Topics of conversation: collaborative sense-making, psychological safety, safe enough to be tender (not vulnerable == unsafe), communication of feelings in a creative community, safe enough to be tough or mocking in communication, ways creative communities flourish and dissolve in mess, Jo Freeman's Tyranny of Structurelessness, ways of making it safe to feel so that the "aha" of connecting concepts can be the drive for authoring in a wiki way, generative structure via Wiki Haiku, fractal (scaleless) structure coming from a poetic inspiration of WikiHaiku (six paragraphs, three links), poetry as a distillation process, daily poem like a daily page.
Ways of keeping a process both open and alive, but also defending its form so that it can be transmitted at high fidelity from one person to another, from one group to another.
Analogies from martial arts instruction and learning.
Demonstrations of tools, elaborations, and wiki federation site inspectors.
In-person presentation and discussions versus remote / teleconference meetings; what are differences, how may gaps be bridged to bring some of the creative connections of in-person gatherings to remote meetings? Tactics like having a recorded presentation, but the presenter being also present with the audience for Q&A or pausing to reflect. Example from Roger Ebert's presentation of classic movies where the audience could interrupt the movie (and pause the playback) for questions or to make observations.
Code crystallized into a small poetic form by choosing a well-expressed language construct, a Javascript async generator function crisply expressing the state machine for exploring a remote resource.
Wiki client using ElectronJS to provide support for authoring and navigating a group of multiple wikis, for bringing in relevant context by using the slug for a new page as a query into Wikipedia and Openverse; also client-side URL interception to allow code to run to restyle the client's wiki presentation, to use full-screen video.
FedWiki image gallery as an alternative view of image resources managed by the server's Image plugin, allowing metadata like "used on these pages". Zooming in on a lineup graph and having it still usefully navigable.