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Home About Me Subscribe Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology Thoughtful and sometimes snarky perspectives on nonprofit technology Free and opensource tool #3: Dokuwiki January 15, 2008 I have become a fan, nay, a devotee of DokuWiki. I’ve always liked wikis, and I have used MediaWiki a lot in the past, and I do like it.
The online help for BlackbaudNow is powered by the opensource software MediaWiki. It is well hidden, but a somewhat savvy MediaWiki user will notice the telltale signs (the URLs are one giveaway.) Of course, proprietary software makers use opensource software all the time, that’s not the problem.
I have two other wikis ( a public and private wiki) that are in Mediawiki, on my web host. I didn’t get so far into coding the markup, but I had decided that I’d follow MediaWiki’s syntax, since it was the most popular wiki software. And I contribute to varied other wikis, which are on varied other wiki platforms.
Leading provider of online fundraising, education and advocacy for nonprofits partners with the first open-source video platform. That they are opensource is a huge added benefit to our clients and the greater nonprofit community.&#. As an opensource platform, Kaltura is unique among online video solutions.
It’s new and updated for the realities of the nonprofit technology and free and opensource worlds of 2007. The primer, which will show up in just electronic form, also has a very cool implementation of a great open API that we’ll be crowing about soon (my lips are sealed right now.) One of which is called Elgg.
What I’d really like to see though is a true, enthusiastic OpenSource community get behind a “better&# spreadsheet for its own sake, not for the sake of copying Office. Phil: I agree – with time and effort, OO or any opensource spreadsheet could out Excel Excel. Maybe WikiCalc is the way to go.
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