Tagged: 'wikis'

Projects to play with over the summer

Yes, we missed last week. Here are the top links for the last two weeks that you should check out over the holiday weekend (via the CoPress Publish2 Newsgroup):

I’m considering changing the format of this weekly post to be a more informal synthesis of the things that have happened in the past week. If you have an opinion on the matter, let me know.

Around the network, Sean Sullivan is looking for opinions on the best wiki for putting together a history of a school budget crisis (I assume he’s looking for both the best software and approach). If the project is big enough to merit the investment, I’d say MediaWiki would be the tool of choice. It’s themeable and has a plugin architecture that lets you extend it. Will Davis and I are going to be playing with the Semantic MediaWiki extension so that you can indicate some information as structured data and do cool things with the aggregate of it (related: check out the information Will added to the profile of The Maine Campus; this is going to be really cool when we have this type of information on a number of newspapers).

Rick Martinez had the first meeting for FIUSM developers earlier today. I’ll see if I can get him to give us some clues on what they’ll be working on this year. Developers plural must mean that FIUSM is going to be doing more than basic website maintenance this coming year.

Wiki software comparison for newspapers

Wikis for news organizations have been a buzzing topic recently as both a means of spreading news and passing down information to future editors. If creating a wiki is your summer plans, you’ll need to use software that meets your needs. 

MediaWiki

Rating:4of5

media-wiki

This is perhaps the most well-known wiki software, especially because of its use by Wikipedia. It’s the open source software that is used on the CoPress wiki.

For your readers, this might be the functionality they’re most familiar with on the front end, but the complexity of the back end could intimidate and deter people from contributing.

mediawiki-code

If you put a helpful guide showing users how to edit the wiki and use the system’s formatting, they might be more likely to contribute. You have to be able to set up a MySQL database for your wiki, but it’s easily done. Setup is straight forward process that only takes a few minutes.
Read more →

What’s in a News Wiki?

News wikis haven’t make it big yet but, in my opinion, their day is soon.

In a conversation I was having with Joey Baker the other day, we were talking about micropayments, monetization, and how news differs from music, movies, and other forums of content. His argument is that news is “read once, and then file away” while the other forms have “repeat use” value which makes them easier to charge for. This got me thinking. Journalism shouldn’t just be about broadcasting the most recent event of the day, but also providing accurate, vetted, and independent information to educate the community. In fact, news websites are pretty bad with this other side of journalism. If I want to understand the context for an issue’s current situation beyond what’s presented in the article, I’ve got to use an atrocious site search tool to find previous articles on the issue. There has to be a better way to get me to the information I need to know.

Enter: the wiki. Read more →