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My parents started a shared text document detailing the key family events that have happened since they married >3 decades ago. It is now nearly 5000 words long. Part of me thinks this is a great idea and I want to make my own for my own life/family, but the other part of me wonders… is there a better way to do this?

@heycitizen Bahaha I love it.

Cons: only I would be contributing

Pros: everyone who'd contribute via the other method would still be contributing

@levisan @heycitizen NextCloud + LibreOffice work great for me. Any registered or unregistered user can participate if I invite them. It looks like Google Crap.

If you don't want to own your own NextCloud I'm pretty sure you can pay a few dollars per month for someone to host it for you.

@levisan @heycitizen Pictured: a spreadsheet hosted in NextCloud on my home server running in LibreOffice on my home server. (Browser acts as quasi-dumb terminal.)

Supports multiple simultaneous users.

Notice it respects my browser's "I prefer dark theme" choice!

@progo @levisan the advantage to git and Syncthing is version history and decentralized.

@heycitizen @levisan agreed. But it's easier to get family to edit a NextCloud document. No solution is perfect for everything.

Also, NextCloud keeps snapshots, enough that you can roll-back and undo days-old mistakes. You can configure it to keep at least one version per day for years, I think.

@progo I didn't know LibreOffice could do that! Neat.

@levisan collaboraoffice.com/code/

From Collabora, who employ most of the people who actually work on the LibreOffice project.

@levisan (The splashy home page doesn't say it, but Collabora Office Online is mostly LibreOffice.)

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