Blogs and Wikis in the Business World Definition and Solutions
Blogs and Wikis in the Business World topics covering definition, objectives, systems and solutions.
Fri, July 06, 2007
- What are blogs?
- What are wikis?
- What is social software?
- Why should I care about blogs and wikis?
- How can blogs and wikis benefit my business?
- What blog- or wiki-related challenges should I watch out for?
- What types of blog technologies should I know about?
- What types of wiki technologies should I know about?
- What blog terminology should I know?
- What wiki terminology should I know?
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What types of wiki technologies should I know about?
- Tags: The content of a wiki is edited by multiple authors, so the traditional hierarchical navigation systems you might expect on a webpage are replaced with internal HTML syntax tokens called tags.
- Wiki engine: The software that runs a wiki system. Typically implemented as a server-side script.
- Wiki software: Tools for developing group-editable websites. Among the best known for corporate environments are Socialtext, Clearspace, MediaWiki, MoinMoin, WakkaWiki, TikiWiki, Confluence and JotSpot, which was recently acquired by Google.
- Wikitext: A simplified version of the Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) used to write wiki pages.
What blog terminology should I know?
- Blogopotamus: An unusually long blog post.
- Blogosphere: All blogs, collectively, or what might be called the universe of blogs.
- Blogroll: A list of links to other blogs, typically shown in a sidebar on a blog index page.
- External blogs: Blogs that can be viewed and responded to by the public at large through a Web browser.
- Index page: The first page of a blog site.
- Internal blogs: Nonpublic blogs, usually accessible only on the corporate intranet by a company's employees.
- Linklog: A blog that is mainly a collection of hyperlinks to other websites.
- Vlog: A video blog.
What wiki terminology should I know?
- Comment spam: Blog comments added to the discussion for the sole purpose of driving traffic to a site.
- Wiki farm: A server farm designed specifically for wiki hosting.
- Wiki node: Pages on a wiki that describe related wikis.
- Wiki page: A single webpage on a wiki.
Wikis and blogs are harbingers of a paradigm shift that is already changing the way people use computers and networks to interact. For the enterprise (for now), they are the most immediately useful examples of a new genre of software for personal interaction. Wikis can provide a uniquely dynamic environment for collaboration that businesses are all but certain to find indispensable. And blogs offer management an incredibly powerful means of communicating with customers, partners and employees.
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Shawna McAlearney


