Re: Wiki Engines

2005-03-31 Thread Larry Cook
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

Wiki Engines

2005-03-29 Thread Larry Cook
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

Re: Wiki Engines

2005-03-29 Thread Bill McGonigle
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

Re: Wiki Engines

2005-03-29 Thread Lawrence Tilly
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,

Re: Wiki Engines

2005-03-29 Thread Peter Dobratz
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

Re: Wiki Engines

2005-03-29 Thread Ray Cote
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,

Re: Wiki Engines

2005-03-29 Thread Steven W. Orr
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

Re: Wiki Engines

2005-03-29 Thread crschmidt
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

Blogging software [was Wiki Engines]

2005-03-29 Thread Greg Rundlett
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:

Re: Wiki Engines

2005-03-29 Thread Paul Lussier
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

Re: Wiki Engines

2005-03-29 Thread Ben Scott
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