There’s a progressive path in how people tend to install and deploy SilverBullet. Generally, it’s best to try it out on your local machine first. Play around a bit, see if it’s for you. Once you’re hooked, you may want to spend a little bit more time and host SilverBullet on a server in your local network or on the public Internet. SilverBullet is not currently available as a SaaS product, so you’ll have to install and run it yourself. # Installation options Installing SilverBullet as a (local) web server is pretty straightforward if you’re technically inclined enough to be able to use a terminal. The basic setup is simple: you run the SilverBullet server process on your machine, then connect to it locally from your browser via `localhost`. You have a few options here: 1. Installation via [[Install/Docker]] (the awesome container runtime): recommended if you already have Docker installed 2. Installation via [[Install/Deno]] (the awesome JavaScript runtime): recommended if you intend to hack on SilverBullet itself later on 3. More advanced: deploy directly to the cloud via [[Install/Deno Deploy]] # Non-local access Once you got a comfortable set running locally, you may want to look at options to expose your setup to your [[Install/Network and Internet]].