I wrote the following comments for another thread, but I don't want to derail that thread and am starting a new one.
1. OVERCOMING PREJUDICE AGAINST ROAM
I don't know why there are so many negative comments towards Roam in this Google Group. They, and their users, are
constantly improving Roam, and it can do way more than even 6 months
ago. They are not resting on backlinks as their only feature (not that
they were doing that even a year ago, when they had filters, graphs, two
columns, etc). So the comments just feel like they are generated out of envy of their success.
Also, Roam doesn't seem to
be overhyping itself. The Roam USERS are the ones posting accolades on
Twitter, and the Roam account (or Connor's account) retweets them. Which
is no different from what @TiddlyWiki does. And other influencers are
creating courses to cash in on people wanting to learn it. And YouTubers
are hoping for hits on their pages by creating videos about Roam.
Everything just snowballed for Roam, like it did for Notion in 2019. And like it could for TiddlyWiki.
I think complaints about Roam are a waste of time. The question is, what can we do, positively, to learn from what they did, so that TiddlyWiki gets the attention and recognition it deserves? Knowing full well that we have a great open source product, how can we get and retain users?
2. LESSONS FOR TIDDLYWIKI
I have a feeling that most of the people who are on
this forum, myself included, are not the people best suited to actually
promote TW, and that we need win over some extroverted influencer types, to
come up with better onboarding materials, and then promote the heck out
of TW. Just remember how much attention we got when Anne-Laure LeCunff
wrote a couple blog posts on TiddlyWiki last Spring, and I merely tagged Roam
Research's @ username a few times on my tweets when I debuted Stroll? Imagine what we could do with a few well-produced video tutorials and highlighting of TW's capabilities, and testimonials from influencers. By people who know how to express it in non-technical, non-absract terms.
Someone should convince Nat Eliason or someone like him to write and promote a paid
web course for TiddlyWiki, or ask people to create more video tutorials for
TW on Youtube. Top candidates: Video walkthroughs for Timimi
and each of the other options for saving. / Ten great plugins for TiddlyWiki for notetaking / ten for
productivity / ten for images / ten for searching / ten for adjusting
the UI, etc
Rather than grumbling
about Roam we should just figure out the right strategy to make
TiddlyWiki popular and get someone to do it for us. For free. They do the work, and get paid by the hits on their Youtube videos and blog posts, or in the case of the courses, the fee they charge for the course. And if they make it look as if they 'discovered' TiddlyWiki even though it has ben around for years, and even though we approached them rather than them discovering TiddlyWiki, let them. Who cares. Let them get their ego stroked. As long as TW gets the press it ought to.
We have had exposure at times, but a deficient onboarding experience
held us back ("wait, I have to read through documentation about numerous saving options before I can even use this on my computer?"). If we could get the onboarding experience right, then get
key people to get us the exposure, TiddlyWiki would have its day.
Thoughts?