Thanks Charlie, Led me on to the series Computers for Cynics, I saw the 1st and look forward to more.
It is nice to hear someone question the things I have done in the past, and while cynicism can be corrosive, I do not think so when it questions "unchallenged received wisdom". As a conceptual thinker, I who is always trying to what if any essential concepts can be derived from complex systems, it is a fact that we have to revisit the "paradigms" and "Axioms" repeatedly something which commercial enterprises usually don't like doing, least it eat into profits. Part of my love for tiddlywiki is it a platform on which I organise, view and manipulate knowledge the way I want to. Playing with the the "paradigms", "Axioms" and assumptions. Just as the "general Purpose computer" permits an almost limitless computation, tiddlywiki permits an almost limitless ways to store information or knowledge. Structured and unstructured. Tones On Monday, 7 June 2021 at 01:48:15 UTC+10 [email protected] wrote: > Just in case this is of any interest for a coffee break: > > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pX0UN-gXBZE > > I do find Ted Nelson eccentric. > > I often think: "I'm not sure what his problem is, but I'm sure it is hard > to spell." > > I always enjoy listening to him. I always find what he has to say > fantastic. > > Whenever he says something, it gives me new insights into sometimes > unrelated things, but usually things that have me thinking about how I > organize stuff in TiddlyWiki, or how TiddlyWiki handles things so well > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "TiddlyWiki" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/tiddlywiki/6e54008f-ef0e-4e54-8f3c-0d127efa0a8an%40googlegroups.com.

