that individual shares of 
> the startup costs would be relatively small.
>
> If enough people can provide the necessary commercial backing we can use 
> TiddlyPip to publish Eric's "Inside TiddlyWiki: The Missing Manual".
>
> Beyond simple read-only publishing, there would be a number of incremental 
> improvements we could make once we see regular revenue:
>
> # Support read/write functionality like annotations, with iCloud syncing 
> between iOS devices.
>
> # Support publishing custom, TiddlyWiki-based applications, such as 
> tw5.scholars. It wouldn't appear to be a TiddlyWiki file: it would behave 
> like a custom app for scholarly notetaking (including multi-device sync)
>
> # Support quizzes and questionnaires, with content unlocked by 
> successfully completing exercises
>
> # Support reporting of progress to the TinCan API
>
> # Support one-on-one student/educator interactions through the app. 
> Students might buy an academic textbook along with tokens to ask the author 
> 5 questions via messaging within the app.
>
> # Create a full end-user application that enables the user to create and 
> work with TiddlyWiki documents on iOS devices. This is really the ultimate 
> goal from a development perspective. But it's a lot of work to create such 
> an app with enough polish to stand out in the app store, and I'm not 
> convinced there are enough people prepared to pay for apps like TiddlyWiki. 
> But if we can bootstrap things via the content publishing route then we 
> ought to be able to gain the time to make the app sufficiently polished and 
> useful
>
> It's fun thinking about the possibilities. But we need to take this 
> journey as a series of small steps, and I need to quickly find out if 
> there's any hope of completing the first step.
>
> I need to know if there's anyone out there who might be prepared to put 
> some money on the table based on their belief that they have content that 
> could viably support this business model. So please let me know if you fit 
> that description. Ideally, we'd find a handful of people which would make 
> it easier to fund the initial development, until the app store revenues 
> kick in.
>
> Please let me know if you have any questions or suggestions,
>
> Best wishes
>
> Jeremy
>
> -- 
> Jeremy Ruston
> mailto:jeremy...@gmail.com <javascript:>
>

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