(anonymous guest) (logged out)

Copyright (C) by the contributors. Some rights reserved, license BY-SA.

Sponsored by the Wiki Symposium and the Nuveon GmbH.

 

Add new attachment

Only authorized users are allowed to upload new attachments.

This page (revision-33) was last changed on 14-Nov-2007 12:24 by ChuckSmith  

This page was created on 12-Jun-2007 17:31 by ChuckSmith

Only authorized users are allowed to rename pages.

Only authorized users are allowed to delete pages.

Difference between version and

At line 5 changed one line
After a year of diligent effort, a group of nearly 50 dedicated users and developers are proud to release [[Creole 1.0|WikiCreole 1.0]]. Creole is a common wiki markup language which augments existing markup to enable wiki users to transfer content seamlessly across wikis, a boon to novice and expert users alike. This markup has emerged from all existing wiki markup, hence the name Creole: a stable language that originated from a combination of two or more languages. Every wiki software has its own markup, making them difficult for novices to learn and experts to remember. A common wiki markup lays the foundation for development of cross-engine wiki software.
After a year of diligent effort, a group of nearly 50 dedicated users and developers are proud to release [[Creole 1.0|WikiCreole 1.0]]. Creole is designed to be a common wiki markup language which augments existing markup to enable wiki users to transfer content seamlessly across wikis, a boon to novice and expert users alike.
At line 7 changed one line
Wiki founder Ward Cunningham coined the name "wiki" from the Hawaiian ~WikiWiki, and suggested the name Creole at Wikimania 2006 in Boston, the international Wikipedia conference, where the Wiki Creole Working Group presented its first empirical analysis on existing markup variants. Cunningham’s idea was to create a common markup that was not a standardization of an arbitrary existing markup, but rather a new markup language that was created out of the common elements of all existing engines.
Creole, taking its name from the field of linguistics, a stable language that originated from a combination of two or more languages. As every wiki software has its own markup definitions, the differences can make them difficult for novices to learn and experts to remember, thus a common wiki markup lays the foundation for development of cross-engine wiki software.
At line 9 changed one line
Under this premise, the Wiki Creole Working Group analyzed existing wiki markup and compiled a greatest-common denominator subset of elements. Practitioners and wiki developers were then invited to a workshop at [[WikiSym 2006]] in Denmark to learn about Creole and discuss how to proceed. Workshop participants went through different markup elements which they wanted to unify and added them to a wiki created for this purpose. The resulting data justified a first version of the Creole spec, version 0.1. Many workshop participants also agreed to implement Creole into their software.
The Creole name and markup was born from an idea of Wiki founder Ward Cunningham at Wikimania 2006 the international Wikipedia conference. The goal : create a common markup that was not a standardization of an arbitrary existing markup, but rather a new markup language that was created out of the common elements of all existing engines. Under this premise the Wiki Creole Working Group analyzed existing wiki markup and compiled a greatest-common denominator subset of elements and presented its report.
At line 11 changed one line
A wiki with the workshop results enabled people who did not attend to discuss the decisions made and make their own proposals. A workflow was introduced that incrementally discussed and introduced these proposals into the spec. Discussion pages were used to talk about each topic. At the end of an iteration (4-8 weeks), a new version number was added to the spec.
Practitioners and wiki developers were then invited to a workshop at [[WikiSym 2006]] in Denmark to learn about Creole and discuss how to proceed. Participants evaluated different markup elements for possible unification and added them to a wiki created for this purpose. The resulting data resulted in the first version of the Creole spec, version 0.1. Many workshop participants also agreed to implement Creole into their existing wiki implementations
At line 13 changed one line
The working group's decisions emphasized consensus instead of majority rule, so opinion polls were always followed by an attempt to reach mutual agreement. After many long months of cooperation, the working group finally reached a point of maximum commonalities. They knew then it was time to freeze Creole 1.0 for the next two years and allow time for adoption. The ~WikiCreole wiki (www.wikicreole.org) now has extensive reasoning through documentation of the empirical analysis and discussions of the elements that back up the spec. Today, ten wiki engines support Creole and many more are planning to implement it in the coming months. Wiki engine developers implementing ~WikiCreole in their parsers give a clear sign to the community of their readiness to cooperate to draw us all closer together, making life easier for everyone in the wiki world.
In true wiki fashion, the report and data was published to a wider audience who were unable to attend allowing them to discuss the decisions made and add their own proposals. A iterative workflow was introduced that discussed and introduced these new proposals into the spec. Discussion pages were used to address each topic and the end of each iteration (4-8 weeks), a new version number was added to the spec.
At line 15 changed one line
With the support of [[http://www.i3g.hs-heilbronn.de/|i3G]] (Interdisciplinary Institute for Intelligent Business Processes), Christoph Sauer and Chuck Smith have led the process with great help from the wiki developer community through its initial concept to 1.0. Through their selection of content and personnel, the i3G, located in Heilbronn, Germany, is trying to overcome the barriers between computer science, engineering and business. They are also developing customized concepts for small and medium-sized companies to help optimize operational workflow and its representation for IT systems.
The working group's goal was to emphasize consensus instead of majority rule, so opinion polls were always followed by an attempt to reach mutual agreement. After many long months of cooperation, the working group finally reached a point of maximum commonalities. Creole 1.0 was then frozen for the next two years and allow time for adoption. The ~WikiCreole site (www.wikicreole.org) now has extensive documentation of the empirical analysis and discussions of the elements to support the decisions behind the spec. Today, ten wiki engines support Creole and many more are planning to implement it in the coming months. Wiki engine developers implementing ~WikiCreole in their parsers, giving a clear sign to the community of their readiness to cooperate and draw us all closer together, making life easier for everyone in the wiki world.
At line 17 added 2 lines
With the support of [[http://www.i3g.hs-heilbronn.de/|i3G]] (Interdisciplinary Institute for Intelligent Business Processes; Heilbronn, Germany), Christoph Sauer, and Chuck Smith have led the process with great help from the wiki developer community through its initial concept to 1.0. Through their selection of content and personnel, the i3G, is trying to overcome the barriers between computer science, engineering and business. They are also developing customized concepts for small and medium-sized companies to help optimize operational workflow and its representation for IT systems.
Version Date Modified Size Author Changes ... Change note
33 14-Nov-2007 12:24 4.047 kB ChuckSmith to previous remove non-functioning plugin
32 06-Jul-2007 11:49 4.12 kB ChristophSauer to previous | to last added cheat sheet
31 05-Jul-2007 08:54 4.047 kB ChristophSauer to previous | to last
30 05-Jul-2007 08:54 4.049 kB 141.7.56.2 to previous | to last
29 05-Jul-2007 08:52 4.002 kB ChristophSauer to previous | to last
28 05-Jul-2007 08:51 4.024 kB 141.7.56.2 to previous | to last locked page
27 04-Jul-2007 19:08 4.002 kB ChuckSmith to previous | to last link to German
26 04-Jul-2007 15:10 3.964 kB ChuckSmith to previous | to last added title
25 04-Jul-2007 15:06 3.914 kB ChuckSmith to previous | to last i3G homepage
24 04-Jul-2007 15:01 3.844 kB ChuckSmith to previous | to last better formatting
23 04-Jul-2007 14:34 3.773 kB ChuckSmith to previous | to last link to Digg
22 04-Jul-2007 14:20 3.699 kB ChuckSmith to previous | to last contact details
21 04-Jul-2007 14:09 3.609 kB ChuckSmith to previous | to last for immediate release
« This page (revision-33) was last changed on 14-Nov-2007 12:24 by ChuckSmith