The wiki is an online collaborative document that requires analysis and consideration from scholars of digital documentation. The wiki\u27s authority style is based on reliability instead of authority. In a wiki, information becomes stable through discourse and conversation to produce a stable truth within the wiki itself. The wiki is unique for open-source access style, meaning all users are equal and anyone can participate. When more users are able to participate, more information is created, making the wiki an almost unlimited source of information creation. Also, the wiki has little to no barriers of entry, so wikis become a space for undesired information storage. Fan wikis, for example, store niche information about popular culture TV...
A wiki is one example of social software that can assist and augment the creative writing process in...
The term wiki, derived from the Hawaiian adjective “wiki wiki” meaning quick or fast, was coined by ...
Ward Cunningham used the word wiki (the Hawaiian word meaning quick) to name the collaborative tool ...
The wiki is an online collaborative document that requires analysis and consideration from scholars ...
This entry describes the socio-technical specificity of wikis and their application in domains of cu...
Wikis are collaborative platforms enabling collective elabo-ration of knowledge, the most famous and...
Wikis are often considered to be the core platform of peer production. This chapter delineates their...
Wikis are collaborative platforms enabling collective elaboration of knowledge, the most famous and ...
Traditional UBC provides for the standardization of bibliographic records, the creation of guideline...
The Wikidata knowledge base provides a public infrastructure for machine-readable metadata about com...
Providing staff access to policies and procedures is vital to keeping Technical Services, and the re...
Described as “an emerging foundation for Web 2.0” (Abram 2005), wiki technology is becoming a popula...
The “WikiWay” is the open editing philosophy of wikis meant to foster open collaboration and continu...
Web 2.0 technologies facilitate knowledge sharing, interaction, and collaboration through user- gen...
Wikipedia is the world's largest, most widely used online encyclopedia. Wikipedia relies on policies...
A wiki is one example of social software that can assist and augment the creative writing process in...
The term wiki, derived from the Hawaiian adjective “wiki wiki” meaning quick or fast, was coined by ...
Ward Cunningham used the word wiki (the Hawaiian word meaning quick) to name the collaborative tool ...
The wiki is an online collaborative document that requires analysis and consideration from scholars ...
This entry describes the socio-technical specificity of wikis and their application in domains of cu...
Wikis are collaborative platforms enabling collective elabo-ration of knowledge, the most famous and...
Wikis are often considered to be the core platform of peer production. This chapter delineates their...
Wikis are collaborative platforms enabling collective elaboration of knowledge, the most famous and ...
Traditional UBC provides for the standardization of bibliographic records, the creation of guideline...
The Wikidata knowledge base provides a public infrastructure for machine-readable metadata about com...
Providing staff access to policies and procedures is vital to keeping Technical Services, and the re...
Described as “an emerging foundation for Web 2.0” (Abram 2005), wiki technology is becoming a popula...
The “WikiWay” is the open editing philosophy of wikis meant to foster open collaboration and continu...
Web 2.0 technologies facilitate knowledge sharing, interaction, and collaboration through user- gen...
Wikipedia is the world's largest, most widely used online encyclopedia. Wikipedia relies on policies...
A wiki is one example of social software that can assist and augment the creative writing process in...
The term wiki, derived from the Hawaiian adjective “wiki wiki” meaning quick or fast, was coined by ...
Ward Cunningham used the word wiki (the Hawaiian word meaning quick) to name the collaborative tool ...