Blogs, Wikis, RSS: Walking the enterprise tightrope
Grok Headline matches for Blogs, Wikis, RSS: Walking the enterprise tightrope
Walking the wireless tightrope
Walking the wireless tightrope
04/19/2004 05:50 AMvnunet.com Apr 19 2004 10:26AM GMT
Walking a Tightrope -- Quickly -- Toward
Iraqi Elections (Los Angeles Times)
Walking a Tightrope -- Quickly -- Toward
Iraqi Elections (Los Angeles Times)
09/25/2004 05:53 AMLos Angeles Times - BAGHDAD — Iraqi and United Nations officials
have little room for error as they confront the challenge of pulling
together credible parliamentary elections in a violence-ravaged nation
with no history of democracy.
Enterprising bl0gs, wikis and RSS
Enterprising bl0gs, wikis and RSS
03/25/2005 04:56 PMZDNet Mar 25 2005 9:43PM GMT
"10 Rules for Corporate Blogs and Wikis"
"10 Rules for Corporate Blogs and Wikis"
04/14/2004 09:03 AM10 Rules for Corporate Blogs and Wikis
10 Rules for Corporate Blogs and Wikis
04/13/2004 02:17 PMi don't know that I agree that blogs are like marriage, but the advice
is pretty good overall
Gilbane Panel on Blogs & Wikis
Gilbane Panel on Blogs & Wikis
04/13/2005 11:22 AMLive blogging the panel I am on at the Gilbane Conference on Content
Management Technologies. Lauren Wood describes the broad uses of wikis
and weblogs. Some for short term information (updates), some for
long term (solve a problem). Different facets...
Disney Enterprise Webl0gs and Wikis
Disney Enterprise Webl0gs and Wikis
02/10/2004 06:45 PMMike Pusateri, Elisabeth Freeman and Eric Freeman at Disney shares
their enterprise blogging initative: Using RSS for content
distribution Using RSS Enclosures to deliver video to 2 million
broadband users. Some argue that enclosures don't scale and their not
enough...
Blogs, Wikis And Photobl0gs Testify To
Tsunami Disaster
Blogs, Wikis And Photobl0gs Testify To
Tsunami Disaster
12/29/2004 06:14 PMInformation Week Dec 29 2004 9:22PM GMT
Ross Mayfield's Webl0g: Disney
Enterprise Webl0gs and Wikis
Ross Mayfield's Webl0g: Disney
Enterprise Webl0gs and Wikis
02/11/2004 04:32 PMDisney Enterprise Weblogs and Wikis .. how Disney's using MT
internally .. Ross Mayfield explains .. did a nice
write-up
ross.typepad.com/blog/2004/02/disney_enterpri.html
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Is Microsoft ready for the SP2
tightrope?
Is Microsoft ready for the SP2
tightrope?
05/06/2004 05:37 PMZDNet May 6 2004 9:27PM GMT
Red Hat Walks The Linux Tightrope
Red Hat Walks The Linux Tightrope
08/21/2004 11:00 AMSlashdot Aug 21 2004 3:24PM GMT
Nokia walks tightrope with Metrowerks
acquisition
Nokia walks tightrope with Metrowerks
acquisition
09/08/2004 02:50 PMBeefs up Symbian tools
Now do one about wikis
Now do one about wikis
03/12/2003 06:04 PMAs far as I can tell from my chair far from Austin, Scott's
bet-winning song was the best thing about SXSW this year: Sitting in
Austin,
Tim Berners-Lee on Wikis
Tim Berners-Lee on Wikis
03/19/2005 03:10 AMTBL at a seminar in Finland, Berners-Lee's original vision of the web
was as a resource for collaboration. He said that so far it had been
"a big disappointment" in this respect, although exceptions
such as "wikis" - essentially interactive...
Atom for Wikis
Atom for Wikis
10/28/2003 11:06 PMWith the recent
upspike in
interest in
Atom
for Wikis, I just thought I would jot down a few thoughts on
the subject
...Wikis Anonymous
Wikis Anonymous
09/07/2004 04:43 AMBrian Lamb has a great article on wikis in academia in EDUCAUSE
Review. I didn't interview for the piece (otherwise would have shared
how academic communities are using Socialtext), but Brian more than
did his homework and sources from some...
More about searching wikis
More about searching wikis
02/01/2005 10:02 PM
Ross
Mayfield:
Meanwhile, Jimmy Wales and others are working on Wikia, a wiki search
engine, and Wikipedia produces a nice diff feed. Adapting to
MediaWiki covers 1/4 of public wikis. There are well over 100
open source wikis, a wonderful diversity to respect, and search
engines
would do well to adapt to them over time just as they have with less
standard blog implementations.
Wikis in Forbes Best of the Web
Wikis in Forbes Best of the Web
12/19/2004 03:05 PMNice article on wikis in Forbes Best of the Web, here's an excerpt on
Socialtext:One firm already focused on trying to apply wiki technology
to the enterprise market is Palo Alto, Calif.-based SocialText, which
offers a simple wiki interface that...
