On Thursday, August 22, 2013 3:43:55 PM UTC+2, Yakov wrote:
>
> I'm connected through WiFi; the router is connected to a ~modem and the 
> line is a TV cable (not sure how it is classified). Yes, I've set the 
> bridge mode (as I did all the other stuff from [1] before using htop and 
> browser. (actually, videos have quite quiet voice, so for me it's easier to 
> use text instructions)
>

With the ISO image and a pure WiFi connection, there may be a configuration 
problem. I didn't test this situation. I think I know the problem, but it 
will need some investigation and a new image :/
 

> As for the Vagrant instructions, I don't quite understand them.
>
> > create an instance directory eg: tiddlyweb
>

on the host system. 
download the Vagrant config stuff form github and extract them there.
adjust your hosts file
vagrant up ... wait .... wait
vagrant reload .. (reload is only need the first time)

open tweb.local:8080 and it should work. (that's the plan :)
 

> where do I create it? In the virtual unix system? If so, how do I get 
> vagrant scripts into it?
>
Vagrant automatically mounts your instance dir from above. You don't need 
to enter the unix system, if everything works well.

vagrant ssh .. opens a terminal on a unix host.

for win you'll need putty or a similar programm. 
 

>
> The tweb-at-home  project is about, how to install a TiddlyWeb instance 
>> using different possibilities. TiddlyWeb is a "server backend" that knows 
>> how to handle tiddlers. The liveCD iso image contains a TiddlyWeb 
>> configuration, that is able to serve TiddlyWikis. The store structure used 
>> is called "text store". So all tiddlers are stored in a directory structure 
>> as plain text files. 
>>
>> So, it sounds like it actually is not what I'm looking for.. I'd like to 
> substitute TiddlySaver, not TiddlyWiki -- I'd like to store my data in 
> TiddlyWikis, otherwise I lose all the cross-platformity (I use TiddlyWikis 
> from a usb-stick on my Android Eee Slider device as well and some are used 
> on my Android handheld) and portability (as far as I can see, the 
> installation is rather bulky to use it at someone's PC for a few times).. 
> If I got it correctly.
>

IMO you can't use it on someone elses PC. At least I wouldn't let you 
install all that stuff :)


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