Why is TiddlyWiki Beaten by Obsidian?

V2. Right-ish though …

  • It is also a “juicey morsel”; either a confecture or interesting gossip;
  • It is also “a bit of useful info” (like a ‘tip’ in betting).

FYI, In the UK tiTbit & tiDbit are used interchangeably in different regions.


Notes

TidBITS has been published weekly since April 16, 1990, making it the longest-running Internet technology publication … https://tidbits.com

Titbits was a salacious weekly periodical in the UK from 1881 to 1984. It pioneered tabloid journalism and “tittle-tattle” magazines.

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Very accurate.

I am one of the British (few?) who delighted in their childhood in dangling their feet in the River Soar and paddling the Grand Union Canal—that swarms with Tiddlers. Most folk are not so lucky to have ducks, water and Tiddlers as their greatest friends.

FYI, a mature Stickleback is much bigger than a Tiddler. A Tiddler is any very small fish that (a) lives in a swarm [aka a “volatile shoal” in fish-ese]; (b) is not afraid of a human; (c) will happily nibble your feet. :grin:

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A vero.

Obscure … Branding … Advantage … Uniqueness … Differentiating.

Si, si

Ma (but), my only qualm is a minor twinge on TIDDLY …

Tiddly Size is good …

... so long as she has ...

Monster Muscles

QED

Right. It all happened 10 years after I needed it.

Back in the day I was fighting for (as an anthropologist with massive descriptive data) text-bases not data-bases.

It all came out okay.

But I’m still a bit non-plussed whether, now, “wiki” means anything other than “web-page”? Well, WikiPedia, I guess, since it is a system. But most other “wikis” … ??

My question is … is TW really …

  A -- A Cunningham Wiki

… or …

  B -- A Ruston Module

It seems to me that JR has outdone Cunningham by eating the internet into one pod.

Asking for a f(r)iend
TT

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A Ruston Module.

Definitely.

I like that. I think you have coined a term.

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Hey folks, Not the first time being suggested but:

TidWiki

is a variant we should collectively (or @jeremyruston as inventor) should claim, copyright, and allow as acceptable shorthand if possible. It seems to be available as a domain name, if .com or .org were added.

It’s clearly not appropriate to allow any other solution to claim or copyright that string, or to claim such a website. And it takes zero learning curve to connect with TiddlyWiki (TWiki might have been similar, but has been claimed.)

TidWiki doesn’t sound silly or hard to get one’s mouth around, and it gets us the tiddler connection with no fuss…

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hmmm, TidWiki and Tiddler will be as hard to explain as TiddlyWiki and Tiddler. So for me there is no difference other than causing a lot of work and problems.

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Sure, the explanations for newbies are needed. I’m not sure there’s any metaphor (short of “card” for old fogeys who remember HyperCard) that would bypass the need for explaining the atomic units of TiddlyWiki…

Whatever the metaphor (atom, bit, card, record, tiddler, facet, gene, node, cell… ), the power of these units in TiddlyWiki — and how their transclusions create a kaleidoscope of options — will always need to be modeled and witnessed to be appreciated.

My thought is just that transitioning to a shorter name — as in from “Federal Express” to FedEx — is as seamless as a nickname gaining popularity, doesn’t even ever have to be official to be useful.

It’s the one place where it seems to me that it couldn’t be a mistake to plant a flag …

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I think it does avoid the “TiddlyGiggly” problem (as coined by @Springer )

However, @pmario, I agree that it’s not enough of a difference to justify the time/work/confusion.

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I often think “tid” instead of tiddler.

I like the idea of working in a “wikitids” file, that allows for quickly making use of small bits of information.

Wikitids notes
Wikitids notebook/journal
Wikitids platform

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I have seen this naming debate occur many times over the years, my personal conclusion is;

  • TiddlyWiki is a unique name that has a substantial history, lots of search juice and whist abstract (very importiant) also makes people ask what it is.
  • It is trivial to rebrand your wiki to any name you want, the underlying platform is of course tiddlywiki.
  • The potentialy trivial sounding name is quickly eliminated if you refer to “The TiddlyWiki Platfom” and implies the multitude of functions, features and posibilities.

The “TiddlyWiki Platform”

  • In some ways none of have the right to name tiddlywiki something else and continue to be refering to the original tiddlywiki, any alternate name comes loaded with the different perspectives of those creating the name.
  • Thus using a second word to qualify what it is, does not compromise it’s originality but allows you to change the emphasis.

Call it “TiddlyWiki Obsidian” or “TiddlyWiki Amethyst” if you want to and can avoid litigation.

  • TiddlyWiki Platform - volcanic rock

Or use an alternate catch Phrase (subtitle) to that on tiddlywiki.com “TiddlyWiki a non-linear personal web notebook” eg; “TiddlyWiki a personal database app/website”

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Slogans (aka, “catch phrases”) can go a long way towards setting a particular marketing “vibe” without having to change the TiddlyWiki name.

