Thanks for the info Tony, I will have to check this out. I have tried DropBox in the past, but I find it hard to keep current because of the multiuser issues.
Cheers! On Saturday, May 25, 2019 at 10:51:35 PM UTC-7, TonyM wrote: > > Post Script > > My suggestions did not include using shared storage like dropbox, > onedrive, google drive etc... > > Regards > Tony > > On Sunday, May 26, 2019 at 3:49:53 PM UTC+10, TonyM wrote: >> >> Nnyrb, >> >> The key question is by online do you mean internet, or Local area >> network?. The internet always has additional security concerns. >> >> *The existing solution for this use case* >> I am personally working on methods to assist in this. If you want >> multiple users at the same time I believe your only option is to *run >> Bob *which is on top of nodeJS, a folder based wiki. >> If you can get a NodeJS docker package or a host that provides node you >> can install bob there or the vanila node install. If you only want it on >> your lan you could run bob.exe on a server or desktop computer. >> The generic nodeJS install has some rudimentary authentication. >> >> *Single file wikis* >> If you only have a html/php server you can use tw-receiver but you still >> have to maintain only a single editor at a time, I have not tested it but >> is has a feature to avoid contention when saving. >> Tw-receiver and standard file based wikis is where I am working and >> building a check in out process to allow serial editing of file based wikis. >> The next version 5.1.20 has a local storage plugin that may allow >> multiple editors at once with the changes exported and reviewed by the >> owner before adding them, >> Or with work we may be able to have only one editor allowed to "commit >> there changes to disk" at once, using a variation of the check in and check >> out process. >> >> *SharePoint* >> Tiddlywikis can be hosted on sharepoint, and you can leverage SharePoints >> document management for check in and out - ask if you want to know more. >> >> *Another strategy?* >> You could define a network of tiddlywikis where each user has update >> rights to their copy and there changes can be imported into a central wiki, >> that then replaces the the user wikis. >> A better version may be possible with Bob by sharing tiddlers accross >> multiple wikis in the same bob server. >> >> Others may have a better idea. >> >> Regards >> Tony >> >> On Sunday, May 26, 2019 at 3:25:17 PM UTC+10, Nnyrb wrote: >>> >>> Evening TiddlyWiki community! >>> >>> I am looking to host a TiddlyWiki online so that my team and I can use >>> it as a reference document. I was curious if anyone had any links or advice >>> on how to do this. >>> >>> I was also curious if there are any plugins to help alleviate the issues >>> with working on a single wiki together. In the end if we have to have a >>> single person update it, that is fine, but finding a solution to edit it >>> live, together, would be great, even if it simply "locked" pages that were >>> being edited so others could not access them. >>> >>> Thanks in advance for any advice you can offer! >>> >> -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "TiddlyWiki" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/tiddlywiki. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/tiddlywiki/68a7decd-f51b-44c8-aa13-5700ecee3703%40googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

