How is a Wiki Different: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(How a Wiki is Different from a Forum) |
No edit summary |
||
| Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
A forum discussion | A forum discussion | ||
*starts | |||
*takes on a life of its own | |||
*sometimes reaches a solution / conclusion | |||
-carries on and devolves, digresses, gets sidetracked or dies | -carries on and devolves, digresses, gets sidetracked or dies | ||
Someone looking for answers can | Someone looking for answers can | ||
*start a new discussion | |||
*wait for the answer to emerge | |||
or | or | ||
*search for a discussion that looks relevant | |||
*read through the unfolding story | |||
*try to identify the answer if it is there | |||
*try to recognize the point of diminishing returns, devolution, digression, sidetrack or death | |||
Some people want the answer, some people enjoy the journey. | Some people want the answer, some people enjoy the journey. | ||
Revision as of 11:58, 5 August 2006
Cliff encouraged me to share a couple of thoughts:
On a typical wiki page "the answer" is at the top. The most highly evolved version of the answer is always visible. A wiki, like a forum is largely self-correcting, but you don't have to experience the process unless you want to.
In a typical forum discussion "the answer" is somewhere near but rarely at, the end. Finding the answer is a treasure hunt and you pretty much have to follow the clues and hope you recognize it if or when you stumble upon it.
A forum discussion
- starts
- takes on a life of its own
- sometimes reaches a solution / conclusion
-carries on and devolves, digresses, gets sidetracked or dies
Someone looking for answers can
- start a new discussion
- wait for the answer to emerge
or
- search for a discussion that looks relevant
- read through the unfolding story
- try to identify the answer if it is there
- try to recognize the point of diminishing returns, devolution, digression, sidetrack or death
Some people want the answer, some people enjoy the journey.