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  IMPARA L'INGLESE CON BABYLON!
Come servizio al nostro pubblico, riportiamo qui a sinistra il box di traduzione di Babylon
. Se c'θ una parola inglese che non capisci, digitala nella casella Traduci... , clicca su GO e subito si aprirΰ una finestra con la traduzione italiana. Per una maggiore comoditΰ e completezza, puoi scaricare qui gratuitamente per un mese Babylon Pro, lo strumento in assoluto piω utile per chi vuole imparare l'inglese. Da oggi anche con il traduttore di frasi inglesi incorporato!
 
 
 


CONTENTS

  1. Answers.com
  2. Bliki
  3. Blocking of Wikipedia in mainland China
  4. Blog
  5. Bomis
  6. Citizendium
  7. Collaborative editing
  8. Collaborative real-time editor
  9. Collaborative software
  10. Collaborative writing
  11. Comparison of wiki software
  12. Corporate wiki
  13. Creative Commons
  14. Enciclopedia Libre
  15. Encyclopaedia Britannica
  16. Ensemble collaboration
  17. FileReplacement
  18. Free content
  19. GNU Free Documentation License
  20. GNUpedia
  21. History of Wikipedia
  22. International Music Score Library Project
  23. InterWiki
  24. IP address
  25. Italian Wikipedia
  26. Jimmy Wales
  27. John Seigenthaler Sr. Wikipedia biography controversy
  28. Larry Sanger
  29. Lexipedia
  30. List of wikis
  31. List of wiki software
  32. Living Platform
  33. LyricWiki
  34. Nupedia
  35. Open Site
  36. Peer review
  37. Peer-to-peer wiki
  38. Personal wiki
  39. Placeopedia
  40. Reliability of Wikipedia
  41. Semapedia
  42. SourceWatch
  43. Structured wiki
  44. TWiki
  45. Uncyclopedia
  46. Unilang
  47. Wapedia
  48. Wiki
  49. Wikia
  50. Wikibooks
  51. Wikifonia
  52. Wikijunior
  53. Wikileaks
  54. Wikimapia
  55. Wikimedia Commons
  56. Wikimedia Foundation
  57. Wikinews
  58. Wikinfo
  59. Wikipedia
  60. 2006 Wikipedia CD Selection
  61. Wikipedia in popular culture
  62. Wikiquote
  63. Wiki software
  64. Wikisource
  65. Wikispecies
  66. Wikitext
  67. Wikitravel
  68. Wikiversity
  69. WikiWax
  70. Wikiweise
  71. WikiZnanie
  72. Wikocracy
  73. Wiktionary

 

 



WIKIPEDIA, THE FREE ENCYCLOPAEDIA
This article is from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bliki

All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_the_GNU_Free_Documentation_License 

Bliki

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

A Bliki (also known as a WikiLog, Wog, WikiWeblog, Wikiblog, or Bloki), is a blog with wiki support. This means that after (or before) an article is posted to the blog, it can be edited, either by anyone or by members of some group of authorized users.

This combination of the two Internet concepts was conceived in 2003 with the purpose of making the popular blogging experience more interactive. Another possible effect (especially for news blogs) is the improvement of the quality and accuracy of the articles posted by giving more people the ability to edit them. However, trolling may become a problem in such systems and steps should be taken to counteract malicious interactions.

The main advantage of combining the two concepts, however, is in leveraging the utility of wikis at making connections between ideas; this effectively turns blog posts into proper wiki articles, but maintains the former's immediate nature. Thus, a bliki can evolve as a whole over time, and past information is not merely jettisoned into the aether and lost in the shuffle.

Many wiki engines are capable of providing an RSS feed, so that users can subscribe to receive notifications of updates and changes. However, a content management system with an RSS feed is not necessarily a blog; so a wiki engine with RSS support is not necessarily a bliki. Blikis look more like a blog than wikis, typically showing reverse-chronological order, date-labeled, entries.

Due to the increasing popularity of both blogs and wikis, and their consequent commercialization, a great deal of ambiguity as to the distinction between the two has been created. Some software marketed as being for the creation of wikis, are little more than partner blogs, some are nothing more than text editors. The key difference to keep in mind is that a true wiki is actively collaborative, that is, anyone can edit the document at any point in the document, whether that is to insert a comma, strike a sentence, or add an additional page. Blogs tend to function more like monologues, or pronouncements from the author(s) to which readers may append their own comments without the ability to alter the original blog text.

The same cautions should also be taken with regard to forum software marketed as suitable to creating a wiki.

See also

  • Martin Fowler
  • OddMuse
  • pimki
  • PodWiki
  • SnipSnap
  • TikiWiki
  • TWiki
  • Wiclear
  • XWiki
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bliki"

 


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