Wiki: Web Collaboration

Couverture
Springer Science & Business Media, 20 mai 2008 - 483 pages
A book about wikis! That’s what people need. Because with wiki technology, lots of people can freely work - gether – they can even generate very large works in the intellectual realm. See for yourself: Today, we still marvel at our massive church buildings, each c- structed over a period of centuries, requiring an immense amount of labor and often bearing the cultural stamp of all of the epochs during which it was created. Someone just has to begin by placing stone upon stone and motivating the people nearby to help out a bit. In places where such enthusiastic fellow men and women lend a hand and donate materials, great things can emerge. And where they are absent? Either scant ruins remain, or the iron will of a pharaoh is required, an army of drivers, the sweat of a people and a mountain of gold. Great things can also be created in that way – take the Py- mids: a clear concept, no blending of styles, pure will. Those are two very different paths. The one entails passionate people devotedly building something together for the common good; the other: A single will manages a variety of resources to achieve a set goal. Wikis are tools with which lots of people with a minimum of - ganization, planning, money and time can create something together and communicate with each other from several scattered computers or over the Internet.
 

Table des matières

9
14
4
54
5
64
6
80
the Function Pages
107
4
119
3
143
XVI
145
What is a Project?
267
Composing the Project Plan
279
Spreadsheet Plugin
297
Executing and Documenting an 23 1 In the Event Office
312
Content XIX
317
Installing
337
XX
352
26
363

4
150
Installing 11 1 Installation under Linux
166
Working with
179
Formatting in TWiki 13 1 Formatting Text
193
Searching
209
Structured Data with Forms
221
Installing TWiki
231
Rights
238
XVIII
247
Designing a TWiki
251
Organization
375
28
397
Technical
415
A few Wiki
425
The Art of Sowing
437
Social
447
2
453
Bibliography
477
Droits d'auteur

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Expressions et termes fréquents

Fréquemment cités

Page 5 - GriinderWiki, offering support for wiki founders, has calculated that an average of two hours a day over a period of two years is needed to establish an active, independent online community.

Références à ce livre

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À propos de l'auteur (2008)

Anja Ebersbach is an information scientist. She is a university and technical college instructor, and is also active as a freelance IT trainer. She is working on her dissertation on the topic of "Wikis as Tools of Scientific Work."

Markus Glaser, also an information scientist, primarily works as a web and application programmer, where he specializes in MediaWiki and TWiki systems.

Dr. Richard Heigl, a historian, works as a freelance instructor, IT trainer and moderator of large group seminars. He is primarily occupied with the planning and moderation of wiki projects.

Alexander Warta, information scientist, is a doctoral candidate employed at Robert Bosch GmbH in Stuttgart. He is a specialist for the wiki software Confluence.

Informations bibliographiques