Amos Shapira wrote:
Hello,
After just over a year of introducing MediaWiki into my workplace (1.7
for now), the non-geek user base (read - sales and marketing) is
expected to grow and I need to address some shortcomings.
A couple of specific points my (geeky and technically capable) CEO
just pointed a couple of things which bother him personally:
1. Attaching files is a bitch.
2. Formatting tables.
He'd like to hear suggestions for other solutions to help share
information inside the company.
The problem is that you've implemented the wrong FOSS project. MediaWiki
is just great - for a quick no hassle no thrills community Wiki. What
you are really looking for is a enterprise grade CMS.
Luckily, there are a whole set of very good and Open Source CMS systems,
the best of which are also commercially backed - just take your pick:
- TWiki: In a sentence, it's a Wiki, but for the enerprise.
http://twiki.org/
- Alfresco: full blown CMS and then some. http://www.alfresco.com/
- Drupal: Some assembly may be required, but there's more then enough
commercial backing to make it hassle free. http://drupal.org/ (contact
Lioe Kesos from Linnovate if you to hear more of that).
There's a bunch more, but these are 3 top that come to my mind.
Hope this helps,
Gilad
--
Gilad Ben-Yossef
Chief Coffee Drinker
Codefidence Ltd.
The code is free, your time isn't.(TM)
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