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Mar29
Stewart Mader: Wiki vs. Blog
Note by Easton: Thanks again to Stewart Mader for guest posting here. He also posted on wikis yesterday. This special guest post is part of the Know More Media Guest Blogger Week effort.

In my last post, I made a comparison between Bill Gates and Steve Jobs - not so much to be critical, but to illustrate a point about the online world. "Today" is central to the growth of technology because the tools and services you can use today are the ones that will have the greatest immediate impact on your work. They'll also better prepare you to be agile and adopt the newer, better services available in the future. After my post yesterday, Easton commented to me that, "there's an important connection between blogs and wikis - both offer incredibly easy publishing capabilities. Smart businesses and smart educators will know how to use both to enhance their offerings." This is the perfect segue to today's post, which looks at the distinction between blogs and wikis.

As web communication and collaboration tools evolve, the distinction between them has become subtle at the outset, and greater as the use deepens, like a fork in the road. Blogs and wikis might not seem that different on first glance, because they both enable communication of information by a person or group of people, and provide a platform for feedback. Blogs do it in the form of comments, while wikis do it by letting users directly edit the contents of a given page. This is where the distinction becomes more apparent. For example, businesses are increasingly using wikis to allow users of their products to write documentation, and the result is better, more comprehensive documentation than a product manager or engineer could write. Here are examples from Merlin Systems and Mozilla. A blog wouldn't work as well for this, because direct editing of pages is necessary for users to alter the same text when correcting errors, improving clarity and flow, and adding new information. A blog would be useful for announcing a new product, and the comments feature would allow people to react to the announcement by posting questions, asking for further details, etc. A wiki wouldn't work so well here, because the text of the announcement needs to stay stable in order to communicate accurate information to as many people as possible. The same general principle applies to education - blogs are a better communication tool when you want to get information out to people, and want to enable feedback, but keep the original text intact. Wikis are better when you want information to be touched - and enhanced - by as many hands as possible. Attached to my blog is a wiki documenting uses of wiki in education - see if you're inspired by the ideas already there (many of which apply equally to business), edit them if you like, or contribute new ideas - that's what technology today is all about!

by Stewart Mader

7 Comments/Trackbacks




Easton, I love the inspiration you bring to encourage discourse that is relevant, pathfinding and alive! Thanks for the comparisons and motivation packed into this piece-- makes me want to read or write a blog!

» Guest Bloggers Featured on the KMM Network, Wednesday from Know More Media
More guest bloggers made their voices heard on our blogs on Wednesday. They were:  Guy Kawasaki: ‘Images of an Ever-changing China’ on PanAsianBiz. Lorraine Miller-Nara: ‘Communicating Between Cultures’ on www.PanAsianBiz.c... [Read More]

» Stewart Mader: You Either Get It (Wikipedia) Or You Don't (Britannica) from BusinessBlogWire
Note by Easton: Thanks go to Stewart Mader for this guest post, which forms part of the Know More Media Guest Blogger Week event.  Stewart has also posted about wikis twice this week at this blog (see "Wiki vs. Blog"... [Read More]

Sorry for choosing your blog to do this posting, but I just want to see how a comment look like and how it works. Please feel free to delete this of yur BLOG

That's okay Anon, I'll leave it here for posterity's sake. Feel free to share your identity and your thoughts with us all here.

as a wikiexpert, I prefer wiki for knowledge structuring. Blogs are excellent for spreading new idea's and new information to be reflected withcomments and opinions. Wikis should be continious improved articles

Thanks for this interesting discussion. It gives our team a lot of input for creating our new online learning environment about Law, while exploring/using Wiki software. Feel free to visit our website to learn from us and leave a comment (now in Dutch only, but soon in English available).

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