Lobster <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Some of you will have received an invite for
Web Collaborator
which (if you will read the below is a cross between
a wiki and a blog)
You should be able edit the project - let me know any
experience you have of this.

I do not know if you visit any blogs - some can be very
beautiful
with great attention to detail.
Who has one or would recommend one?

At the moment our joint wikis on wikipedia and wiki
books have been updated or removed

However many pages and entries will stay and develop

If you go to google and type tmxxine blog
or tmxxine wiki
you will find some of the experiments
that have been made

Some of the 'side pages' created by tmxxine
at wikibooks or wikipedia

Freeware
Nasrudin
Buddhist Philosophy
Sufism
Puppy Linux

Alchemy (too controversial - may be removed)

ASQ (may be removed - incidentally this resulted in a
3 page web site - so was useful)

Computer know how (being developed)
Linoleum
Curl (includes a bizzare interview with Friedger)

Movable feast (will probably dissapear over time unless
supported)

Freeflow (will probably dissapear over time unless
supported)

We also supported Wikiversity and Wikiresearch
(wikiresearch will no doubt move into a separate project)


Many thanks to everyone involved :-)


Many thanks for including everyone in the Web Collaborator efforts!

That's what one of the things i like about HolyGeek - everyone is welcome to participate.

love,

joyce


OAUSAI

Lobster

==================
Record Keeping With Wikis
Many people have heard about blogs, but not as many
people have heard about Wikis. The most famous wiki is
Wikipedia, an online encyclopedia. In Wikipedia, as in
any wiki, you can see all of the pages just like any
other website. The difference is that at the top of the
page is a link that says "Edit this page". That's right,
anybody in the whole world at any time can edit any
page. You don't even need to register for anything. All
you have to do is start typing away and press save.

What happens if someone deletes the whole page? No
problem, the next person to see the page can simply go
to the history of the page, click a previous version,
and press save. It keeps track of every revision of
every single page.

The wiki becomes the record keeper, updating changes to
projects, always providing the latest copy, showing who
changed what and when.

Two problems exist with major wiki implementations as of
today.

Only those skilled with high technical skill can install
them
Not many wikis exist for people to use for their own
personal projects
Those are the two problems that Web Collaborator sets
out to solve. In Web Collaborator, starting your own
personal wiki is as easy as typing in the names of your
collaborators. No need to install complicated software
requiring database systems and whatnot.

Thus Web Collaborator gives you all the power of cutting
edge technologies without any of the fuss of setting
them up. Go ahead and try for yourself.
=================


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