Wiki book: Difference between revisions

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The term '''wiki book''' is ambiguous and means several things:
The term '''wiki book''' is ambiguous and means several things:
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* A collection of wiki pages about a topic. The best example are the [http://en.wikibooks.org/ Wikibooks] from Wikipedia. Sometimes PDF versions are made available too.
* A collection of wiki pages about a topic. The best example are the [http://en.wikibooks.org/ Wikibooks] from Wikipedia. Sometimes PDF versions are made available too.


* A print book authored on the wiki and then post-processed for typesetting and minor adjustments
* A print book authored on the wiki and then post-processed for typesetting and minor adjustments. A typical example are the [http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/WikiReader WikiReader]s, collections of articles from Wikimedia Foundation projects on a certain topic, in the form of PDFs published for download and intended to be printed, and also to be sold in printed form.


* A real print book prepared on the wiki, but heavly edited once imported to a word processor.
* A real print book prepared on the wiki, but heavly edited once imported to a word processor.
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There are several arguments:
There are several arguments:


* Wikis are good tools for mass collaboration ([[social computing]]) as well as for fairly large groups work. This idea seems to work in some [http://en.wikibooks.org/ Wikibooks] projects.
# Wikis are good tools for mass collaboration ([[social computing]]) as well as for fairly large groups work. This idea seems to work in some [http://en.wikibooks.org/ Wikibooks] projects.
# '''Books as "after thought"'''. Some people create wiki pages about isolated subjects and that could grow into a collection of related subjects. Making a "book" out of these should be as easy as possible.
# '''Evolving tutorials'''. With a wiki one can test (and change in real time) tutorials. These could then be assembled into a printable textbook. E.g. with (lots) of extra work I could do this for my [[Flash tutorials]]. Already now we generate PDFs for handouts. In addition, one get get occasional help from users to fix small mistakes and broken links.
# Cross-references and references to external sources are easy to create and to manage in a wiki. In some word processors this is troublesome, e.g. Word (all versions) is a total disaster with respect to crossreferencing and other tagging.


* Some people create wiki pages about isolated subjects and that could grow into a collection of related subjects.
== Mediawiki technology ==


* With a wiki one can test (and change in real time) tutorials. These could then be assembled into a printable textbook. E.g. with (lots) of extra work I could do this for my [[Flash tutorials]]. What I do now is to generate PDFs for handouts.
Mediawikis (like this one) or the wikipedias rely on an infrastructure that is badly suited for producing books in any form. Firslty the wiki syntax fairly complicated to parse. Worse, most mediawikis inlude at least some (or hundreds) of so-called templates, e.g. <nowiki>{{incomplete}}</nowiki> will insert a banner on top of a page in this wiki. Still worse, there exist extensions (e.g. to define digrams with a code) that rely on complex external markup languages.


== Software links ==
We could find any easy strategy to produce high-quality PDF or insure perfect export/import to text processing software.
 
Information on various Wikipedia servers is fairly chaotic and many pages are not really updated. See for example the discussion about [http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Paper_Wikipedia Paper Wikipedia].
 
=== Strategies for creating PDF from mediawiki ===
 
; Tools
 
* [http://www.plog4u.org/index.php/Using_Eclipse_Wikipedia_Editor The Eclipse Wikipedia Editor with PDF Exporter]
 
* [http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Extension:Collection Collection] is an extension that you can intall in your own wiki. It will allow a user to organize personal selections of pages in a collection. Collections then can be structured with chapters, exported in ODF, [[DocBook]] or PDF using other extensions or ordered as print book through [http://pediapress.com/ http://pediapress].
 
