That doesn't fit the kind of flow I'm trying to generate, but I appreciate 
the suggestion. Do you know any other way to have an online hosted wiki 
with two contributors? Any leads on where to look for something like this?

On Tuesday, September 28, 2021 at 5:43:38 AM UTC+5:30 [email protected] 
wrote:

> It might be safer for your remain solo editor of the TiddlyWiki, and have 
> content that is multi-editor kept on Google Drive (Docs, Sheets, Slides, 
> Drawings), because those support simultaneous/collaborative editing really 
> well.
>
> Say you have a TiddlyWiki tiddler about Blender.  Create a related Google 
> Doc (where everybody can put in information about blender, and add comments 
> related to whatever) and embed it in your tiddler.
>
> Now your TiddlyWiki has content that makes sense there, but also acts as a 
> portal to content that maybe makes more sense somewhere else (for 
> simultaneous/collaborative editing and/or whatever else?
>
>
>
> On Monday, September 27, 2021 at 12:18:05 PM UTC-3 [email protected] 
> wrote:
>
>> So I understand that I can open access to wikis by turning them public. 
>> But I wanted to figure out how to give some other logged in users the 
>> permission to add and or edit tiddlers in a wiki. For context, I have a 
>> friend whose learning 3d modelling with blender and I wanna get started 
>> with 2d digital art and I wanna set up a shared wiki so we can share what 
>> we learn and what we made in an organized way. (Don't worry about file 
>> size, we'll be using a shared drive and share links to that instead of 
>> putting it on the wiki)
>
>

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