Hi Tones,
To folks who speak server-talk, phrases like "a standard php server with tw-receiver" and "the store.php" are surely as clear as day. And I appreciate that your reply is a gesture of generous helpfulness.
To someone like me, unpacking even those casual phrases is a risky investment of time. Even assuming that the server space I can use at my university is/has "standard" php (though I wouldn't know how to check that), I don't grasp what it would take to equip (?) it with tw-receiver, or whether tw-receiver lives (?) there at the server (and may require getting an IT person to approve/help) or whether "receiver" implies that I need to get it set up (?) at my end... , etc.
Yes, I could grope around for some clarity on these matters... OK... a quick google gets me as far as
this page, where I learn that tw-receiver apparently has both a tw-plugin component and a server-side file to install... ok... But then a bit further along I read that "You will likely have to make server side adjustments; things like setting directory permissions or ini configurations like max upload sizes". Meh. This is more server-speak; it assumes that I can orient to whether and how I need to make adjustments to "ini configurations" and "things like that" ([insert emoji for blank stare]) ... and having never done anything at all with php before, I just can't tell how long, or how steep, this learning-curve will be, and what the odds are that, one or two hours in, I'll hit a brick wall of some kind.
The only reason I was able to work it out with GitHub was because of Mohammad's very careful step-by-step tutorial, written so that even I could understand it. Might something comparable be available for setting up a php server and getting tw-receiver up and running with it?
(As I mentioned to Alvin, I'm pretty content with the GitHub saver for now, since it really does let TW5 behave over https in the Tiddlyspot way. But I'm replying on behalf of other muggles who feel stranded by the loss of tiddlyspot.)