I want a wiki…

by on July 21, 2006

I’m trying to do a Wiki for my Off-the-Grid campout. But, I don’t know where to put it. So, off to Google I go. The trouble is I’ve poked around for a while and haven’t found a wiki hosting service that’s appropriate for doing something small like this. In fact, it might be fun to have one linked off of my blog permanently. Any good wiki services out there? Low cost is better.

  • Charlie
    I'm in the same boat as you. Actually been trying to setup my Wiki for my office, but I'm concerned that the non-tech employees that have no idea what a Wiki is will not use it.

    If you can't find what you are looking for, I may suggest getting your own host that does MYSQL and PHP. If you need help, just hit me up. Email is best.
  • Btw, it's by those crazy 37 signal geniuses.
  • Ralph Whitbeck
    Take a wiki like tiddlywiki http://www.tiddlywiki.com/ and save it and then host the file on your site...it doesn't use a database and can easily be customized to what you need it to do for a simple application like a campout.
  • Tim
    I like pbwiki.com. It's as easy to set up as a peanut butter and jelly sandwich. They have a free version that I use which is pretty cool. Also have premium accounts for more storage and more features.
  • toivo
    hey, what do you think about this one?

    http://www.mychingo.com/learnmore.asp
  • JB
    We just started using StikiPad yesterday. We found it on BuzzShout, and once we've been using it for a while we will review it. So far so good.

    Have you checked the wiki tag on our site yet? A lot of choices out there.
  • This is a good one.

    http://www.wikispaces.com/
  • At 360voice.com we use http://www.wetpaint.com/

    It is really nice.
  • I add a second vote for PBWiki (http://pbwiki.com/). Real easy to set up and free.
  • Al
    twiki is great.

    http://twiki.org/

    i also have used http://www.kwiki.org/ for smaller projects.
  • ThatGuy
    I've been using jotspot.com. Pretty easy to get up and running and has a tier'd level of paid support.
  • ThatGuy
    I've been using jotspot.com. Pretty easy to get up and running and has a tier'd level of paid support. Did so after reading this review from TechCrunch.
    http://www.techcrunch.com/2005/09/27/jotspot-li...
  • We chose stikipad, because it's easy, looks good, and is cheap. After trying to host several ourselves on the MS platform, switching to Stikipad was a breeze.
  • William
    I'm with jake above. Use Writeboard. Depending on what you want to do its perfect. If you want one big thing, then its perfect. If you are looking for something with a little more structure, Basecamp might also work.

    Public wikis can be a pain just because of the syntax needed and other technical issues. I use one for internal stuff but I just dont think they at the point where you can just dump someone in them and let them go to town.
  • Greg
  • Robert, I just ran across a little wiki service called. duh, littlewiki. (From the shopwiki folks) http://www.littlewiki.com/wiki/Home
  • Ron McCoy
    A third vote for pbwiki
  • pbwiki is what you want. We used it for the BloggerCon signup page and it was perfect.

    http://bloggercon-sign-up.pbwiki.com/FrontPage
  • For an easy-to-use blog that is hosted by someone else, I highly recommend checking out wetpaint. They are a Seattle-based start-up with a free and compelling solution.

    http://www.wetpaint.com/
  • Tom
    We use http://www.centraldesktop.com. You can make your wiki private or public, and use their database feature which works well for user registration and such.
  • Jotspot.com lets you get started for free.
  • I'm rather fond of Stikipad - rather customizable too. My wiki: http://patrick.stikipad.com/, and their homepage http://www.stikipad.com/
  • Robert,

    now that you're a fellow Coastsider, do we have a deal for you...

    Actually, the same deal we offer everyone else through our TeleInterActive Networks hosting service. ;-)

    Five dollars a month should get you what you need. We can set up one "project" within the wiki for the "Off the Grid" camp-out, and other projects as needed to support other topics off your blog.

    We use the open source MediaWiki, the foundation of the Wikimedia family of sites.

    We're using it for our own ,a href="http://press.teleinteractive.net/open/wiki/Main_Page">Open Source Business Intelligence wiki.

    Talk to you soon.
  • Oops, that one comma should be a left angle bracket to give: Open Source Business Intelligence wiki

    :-D
  • I vote for PBWiki. Don't use Writeboard. We tried to use it with just 4 users and it had no way of ensuring that our changes didn't stomp all over each other.
  • Yup I use PB WIKI for my show notes of both my podcasts. Here is an example and it's super easy. http://typicalmacuser.pbwiki.com/
  • http://digg.com/software/What_are_the_Best_Wiki...


