This link has been bookmarked by 120 people . It was first bookmarked on 25 Jul 2006, by Jeff Schilling.
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Bo Leuf and Ward Cunningham define wiki as "a freely expandable collection of interlinked Web 'pages,' a hypertext system for storing and modifying information — a database, where each page is easily editable by any user with a forms-capable Web browser client" (page 14). Wiki pages are controlled — created, linked, edited, deleted, moved, renamed, and so on — by a programming or scripting language, and stored either as plain ASCII text files or in an external relational database, such as MySQL, Oracle, or PostgreSQL. Wiki pages are only rendered or displayed as HTML through templates by the wiki Web server. Ward's original wiki was written in Perl, and he released the script as copyright-limited open source.
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Jason McDonaldDefinition of wikis and discussion on uses and the future of wikis.
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"a freely expandable collection of interlinked Web 'pages,' a hypertext system for storing and modifying information — a database, where each page is easily editable by any user with a forms-capable Web browser client"
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shevoo2003 article on wikis; includes glossaries and lots of links.
Informative, but is from 2003, so I imagine a lot has changed since
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Nico ZwaneveldQuickiwiki, Swiki, Twiki, Zwiki and the Plone Wars Wiki as a PIM and Collaborative Content Tool
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Rachel CDavid Mattison
wiki collaboration technology tools trends socialsoftware community opensource
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Christian JohansenLarge and very detailed article. Somewhat dated, but has references to "canonical" wiki articles.
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We've seen uses of the Swiki where it's had an important role in helping students to collaborate and become more engaged in the course material. Learning scientists refer to this phenomenon as "shifting the agency." In most classrooms, the teacher has the "agency," the control, the driving force — the teacher asks the questions, the students respond. But in the real world, each of us have our own agency. In that sense, the classroom works backwards from the real world. In the real world, if you have a question, you go to an expert who knows the answer, then ask him or her the question. But in the classroom, the teacher typically already knows the answer, but is asking the students the question, and they may not know the answer. The Swiki offers the opportunity to shift the agency into a more realistic state: Students ask questions, make the pages, even create their own activities.
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12 May 05
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Wikis are everywhere, but, unfortunately, the online literature has not begun to focus on wikis yet. Why aren't wikis on our radar screen the way blogs are right now? Walt Crawford, a senior analyst at RLG and active writer and speaker in the library field, reported to me by e-mail that he had "tried out a library-related one quite a while ago and, at the time, found the mechanisms and content both either uninteresting or problematic. Since I didn't have any need that cried out for wikis as a solution, I didn't pursue the matter. That also explains the absence of any mention of wikis in my American Libraries 'e-files' series in late 2001: I was not aware of any real significance in the library field. That doesn't mean there isn't any, of course."
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Quickiwiki, Swiki, Twiki, Zwiki and the Plone Wars Wiki as a PIM and Collaborative Content Tool by David Mattison • Access Services Archivist • British Columbia Archives, Cananda In July 1991 I had my first taste of hypertext when a neighbor loaned me his Classic Macintosh. I created a HyperCard stack simulating an orientation to my workplace. Working in a Wang shop as I did at the time, I couldn't show it to anyone except in printed form. I remember it was pretty tough to convey my excitement over hypertext on the basis of ink on paper. Over my many years of research and writing, I could see the personal potential for either a stand-alone or a Web-based hypertext system. Over the 2 decades I've worked with personal computers, I tried a few personal information manager (PIM) and free-form database products such as AskSam [http://www.asksam.com/], but decided to wait. Even then, others were already working out solutions to using a Web browser as a hypertext writing tool.
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Quickiwiki, Swiki, Twiki, Zwiki and the Plone Wars Wiki as a PIM and Collaborative Content Tool
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Quickiwiki, Swiki, Twiki, Zwiki and the Plone Wars Wiki as a PIM and Collaborative Content Tool by David Mattison • Access Services Archivist • British Columbia Archives, Cananda In July 1991 I had my first taste of hypertext when a neighbor loaned me his Classic Macintosh. I created a HyperCard stack simulating an orientation to my workplace. Working in a Wang shop as I did at the time, I couldn't show it to anyone except in printed form. I remember it was pretty tough to convey my excitement over hypertext on the basis of ink on paper. Over my many years of research and writing, I could see the personal potential for either a stand-alone or a Web-based hypertext system. Over the 2 decades I've worked with personal computers, I tried a few personal information manager (PIM) and free-form database products such as AskSam [http://www.asksam.com/], but decided to wait. Even then, others were already working out solutions to using a Web browser as a hypertext writing tool.
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Quickiwiki, Swiki, Twiki, Zwiki and the Plone Wars Wiki as a PIM and Collaborative Content Tool by David Mattison • Access Services Archivist • British Columbia Archives, Cananda In July 1991 I had my first taste of hypertext when a neighbor loaned me his Classic Macintosh. I created a HyperCard stack simulating an orientation to my workplace. Working in a Wang shop as I did at the time, I couldn't show it to anyone except in printed form. I remember it was pretty tough to convey my excitement over hypertext on the basis of ink on paper. Over my many years of research and writing, I could see the personal potential for either a stand-alone or a Web-based hypertext system. Over the 2 decades I've worked with personal computers, I tried a few personal information manager (PIM) and free-form database products such as AskSam [http://www.asksam.com/], but decided to wait. Even then, others were already working out solutions to using a Web browser as a hypertext writing tool.
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Quickiwiki, Swiki, Twiki, Zwiki and the Plone Wars Wiki as a PIM and Collaborative Content Tool
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Quickiwiki, Swiki, Twiki, Zwiki and the Plone Wars Wiki as a PIM and Collaborative Content Tool
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24 Sep 04
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Swiki is a wiki clone created with Squeak
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Swiki is a wiki clone created with Squeak
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Amy GahranFound it through Furl popular items
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Andy Robertsl for either a stand-alone or a Web-based hypertext system. Over the 2 decades I've worked with pe
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Tom SeppComprehensive overview...
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Quickiwiki, Swiki, Twiki, Zwiki and the Plone Wars Wiki as a PIM and Collaborative Content Tool
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12 May 04
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Where Will Wikis Go Next?
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