Adam, Landon and others love the idea of adding some history about Tina to the about page β users looking into Tina might be interested in this context as well.
π‘ Suggested Solution
Add in a 'Timeline' component to the about page that has some copy describing the history of Tina.
πΌ Tasks
[x] Use the existing roadmap component to add a timeline to the about page.
[x] Use the content provided by Landon and mock-up by Betty to show the design.
β Acceptance Criteria
[x] Timeline exists on the about page with the given content, below the other content and before the image banner.
πΈ Screenshots
Figure β design to be used
β Copy...
High-level overview and history of TinaCMS
8-year timeline
2016: Forestry.io was created
This was a revolutionary Headless CMS as it was one of the first Git-based CMS platforms that focused on the JAMstack. Its ability to integrate directly with repositories like GitHub set a new standard for managing markdown-based content. The CMS allowed content teams to work seamlessly with developers, bridging the gap between technical and non-technical users.
2019: TinaCMS was born!
Initially launched as an open-source project by Forestry.io, TinaCMS was developed to create a more flexible, inline-editing CMS experience that was also Git-backed. It aimed at making site editing easier for non-technical users within static site generators like Gatsby, allowing them to edit directly within the frontend.
2020: Expansion beyond Gatsby
TinaCMS expanded to work with other static site generators like Next.js, Hugo and Jekyll, increasing its reach and versatility.
2021: Introduction of TinaCloud
TinaCMS introduced Tina Cloud, a managed service that added features like real-time collaboration, identity management, and advanced content workflows, reducing the complexity of self-hosting. TinaCloud provided Git-backed editing without requiring users to manage infrastructure, making it more accessible for small teams and reducing the complexity of deployment.
2022: Improved Developer Experience
The team streamlined developer workflows, adding robust documentation to simplify setup and integration. Tina also got enhanced block editors, better schema management, and expanded plugin support that made it more flexible for different use cases.
2023: 10,000 stars on GitHub β
Tina reached some exciting milestones, with 1,000 members in our Discord support forum and 10,000 GitHub stargazers, thanks to the amazing Tina community π₯°
New features were added, like block-level control, schema-based content models, and enhanced UI customization, allowing for more sophisticated content structuring.
2024: Acquired by SSW
SSW loved using Tina so much that they reached out to help and ended up acquiring TinaCMS, bringing greater enterprise resources, support, and expertise.
Version 2 was released, with big updates including improved content indexing and better performance. Additionally, the team launched the TinaGPT chatbot in June, integrating AI-driven assistance into the platform.
π©Έ Pain
Adam, Landon and others love the idea of adding some history about Tina to the about page β users looking into Tina might be interested in this context as well.
π‘ Suggested Solution
Add in a 'Timeline' component to the about page that has some copy describing the history of Tina.
πΌ Tasks
β Acceptance Criteria
πΈ Screenshots
Figure β design to be used
β Copy...
High-level overview and history of TinaCMS
8-year timeline 2016: Forestry.io was created This was a revolutionary Headless CMS as it was one of the first Git-based CMS platforms that focused on the JAMstack. Its ability to integrate directly with repositories like GitHub set a new standard for managing markdown-based content. The CMS allowed content teams to work seamlessly with developers, bridging the gap between technical and non-technical users. 2019: TinaCMS was born! Initially launched as an open-source project by Forestry.io, TinaCMS was developed to create a more flexible, inline-editing CMS experience that was also Git-backed. It aimed at making site editing easier for non-technical users within static site generators like Gatsby, allowing them to edit directly within the frontend. 2020: Expansion beyond Gatsby TinaCMS expanded to work with other static site generators like Next.js, Hugo and Jekyll, increasing its reach and versatility. 2021: Introduction of TinaCloud TinaCMS introduced Tina Cloud, a managed service that added features like real-time collaboration, identity management, and advanced content workflows, reducing the complexity of self-hosting. TinaCloud provided Git-backed editing without requiring users to manage infrastructure, making it more accessible for small teams and reducing the complexity of deployment. 2022: Improved Developer Experience The team streamlined developer workflows, adding robust documentation to simplify setup and integration. Tina also got enhanced block editors, better schema management, and expanded plugin support that made it more flexible for different use cases. 2023: 10,000 stars on GitHub β Tina reached some exciting milestones, with 1,000 members in our Discord support forum and 10,000 GitHub stargazers, thanks to the amazing Tina community π₯° New features were added, like block-level control, schema-based content models, and enhanced UI customization, allowing for more sophisticated content structuring. 2024: Acquired by SSW SSW loved using Tina so much that they reached out to help and ended up acquiring TinaCMS, bringing greater enterprise resources, support, and expertise. Version 2 was released, with big updates including improved content indexing and better performance. Additionally, the team launched the TinaGPT chatbot in June, integrating AI-driven assistance into the platform.
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