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Teratornis (talk | contribs) (→Making a successful new wiki is hard: I have some thoughts on your questions) |
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Fred Mir - fredofromstart@gmail.com {{Unsigned2|05:45, 3 July 2010|74.198.15.1}} | Fred Mir - fredofromstart@gmail.com {{Unsigned2|05:45, 3 July 2010|74.198.15.1}} | ||
== Making a successful new wiki is hard == | |||
Hello Ivana, [[User:Ivana Zelenika#Research Topic|you ask]]: | |||
* "Is one of the solutions to establish rich interconnected networks/ website/ database/ wikis for all A.T. related needs? How can we speed it up and scale up?" | |||
I have some thoughts on these questions, but before writing them I will read your papers, to see if I have anything new to tell you. Wikis are probably the most effective platform to date for large-scale remote collaboration, but [[Making a successful new wiki is hard]]. Barriers exist to productive collaboration on wikis, and the (relatively few{{w|Pareto principle}}) successful wikis had to overcome these barriers, either by accident or by design. I suspect success involves a combination of accident and design in all cases - i.e., probably no one ''really'' knows how to make a successful wiki, at least not initially, only things they can do to increase the probability of success. --[[User:Teratornis|Teratornis]] 16:09, 10 February 2011 (PST) |
Revision as of 00:09, 11 February 2011
Check your email asap -- Joshua 19:32, 14 May 2010 (UTC)
Hi Ivana !
(We met in Montreal, at RoCoCo.)
Let's keep in touch ! Are you on Facebook ?
Fred Mir - fredofromstart@gmail.com —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 05:45, 3 July 2010, 74.198.15.1
Making a successful new wiki is hard
Hello Ivana, you ask:
- "Is one of the solutions to establish rich interconnected networks/ website/ database/ wikis for all A.T. related needs? How can we speed it up and scale up?"
I have some thoughts on these questions, but before writing them I will read your papers, to see if I have anything new to tell you. Wikis are probably the most effective platform to date for large-scale remote collaboration, but Making a successful new wiki is hard. Barriers exist to productive collaboration on wikis, and the (relatively fewW) successful wikis had to overcome these barriers, either by accident or by design. I suspect success involves a combination of accident and design in all cases - i.e., probably no one really knows how to make a successful wiki, at least not initially, only things they can do to increase the probability of success. --Teratornis 16:09, 10 February 2011 (PST)