: http://www.socialtext.com A Palo Alto, California-based company with a distributed team including people who are active in wiki and weblog and other internet community and business. The base of the Socialtext Workspace product Brian Ingerson's KwikiClone [http://www.kwiki.org]. Socialtext melds WebLog""s and wikis, email and InstantMessaging together for enterprise-level groupware. Of course, they call it SocialSoftware. Features include: * Some EasySubmission features such as emailing to wiki pages * Simplification of a number of traditional wiki features for business users * WikiBlog support * RSS support * Nice tool column on right, with a recently visited pages box and a recent changes box that work better then any I've seen so far. It was just used at the RSS Winterfest http://www.socialtext.net/rss-winterfest/ if you want to see some of its latest features in a rare publically accessible site. They have recently hosted the PC Forum ConferenceWiki, which covered topics not unfamiliar to MeatballWiki, for which they have a [http://www.socialtext.com/pcforum/index.cgi wiki]. At the same time, you should see their [http://www.socialsoftwarealliance.org/ Social Software Alliance]. They also have a [http://lists.polycot.com/cgi-bin/ezmlm-cgi/2/ archived] mailing list Of interest to me is [http://joi.ito.com/static/emergentdemocracy.html Emergent Democracy] essay that came out of a [http://socialtext-com.istori.com/workspace/index.cgi?%5BHappening Happening]. I do believe the site is password enhanced, not sure why, seems like anyone can have one. MarkDilley It's probably just a bad habit. Any wiki can be public or private at the discretion of the host. --AdinaLevin ---- An interesting reference to this company, taken from a Gartner report dated 2004-09-23, titled "Apply the Knowledge Gained From Building a 'Wiki'". I found the article to be focused more on the generic aspects of collabotation (all be it using a wiki) rather than on any specifics related to Wikis. -- HansWobbe Open-source products dominate the wiki software product market. There are more than 200 wiki-related products under development at SourceForge?.net (http://sourceforge.net), although only a dozen or so are popular among users and developers. Wikis will not remain the exclusive preserve of open-source software -- the commercialization of wiki products has begun. Two examples are Socialtext's Workspace and Atlassian Software Systems' Confluence. A growing number of hosted solutions target small and midsize businesses. Vendors such as IBM and Microsoft probably will integrate wiki-like functionality into their e-workplace suites. As wikis' suitability and value in other contexts are better understood, wiki-style collaboration probably will be supported in Web content management, team collaboration and smart enterprise suite products. ---- [http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/oct2004/tc20041019_0375_tc182.htm "Championing a Wiki World"] article in Business Week 2004-10-19 describes "Socialtext, Ross Mayfield's Web-collaboration outfit" ---- I am interested in an OpenSource wiki comparable to either SocialText, AtlassianConfluence or ProjectForum in terms of both features and ease of setup. Any recommendations? According to [http://ross.typepad.com/blog/2006/07/it_changes_ever.html Ross Mayfield's blog], Social text goes opensource next week (as of July 20th 2006). Yes, it was released 2006-07-23. It doesn't look easy to install however... ---- CategoryWikiEngine CategoryCompany