LibraryH3lp has another hosted Q&A system that comes free with their virtual 
reference system (or vice versa, I suppose). They use it for their own 
knowledge base at http://ask.libraryh3lp.com/ 

Deborah

-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Jason 
Stirnaman
Sent: Thursday, 15 January 2015 4:42 p.m.
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Structured help platform recommendations?

>> By that I mean a tool by which a broad range of staff can create,
edit, inter-link, classify and maintain a set of structured documentation for 
fixing problems and resolving issues.

That sounds just like a wiki to me. Many wiki tools provide that, it just may 
not be obvious.

By "structured", do you mean you want structure enforced more as fields?

Redmine can track issues and store documentation. You can add any type of 
custom field to your issue schema. Documentation, though, is generally authored 
as a wiki. You can easily reference other objects. It definitely meets your 
reporting and authentication requirements. CAS authentication was really easy 
to setup.
http://www.redmine.org/projects/redmine/wiki/Features

And then there are hosted Q&A systems like http://gimlet.us/ (from some of our 
C4L friends) and http://springshare.com/libanswers/systems.html.

I agree about Drupal. It seems like that type of thing would be fairly easy to 
accomplish.  There's the Books module, 
https://www.drupal.org/documentation/modules/book, for structured content. Not 
sure how to wire that up with issue/ticket-tracking though.

Jason

Jason Stirnaman, MLS
Application Development, Library and Information Services, IR University of 
Kansas Medical Center jstirna...@kumc.edu
913-588-7319

On Jan 14, 2015, at 7:25 PM, Stuart A. Yeates <syea...@gmail.com> wrote:

> I'm looking for recommendations for a structured help platform.
>
> By that I mean a tool by which a broad range of staff can create, 
> edit, inter-link, classify and maintain a set of structured 
> documentation for fixing problems and resolving issues.
>
> Open source, closed source and hosted solutions considered, but the 
> platform must enforce structure (i.e. not a wiki); do LDAP / SAML / 
> etc; decent reporting of high-use docs; and be easy to use for 
> literate non-techies.
>
> It seems like there should be a drupal module or something for this, 
> but for the life of me I can't see it (but then there are a confusing 
> array).
>
> Pointers to accounts of other people doing similar things also readily 
> accepted.
>
> cheers
> stuart
> --
> ...let us be heard from red core to black sky

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