=== Strategies for creating real print books ===
 
; software
 
* []


== Links to wikibooks and organisations that publish them ==
== Links to wikibooks and organisations that publish them ==
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=== Wikipedia books ===
=== Wikipedia books ===


* [http://en.wikibooks.org/ Wikibooks] {{quotation|Wikibooks is a Wikimedia community for creating a free library of educational textbooks that anyone can edit. Wikibooks began on July 10, 2003; since then Wikibooks has grown to include over 35,021 pages in a multitude of textbooks created by volunteers like you!}}, retrieved 11:43, 20 March 2009 (UTC).
* [http://en.wikibooks.org/ Wikibooks] {{quotation|Wikibooks is a Wikimedia community for creating a free library of educational textbooks that anyone can edit. Wikibooks began on July 10, 2003; since then Wikibooks has grown to include over 35,021 pages in a multitude of textbooks created by volunteers like you!}}, retrieved 13:12, 20 March 2009 (UTC).


* [http://www.wikibooks.org/ Wikibooks.org] (List of international Wikibook wikis).
* [http://www.wikibooks.org/ Wikibooks.org] (List of international Wikibook wikis).
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There are lots of educational organizations that use wikis or similar CMS technology, e.g.
There are lots of educational organizations that use wikis or similar CMS technology, e.g.


* [http://www.wikieducator.org/Main_Page WikiEducator]. Some of its contents can be considered virtual books, but you'll have to dig a bit - [[User:Daniel K. Schneider|Daniel K. Schneider]] 11:43, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
* [http://www.wikieducator.org/Main_Page WikiEducator]. Some of its contents can be considered virtual books, but you'll have to dig a bit - [[User:Daniel K. Schneider|Daniel K. Schneider]] 13:12, 20 March 2009 (UTC)
* [http://cnx.org/ Connexions]
* [http://cnx.org/ Connexions]
* [http://www.scholarpedia.org/ Scholarpedia] (not a collection of books actually, but it does include "encyclopedias about subjects")
* [http://www.scholarpedia.org/ Scholarpedia] (not a collection of books actually, but it does include "encyclopedias about subjects")


See also [[open contents]] and [[open educational resources]]
See also [[open content]]s and [[open educational resources]]


=== Publishing companies ===
=== Publishing companies ===


* [http://www.wikireader.de/ WikiReader]. Published some print books in German made from Wikipedia articles.
* [http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2008/02/ck12_remix_and.html Flexbooks]
* [http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2008/02/ck12_remix_and.html Flexbooks]
* http://www.webook.com/ weBook], online writing and reading in several areas
* [http://www.webook.com/ weBook], online writing and reading in several areas. Read also [http://www.internetredux.com/blog/2008/05/28/wiki-book-publisher-for-collaborative-writing/ Wiki book publisher for collaborative writing].
* Random House [http://www.thebookseller.com/news/57287-random-to-publish-first-wiki-book.html will publish] a synthesis of the 50'000 most popular german wiki articles.
* [http://pediapress.com/ PediaPress] has an interesting model. You select the content from your favorite wiki and PediaPress takes care of typesetting, printing and shipping.


=== Wikibooks in educational technology ===
=== Wikibooks in educational technology ===
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* [http://www.wikinomics.com/ Wikinomics] has some propaganda for the "collective intelligence" argument.
* [http://www.wikinomics.com/ Wikinomics] has some propaganda for the "collective intelligence" argument.
* Rick Sapir explains with [http://www.keycontent.org/tiki-index.php?page=Writing+a+Wiki+Book Writing a Book, the Wiki Way] why (and a bit how) he wrote [http://twbasics.keycontent.org/tiki-index.php TikiWiki for Smarties], an online document.
* [http://gawker.com/387731/penguin-books-proves-the-entire-internet-cant-write-a-novel Penguin Books Proves The Entire Internet Can't Write A Novel] (2008).




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* Barton, Matthew D. et al (n.d.), Rhetoric and Composition, Wikibook, http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Rhetoric_and_Composition. (Good example of a wikibook, but also includes good information on composition and collaborative writing).
* Barton, Matthew D. et al (n.d.), Rhetoric and Composition, Wikibook, http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Rhetoric_and_Composition. (Good example of a wikibook, but also includes good information on composition and collaborative writing).
* Mason, Bruce and Sue Thomas (2008). A Million Penguins Research Report, Institute for Creative Technologies, De Montfort University. [http://www.ioct.dmu.ac.uk/projects/amillionpenguinsreport.pdf PDF]. Good reading about why a million penguins can't write a very good novel. This paper includes also further links to related blogs.


