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by panphora
358 days ago
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No app installation needed, Hyperclay files are just HTML files, so they work like TiddlyWiki in that regard. You can download them and use them locally with any text editor, or even implement TiddlyWiki's saving mechanism if you prefer that workflow. The key difference is when you want to share your creation on the web. With TiddlyWiki, you typically share a read-only version, requiring visitors to download and save their own copy. With Hyperclay, you can host that same HTML file on any server and live-edit it directly in your browser (if you're the owner). When people clone it, their clone is shareable and available on the web. So you get the best of both worlds: the simplicity of a single HTML file that "just works" offline, plus the ability to publish it as a living document that you can edit directly in the browser. Think of it as TiddlyWiki's philosophy extended to the shared web. Same single-file simplicity, but now your changes can be seen by others. |
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Sorry but I'm having issues seeing this as a feature. TiddlyWikis can be shared as easily as sending an attachment. Running a server, tho, is not simple at all for the common user.