TiddlyChatter v0.75 – track lots of people

Hello, TiddlyChatter v0.75 is in svn and up on the web in a packaged form at http://tiddlychatter.tiddyspot.com. Major change in this version is that you can subscribe to multiple feeds. Other bug fixes documented. Many thanks to everyone who has given feedback and encouragement. This is a prototype to accompany the interface development that’s going […]

TiddlyChatter v0.6 – with TiddlySpot!

This is a strange release, because most of the work has been to get TiddlyChatter to play nicely with TiddlySpot and improvements in the documentation based on actually trying to use it… The idea with this release is that you can go to http://tiddlychatter.tiddlyspot.com and that will guide you through the process of installing the […]

TiddlyChatter v0.5

I’m pleased to announce the first “usable” release of TiddlyChatter, a project I’ve written about before here and here. You can find an example TiddlyWiki loaded up with TiddlyChatter (hit right-click to save) here. (And another with different colours for testing on one machine) The instructions are all in there. I’ve thought hard about the […]

TiddlyChatter v0.1

I recently posted about the TiddlyChatter idea I’m working on. I’ve posted a first version of TiddlyChatter: get it here. The instructions are contained in the file, but if you can’t get it to work, let me know. You’ll probably want two different TiddlyWiki’s to test with, so you can pretend there are two of […]

“Collaborate!” (getting people to use technology to work together)

Working with other people is, for me, the best way of learning and getting things done. Unfortunately, I only learnt this after I left university, but better late than never… Over the last two years at BT, I’ve introduced users to a variety of technologies designed to help them work together more effectively, originally in […]

The Ignorance of Nick Carr

Thanks to Otti for pointing out this article by Nick Carr, entitled the Ignorance of Crowds. It’s a look back at Eric Raymond’s seminal paper, the 10-yr old “The Cathedral and the Bazaar”, in which he makes the case for peer production, focussing on the Linux operating system as his example. Peer productions and open […]

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