Disrupting IT and Wikis
Disrupting IT and Wikis
05/24/2004 11:21 PMGreat article by Jim Louderback in eWeek on how social software,
social networking and wifi are disruptive technologies for IT like PCs
were. Makes specific Wiki IT recommendations....
"Der Stein der Wikis"
"Der Stein der Wikis"
04/11/2005 11:43 PMWhy I hate Wikis
Why I hate Wikis
08/19/2004 10:16 AM Jimmo explains why he hates Wikis
Wikis In Schools
Wikis In Schools
03/17/2005 03:08 AMStudents working on writing projects are accessing their teacher's
wiki from their Safari bookmark toolbar on their Macs via Apple's
Rendezvous. By Chris Jablonski, ZDNet
Do Wikis Have a Place in the Newsroom?
Do Wikis Have a Place in the Newsroom?
09/08/2004 09:48 PMMark Glaser, in the Online Journalism Review asks a very big question:
Do Wikis Have a Place in the Newsroom? He covers the latest tests to
Wikipedia authority, the Wemedia Project and gets comment on public
wikis: "Most user-generated content...
Wikis for Yahoo Users?
Wikis for Yahoo Users?
04/18/2005 07:02 PMSwaroop wants to Wikify Yahoo! Notepad. Did you even know we had a
Yahoo! Notepad? I bet many of you did not. I used to keep my grocery
list on it back in 2000, but eventually gave that up for some reason.
I still don't know why. I say we take it step farther and give some
wiki space to every Yahoo! Group as well. I wonder how many groups
would use it... Where else should Yahoo have wiki functionality...
Time Article on Wikis
Time Article on Wikis
06/05/2005 11:47 PMIt's a Wiki, Wiki World: Time Magazine has an article about
wikis in its latest issue. They focus on Jimmy Wales and Wikipedia of course, but they cover
wikis in general.
This line was interesting:
A wiki is a deceptively simple piece of software (little more than
five lines of computer code) [...]
There's a wiki written in five lines? Does each line have 1,000
semi-colons?
Wikis winning ways
Wikis winning ways
06/20/2004 12:16 AM via Satish Talim
Free Desktop Wikis
Free Desktop Wikis
06/17/2005 04:46 PMwikidPad is now a Sourceforge project with a BSD-style license. I've
been using wikidPad since last February and consider it...
Wicked (Good) Wikis
Wicked (Good) Wikis
03/06/2004 01:49 AMBlogalyst Stowe Boyd has a seriously great article on wikis in Darwin.
Its a good intro to wiki, compares them with weblogs, highlights their
emergent properties and role as social tools. ...Wikis are built upon
an inherently open model of...
Using Wikis for content management...
Using Wikis for content management...
01/09/2004 10:15 PMSo here's a thought partly inspired by an e-mail from a work
colleague and partly by Haughey.com. Creating and editing
wiki pages is extremely simple and elegant once you get past the first
30 minute learning curve. And essentially you end up with a page
that's got an incredibly simple template, pretty well marked-up code
(or at least could do if you used the right Wiki system) and can be
edited incredibly quickly. Now, imagine for a moment that the Wiki
page itself is nothing but a content management interface and that the
Wiki has a separate templating and publishing engine that grabs what
you've written on the page, turns it into a nicely designed
fully-functioning (uneditable) web-page and publishes it to the world.
It could make the creation of small information rich sites enormously
quick - particularly if you built in FTP stuff.
Now one of the problems with using Wikis generally is that they
don't lend themselves to the creation of clear sectionalised
navigation. Nor do they do naturally find it easy to use graphic
design, colour or layout differently on separate pages to communicate
either your context or the your location in the site. That's not to
say that Wikis are broken, of course, just that the particularly
networked rather than heirarchical model of navigation that they lend
themselves towards isn't suitable for all kinds of public-facing sites
(the same could be said of the one-size-fits-all design of the pages).
This would clearly be a problem. Wikis sacrifice that kind of
functionality on the whole in order to gain advantages in other areas
(ie. collaborative site generation and maintainance). Without those
advantages, you'd simply be left with an inferior product.
So how to integrate design and architecture into the production of
a wiki-CMSed website? Well, it's not a particularly new question with
regard to wikis generally - loads of suggestions about how some kinds
of heirarchy could be built in have been made and some of them
implemented. On the whole they've not been terribly successful as they
present a higher level of user-level complexity, and with a lot of
potential naive users, publically editable wikis can't really afford
complexity. But that's not true if only one person or a small group
were to be updating the site. The complexity level could increase a
bit and the learing curve would have to be just a little steeper
initially.
Here's an example of how you could create heirarchy and utilise
different templates at the level of the individual page. First,
imagine a templating interface that allowed you to create an outline
heirarchy of the various sections of a site (just like you'd produce
in the outline view of Word or using something like OmniOutliner).
