"Nah... not for me" - Why?

I’ll throw in some thoughts.

This is a niche within a niche product. That doesn’t mean it can’t grow more. But, the OP asks why someone would visit then leave. In a nutshell that’s my opinion why… Niche within niche. Which I love. That’s why I’m here. But, I feel like many people settle for a basic notes app, blog, or even pen and paper.

You also must be a little tech savvy to use TiddlyWiki. Not a lot. But, a little. You may think dropping a HTML file somewhere is easy, but even easier is clicking download in an App Store for something else. And there’s no saving intricacies with a free downloaded app.

Those are reasons why “regular users” may not use it. But, maybe you’re wondering how to attract developers? I have no help for you there. :relaxed: I don’t know what developers look for when deciding to contribute to these projects.

To overcome the above “regular users” problems, as others have said, a clearer landing page could help. Maybe both visually and textually hammering home that this amazing tool is one file. And showing that you can just drop it on your desktop. And, that your notes are forever your notes. Unlike if an online app gets hacked or goes out of business. Then after some eye catching things like that, go into the explanation such as what is currently there at tiddlywiki.com.

Personally, the number one reason I come back to TiddlyWiki time and time again is because I feel like a single file is more likely to store my thoughts longer than some other app. Again, there’s no company going out of business or risk of getting hacked (well, less of a chance especially if kept offline). And in a worse case scenario, if I have to sell all of my processions, hopefully I can at least keep a USB drive with my TiddlyWiki on it. :blush:

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My thoughts having tried to be an advocate of TiddlyWiki in the workplace … these are not necessarily “fixable” but they are deterrents:

  1. When people see an “html” file, they do not immediately thing “locally editable document format”. They think, “web-server needed and read-only”.
  2. TiddlyWiki is such a wide-open, multi-functional tool that people with the least amount of agoraphobia or analysis paralysis will run away screaming back to their one-true-path/walled-garden sanctuaries.
  3. There are plenty of footguns present in building/configuring a TiddlyWiki … particularly when you are messing with SystemTags/ViewTemplates. Maybe these are not encountered as quickly as the OP scenario laid out but they would certainly lead to rage-quiting TiddlyWiki if it leads to data-loss. Something as easy as a mis-type in the config panel could render your TiddlyWiki useless if it is saved that way.

But, as I said, these are not necessary fixable but maybe some more bumpers and guide-rails could be added.

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2 posts were split to a new topic: ThemeTweaks need to be validated

I have suggested, and implemented for myself an alternative the .tw file extension. You then create an association with the browser, And set your browser to recognise it. No distracting html but it is one.

  • The next issue is allowing an exchangeable form to be shared.
  • No real suitable forms here in discourse for example.

While having a unique file extension would remedy the issue related to the stigma behind the .html, it would also create more steps for a novice user to go through in order to use the application.

Maybe if we included in the basic summary of what TiddlyWiki is about the nature of what a hypertext markup language file actually is, but ELI5 it, it would be an all around improvement?

Something along the lines of, “This is TiddlyWiki, an all purpose, flexible dynamic notetaking app, all in a simple html file. Copy and Paste it to your hearts content! Anything that has a browser, has TiddlyWiki support.”

Or something to that degree? I’m no expert at selling an idea to users unfortunately haha

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Hi folks,
The “bumpy” start of the thread has been “moderated” in consensus with jonnie45 and twMat. 3 related posts from others, that where out of context have been removed too.
-m

I think this would help a lot with getting over the learning curve, as well as having some more general examples. Right now the top two examples on tiddlywiki.com are an online shop and Gospel Bubbles, both which are very specific uses that do immediately show me the range that TW can cover but leave me wondering, “ok, but where do I get started on just organizing some notes?”

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This Topic has once again got my “creative juice’s flowing” (I love and hate that phrase with equal measure). First and foremost is a growing meme I have heard building of late;

  • Nah, Nah, Yeah - which actually seems like a good retort to the Topics title
  • The other is the creative writers challenge to try and encapsulate what TiddlyWiki is and can be to anyone.
    • The First phrase that comes to mind is the “Goodies” catch phrase “Do Anything, Anytime, Anywhere”, But this demands trust even before someone is given the evidence it is true.

So lets return to the Topics title;

"Nah… not for me” - Why?

  • it is perhaps impossible to tackle the “negative” when it appears impossible to even describe the “positive”, “why tiddlywiki is for you!”
  • We have the further problem that TiddlyWiki’s possibilities, are effectively infinite in so many different directions. How do you describe the infinite?
  • There are as many reasons to use tiddlywiki as there are people who could use tiddlywiki.
  • Then some may think in such cases, well lets describe it by "what it can’t do?, “what is it not?”
    • Beyond the obvious ,such as it can’t make you a coffee or your bed, there is very little it can’t do, and when it’s limits are found the community works to eliminate them.

Off line I am writing for the nth[?] time yet another way to try and capture TiddlyWiki’s true nature and spell it out in a way that the TiddlyWiki naïve will want to learn more.

Perhaps we need to start a (separate) topic which asks “You all” to write a convincing argument for TiddlyWiki for the uninitiated?

  • Please thumbs up this reply if you want to see this.

