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18 July 2003, at 02:10 PM by unknown -
Changed line 5 from:

A Wiki Wiki Web1 is an open-editing system where the emphasis is on the collaborative authoring of hyperlinked documents. The basic concept of a wiki is that anyone can edit any page. This blurs or erases the traditional distinction between publishing and reading. While at first this sounds like a recipe for anarchy, sites using this system have developed complex and rich communities for on-line collaboration and communication. Yes, it’s possible for someone to go and destroy everything on a page, but it doesn’t seem to happen often. And most wiki systems (including this one) have built-in mechanisms to secure selected pages and restore content that has been defaced or destroyed.

to:

A Wiki Wiki Web2 is an open-editing system where the emphasis is on the collaborative authoring of hyperlinked documents. The basic concept of a wiki is that anyone can edit any page. This blurs or erases the traditional distinction between publishing and reading. While at first this sounds like a recipe for anarchy, sites using this system have developed complex and rich communities for on-line collaboration and communication. Yes, it’s possible for someone to go and destroy everything on a page, but it doesn’t seem to happen often. And most wiki systems (including this one) have built-in mechanisms to secure selected pages and restore content that has been defaced or destroyed.

Changed line 7 from:

This type of software is ideal when people in different organisations and locations are working together to create or share knowledge. It lets people respond immediately to proposed content and see one another’s contributions. Because it uses a browser and simple markup, people using different technology platforms can easily work together. The software is simple to set up and easy to customise for local conditions, so it can be used for short projects, such as the Tertiary Information Strategy?, as well as for permanent web page collections. All that’s required is a Unix or GNU/Linux web server that runs Php3.

to:

This type of software is ideal when people in different organisations and locations are working together to create or share knowledge. It lets people respond immediately to proposed content and see one another’s contributions. Because it uses a browser and simple markup, people using different technology platforms can easily work together. The software is simple to set up and easy to customise for local conditions, so it can be used for short projects, such as the Tertiary Information Strategy?, as well as for permanent web page collections. All that’s required is a Unix or GNU/Linux web server that runs Php4.

Changed line 11 from:
 

1 named after the Wiki Wiki Airport Shuttle Bus—the Hawaiian word wiki means quick {:-) (↑)

2 named after the Wiki Wiki Shuttle Bus—the Hawaiian word wiki means quick {:-) (↑)

3 other wiki flavours are available for Microsoft Windows servers (↑)

4 other wiki flavours are available for Microsoft Windows servers (↑)

to:
04 June 2003, at 07:53 PM by unknown -
Changed line 1 from:

“The dream behind the Web is of a common information space in which we communicate by sharing information. … There are many parts of the original dream which are not yet implemented. For example, very few people have an easy, intuitive tool for putting their thoughts into hypertext.”—http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/ Tim Berners-Lee.

to:

“The dream behind the Web is of a common information space in which we communicate by sharing information. … There are many parts of the original dream which are not yet implemented. For example, very few people have an easy, intuitive tool for putting their thoughts into hypertext.”—http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/ Tim Berners-Lee.

Changed line 3 from:

The first web client was a browser-editor. Since then, the web has evolved into a medium where a few publish and many browse. The purpose of wiki software is to make it as easy to edit pages as it is to browse them. It aims to do for collaboration what e-mail does for communication—open it up (which can be good and bad).

to:

The first web client was a browser-editor. Since then, the web has evolved into a medium where a few publish and many browse. The purpose of wiki software is to make it as easy to edit pages as it is to browse them. It aims to do for collaboration what e-mail does for communication—open it up (which can be good and bad).

