On Tue, Apr 27, 2010 at 10:13:51AM +0300, Giorgos Keramidas wrote:
On Mon, 26 Apr 2010 14:48:49 -0700, Gary Kline kl...@thought.org wrote:
Guys,
I'm creating another virt website and intend to publish things that
users could respond to. It is also time to rethink my JOTTINGS
thoughts and put each of the 15 sections|chapters into a format where
readers could give feedback. Whether we have all the ports is one
question; whether these would be portable to the Linux or MAC OS-10,
are other issues.
One of the ways to foster a community around a set of writings is to set
up a small special-purpose Wiki. There are dozens of Wiki engines and
different implementations out there. Some of them include support for
exotic and complex authentication setups. Others thrive precisely on
the *lack* of user accounts and permissions.
For a set of jottings that are mostly personal thoughts written with the
express purpose of inviting commentary, or even editing, enriching and
powerful contributions by others, I'd definitely go the way of a Wiki.
It is one of the ways that works admirably well when inviting others to
write in a collaborative, co-operative, and community-driven spirit.
I personally like the OddMuse wiki engine. It's what I run as the main
page of my laptop's http://localhost/ interface. There are many other
Wiki engines out there though. Have a look at the Wikipedia page that
lists Wiki implementations and pick one that you like.
Sounds good. I had no idea that threr were different flavors
of the Wiki model. it sounds useful for my Jottings pages
where I'd value other's pitching in and sharing their own
thoughts!
--
Gary Kline kl...@thought.org http://www.thought.org Public Service Unix
The 7.83a release of Jottings: http://jottings.thought.org/index.php
http://journey.thought.org 100% Guaranteed Novel
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