I agree with this CSS-tricks
article that using
spreadsheets as databases is a really cool idea. The article provides, as prime example, the service
Airtable which seems nice per se but I particularly found their "presentational formats" interesting from a TW perspective. My take on it is that they were pretty much in a situation that TW is in, i.e "we have the data and can present it in any way people want... so what are those ways?" Seems they decided on these:
- Grid (presumably the typical spreadsheet view?)
- Calendar
- Gallery
- Kanban
- Form
I must assume they see these as the most important "editions" for their customer base.
In addition, they have something called templates. I don't know how these differ from the afore mentioned list tho...but there seem to be hundreds of different ones for special applications.
There are also blocks, maybe comparable to widgets.
<:-)
P.S For anyone thinking "Wow! Why should I bother with TW when this exists?"... you're forgetting things like "100% open source", "total customization", "You own your data", "Your notes will still be available in X decades when most commercial services... poof!" etc.