Changed line 5 from:

A Wiki Wiki Web1 is an open-editing system where the emphasis is on the collaborative authoring of hyperlinked documents. The basic concept of a wiki is that anyone can edit any page. This blurs or erases the traditional distinction between publishing and reading. While at first this sounds like a recipe for anarchy, sites using this system have developed complex and rich communities for on-line collaboration and communication. Yes, it’s possible for someone to go and destroy everything on a page, but it doesn’t seem to happen often. And most wiki systems (including this one) have built-in mechanisms to secure selected pages and restore content that has been defaced or destroyed.

to:

A Wiki Wiki Web2 is an open-editing system where the emphasis is on the collaborative authoring of hyperlinked documents. The basic concept of a wiki is that anyone can edit any page. This blurs or erases the traditional distinction between publishing and reading. While at first this sounds like a recipe for anarchy, sites using this system have developed complex and rich communities for on-line collaboration and communication. Yes, it’s possible for someone to go and destroy everything on a page, but it doesn’t seem to happen often. And most wiki systems (including this one) have built-in mechanisms to secure selected pages and restore content that has been defaced or destroyed.

Changed line 7 from:

This type of software is ideal where people in different organisations and locations are working together to create or share knowledge. It lets people respond immediately to proposed content and see each other’s contributions. Because it uses a browser and simple markup, people using different technology platforms can easily work together. The software is easy to set up and easy to customise for local conditions, so it can be used for short projects, such as the Tertiary Information Strategy?, as well as for permanent web page collections. All that’s required is a Unix or GNU/Linux web server that runs Php3.

to:

This type of software is ideal when people in different organisations and locations are working together to create or share knowledge. It lets people respond immediately to proposed content and see one another’s contributions. Because it uses a browser and simple markup, people using different technology platforms can easily work together. The software is simple to set up and easy to customise for local conditions, so it can be used for short projects, such as the Tertiary Information Strategy?, as well as for permanent web page collections. All that’s required is a Unix or GNU/Linux web server that runs Php4.

Changed line 11 from:
 

1 from the Hawaiian wiki which means quick and named after the Wiki Wiki Airport Shuttle Bus {:-) (↑)

2 named after the Wiki Wiki Airport Shuttle Bus—the Hawaiian word wiki means quick {:-) (↑)

3 other wiki flavours are available for Microsoft Windows servers (↑)

4 other wiki flavours are available for Microsoft Windows servers (↑)

to:
26 May 2003, at 03:03 PM by unknown -
Changed line 5 from:

A Wiki Wiki Web1 is an open-editing system where the emphasis is on the collaborative authoring of hyperlinked documents. The basic concept of a wiki is that anyone can edit any page. This blurs or erases the traditional distinction between publishing and reading. While at first this sounds like a recipe for anarchy, sites using this system have developed complex and rich communities for on-line collaboration and communication. Yes, itís possible for someone to go and destroy everything on a page, but it doesnít seem to happen often. And most wiki systems (including this one) have built-in mechanisms to secure selected pages and restore content that has been defaced or destroyed.

to:

A Wiki Wiki Web2 is an open-editing system where the emphasis is on the collaborative authoring of hyperlinked documents. The basic concept of a wiki is that anyone can edit any page. This blurs or erases the traditional distinction between publishing and reading. While at first this sounds like a recipe for anarchy, sites using this system have developed complex and rich communities for on-line collaboration and communication. Yes, it’s possible for someone to go and destroy everything on a page, but it doesn’t seem to happen often. And most wiki systems (including this one) have built-in mechanisms to secure selected pages and restore content that has been defaced or destroyed.

23 May 2003, at 02:26 PM by unknown -
Changed lines 1-2 from:

“The dream behind the Web is of a common information space in which we communicate by sharing information. … There are many parts of the original dream which are not yet implemented.  For example, very few people have an easy, intuitive tool for putting their thoughts into hypertext.”

—http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/ Tim Berners-Lee.
to:

“The dream behind the Web is of a common information space in which we communicate by sharing information. … There are many parts of the original dream which are not yet implemented. For example, very few people have an easy, intuitive tool for putting their thoughts into hypertext.”—http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/ Tim Berners-Lee.