Now, each section of that site-map could have a distinct template
attached to it, or inherit a template from the section above. Then all
you'd need on the Wiki-page (as content-management interface) would be
a drop-down box on the right that allowed you to choose which section
the page you'd created would sit under. Given that, you could use the
mechanics behind the templating engine automatically generate a
variety of different models of heirarchical navigation and breadcrumb
trails which you could embed into your templates (you could use a
templating mechanism very much like the one used to move content
chunks around weblogs using Typepad). And the same part of the Wiki
page that you use to decide which section the wiki page should be
contained within could also house a .gif thumbnail of the template for
that page. And the assigned section of a new page could even default
to that of the page from which you created it - forward-link from a
page about Troubleshooting (in the section "Help") to create a page
about Error Messages, and Error Messages is automatically created
inside the "Help" section initially. And all of this could then be
'published', pushing everything out in a lovely stylish elegant and
visually rich format to the rest of the world at the push of a
button.
Wouldn't that be cool? Blogger-style management for all kinds of
other sites... The only things that don't seem obvious to me at the
moment is how you make the intra-wiki links not look like Wiki links
to the general public while preserving the ease of use that they
engender for the person creating the pages... Any thoughts?
Read the comments
Monitoring wikis worldwide
Monitoring wikis worldwide
01/01/2005 02:58 PM
Newsfeed search engines like Technorati, Feedster, and PubSub make
it easy to monitor blogs and news sites. You can subscribe to a search
newsfeed to be alerted whenever a blog entry or news items matches
your
search criteria. But how do you monitor all of the wikis of the world?
The newsfeed search engines don't monitor wiki recent changes
newsfeeds, or do they?
I googled
and turned up some wiki pages on InterWi
kiSearchEnginesDiscussion
and UnifiedRecentChange
s. Looks like there is plenty more work to be done in this
area.
Patterns, Wikis, and APIs
Patterns, Wikis, and APIs
05/21/2004 02:11 PM

It's great to see Ward Cunningham's friendly face popping up on MSDN's
Channel 9. In
these segments, he connects the dots between the patterns
that we increasingly use to guide software architecture, and the
environments in which we formulate, discuss, and apply those patterns.
...WikiBibliography Offers Information on
Wikis
WikiBibliography Offers Information on
Wikis
01/03/2005 08:26 AMThere's a new Web bibliography available, devoted to significant
reports, information, and publications about Wikis. It's called
WikiBibliography and thank goodness for the paste key. It's available
at http://www.public.iastate.edu/~CYBERSTACKS/WikiBib.htm ....
IT Heavies Lifting Dollars for Wikis
IT Heavies Lifting Dollars for Wikis
07/27/2004 02:42 PMMichael Singer of Internet.com covers an enterprise view of the BlogOn
event: The industry itself has shifted from its early adopter stage to
an "awkward adolescence," according to experts attending last Friday's
BlogOn 2004 conference here. But major IT players...
Netcraft: Wikis: The Next Frontier for
Spammers?
Netcraft: Wikis: The Next Frontier for
Spammers?
06/08/2004 03:02 AMWikis: the next frontier for link spammers .. it’ll happen in
the future .. Wiki spamming is the new black .. If Netcraft is
right
news.netcraft.com/archives/2004/06/04/wikis_the_next_frontier_
for_spammers.html
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site | 5 links
Wikis make online encyclopedias
interactive
Wikis make online encyclopedias
interactive
04/10/2005 10:40 AMChron.com - Sun Apr 10, 07:30 am GMT
Wide Open Spaces: Wikis, Ready or Not
Wide Open Spaces: Wikis, Ready or Not
09/09/2004 05:25 AMWide Open Spaces: Wikis, Ready or Not by Brian Lamb/strong>
http://www.edu
cause.edu/pub/er/erm04/erm0452.asp
In 1999, the World
Wide Web inventor Sir Tim Berners-Lee looked back on the previous
decade and lamented: “I wanted the Web to be what I call an
interactive space where everybody can edit. And I started saying
‘interactive,’ and then I read in the media that the Web was great
because it was ‘interactive,’ meaning you could click. This was
not what I meant by interactivity.” That vision of a genuinely
interactive environment rather than “a glorified television
channel”—one in which people not only would browse pages but also
would edit them as part of the process—did not disappear with the
rise of the read-only Web browser.1 It’s churning away more actively
than ever, in a vivid and chaotic Web-within-the-Web, via an anarchic
breed of pages known as “wikis.”. This has been added to my Wikis
section in Bots, Blogs and News
Aggregators web page.
SMC Expands Enterprise Wireless Solution
Set to Extend Enterprise Networking
SMC Expands Enterprise Wireless Solution
Set to Extend Enterprise Networking
06/05/2005 11:19 PM
New EliteConnect 802.11b/g wireless accessories extend network reach
with the security, range, flexibility, interoperability and throughput
that Enterprise wireless applications demand [PRWEB May 25, 2005]
Let Your IT Do the Walking
Let Your IT Do the Walking
03/26/2005 02:36 AM
Constructech Magazine Mar 26 2005 6:44AM GMT
Walking to the sky.
Walking to the sky.
09/13/2004 03:44 AM
Grok Description matches for Blogs, Wikis, RSS: Walking the enterprise tightrope
GrokA matches for Blogs, Wikis, RSS: Walking the enterprise tightrope
Blogs, Wikis, RSS: Walking the enterprise tightrope