I'm very happy about Markmin! I've used Markdown for years for creating
eLearning resources and blogging.

I have tried to get 'normal' users to use Markdown (Markmin would be the
same) and it's not easy.  Non-techy people will not use inline markup!  So
an editor like MarkItUp is essential.

The combination of MarkItUp and Markdown is excellent.  Add web2py to the
mix and Massimo has created a winner in my opinion! (I've created a combined
blog / wiki using plugin_wiki and it works great.)

But I reiterate - don't try and teach a markup language (however simple) to
non technical users - you will lose them in seconds!

On 4 November 2010 22:27, rochacbruno <[email protected]> wrote:

> I am a markmin fan, I wrote An. Entire book in markmin.
>
> Very rapid
>
> Enviado via iPhone
>
> Em 04/11/2010, às 20:15, Christopher Steel <[email protected]>
> escreveu:
>
> > We love Markmin. It is tiny, easy to use and logical. It is similar to
> > Markdown which is pretty nice, but Markmin covers what people actually
> > use in a way that makes markup look good in itself.
> >
> > As an added bonus it is totally readable as a text file so everyone,
> > including one of our board members who happens to be blind, can edit,
> > create and update markmin documents.
> >
> > I think it has world changing possibilities...
> >
> > and Massimo(?) just posted an example app ->
> http://www.web2py.com/markmin
> >
> >
> > On Nov 4, 3:20 pm, Luther Goh Lu Feng <[email protected]> wrote:
> >> Has anyone had experience implementing markin as part of text area
> >> input? Do end users find markmin difficult? Personally, I find it very
> >> user friendly, especially withhttp://www.web2py.com/markminBut then
> >> again, I am a biased developer.
> >>
> >> Any feedback on this?
>

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