View Poll Results: Should Spring have a wiki to encourage further growth of the plattform?

Voters
17. You may not vote on this poll
  • No, the community is great as it is now in the forums

    2 11.76%
  • Yes, the wiki would be great addition to the forum

    12 70.59%
  • I only use the forum because there is no good wiki

    1 5.88%
  • What is a wiki anyway? ;-)

    2 11.76%
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Results 11 to 14 of 14

Thread: Spring Wiki

  1. #11
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    Germany
    Posts
    31

    Default

    i contacted them all but got no answer :-(

  2. #12
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    Germany
    Posts
    31

    Default

    is there any other way to get in touch with anyone?

  3. #13
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    UK
    Posts
    8,424

    Default

    The forum administrators are contactable through this forum, you could try those addresses. If you click view forum leaders you can see all of them.

  4. #14
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Posts
    382

    Default Wiki's can work, with the right tools and policies set up

    I am an admin on another wiki site, http://wiki.mythtv.org. We had spam problems until they instituted the policy about no edits except through logged in accounts confirmed through email. I used to scan daily for spam in order to make rollbacks. Now, I don't hardly ever have to attend to that. I know this is different from the anonymous policy of Wikipedia and some people might not like it, but in my opinion it was necessary.

    MythTV previously used MoinMoin, which wasn't used very heavily, and in my opinion was limited in features. The pages were very cluttered. Picking a good wiki engine (I personally like mediawiki, being the engine used on three wikis I maintain) with the right features and security policies is beneficial.

    If Interface21 is willing to back a wiki effort, by releasing notes, documentation, etc. through the wiki, then support for the site will be very keen.
    Greg L. Turnquist (@gregturn), SpringSource/VMware
    Project Lead: Spring Python and author of Spring Python 1.1 and Python Testing Cookbook.
    Listen to Pond Jumpers, the international podcast for open source developers.
    These comments are my own personal opinions, and do not reflect those of my company.

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