23 May 2003, at 02:24 PM by unknown -
Changed line 2 from:
—http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/ Tim Berners-Lee.
to:
—http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/ Tim Berners-Lee.
23 May 2003, at 02:23 PM by unknown -
Changed lines 1-2 from:
“The dream behind the Web is of a common information space in which we communicate by sharing information. … There are many parts of the original dream which are not yet implemented.  For example, very few people have an easy, intuitive tool for putting their thoughts into hypertext.”—http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/ Tim Berners-Lee.
to:

“The dream behind the Web is of a common information space in which we communicate by sharing information. … There are many parts of the original dream which are not yet implemented.  For example, very few people have an easy, intuitive tool for putting their thoughts into hypertext.”

—http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/ Tim Berners-Lee.
23 May 2003, at 02:22 PM by unknown -
Changed line 1 from:

“The dream behind the Web is of a common information space in which we communicate by sharing information. … There are many parts of the original dream which are not yet implemented.  For example, very few people have an easy, intuitive tool for putting their thoughts into hypertext.”—http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/ Tim Berners-Lee.

to:
“The dream behind the Web is of a common information space in which we communicate by sharing information. … There are many parts of the original dream which are not yet implemented.  For example, very few people have an easy, intuitive tool for putting their thoughts into hypertext.”—http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/ Tim Berners-Lee.
Changed line 5 from:

A Wiki Wiki Web3 is an open-editing system where the emphasis is on the collaborative authoring of hyperlinked documents. The basic concept of a wiki is that anyone can edit any page. This blurs or erases the traditional distinction between publishing and reading. While at first this sounds like a recipe for anarchy, sites using this system have developed complex and rich communities for on-line collaboration and communication. Yes, it’s possible for someone to go and destroy everything on a page, but it doesn’t seem to happen often. And most wiki systems (including this one) have built-in mechanisms to secure selected pages and restore content that has been defaced or destroyed.

to:

A Wiki Wiki Web4 is an open-editing system where the emphasis is on the collaborative authoring of hyperlinked documents. The basic concept of a wiki is that anyone can edit any page. This blurs or erases the traditional distinction between publishing and reading. While at first this sounds like a recipe for anarchy, sites using this system have developed complex and rich communities for on-line collaboration and communication. Yes, itís possible for someone to go and destroy everything on a page, but it doesnít seem to happen often. And most wiki systems (including this one) have built-in mechanisms to secure selected pages and restore content that has been defaced or destroyed.

12 May 2003, at 02:56 PM by unknown -
Changed line 1 from:

“The dream behind the Web is of a common information space in which we communicate by sharing information. … There are many parts of the original dream which are not yet implemented.  For example, very few people have an easy, intuitive tool for putting their thoughts into hypertext.”—http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/ Tim Berners-Lee.

to:

“The dream behind the Web is of a common information space in which we communicate by sharing information. … There are many parts of the original dream which are not yet implemented.  For example, very few people have an easy, intuitive tool for putting their thoughts into hypertext.”—http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/ Tim Berners-Lee.

Changed line 3 from:

The first web client was a browser-editor. Since then, the web has evolved into a medium where a few publish and many browse. The purpose of wiki software is to make it as easy to edit pages as it is to browse them. It aims to do for collaboration what e-mail does for communication—opens it up (which can be good and bad).

to:

The first web client was a browser-editor. Since then, the web has evolved into a medium where a few publish and many browse. The purpose of wiki software is to make it as easy to edit pages as it is to browse them. It aims to do for collaboration what e-mail does for communication—open it up (which can be good and bad).

Changed line 5 from:

A Wiki Wiki Web5 is an open-editing system where the emphasis is on the collaborative authoring of hyperlinked documents. The basic concept of a wiki is that anyone can edit any page. This blurs or erases the traditional distinction between publishing and reading. While at first this sounds like a recipe for anarchy, sites using this system have developed complex and rich communities for on-line collaboration and communication. Yes, it’s possible for someone to go and destroy everything on a page, but it doesn’t seem to happen often. And most wiki systems (including this one) have built-in mechanisms to secure selected pages and restore content that has been defaced or destroyed.

to:

A Wiki Wiki Web6 is an open-editing system where the emphasis is on the collaborative authoring of hyperlinked documents. The basic concept of a wiki is that anyone can edit any page. This blurs or erases the traditional distinction between publishing and reading. While at first this sounds like a recipe for anarchy, sites using this system have developed complex and rich communities for on-line collaboration and communication. Yes, it’s possible for someone to go and destroy everything on a page, but it doesn’t seem to happen often. And most wiki systems (including this one) have built-in mechanisms to secure selected pages and restore content that has been defaced or destroyed.