    This is great when Webmasters, Programmers and Sys Admins all chime in with their suggestions

    There are not enough options available for anyone needing information of this sort - not depending on marketing websites or self interest magazine reviews

    Had to give this a digg - hopefully others will contibute from their experiences so as to compile a REAL-LIFE list of best WIkI options
  • Robert, what do you mean by "low cost"? Should be free:-) If it's only for your personal use, any of those mentioned in the previous comments will do.

    If you expect interaction from people not necessarily familiar with wikis, Wetpaint is almost your only choice: the Wiki-less Wiki that combines wiki, blog and forum-like features. Nothing else is as simple to use as Wetpaint.

    I am about to do what you plan: launch my own wetpaint wiki as a sidekick to the blog and a social experiment.
  • http://www.jotspot.com. It has a ton of features for free and the ability to add on modules.
  • http://wikiindex.com/Category:WikiFarm

    you can find wiki farms and see wiki that are using them.

    please jump in and help organize this project if you would like! Best, Mark
  • yes i'd vote pbwiki with Dave Winer...
  • I haven't used Wikia myself (used to be WikiCities), but I think it's run by the Wikipedia folks.
  • And Joi is on the BoD!
  • Wayne
    I want to echo Stephen Rahn's recommendation of http://www.wikispaces.com

    A couple of friends and I are happily using it for the spec on a startup project.
  • can't you get a little web space and run your own Docuwiki ? (no database needed): http://wiki.splitbrain.org/wiki:dokuwiki

    also i've used wikispaces, but then you'll have a scobeizer.wikispaces.com domain {at least with the free service}
  • I'll add an (eighth?) vote for pbwiki. My robotics team used it for a few months and we didn't have any problems. The starting disk space is a bit small, but they have had so many bonus space boosts over the past six months that I think we're close to something like 100mb.
  • yep
    http://pbwiki.com
    is the bomb

    easy to make one
    easy to use
  • Evolver
    http://www.near-time.com has a pretty decent Wiki integrated into their "Pages" tab. It has some really nice features for the power user as well. Going through their documentation really helped me realize the potential in it.
  • For my own servers/more control I like MediaWiki... If those things are not as important, pbwiki kicks butt.
  • Tim
    Which wikis work best depends on what exactly your requirements are. Wikimatrix (http://www.wikimatrix.org) may help you compare some of the wiki products mentioned above.
  • PBwiki is the way to go. Barcamp and Bloggercon can not be wrong!
  • I want a wiki…
    I’m trying to do a Wiki for my Off-the-Grid campout. But, I don’t know where to put it. So, off to Google I go. The trouble is I’ve poked around for a while and haven’t found a wiki hosting service that’s appropriate for doing something small like this. In fact, it might be fun to have one linked off of my blog permanently. Any good wiki services out there? Low cost is better.
  • Haven't tried anything else except Mediawiki. I have been using this for various project documentation in a team.
  • I have loads of bandwidth free on my server, I would be happy to host a Wiki for you Robert. I've got scripts to setup MediaWiki easily, or I can install (almost) any other setup that will run on a LAMP system. I can give you SSH and FTP to the server, and host a subdomain or full domain depending on what you need. Drop me an email if you want it.
  • snerd
    I'm extremely fond of Atlassian Confluence - http://atlassian.com
  • vinodi
    What is Robert's preference? He has not commented.
  • We like to use PmWiki for our wikis. We would happily put a custom PmWiki up for you - just let us pimp that you are one of our customers. Our company, Big in Japan, builds and support social tools like wikis. http://www.weblogswork.com

    Give me a jingle - Alexander Muse 214.550.2003 or amuse@m-ven.com
  • Another vote for PB Wiki. I've been using it as a class web site (college) and by the end of the first lab session the students have pages up with links, pictures and video. As transparent as technology gets.
  • Keith Creech
    I would like a wiki that I could install under my own domain but would be simiple for members of my site to add content.
  • Try http://wikihost.org . It's easy, fast and free.

    Give it a try and you'll be happy with it, I'm sure! :-)
  • Like the site - some really cool and great material. I love this site and your work is great! Cool website very helpful.
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