[[Category:Technologies]]
[[Category:Technologies]]
[[Category:Writing]]
[[Category:Writing]]
[[Category:Document standard]]
[[Category:Document standards]]

Revision as of 15:12, 20 March 2009

This article or section is currently under construction

In principle, someone is working on it and there should be a better version in a not so distant future.
If you want to modify this page, please discuss it with the person working on it (see the "history")

Draft

<pageby nominor="false" comments="false"/>

The term wiki book is ambiguous and means several things:

  • A collection of wiki pages about a topic. The best example are the Wikibooks from Wikipedia. Sometimes PDF versions are made available too.
  • A print book authored on the wiki and then post-processed for typesetting and minor adjustments. A typical example are the WikiReaders, collections of articles from Wikimedia Foundation projects on a certain topic, in the form of PDFs published for download and intended to be printed, and also to be sold in printed form.
  • A real print book prepared on the wiki, but heavly edited once imported to a word processor.
  • A collection of wiki articles assembled on the fly by a user into a PDF document.

See also open content and open educational resources (OER). Wiki books are a favorite tool for open content authors.

Why wiki books

There are several arguments:

  1. Wikis are good tools for mass collaboration (social computing) as well as for fairly large groups work. This idea seems to work in some Wikibooks projects.
  2. Books as "after thought". Some people create wiki pages about isolated subjects and that could grow into a collection of related subjects. Making a "book" out of these should be as easy as possible.
  3. Evolving tutorials. With a wiki one can test (and change in real time) tutorials. These could then be assembled into a printable textbook. E.g. with (lots) of extra work I could do this for my Flash tutorials. Already now we generate PDFs for handouts. In addition, one get get occasional help from users to fix small mistakes and broken links.
  4. Cross-references and references to external sources are easy to create and to manage in a wiki. In some word processors this is troublesome, e.g. Word (all versions) is a total disaster with respect to crossreferencing and other tagging.

Mediawiki technology

Mediawikis (like this one) or the wikipedias rely on an infrastructure that is badly suited for producing books in any form. Firslty the wiki syntax fairly complicated to parse. Worse, most mediawikis inlude at least some (or hundreds) of so-called templates, e.g. {{incomplete}} will insert a banner on top of a page in this wiki. Still worse, there exist extensions (e.g. to define digrams with a code) that rely on complex external markup languages.

We could find any easy strategy to produce high-quality PDF or insure perfect export/import to text processing software.

Information on various Wikipedia servers is fairly chaotic and many pages are not really updated. See for example the discussion about Paper Wikipedia.

Strategies for creating PDF from mediawiki

Tools
  • Collection is an extension that you can intall in your own wiki. It will allow a user to organize personal selections of pages in a collection. Collections then can be structured with chapters, exported in ODF, DocBook or PDF using other extensions or ordered as print book through http://pediapress.

Strategies for creating real print books

software
  • []

Links to wikibooks and organisations that publish them

Wikipedia books

  • Wikibooks “Wikibooks is a Wikimedia community for creating a free library of educational textbooks that anyone can edit. Wikibooks began on July 10, 2003; since then Wikibooks has grown to include over 35,021 pages in a multitude of textbooks created by volunteers like you!”, retrieved 13:12, 20 March 2009 (UTC).

Other organizations

There are lots of educational organizations that use wikis or similar CMS technology, e.g.

See also open contents and open educational resources

Publishing companies

Wikibooks in educational technology

Orey, M.(Ed.). (2001). Emerging perspectives on learning, teaching, and technology. Retrieved <insert date>, from http://projects.coe.uga.edu/epltt/

Various links

  • Wikinomics has some propaganda for the "collective intelligence" argument.


Bibliography

  • Mason, Bruce and Sue Thomas (2008). A Million Penguins Research Report, Institute for Creative Technologies, De Montfort University. PDF. Good reading about why a million penguins can't write a very good novel. This paper includes also further links to related blogs.