The answer to all four tenets is Confluence. Federates nicely with how
things work in higher-ed.

On Apr 27, 2010 3:57 PM, "David Parter" <[email protected]> wrote:


I know, there are a million to choose from.

Here's the situation:

 Our faculty (and students) want wikis. And they would like us to
 support their wikis. They haven't exactly said what that means, but we
 can at least define a plausible service offering, and see if that
 works.

 Currently we have a ton of different wikis, all in a state of
 disrepair/not being maintained or secure, installed by individual
 faculty and students. We want to do better. We *need* to do better.

Some things we already know:

1) We think we want a wiki that stores content in a database, because it
  decouples the content from the wiki code, makes migration and
  upgrades easier, and doesn't rely on the unix file system and which
  uid the web server runs as for security. But that maybe a misguided
  idea...

2) There needs to be some kind of authentication and authorization. This
  is where it gets hard -- we don't have to solve every problem with
  the same tool, but some of our users just need a handful of wiki
  users, so built-in authentication & authorization is ok. some
  probably want to leverage our existing authentication (for example,
  to allow all their students' access) but that may be ok to defer to a
  different solution.

  All probably want both authenticated and anonymous users to be able
  to read the wiki (but not post).

3) If we have to maintain/support the wiki code, we'd like it to be
  secure and reasonable to manage.

4) they don't all have to be in the same wiki instance, we can run
  multiple instances

Any ideas? I realize this is not an entirely well-formed request, the
staff person who has been looking into this is rather frustrated, so I
thought I'd get some fresh ideas.

thanks,

 --david

ps: the same exact questions will be asked about "blogs", because some
people think a wiki is the way to maintain a web site, others prefer
blogs...
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