12 posts were split to a new topic: The toolbar misses format-text buttons – to make paragraphs stand out

To confirm the marketing issue: thrice in the last 15 years or so I seriously looked into notetaking apps (aiming for no vendor lock in, ability for zettelkasten/backlinks, and agreeable UI on phone and desktop), but only now learn of TW. And I’d rate my search skills perhaps not detective-worthy but above average for sure.
(I was gobsmacked when I read TW has been around for so many years already!)
Also, without having found the forum before, the very few YouTube tutorials made me wonder whether TW was ‘still a thing’ until I came here / checked some dates and realized it’s alive and kicking.
My guess would be there’s also the other bottleneck of less tech savvy persons leaving before downloading / trying TW - most comments made on the landing page and the way information is presented are painfully / reassuringly recognizable :grinning_face_with_smiling_eyes:

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Just some feedback from a new (few weeks old) user (maybe Im repeating somebody else’s comment):

  • onboarding: great, tiddlywiki.com tells it all (especially the big download button)
  • interaction: great forum
  • community resources: lots of plugins, really inspiring tiddlywiki variations

So everything was great so far, but the ‘community’-examples quickly started to make me feel stupid…or at least that a big learning-curve was ahead :slight_smile:

I started longing for some kind of hierarchical list of ‘how to do X’-links, to guide me as a new user (customizing/understanding my vanilla tiddlywiki).

Luckily, I (accidentally) discovered (after some weeks) that this exist in the ‘Content’-tab in the sidebar.
I know, it’s a bit stupid…but lets assume most people are stupid and are in a rush when reviewing new technology :slight_smile:
I think it would really give new users ‘Oh I can do this’-confidence if the ‘Content’-tab would always be shown by default on the homepage.
Before I discovered this menu, I got a bit intimidated by the idea of learning everything from forum-posts.

Just my few cents!

ps. thank you all, you are awesome

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Well first, welcome to TW coderofsalvation, I had a similar time where I practically avoided the main site because of a similar reason, funny enough, so hearing your sentiment on it brought back memories of me splicing tiddlers to figure things out. (Something I’m still doing now, actually haha)

I agree though, having a list of how to achieve certain things like how there is for the TOC, would be a nice beginner level addition.

Off the top of my head the only thing that offers such a thing is Grok TW, but I feel like TW could do something akin to this as well.

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WHO are you referring to?

apologies TiddlyTweeter , I was referring to coderofsalvation, the previous commentor

Quite understandable :slight_smile:

TT

I haven’t read through this very long thread, but I spotted a big issue in the first post:

I mean this part: Gimme your best guess

You can’t really know what are the experiences of new users without either very thorough tracking or just looking at them interact with it and talk about their experiences. Sure, we can use knowledge about best UX and UI practices to make informed guesses but that can only take us so far without actual feedback.

So here’s how I see this being approached:

  1. Find a friend, a colleague, coworker, someone in your social circles who would be a good candidate for a test. Someone who you know uses this type of software or who could potentially use it.
  2. Ask them if they’d be willing to sacrifice 15 minutes of their time to check out a certain open source product you yourself use and like. It can be done in person (you can bribe them with coffee or a dinner) or over the internet.
  3. Tell them you’d like them to interact with the software as if you weren’t there, so best to not ask you questions. Tell them they’re more than welcome to narrate what they’re thinking or doing.
  4. Ask them to share the screen with you, very briefly explain what TiddlyWiki is (and by briefly I mean really brief, something they could’ve read in passing somewhere online, a short, single sentence).
  5. Tell them to open tiddlywiki.com and let them go wild with it, do whatever they want, click whatever they want, if they want to spend the time watching the introduction video - let them. If they start messing everything up - let them.
  6. Take copious notes of everything.
  7. Share it with the TW community.

Or just approach it however you want, there are three important parts, though:

  1. The tester should approach TW with as little influence and prior knowledge from you as possible.
  2. Ideally you should not help the tester in any way – when facing something new people tend to ask for things that they can find easily themselves, at least let them stumble for a bit before answering their questions.
  3. You need to take notes of how they interact with the site, which parts they read first, which parts they skip, where they click, etc.

And also I noticed there is a few threads around the same topic – increasing TW user conversion rate. This is great and all, but many of those threads are a year old. Is there any place that collects all this collective knowledge and turns it into a list of actionable actions?

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Right.

That forensic approach seems right.

SO, how to do that?

Demo some results here of your probes?

Just a query
TT

Nearly 40 years ago, while receiving my formal education in Cognitive Psychology at Carnegie-Mellon University, my professors, Nobel Prize winner Herbert A. Simon and his colleague Alan Newell – who together wrote the seminal textbook, “Human Problem Solving” (1972) – instructed us in the process you have described.

This research technique is called “Verbal Protocol Analysis”, which is one of the methods used in the field of inquiry known as “Cognitive Task Analysis” and is very useful for collecting empirical source data for analyzing the behaviors involved in complex cognitive problem-solving activities, especially during the initial “learning curve” phase of knowledge acquisition.

While these methods can be somewhat subjective as well as time-consuming, they can be very effective in deriving an action plan for improving qualitative performance in the use of complex interactive systems, such as TiddlyWiki.

I recommend reading through some overviews/outlines of Verbal Protocol Analysis and Cognitive Task Analysis to provide some specific guidance (and a general investigatory framework, as you have already done) so that people who want to use these techniques to help improve the TiddlyWiki usability experience can gather and share practical, actionable results.

-e

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Lucky fellow. Herbert A Simon is a leading thinker. I value his “satisficing” ideas to name one.

Thanks for sharing your interesting background. No wonder you are yourself a accomplished thinker Eric. :nerd_face:

Also: https://www.usertesting.com/ – it takes careful setup of the test itself depending on what you’re trying to find out.

If someone wants to put in the work, this is something we might fund through the Open Collective funds on account.