Note-keeping software
Tinderbox is a personal content management system and personal knowledge base .
It is a tool for storing, arranging, exploring, and publishing data.[ 1]
Tinderbox was developed for Mac OS and Mac OS X by Mark Bernstein,[ 2] Chief Engineer of Eastgate Systems .[ 3] [ 4]
Its functions include storing and organizing notes, plans, and ideas, and sharing ideas through blogs.[ 5]
It also offers functionality similar to that of outliner and spatial hypertext/mind mapping tools, in addition to knowledge management, database and agent (persistent search) tools.
Tinderbox is used for a wide variety of tasks:
^ Minifinders: Multimedia to Organization Software , MacWorld, May 18, 2004. Archived May 28, 2005, at the Wayback Machine
^ Interesting Software Update: Tinderbox How-To, Jerry’s Brain - James Fallows The Atlantic, 9 March 2015
^ Tinderbox 1.2: multipurpose app sparks, stores, and shares ideas. , MacWorld, September 1, 2003. Archived May 16, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
^ Hurrah For Great Mac Software by Jeremy Wagstaff, The Wall Street Journal, October 16, 2003.
^ Eastgate Tinderbox product page, August 16, 2007
^ Flint
^ Mark Bernstein, "Composites, Construction, Hypertext", Proceedings of the fourteenth ACM conference on Hypertext and hypermedia, ACM, New York, 2001. pp. 122-123.
^ See the Tinderbox manual
^ Notes about Notes and Tinderbox Prototypes
^ Plotting With Tinderbox . YouTube . Archived from the original on 2021-12-11.
Review by Nathan Matias , SitePoint , 2004 February 27.
Giles Foden , The Guardian, 2003 October 16.
Deep Tinderbox , About This Particular Outliner, Ted Goranson
The Best IA Tool You Never Heard Of , Sean Carton, ClickZ, 2002 October 7.
Innovation Extreme Makeover , Robert Ouellette, Boxes and Arrows, 2004 June 21.
Tinderboxing Engelbart Revisited , Gordon Meyer, Wet Behind the Years, 2003 May 29.