Thanks for all of the recommendations. It sounds like TWiki is the one to go
with.
Larry
___
gnhlug-discuss mailing list
gnhlug-discuss@mail.gnhlug.org
http://mail.gnhlug.org/mailman/listinfo/gnhlug-discuss
I'm looking for a wiki engine to try out internally with my eight-person team
at work. I'm willing to do my own research, but thought I'd ask for
recommendations first.
I'd prefer something that I can just install and run without much or any
configuration. Just a standalone program would be
On Mar 29, 2005, at 14:30, Larry Cook wrote:
I'm looking for a wiki engine to try out internally with my
eight-person team at work. I'm willing to do my own research, but
thought I'd ask for recommendations first.
I found kwiki (kwiki.org) very easy to setup. I'm using it at
I'm actually starting with TWiki ( www.twiki.org ) right now. Setting
up on a Linux box behind Apache2. Documentation is good and from my
experience ( very wiki limited ) it is meeting my needs. Revision
history, authentication, role based access, etc.
-L
On Tue, 2005-03-29 at 14:30 -0500,
Recently, I setup a similar system quickly at my work to try to get
some feedback as to whether or not such a collaborative tool would be
useful for our purposes. Basically, I installed Debian unstable on a
spare box and went through all the wiki Debian packages until I found
one that worked
At 3:10 PM -0500 3/29/05, Lawrence Tilly wrote:
I'm actually starting with TWiki ( www.twiki.org ) right now. Setting
up on a Linux box behind Apache2. Documentation is good and from my
experience ( very wiki limited ) it is meeting my needs. Revision
history, authentication, role based access,
Great question. Here's another related one:
What do people like for setting up a blog?
--
Time flies like the wind. Fruit flies like a banana. Stranger things have .0.
happened but none stranger than this. Does your driver's license say Organ ..0
Donor?Black holes are where God divided by
On Tue, Mar 29, 2005 at 04:59:35PM -0500, Steven W. Orr wrote:
Great question. Here's another related one:
What do people like for setting up a blog?
Nothing better than Wordpress: open source, well written, great plugin
system, easy to work with to design, easy to pull apart and build into
Steven W. Orr wrote:
Great question. Here's another related one:
What do people like for setting up a blog?
Serendipity is a first-class piece of blogging software in every
respect: http://www.s9y.org/ The developer team is made up of some of
the best PHP developers out there. Examples:
Larry Cook [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I'm looking for a wiki engine to try out internally with my
eight-person team at work. I'm willing to do my own research, but
thought I'd ask for recommendations first.
I'd prefer something that I can just install and run without much or
any
On Tue, 29 Mar 2005 16:48:25 -0500, Ray Cote
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'll second the TWiki endorsement. ...
TWiki (and an older version, at that) has been running the GNHLUG
website for years without any significant trouble. I find that TWiki
reflects its Perl hertiage well: Lots of docs, good
11 matches
Mail list logo