Changed line 7 from:

This type of software is ideal where people in different organisations and locations are working together to create or share knowledge. It lets people respond immediately to proposed content and see each other’s contributions. Because it uses a browser and simple markup, people using different technology platforms can easily work together. The software is easy to set up and easy to customise for local conditions, so it can be used even for short projects, such as the Tertiary Information Strategy?, as well as for permanent collections.

to:

This type of software is ideal where people in different organisations and locations are working together to create or share knowledge. It lets people respond immediately to proposed content and see each other’s contributions. Because it uses a browser and simple markup, people using different technology platforms can easily work together. The software is easy to set up and easy to customise for local conditions, so it can be used for short projects, such as the Tertiary Information Strategy?, as well as for permanent web page collections. All that’s required is a Unix or GNU/Linux web server that runs Php7.

Changed line 9 from:

http://www.affinity.co.nz/wiki Affinity Limited set up this wiki as part of its role as facilitator of the strategy. Its power, scalability and ease of use have led people to use the software to create and maintain some very http://www.concretestreet.net/wiki/CSA/HomePage sophisticated web sites. %%It is an example of Open Source Software?.

to:

http://www.affinity.co.nz/wiki Affinity Limited set up this wiki as part of its role as facilitator of the strategy. The software’s power, scalability and ease of use have led people to use it to create and maintain some very http://www.concretestreet.net/wiki/CSA/HomePage sophisticated web sites. %%It is an example of Open Source Software?.

09 May 2003, at 12:16 PM by unknown -
Changed line 5 from:

A Wiki Wiki Web8 is an open-editing system where the emphasis is on the collaborative authoring of hyperlinked documents. The basic concept of a wiki is that anyone can edit any page. This blurs or erases the traditional distinction between publishing and reading. While at first this sounds like a recipe for anarchy, sites using this system have developed complex and rich communities for on-line collaboration and communication. Yes, it’s possible for someone to go and destroy everything on a page, but it doesn’t seem to happen often. And most wiki systems (including this one) have built-in mechanisms to secure selected pages and restore content that has been defaced or destroyed.

to:

A Wiki Wiki Web9 is an open-editing system where the emphasis is on the collaborative authoring of hyperlinked documents. The basic concept of a wiki is that anyone can edit any page. This blurs or erases the traditional distinction between publishing and reading. While at first this sounds like a recipe for anarchy, sites using this system have developed complex and rich communities for on-line collaboration and communication. Yes, it’s possible for someone to go and destroy everything on a page, but it doesn’t seem to happen often. And most wiki systems (including this one) have built-in mechanisms to secure selected pages and restore content that has been defaced or destroyed.

09 May 2003, at 12:13 PM by unknown -
Changed line 5 from:

A Wiki Wiki Web10 is an open-editing system where the emphasis is on the collaborative authoring of hyperlinked documents. The basic concept of a wiki is that anyone can edit any page. This blurs or erases the traditional distinction between publishing and reading. While at first this sounds like a recipe for anarchy, sites using this system have developed complex and rich communities for on-line collaboration and communication. Yes, it’s possible for someone to go and destroy everything on a page, but it doesn’t seem to happen often. And most wiki systems (including this one) have built-in mechanisms to secure selected pages and restore content that has been defaced or destroyed.

to:

A Wiki Wiki Web11 is an open-editing system where the emphasis is on the collaborative authoring of hyperlinked documents. The basic concept of a wiki is that anyone can edit any page. This blurs or erases the traditional distinction between publishing and reading. While at first this sounds like a recipe for anarchy, sites using this system have developed complex and rich communities for on-line collaboration and communication. Yes, it’s possible for someone to go and destroy everything on a page, but it doesn’t seem to happen often. And most wiki systems (including this one) have built-in mechanisms to secure selected pages and restore content that has been defaced or destroyed.

