Changes for page 477

Last modified by Ludovic Dubost on 2019/06/17 20:28

From version 2.1
edited by Ludovic Dubost
on 2019/06/17 20:28
Change comment: Migrated property [image] from class [Blog.BlogPostClass]
To version 1.1
edited by Ludovic Dubost
on 2005/11/29 16:04
Change comment: There is no comment for this version

Summary

Details

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1 -#includeForm("Blog.BlogPostSheet")
1 +#includeForm("XWiki.ArticleClassSheet")
Blog.BlogPostClass[0]
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1 -No
Publish date
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1 -2005-11-10 12:21:00.0
Is published
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1 -Yes
Title
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1 -IBM into Applications Wikis
Content
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1 -
2 -
3 -<p>Apparently IBM has shown <a href="http://www.hyperorg.com/blogger/mtarchive/ibm_shows_delicious_for_the_en.html">QEDWiki</a>:</p>
4 -
5 -<p>"Extensions to wikis that lets people "easily link together applications and services that are on the Web." David Sink and Joel Farrell show the QEDWiki demo. They show a table of contacts and then turn it into a database. They do a "mash up" with Google Maps and weather data. Right now, it requires on-screen programming, but they assure us it'll be much more user-friendly when it ships.... It's php-extensible. It uses AJAX."</p>
6 -
7 -<p>It seems that it's going to be a product since they say it will "ship". It's great to have an Application Wiki in PHP to spread this type of tool. <a href="http://www.twiki.org">TWiki</a> is the closest to an Application Wiki in the "Perl" world and <a href="http://www.jot.com">JotSpot</a> is one in the "proprietary" world. And XWiki is <a href="http://www.xwiki.org">the Open Source Application Wiki in Java</a>. The .Net platform is clearly missing some good wikis (there is <a href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/flexwiki/">FlexWiki</a> which is Open Source from Microsoft).</p>
8 -
9 -<p>Note that IBM has also some XWiki's install internally, as well as many other wikis, as have many big companies.</p>
10 -
11 -<p>Via <a href="http://www.jnolen.com/blog/2005/11/ibm_launching_a.html">Jonathan Nolen</a></p>
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13 -<a name="a000477more"></a>
14 -<a id="more"></a>
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XWiki.ArticleClass[0]
Content
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1 +
2 +
3 +<p>Apparently IBM has shown <a href="http://www.hyperorg.com/blogger/mtarchive/ibm_shows_delicious_for_the_en.html">QEDWiki</a>:</p>
4 +
5 +<p>"Extensions to wikis that lets people "easily link together applications and services that are on the Web." David Sink and Joel Farrell show the QEDWiki demo. They show a table of contacts and then turn it into a database. They do a "mash up" with Google Maps and weather data. Right now, it requires on-screen programming, but they assure us it'll be much more user-friendly when it ships.... It's php-extensible. It uses AJAX."</p>
6 +
7 +<p>It seems that it's going to be a product since they say it will "ship". It's great to have an Application Wiki in PHP to spread this type of tool. <a href="http://www.twiki.org">TWiki</a> is the closest to an Application Wiki in the "Perl" world and <a href="http://www.jot.com">JotSpot</a> is one in the "proprietary" world. And XWiki is <a href="http://www.xwiki.org">the Open Source Application Wiki in Java</a>. The .Net platform is clearly missing some good wikis (there is <a href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/flexwiki/">FlexWiki</a> which is Open Source from Microsoft).</p>
8 +
9 +<p>Note that IBM has also some XWiki's install internally, as well as many other wikis, as have many big companies.</p>
10 +
11 +<p>Via <a href="http://www.jnolen.com/blog/2005/11/ibm_launching_a.html">Jonathan Nolen</a></p>
12 +
13 +<a name="a000477more"></a>
14 +<a id="more"></a>
15 +
16 +
17 +
Title
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1 +IBM into Applications Wikis