Yeah me too. I like it cause it's lightweight. Easy to back up, and has a small memory footprint. And most importantly, it just works.
It's also pure Java, which for me means that, as a Java developer, in future I can extend/enhance it. My site is here, not much on there, but it'll grow over time. http://digitalspider.com.au/JSPWiki/ Although I also have an internal one where I journal different technology learnings also. Cheers, David V On Tue, Feb 9, 2016 at 10:15 AM, Dave Koelmeyer < dave.koelme...@davekoelmeyer.co.nz> wrote: > On 08/02/16 17:33, Paul Uszak wrote: > > Why do you use JSPWiki? > > > > Since there is a concurrent thread regarding “who is JSPWiki for ?” I > > thought it might be useful to try to gain some insight into why we chose > > /use it. This might be useful in assessing it's appeal. > > > > I'll go first if I may :-) > > > > All Java, from web server to the application itself > > No need for a separate database > > File storage facilitates easy backup > > