Difference between revisions of "Collaborative Document Production"

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[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wiki Wiki web pages] are part of the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_2 Web 2.0], where webpages can be used for dynamic collaboration.  Any person viewing a wiki page can be a contributor/editor without needing direct access to a server. These contributions can include: changing the outline of the page, editing content and adding additional content or pages. Ideally, anyone who reads a page could edit, however there are multiple levels of access that can be set. Because of the ease of contributing, there is metadata (Who, What, When) attached to the page. The "[http://wiki.esipfed.org/index.php?title=Air_Quality/Chemistry_Naming_Conventions&action=history  History]" tab at the top of each page shows the time-sequence of edits and allows reverting back to any of its previous versions. Thus, content is never deleted, just shoved to the background.  
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===Wiki===
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[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wiki| Wiki web pages] are part of the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_2| Web 2.0], where they can be used for collaboration.  Any person viewing a wiki page can be a contributor/editor without needing direct access to a server. These contributions can include: changing the outline of the page, editing content and adding additional content or pages. Ideally, anyone who reads a page could edit, however there are multiple levels of access that can be set. Because of the ease of contributing, there is metadata (Who, What, When) attached to the page. The "[http://wiki.esipfed.org/index.php?title=Air_Quality/Chemistry_Naming_Conventions&action=history  History]" tab at the top of each page shows the time-sequence of edits and allows reverting back to any of its previous versions. Thus, content is never deleted, just shoved to the background.  
  
 
The wiki is self-regulating because spam and other bad information is quickly removed by the community and good stuff tends to be preserved.
 
The wiki is self-regulating because spam and other bad information is quickly removed by the community and good stuff tends to be preserved.
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[[category:Collaboration]]

Latest revision as of 20:02, June 2, 2012

What links here: Collaborative Document Production

Wiki

Wiki web pages are part of the Web 2.0, where they can be used for collaboration. Any person viewing a wiki page can be a contributor/editor without needing direct access to a server. These contributions can include: changing the outline of the page, editing content and adding additional content or pages. Ideally, anyone who reads a page could edit, however there are multiple levels of access that can be set. Because of the ease of contributing, there is metadata (Who, What, When) attached to the page. The "History" tab at the top of each page shows the time-sequence of edits and allows reverting back to any of its previous versions. Thus, content is never deleted, just shoved to the background.

The wiki is self-regulating because spam and other bad information is quickly removed by the community and good stuff tends to be preserved.