I use Qwikiwiki as it's so simple to set up and run. It uses files rather than a DB though and I did have to tinker with the PHP to make it fully CSS compliant.
On 16/06/05, Neerav <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Matt > > I researched the same topic recently and my findings are at: > http://www.bhatt.id.au/blog/2005/05/17/wiki-comparison-pages/ > > -- > Neerav Bhatt > http://www.bhatt.id.au > > Need a Sydney based web standards contractor? You need my services. > Recent projects for iFocus, Glassonion, Freshweb, Cogentis > > http://www.bhatt.id.au/blog/ - Ramblings Thoughts > http://bookcrossing.com/referral/neerav > > Matt Hampel wrote: > > I'm looking for a fast and easy to set up Wiki for my organization. I > > really like the features included in TiddlyWiki > > (http://www.tiddlywiki.com/), but all the server-side implementations > > I've tried have worked poorly or not at all. > > > > Does anyone have any recommendations for a lightweight server-side Wiki? > > > > Thanks- > > Matt Hampel > ********************************************************* > The CMS discussion list for http://webstandardsgroup.org/ > ********************************************************* > > ********************************************************* The CMS discussion list for http://webstandardsgroup.org/ *********************************************************
