Wiki - Information Wants To Be Free
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Transcript Wiki - Information Wants To Be Free
Wiki: The Ultimate Tool
For Online Collaboration
Meredith Farkas
November 15, 2006
Michigan Library Consortium
What you will learn
What a wiki is
What wikis are good for, what
they’re not so good for
How libraries are successfully using
wikis
Tips on developing a successful wiki
What is a wiki?
Allows people to collaboratively
develop a Web site without any
tech-savvy (no HTML required!)
Like a content management system
Wiki = quick (in Hawaiian)
All community members can add to
or edit the work of others
Wiki background
Ward Cunningham and the Portland
Pattern Repository
Wikipedia
Conference wikis, fan wikis, wiki
knowledgebases
Wiki Structure
All wikis start off as a single blank
page
Pages are created and connected by
hyperlinks
No ownership of pages; anyone can
change the work of others
Wiki components
Discussion area for each page
All changes made to the page
List of changes made to all pages
Wiki Syntax
Ways to format text, change color,
create links, create tables, etc.
Not difficult to learn, but different
Example: ALA New Orleans Wiki
Differences for each wiki
WYSIWYG is the future
Wikis
vs.
No one owns
content
No specific
organization
(hyperlinks)
Anyone can edit
other people’s
work
Blogs
A person owns
their post
Organized in
reverse chron.
order
Only author can
edit their own
work (others
can comment)
Wikis
vs.
Perpetual work
in progress
Good for
collaborative
group work
Blogs
Posts are
permanent
Good for
disseminating
info/starting a
dialogue
Why wiki?
Easy to use
Web-based
Anyone can make changes
Findability
Many free and open-source wikis
Flexible and extensible
Why not wiki?
Too open (trust issues)
Concerns about ownership of
content
Disorganized
Vandalism and spam
Wikis in Practice
How libraries can use wikis with their
patrons
Community wiki
Subject guide wiki
Wiki as courseware
Wiki as Web site
Community wiki
http://daviswiki.org/
Subject guide wiki
http://www.library.ohiou.edu/subjects/bizwiki/
Wiki as courseware
http://biro.bemidjistate.edu/~morgan/e-rhetoric/wiki.php
Wiki as Web site
http://library.usca.edu/Main/HomePage
How librarians can use wikis
Staff Intranet
Collaborative document editing
Collaboratively-developed manual
Guidebook
Knowledgebase
Planning space for conferences
Staff Intranet
Collaborative document editing
http://www.zohowriter.com/
Collaboratively-developed manual
http://www.seedwiki.com/wiki/
antioch_university_new_england_library_staff_training_and_support_wiki/
Guidebook
http://il2006.pbwiki.com/
Knowledgebase
http://www.libsuccess.org/
Planning space for conferences
http://wikimania2006.wikimedia.org/wiki/Main_Page
Wiki Tips
How to develop and maintain a
successful wiki
Wiki Tips: Software
Do you want your wiki hosted?
Wiki Farms
Easier if you don’t have a server or don’t
know what you’re doing
Examples: PBWiki, WetPaint, WikiSpaces
Do you want to install the software on
your own server?
More software options this way
More control
Maintenance burden is on you
Examples: MediaWiki, PmWiki, Twiki
Things to consider
Programming language
Ease of installation
Security
Permissioning
Spam prevention
Ease of use
Cost
Things to consider (cont’d)
Syntax
Version control
Ability to hold discussions
RSS
Ability to change look
For help choosing software, check out the
Wiki Matrix (http://www.wikimatrix.org/).
Wiki management
Seeding the wiki
Documentation
Policies
Marketing
Dealing with spam
Questions?
Just ask!
E-mail me: [email protected]
AIM me: librarianmer
Visit my site: meredith.wolfwater.com