… To put it short: an Ikiwiki newbie. [Altai State University]: http://www.asu.ru/ [Emacs]: http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/ [Lynx]: http://lynx.isc.org/ [Software Freedom Day]: http://sf-day.org/ ## Wikis Currently, I run a few Ikiwiki instances. Namely: * — [Software Freedom Day][] event at [Altai State University][]. * — introductory materials on XML, Markdown, Ikiwiki, etc. in Russian. * — bits & pieces related to the course on computer networks I've read in 2011. * http://rsdesne.am-1.org/rsdesne-2010/ **(down since December, 2012)** — used to hold some of the materials related to the “Remote Sensing in Education, Science and National Economy” (2010-03-29 … 2010-04-10, Altai State University) program I've participated in as an instructor. * http://lhc.am-1.org/lhc/ **(down since December, 2012)** — used to hold random stuff written by me, my colleagues, students, etc. ## Preferences I prefer to use [Lynx][] along with [Emacs][] (via `emacsclient`) to work with the wikis. (Note the “Local variables” section below.) The things I dislike in the wiki engines are: * the use of home-brew specialized version control systems — while there're a lot of much more developed general purpose ones; * oversimplified syntax — which (to some extent) precludes more sophisticated forms of automated processing; in particular, this forces one to reformat the material, once complete, to, say, prepare a book, or an article, or slides. Out of all the wiki engines I'm familiar with, only Ikiwiki is free of the first of these. I hope that it will support more elaborate syntaxes eventually. ---- Local variables: mode: markdown coding: utf-8 fill-column: 64 ispell-local-dictionary: "american" End: