I just realized that your users who refuse to use the wiki and want to use Word 
are probably doing so because of the wikitext editor, which can be a real pain 
for people to switch to from Word.  Over a year ago we installed the FCKeditor 
extension (FCKeditor+Mediawiki) which provides a WYSIWYG editor to Mediawiki.  
It had its bugs then but has improved a lot and I have heard no complaints from 
our many users.  With a WYSIWYG editor you will likely have a much better 
response from users who switch to the wiki from Word.

-Jim

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Chris Reigrut
Sent: Tuesday, April 28, 2009 11:53 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Mediawiki-l] wiki versus Word

We've seen the same basic tendencies of our users to stick with what 
they know, which is Office documents.  Yes, we much prefer it if people 
use a real wiki page, especially for Word documents, but frankly, I 
don't get all that bent out of shape about it--I'll mention it to people 
if it comes up, but I don't go out of my way to find people uploading 
those documents and trying to "convert" them.  And it does make sense in 
some occasions:  as you've mentioned, forms, final documents, but 
certainly for spreadsheets, presentations, etc.  As someone else 
mentioned, keeping a Word document up-to-date is quite a pain, and I've 
found that people tend to migrate to wikitext after the first few 
iterations.  We actually have extended the search engine to 
automatically index the text in common types of attachments so that they 
are searchable.

Personally, I've found that the lower-key approach works better, but 
your mileage may vary.

[email protected] wrote:
> Message: 2
> Date: Tue, 28 Apr 2009 10:06:48 -0600
> From: "McHale, Nina" <[email protected]>
> Subject: [Mediawiki-l] wiki versus Word
> To: "[email protected]"
>       <[email protected]>
> Message-ID:
>       <3354e9b491d9ea47a1db89bf983763636700777...@steamboat.ucdenver.pvt>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
>
> Hey, all,
>
> Some of my colleagues are objecting to my desire to minimize uploading of 
> Word documents to our new intranet wiki. My main objection to it is that we 
> ought to be entering information into wiki pages so that we can take full 
> advantage of document versioning, talk pages, watching, etc.-y'know, the 
> stuff that makes it a wiki...
>
> I've been called "silly" and "arbitrary" regarding this. :) I'm not outright 
> forbidding posting Word documents; I'm just trying to get people to use the 
> wiki the way it's mean to be used. Am I being unreasonable? I even stated 
> that it's acceptable to load the final version of a 20-page report, or a form 
> that's meant to be printed out and filled out by hand-i.e., things in a final 
> state that do not need further editing.
>
> Has anyone else encountered this resistance? I was most surprised that it 
> came from someone who uses/edits Wikipedia, which, as far as I can tell, does 
> not support uploading of Word docs.
>
> Nina
> Nina McHale, MA/MSLS
> Assistant Professor, Web Librarian
> Auraria Library
> http://library.auraria.edu/~nmchale/
> Facebook<http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=672599042> | 
> MySpace<http://www.myspace.com/ninermac>
> Serving the University of Colorado Denver,
> Metropolitan State College of Denver,
> and the Community College of Denver
> 1100 Lawrence Street
> Denver, CO 80204
> 303-556-4729
>   
-- 
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Chris Reigrut                                Home: +1-303-682-9630
[email protected]                          Mobile: +1-303-960-9831
http://www.reigrut.net

"You live and learn, or you don't live long" -- Robert A. Heinlein


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