Jeremy Ruston joined the show to talk about TiddlyWiki — a unique non-linear notebook for capturing, organizing, and sharing complex information. It’s written in JavaScript and sports a custom fake DOM. We talked to Jeremy about his nearly 40 year career in programming, Hackability as a human right, Tiddlers — the atomic unit of data in TiddlyWiki and so much more.
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Notes & Links
- TiddlyWiki · Issue #248 · thechangelog/ping
- TiddlyWiki — a non-linear personal web notebook
- TiddlyWiki on GitHub
- MK14 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- Hackability as a Human Right — Jermolene TalkyTalky
- Wuthering Bytes - 26th September to 2nd October 2015
- Tiddlywinks - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia