Information About

Wikiwikiweb




In order to make the exchange of ideas between programmers easier, Ward Cunningham started developing WikiWikiWeb in 1994 and installed it on his company Cunningham & Cunningham's Internet domain c2.com on March 25 , 1995 . Cunningham named WikiWikiWeb that way because he remembered a Honolulu International Airport counter employee telling him to take the so-called "Wiki Wiki" Chance RT-52 Shuttle Bus line that runs between the airport's terminals. "Wiki Wiki" is a Reduplication of "wiki", a Hawaiian-language word for ''fast''. Cunningham's idea was to make WikiWikiWeb's pages quickly editable by its users, so he initially thought about calling it "QuickWeb", but later changed his mind and dubbed it "WikiWikiWeb".

The name 'Ward's Wiki' (or, in Camel Case , 'WardsWiki') is also used for WikiWikiWeb, but has many times negative connotations due to its suggestion that Ward Cunningham maintains strict ownership and control over the entire community, a role which he actively avoids. Other names have been suggested to try to avoid ambiguity with the generic concept of ''a wiki'', and to reflect the growing amount of non-pattern related content. The term ''C2 Wiki'' is also used.

Whichever term is used, WikiWikiWeb should not be confused with the PPR, since WikiWikiWeb is just a complement to the repository. As explained on WikiWikiWeb's '''' page:
This wiki and the pages in it are a feature of the Portland Pattern Repository, published by Cunningham & Cunningham, Inc., Portland, Oregon {Link without Title} .


The PPR itself predated WikiWikiWeb, and includes some static pages (pages that don't belong to WikiWikiWeb).

WikiWikiWeb's '''' page contains the following description:

This wiki's primary focus is . All the information here is subjective.



WIKIWIKIWEB AND ITS DESIGNATED SISTER SITES



WIKIWIKIWEB AS A PRECURSOR TO OTHER ONLINE COMMUNITIES

WikiWikiWeb plays an important historical role on the Worldwide Web and the Internet, because of its influence on other online communities. WikiWikiWeb's focus on specialized programming makes its content relatively unintelligible to people outside the programming sphere, but, nevertheless, editors (so-called "wiki citizens" or "wikizens") and visitors and readers of the WikiWikiWeb took the idea of making pages user-modifiable outside the WikiWikiWeb and created their own new wiki engines (programs which run wikis) and wikis.

Wiki communities outside WikiWikiWeb implemented their wiki engines to create wikis focused on content other than programming. The versatility of wikis and their multiple applications is what subsequently made them popular in the Internet's communities.

Probably the most famous example of WikiWikiWeb's legacy is of San Diego, California , introduced WikiWikiWeb to Larry Sanger of the Internet company Bomis on the evening of January 2, 2001. At the time, Bomis was working on the online encyclopedia Nupedia , but that project turned out to fail, so Sanger suggested running an open encyclopedia on UseModWiki , an indirect clone of WikiWikiWeb's engine. Sanger presented the idea to Jimmy Wales , then the head of Bomis, and he agreed. The UseModWiki-based encyclopedia eventually came to be known as "Wikipedia".


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