I'm looking at implementing a wiki for internal business use. The users are technically adept, so does anyone have a recommendation as to what wiki system to use?
Cheers!
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I'm looking at implementing a wiki for internal business use. The users are technically adept, so does anyone have a recommendation as to what wiki system to use? Cheers! |
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MediaWiki runs the Wikipedia. But, if you want something simple to setup and manage, I'd suggest the XAMPP Open-source, cross-platform, freeware and comes ready with
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Take a look at dokuwiki It's full featured, can support multiple users with out a problem, and stores it's data in text files instead of a database so requires less setup. It will run on any server with PHP. If your dealing with hundreds of users then media wiki may be better since it uses a database backend but for small to mid size teams dokuwiki should be fine. |
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Go to WikiMatrix's Wiki Choice Wizard and put in your requirements and it will suggest wiki's that match your needs and show you a comparison matrix of them. |
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We currently use screwturn wiki, and have been very happy with it! |
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For your situation a TiddlyWiki or two might be good. If you don't have a large number of users and they aren't all updating the wiki at the same time, you can put it on a network drive or a web server for shared use. It's one of the simplest ways to get a wiki happening. |
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It depends if it has to be free or open-source and if you want to host it on your own server or if that doesn't matter. For me the most important thing about the wiki is the ease-of-use, since a Wiki that is very unforgiving in it's typing and editing will not be used. For instance, the wiki we use from Mindtouch has a hard time when I copy text from Word, making it hard to share my Word documents on the wiki. |
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I use WikkaWiki for my personal wiki. It's super fast and it's easy to install - especially through SimpleScripts. The wiki dialect is also similar to Super User's Markdown |
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It's a distributed version control app, but it has builtin wiki. You get the full history of changes as free bonus (it's a DVCS after all), it is very simple to deploy it and very simple to backup. While there are situations when a "traditional" wiki could suit you better, there are a lot of scenarios where fossil fits in perfectly. |
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I use PbWorks (formerly PbWiki). I've used it for wikis on IT & Business Ethics, Systems Analysis and Design and Vertical Market Solutions for Retail Markets. No idea how you can use it internally though. |
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Download wiki software and find the best one http://serverfault.com/questions/10662/good-internal-wiki-software Then based on your wiki software , you can start create the wiki pages . But i would suggest you media wiki |
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I highly recommend Foswiki. It's the only wiki that's explicitly made to be used as business intranet.
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