Hi Mat
Nowadays, most famous to-C Web Apps are Single Page App, likes Notion and Evernote, they both supports "export as single zip" and "sync to backend".
And TW also supports "export as single HTML" and "sync to backend", so about saving, TW don't have much downside, It's even being superior due to it is an open software (you own your data), and it's open for developers to connect it to new BaaS, for example, SoLiD or FileCoin.
For the writing experience, It has more significant Pros and Cons.
I think it has best editing experience among all semantic wikis, UI and learning curve is better than semantic media wiki.
But It has middle editing experience among team workspaces, for example, Quip and Notion have WYSIWYG editor, and don't have "draft", you can sync to backend immediately. TW can enable teamwork if you choose some backend, but there won't be realtime collaboration, syncadaptor can't help with that.
For personal KB part, I think it's the best, personal KB don't need realtime syncing, but need KB and methods to reuse data from KB, Notion can partially do that, but its API is very limited.
Coda can build CRM by composing macros, but its macro pool is way small than TW, Con on TW is that TW's macro needs to dive in and learn and find out (no such a macro market), and there is no a "/" menu (open a menu to select macro when you hit "/") to select macro, it all depends on your brain to remember.
Anyway, I think except for the realtime collaboration part, all other Cons can be overcome by plugins, all TW needs is time, it's open, so people will contribute to it.
在 2019年5月4日星期六 UTC+8下午10:40:26,Mat写道: