You can set up saving with github and also github pages and then have a 
system that works very similar to TS. BUT (there's always a "but") it's 
more complicated to set up in the first place and you should set up the 
saver to use a personal access token and *not* your GH password. That token 
will be long and tedious to enter when you are at a guest computer that 
won't let you access a USB device. Hmm ... I guess if you have something 
like Google Drive you can use it to store your passcode so you don't have 
to type it all by hand.

On Thursday, October 29, 2020 at 2:46:24 PM UTC-7, springer wrote:
>
> Tones and all,
>
> I'd love to hear from others if there's any cloud storage that offers as 
> much portability as tiddlyspot.
>
> If I'm on a public or institutional computer (like a library kiosk with a 
> browser, or a university's lecture-hall computer), it seems dropbox can't 
> work, because dropbox requires me to download the file before it can be 
> properly loaded in a browser (and these institutional machines are not 
> friendly to downloads).
>
> I assume that's equally true of these other cloud solutions like 
> sharepoint and AWS, yes? (Like dropbox, they may have one-click ways to 
> "preview" html files, but not to actually open them.)
>
> Is there any solution besides tiddlyspot that can work well in such 
> situations -- at LEAST for read access on the road, if not for editing -- 
> and that doesn't require me to have an Apache server at my disposal?
>
> -Springer
>
> On Wednesday, October 28, 2020 at 8:50:22 PM UTC-4 TW Tones wrote:
>
>> Surya,
>>
>> Independent from tiddlyspot.
>>
>> If you have a php apache server you can upload and share tiddlywiki's as 
>> simple files. If you want to edit on line you can use tw-receiver.
>>
>> Other use dropbox, one drive etc... I use sharepoint, some use AWS and 
>> there are more.
>>
>> Regards
>> Tones
>>
>> Regards
>> Tones
>>
>>
>> On Wednesday, 28 October 2020 12:27:18 UTC+11, Surya wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi :-)))))))
>>>
>>> @TW Tones: I know... But I couldn't reply privately to amreus- that 
>>> possibility is grey for me :-(
>>> But he found, how he can contact me :-)
>>>
>>> And, @amreus- it worked :-))))) I got your adress and replied just now.
>>> So, I am really really happy for now!!
>>>
>>> But after that, is there no other possibility for uploading a TW?? I 
>>> guess not, otherwise someone had written it here already...
>>> Good luck to all!
>>> Surya
>>>
>>> Mark S. schrieb am Dienstag, 27. Oktober 2020 um 17:54:10 UTC+1:
>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Tuesday, October 27, 2020 at 8:02:46 AM UTC-7, Eric Shulman wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> On Tuesday, October 27, 2020 at 7:18:47 AM UTC-7, André Carvalho wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> There is, at least, a violation of good-faith and a right of 
>>>>>> accessing my data under EU law that I'll exercise if there is no other 
>>>>>> solution.
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> In keeping with the "I'm not a lawyer but I play one on the Internet" 
>>>>> theme...
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>> Continuing your "not a lawyer" theme, DH is a California company, so 
>>>> it's likely EU laws won't apply. Even Prop 24 doesn't seem to provide 
>>>> "data 
>>>> guaranteed" rights.
>>>>
>>>> Having read the Wikipedia page, I'm really hoping this is just a fluke. 
>>>> They went to bat to fight for their customer's privacy rights, moving them 
>>>> into the "good guy" category. Of course, maybe they wrote the wikipedia 
>>>> page ;-)
>>>>
>>>>

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