05 September 2006

List of Wiki Engines

(The Varieties of Wiki Experience)

While WikiIndex lists scores of wiki engines, I wanted to narrow down the list of wiki engines to those that have widespread use or prominent implementations.

All of the wiki engines listed below except for Everything2 are free and open source
Wiki EngineDescriptionTop Wiki

Bitweaver

CMS related to TikiWiki; written in PHP; modular; high traffic, custom web development.
VOIP-Info
Clearspace
Jive Software; written in Java;
BBC newsforums
CNet
CLiki
Written in Common Lisp;
TUNES Wiki
Corendal
Corendal; written in Java; no wiki syntax to learn, a WYSIWYG rich text editor is used instead collaborative
DokuWikiSplitbrain Software; written in PHP;
Romapedia
mostly collaborative
Everything2Custom Wiki for Everything Development Company; programming language probably Perl
Everything2
JAMWikiWritten in Java; feature parity with MediaWiki
OLAT
MediaWikiOpen source; most widely used; developed specifically for Wikipedia. Written in PHP;
1911Encyclopedia
Althistory
AnswerWiki
Banknote Wiki
C Language
CFD Wiki
Chainki
Changemakers
Christianity KB
Corpsknowpedia
SourceWatch
Uncyclopedia
Wikipedia
MoinMoinWritten in Python;
Edubuntu
FedoraProject
GnomeLiveWiki
Handhelds.org
Python
TechnoratiDeveloper
Ubuntu
PmWikiWritten in PHP; mostly used for non-reference sites;
CenterForestResearch
ITmission (Linux)
Leo Laporte
PukiWikiJapanese; written in PHP;
Mostly Japanese
TiddlyWikiWritten in JavaScript; weak on anti-spam, other security features; no preview; entire site stored in a single HTML file (that's how it's possible to be written in JavaScript)
BoliviaWiki
Reasoning Well
Xwiki
Written in Java; enterprise wiki used mainly in France
collaborative
"Collaborative" means that users have used their installations on organization intranets, as opposed to general access reference wikis.

BitWeaver and MediaWiki are database-oriented; the other wiki engines listed above are file-oriented. The difference is that, with a file-oriented wiki engine, each entry is its own file. In contrast, with a database, each entry is a record in a table belonging to the backend.

I was interested in some of the various alternatives, one of which was the commercial wiki engine Clearspace ($29/user). There I was surprised to learn that the BBC website is (evidently) powered by this product. Clearspace is written in Java, which is very interesting to me for several reasons I'll discuss later. Another product that I thought looks attractive is Corendal.


SOURCES & ADDITIONAL READING: Gmap Package, Bitweaver organization; Wiki Popularity results, Wiki Creole; Comparison of WikiEngines (results for this table), WikiMatrix;

Labels: , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home