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Genetically recombining a Blog and Wiki

Collaboratory Context

The University of Mary Washington has taken the small pieces loosely joined philosophy to heart. Over the last several years UMW has concentrated the lion's share of its instructional technology praxis upon crafting learning environments through open source blogging and wiki applications. This philosophy of remaining limber and flexible has afforded our division the opportunity to experiment at length with tools that we have identified as the most malleable and extensible to reflect a dynamic learning community.

In short, our group spends very little, if any, time on infrastructural or network issues, and concentrate all our efforts solely upon developing, experimenting, and iterating through small pieces loosely joined. Exploring the possibilities of combining and re-combining these tools inside and outside of the classroom for both students and instructors.

The Objective

mediapress.jpg

To integrate a blogging application with wiki software (for our purposes WordPress and MediWiki) in order to harness the simple publishing platform of the blog as a quick and easy personalized content management system with the ongoing, collaborative editing and easily extensible publishing logic of the wiki.

In other words, the blog provides the framework for publishing dynamic content, providing out-of-the-box feeds, and managing content. While the wiki enables one, or a number, of users to constantly edit, update, track revisions, and extend content spontaneously. The logic here is that a blog post or page is no longer necessarily static after its been published. Along the same lines, a wiki article has some more sophisticated and consistent ways of being organized, searched, and re-presented.

Initial Inspirations & Experiments

The Bliki -It's Dead Simple

thinkubator.jpg

John Maxwell's Thinkubator, which I saw at NV2007 got me excited about the ways in which a wiki could be skinned and framed to look and, to some degree, act like a blog. His vision and architecture framed out quite clearly the interrelatedness and the potential power of blurring of these two tools.

   This Thinkubator thing is my [John Maxwell's] 
   project. It is (currently) a wiki pretending to be a blogging/webforum 
   platform. More broadly, it is a working laboratory for publication 
   architecture concepts.

Visual Integration

rush_newmedia.jpg

Andy Rush, from the University of Mary Washington's Division of Teaching and Learning Labs, has recently made some progress in effecting the visual illusion of such a recombination. By modifying the front-end of a WordPress theme (MistyLook) for MediaWiki -the two have become basically indistinguishable. See the experiments here and here.

Further Experiments: Grab MediaWiki

grabmediawiki.jpg

The next logical step after the visual integration is a more seamless structural integration between the two applications. The DTLT labs are currently working on a plugin for Wordpress that will grab MediaWiki articles from a specified url and publish them (including images, videos, etc) within the specified Wordpress post or page. The idea has already be successfully accomplished in the open source content management system Typo3 using PHP's fcurl. DTLT is currently still tweaking the code for WordPress but a working example is up and running here.

To do: Tweak database and search functionality for wiki through an integrated search field on the blog.

Conclusion: Why go to the trouble?

elsblogs1.jpg

Blogs and Wikis remain the most accessible and widely used free tools for sharing distributed resources and online publishing. David Wiley's development of the bookmarklet Send2wiki, exemplifies how easy it can be to put web content into a MediaWiki article with the click of a button. Riffing off this, Grab MediaWiki asks the question- "How can we get the content out of MediaWiki and into a blog or content management system quickly and easily?" The Bliki idea can be understood as using the functionality of the wiki for the backend editor and collaborative revision possibilities, while harnessing the blog as the user-controlled management system for creating posts and pages that will pull in the relevant wiki article. And, as a bonus, you can also post content the old-fashioned way!

Such a system may very well change the way in which we publish content to a university website quite dramatically -allowing for intense flexibility, numerous plugins, and a more malleable and easy-to-use content management system. A genetically recombined, open source Contribute. Now we have to fill it up with Open Content!!!

del.icio.us bookmarks with the tag "bliki"

Delicious/tag/bliki

  1. Java Wikipedia API - MathEclipse
  2. Martin Fowler's Bliki in Japanese - FrontPage
  3. info.tw.o - Welcome to TikiWiki CMS/Groupware : Learn More
    TikiWiki CMS/Groupware -- Whatever you're looking for, Tiki's got it.
  4. cyn.in> Open Source Collaboration Software for the Enterprise
  5. Bliki index - The Schommunity Wiki
  6. Blog + Wiki = Bliki " collaborate
  7. Blog Wiki = Bliki " collaborate
  8. Martin Fowler's Bliki in Japanese - ソフトウェア開発の学派
  9. Vanilla.rb
    A Ruby implementation of the bliki concept (weblog+wiki) which was pioneered by Vanilla.
  10. Wiki Weblogs
    wikis that support blogging
  11. XWiki - Main - WebHome
  12. Meatball Wiki: WikiLog
    wikilog - aka bliki
  13. PmWiki | PmWikiPt / PmWikiPt
    PmWiki é um sistema do tipo WikiWikiWeb destinado a suportar a criação e manutenção colaborativa de sites para a Internet. As páginas PmWiki são tratadas como páginas web normais, tendo uma opção com o nome "Editar" que permite alterar de forma simples o seu conteúdo assim como adicionar novas páginas ao site, não sendo necessário conhecer a linguagem HTML ou CSS. Estas funcionalidades são disponibilizadas de acordo com o conjunto de regras BasicEditing. A edição de uma página pode ser feita pelo público em geral ou apenas por um conjunto pré-definido de pessoas.
  14. WordPress " Blicki " WordPress Plugins
  15. Martin Fowler's Bliki
    Martin Fowler's Bliki