09 May 2003, at 11:46 AM by unknown -
Changed line 5 from:

A Wiki Wiki Web12 is an open-editing system where the emphasis is on the collaborative authoring of hyperlinked documents. The basic concept of a wiki is that anyone can edit any page. This blurs or erases the traditional distinction between publishing and reading. While at first this sounds like a recipe for anarchy, sites using this system have developed complex and rich communities for on-line collaboration and communication. Yes, it’s possible for someone to go and destroy everything on a page, but it doesn’t seem to happen often. And most wiki systems (including this one) have built-in mechanisms to secure selected pages and restore content that has been defaced or destroyed.

to:

A Wiki Wiki Web13 is an open-editing system where the emphasis is on the collaborative authoring of hyperlinked documents. The basic concept of a wiki is that anyone can edit any page. This blurs or erases the traditional distinction between publishing and reading. While at first this sounds like a recipe for anarchy, sites using this system have developed complex and rich communities for on-line collaboration and communication. Yes, it’s possible for someone to go and destroy everything on a page, but it doesn’t seem to happen often. And most wiki systems (including this one) have built-in mechanisms to secure selected pages and restore content that has been defaced or destroyed.

Changed line 9 from:

http://www.affinity.co.nz/wiki Affinity Limited set up this wiki as part of its role as facilitator of the strategy. Its power, scalability and ease of use have led people to use the software to create and maintain some very http://www.concretestreet.net/wiki/CSA/HomePage sophisticated web sites. It is an example of Open Source Software?.

to:

http://www.affinity.co.nz/wiki Affinity Limited set up this wiki as part of its role as facilitator of the strategy. Its power, scalability and ease of use have led people to use the software to create and maintain some very http://www.concretestreet.net/wiki/CSA/HomePage sophisticated web sites. %%It is an example of Open Source Software?.

09 May 2003, at 11:43 AM by unknown -
Changed line 5 from:

A Wiki Wiki Web14 is an open-editing system where the emphasis is on the collaborative authoring of hyperlinked documents. The basic concept of a wiki is that anyone can edit any page. This blurs or erases the traditional distinction between publishing and reading. While at first this sounds like a recipe for anarchy, sites using this system have developed complex and rich communities for on-line collaboration and communication. Yes, it’s possible for someone to go and destroy everything on a page, but it doesn’t seem to happen often. And most wiki systems (including this one) have built-in mechanisms to secure selected pages and restore content that has been defaced or destroyed.

to:

A Wiki Wiki Web15 is an open-editing system where the emphasis is on the collaborative authoring of hyperlinked documents. The basic concept of a wiki is that anyone can edit any page. This blurs or erases the traditional distinction between publishing and reading. While at first this sounds like a recipe for anarchy, sites using this system have developed complex and rich communities for on-line collaboration and communication. Yes, it’s possible for someone to go and destroy everything on a page, but it doesn’t seem to happen often. And most wiki systems (including this one) have built-in mechanisms to secure selected pages and restore content that has been defaced or destroyed.

Added lines 10-11:
 

1 from the Hawaiian wiki which means quick and named after the Wiki Wiki Airport Shuttle Bus {:-) (↑)

2 from the Hawaiian wiki which means quick and named after the Wiki Wiki Airport Shuttle Bus {:-) (↑)

3 from the Hawaiian wiki which means quick and named after the Wiki Wiki Airport Shuttle Bus {:-) (↑)

4 from the Hawaiian wiki which means quick and named after the Wiki Wiki Airport Shuttle Bus {:-) (↑)

5 from the Hawaiian wiki which means quick and named after the Wiki Wiki Airport Shuttle Bus{:-) (↑)

