11-25-2012, 11:21 AM
It comes down to the choice of tool: Wordpress vs Wiki.
When/if you reply to this - note the tool and syntax used is very much like a wiki, so it's not that bad - is it?
I would vote for the wiki approach, but that's from a user point of view; apart from familiarity with wikis, not much in it for me.
If you (note the 'you' ) set up a separate public wiki using, say, Mediawiki, then there's the additional admin and access management to consider.
But perhaps you're thinking of Wordpress wiki plug-in. Advantages include: admin of single platform, same access control to content and same defence against spam bots etc. I think you'd still have to grant trusted access to the WP wiki.
The Wikibooks option advantages include: Its there. And wide open.
(But if the Wingswiki is set up, we must transfer and 'shutdown' the wikibooks stuff to point to new material.)
Single long page vs linked pages. ??
Isn't that like asking whether Erlang modules should be written as one long single module or written as , er, modules?
(Seriously though, why would you go for a single long page?)
When/if you reply to this - note the tool and syntax used is very much like a wiki, so it's not that bad - is it?
I would vote for the wiki approach, but that's from a user point of view; apart from familiarity with wikis, not much in it for me.
If you (note the 'you' ) set up a separate public wiki using, say, Mediawiki, then there's the additional admin and access management to consider.
But perhaps you're thinking of Wordpress wiki plug-in. Advantages include: admin of single platform, same access control to content and same defence against spam bots etc. I think you'd still have to grant trusted access to the WP wiki.
The Wikibooks option advantages include: Its there. And wide open.
(But if the Wingswiki is set up, we must transfer and 'shutdown' the wikibooks stuff to point to new material.)
Single long page vs linked pages. ??
Isn't that like asking whether Erlang modules should be written as one long single module or written as , er, modules?
(Seriously though, why would you go for a single long page?)