

I'm not sure why Tracy had the issue installing under Linux Mint. Double-clicking the icon brought up TiddlyWiki in a I pointed it at the TiddlyWiki empty.html file. It loaded, and pit up a dialog box asking for configuration. I then ran prism from the /opt/Prism directory.

I put the empty.html file that you get in a TiddlyWiki download, and put that in /opt/TiddlyWiki. I grabbed the last 0.9 version as a tar.gz file, and extracted it to /opt/Prism. (Oddly, under current SeaMonkey, it works: the browser pops up a dialog box about possible unsafe access and asks for permission, but once given, it works as expected.)īecause I don't need tabs for the usage, and don't need the overhead of a full browser, Prism looked like an appropriate solution, since the version of Gecko it implements dates from before the security model changes. (my preferred browser), and Midori, Tiddly complains it is unable to save changes, and requires a Java applet as a Have broken it, by placing restrictions on what might be done with things opened from file:// URLs. The problem is, recent changes in the browser TiddlyWiki is implemented in HTML, CSS, and JavaScript, and is contained in a single file. One of the things I've been playing with is TiddlyWiki, a personal notebook. I experimented with Prism before under Windows, and have recently resurrected it under Ubuntu Linux 12.04 LTS, using XFCE4 as my desktop.