6 from the Hawaiian wiki which means quick and named after the Wiki Wiki Airport Shuttle Bus {:-) (↑)

7 other wiki flavours are available for Microsoft Windows servers (↑)

8 from the Hawaiian wiki which means quick and named after the Wiki Wiki Airport Shuttle Bus{:) (↑)

9 from the Hawaiian wiki which means quick and named after the Wiki Wiki Airport Shuttle Bus{:-) (↑)

10 from the Hawaiian wiki which means quick and named after the Wiki Wiki Airport Shuttle Bus (↑)

11 from the Hawaiian wiki which means quick and named after the Wiki Wiki Airport Shuttle Bus{:) (↑)

12 From the Hawaiian wiki which means quick and named after the Wiki Wiki Airport Shuttle Bus (↑)

13 from the Hawaiian wiki which means quick and named after the Wiki Wiki Airport Shuttle Bus (↑)

14 From the Hawaiian wiki which means quick and named after the Wiki Wiki Airport Shuttle Bus (↑)

15 From the Hawaiian wiki which means quick and named after the Wiki Wiki Airport Shuttle Bus (↑)

09 May 2003, at 11:43 AM by unknown -
Changed line 1 from:

“The dream behind the Web is of a common information space in which we communicate by sharing information. … There are many parts of the original dream which are not yet implemented.  For example, very few people have an easy, intuitive tool for putting their thoughts into hypertext.”—Tim Berners-Lee.

to:

“The dream behind the Web is of a common information space in which we communicate by sharing information. … There are many parts of the original dream which are not yet implemented.  For example, very few people have an easy, intuitive tool for putting their thoughts into hypertext.”—http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/ Tim Berners-Lee.

Changed lines 3-9 from:

The first web client was a browser-editor. Since then, the web has evolved into a medium where a few publish and many browse. The purpose of wiki software is to make it as easy to edit pages as it is to browse them. It aims to do for collaboration what e-mail does for communication—and that can be good and bad.

to:

The first web client was a browser-editor. Since then, the web has evolved into a medium where a few publish and many browse. The purpose of wiki software is to make it as easy to edit pages as it is to browse them. It aims to do for collaboration what e-mail does for communication—opens it up (which can be good and bad).

A Wiki Wiki Web1 is an open-editing system where the emphasis is on the collaborative authoring of hyperlinked documents. The basic concept of a wiki is that anyone can edit any page. This blurs or erases the traditional distinction between publishing and reading. While at first this sounds like a recipe for anarchy, sites using this system have developed complex and rich communities for on-line collaboration and communication. Yes, it’s possible for someone to go and destroy everything on a page, but it doesn’t seem to happen often. And most wiki systems (including this one) have built-in mechanisms to secure selected pages and restore content that has been defaced or destroyed.

This type of software is ideal where people in different organisations and locations are working together to create or share knowledge. It lets people respond immediately to proposed content and see each other’s contributions. Because it uses a browser and simple markup, people using different technology platforms can easily work together. The software is easy to set up and easy to customise for local conditions, so it can be used even for short projects, such as the Tertiary Information Strategy?, as well as for permanent collections.

http://www.affinity.co.nz/wiki Affinity Limited set up this wiki as part of its role as facilitator of the strategy. Its power, scalability and ease of use have led people to use the software to create and maintain some very http://www.concretestreet.net/wiki/CSA/HomePage sophisticated web sites. It is an example of Open Source Software?.

08 May 2003, at 03:34 PM by unknown -
Changed lines 1-3 from:

Describe Why Choose Wiki here.

to:

“The dream behind the Web is of a common information space in which we communicate by sharing information. … There are many parts of the original dream which are not yet implemented.  For example, very few people have an easy, intuitive tool for putting their thoughts into hypertext.”—Tim Berners-Lee.

The first web client was a browser-editor. Since then, the web has evolved into a medium where a few publish and many browse. The purpose of wiki software is to make it as easy to edit pages as it is to browse them. It aims to do for collaboration what e-mail does for communication—and that can be good and bad.

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