Watched How I Make my Website & My Thinking Behind It: TiddlyWiki NodeJS, Wikis, and Internal Linking by  Brandon Hall Brandon Hall from YouTube

This is how I edit and update my website and how I think about the way I've been structuring the website . The main tools that I use for this are TiddlyWiki NodeJS, any modern web browser, simple command line scripts, and FileZilla. Links to these are below.

Also on PeerTube at https://peertube.mastodon.host/videos...

This is really awesome. Brandon is using a private TiddlyWiki to generate a static website! This is so very IndieWeb. If he’s available, he should come to the next Homebrew Website Club for San Diego or the online West Coast version.
Watched TiddlyWiki Tutorial 07 - Encrypting TiddlyWiki for Cloud Storage from YouTube

Fair warning; this solution is a bit of an overkill. If all you want to do is encrypt Tiddlywiki, it has it's own encryption utility that is every bit as secure which you can read about here: http://tiddlywiki.com/#Encryption. Otherwise, if you also would like to backup other content along with TiddlyWiki, EncFS may be the solution for you: This tut gives a brief overview on how to use EncFS to encrypt theTiddlyWiki data file before it is uploaded to the cloud.

Watched "Dirty Money" The Wagon Wheel from Netflix
Directed by Dan Krauss. Wells Fargo was long seen as the 'golden child' of banking. But former employees detail the ruthless and fraudulent practices that fueled its growth.
We need better government regulation and oversite to prevent companies from doing exactly this. The fines should have been significantly worse.
Watched TiddlyWiki Tutorial 05 - Importing and Referencing Images in TiddlyWiki from YouTube
This tutorial covers importing images into TiddlyWiki, file storage and referencing images served over the Internet.
The fact that they would be embedded into the install directly and bloating its size is a bit concerning to me. I’d probably host them on another site and transclude them.