I thought of suggesting a poll. Then I felt a poll would be adversarial and
need not accurately reflect the usefulness of the method to a particular
user, whether or not it meets his demands and needs etc. So a feature table
might help. If needed, we can include the GitHub stars info - although it
is in no way any measure of popularity because
a. Many users of this community might not have a GitHub account
b. Even those who have GitHub account use stars as a way of bookmarking.

On Sat, 2 May 2020, 20:32 Rizwan Ishak, <[email protected]> wrote:

> Oh no, I didn't mean deleting all other save methods. Getting Started
> tiddlers and save method tiddlers are separate.
>
> In the main Getting Started tiddler all the save methods are listed. Now
> if you go to tiddlywiki.com and search the words "Getting Started", you
> can see that there are multiple other "Getting Started" tiddlers. Those
> tiddlers contain information that is badly outdated.
>
> My suggestion is to keep 2 tiddlers : Main Getting Started tiddler - which
> lists all save methods. Then Getting Started - Node tiddler, which explains
> how to get up and running with Node.js
>
> On Sat, 2 May 2020, 20:24 Michael Durland, <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> On Friday, May 1, 2020 at 2:47:57 PM UTC-7, Riz wrote:
>>>
>>> The only "Getting started" Tiddler that makes a reasonable sense is
>>> "Getting started Node JS". Delete the rest so that there is one source of
>>> truth to maintain.
>>>
>>
>> I hope you don't mean deleting all the other Save method tiddlers from
>> the GettingStarted page? Yes, some are obsolete/unsupported at this time,
>> but many are still working/active, and users need to know the options. The
>> Node server is certainly not the only "one source of truth" for saving
>> options. Perhaps focus on removing only the truly dead ones, rather than
>> "Delete the rest."
>>
>> On a related note, it would be interesting to see a poll with results as
>> to what Save methods are ranked as the most popular. I'm currently using
>> TiddlyDrive, as it has been the easiest to setup for me so far to support
>> sharing/syncing my wiki across two Windows 10 computers and my Android
>> phone. I don't see how the locally-run Node server could handle that use
>> case?
>>
>> Michael
>>
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