Here’s my trademarked slogans for TiddlyTools:

  • “Small Tools for Big Ideas!” ™
  • “Intuitive Interfaces for Intelligent Interactions” ™

and some suggestions for TiddlyWiki itself:

  • “The Personal Portable Programmable Platform for People”
  • “Own it like a document… use it like a website!”
  • “Your plastic pal who’s Fun to be with. Share and Enjoy!”

Actually, that last one is how the Sirius Cybernetics Corporation defines “robot”:

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I can’t lie, I do enjoy the sound of this one.

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Right. I’m sure many do.
But likely it is a mental contraction of “Tiddler” or “Tiddly”??

So, I doubt the long-form of “Tiddler” needs avoidance.
Rather it needs be there as the “referant” for the “short-form”.

Linguistic note, TT

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(my emphasis)

Simple question.

IF that were right, given TW’s history already, is it too late (anyway) to change?

Best, TT.

Right. This, socio-linguistically, is true. I’d say “Fedex” knowing it is “Federal Express”—as many (most) would.

Note, however, an international English using a pre-exisiting vocabulary where “Fed”, “The Feds”, “The FBI” etc. were known and used and know their referant is “Federal”.
“FedEx” is deep in that cultural usage context.

You get the idea?

Would that ever apply to “Tid” etc. ??

Show me how. :slightly_smiling_face:

TT

Right.

Several of us oldboys/girlspeople have been round the swings and roundabouts of “The Name” a bunch (a lot) of times already.

In the past I was more “change it”. As years go by far less so.
History, rightly, creates healthy inertia.

@pmario I feel makes the simplest vital question, being (my interpretation) …

Given the context now. Years after invention. WHY attempt change a name that would, likely, very likely, be difficult, work intensive and create legacy issues, to acheive?

TT

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I think there’s obviously a pretty big circle of overlapping use cases for Obsidian and TiddlyWiki, but they are considerably different, I think even more different than Google Maps to OpenStreetMap. They’re not even the same kind of thing, they can just be used for some of the same kinds of purposes.

I guess that Obsidian became popular quickly for similar reasons to those explaining why Python became popular across disciplines – because people who are code literate but not super technical liked it. (Then because Python became popular among slightly technical academic users etc., it became increasingly used by actual developers for more lower level purposes.)

It’s fun and easy for someone who likes to write in plain text in text editors to keep notes in markdown – a more-or-less common sense and universal standard for slightly computer savvy people who dislike GUIs. TiddlyWiki is not only more technically complicated to use at a fairly deep level, but it’s also less text native. The typical use of TiddlyWiki is to click things in its browser GUI, even though the wikitext aspect is WYSIWYM (to use the terminology in //Grok TiddlyWiki//). To use TiddlyWiki in a more text-native and filestystem-native workflow requires also using NodeJS, which requires more technical expertise and effort to set up. So if you’re not a programmer but you like working in plain text and feeling superior to people who take notes in Microsoft Office software, Obsidian is more gratifying.

But TiddlyWiki is a fully featured and fundamentally unified hypertext system, encapsulating the design structures informing browsers and the web and a deeper level of implementation. So TiddlyWiki is way better at designing systems for cross-referencing content.

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I think Tiddlywiki is not beaten as a developer’s tool. It is fun to tinker your tool in TW. But when I come to the end of my abilities - that is when integrating js libraries is involved - and have to look at TW from the user perspective, I miss some tools and capabilities that would be basic to continue tinkering.

E.G. : I am still looking for a canvas like this one in the tool-that-shall-not-be-named

To achive something like that I miss:

  • Floating Tiddlers Or anything hovering.
  • Ties between objects.
  • Drawing lines on transparent canvass.

et ceterum censeo: we should stop discussing the name.

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I don’t think tiddlywiki will be defeated by obsidian

I started out (6 years ago) with 500 efficiency software on obsidian and used obsidian’s relationship graph to show them, but I didn’t know some concepts of “clustering” at that time, which made my first attempt at obsidian fail, but I also learned to use markdown syntax

In obsidian, there is a switch in the Settings, the function is whether to save automatically, but before I, at that time I wanted to be able to precisely control the save, no software can do this

In tiddlywiki, I noticed it when I was organizing obsidian. At the beginning, tiddlywiki gave me the feeling of being as unfathomable as emacs, but once I participated in the high-pressure environment of a competition, I suddenly knew how to use tiddlywiki

Now I want to try out the new features of obsidian. When I downloaded obsidian, I had no idea about its nature. I learned that there are nearly 260 widgets in tiddlywiki from the forums and public knowledge base. For obsidian, I had to learn nearly 300 plugins from scratch to match the functionality of my tiddlywiki, so I was ready to give up, but I also recorded some basic obsidian tiddlers cards, about 10 of which looked like