On 28 Oct 2005, at 19:57, MisterX wrote:

Compared to a browser, it's also low cost in your desktop! And it's fast, and it never looses its cookies like bugzilla on win32 and firefox??! And the wiki's which I've discovered in the past months, despite making cookies stale requiring you to remember yet another password still don't match up to
the quality of rev's ebook.

Xavier - the idea is that the local Rev document is an off-line cache of the wiki - so you get the best of both worlds. You can edit using a browser if you want to or from within Revolution. That is the basics, it can apply to transcript code, images, or documentation. The questions for me are just establishing exactly which are the best tools to do the job, and secondly how to ensure that the content is open and can work both for the Rev IDE and other developers as a collaboration tool. Based on a couple of years experience with TikiWiki - it doesn't cut the custard.
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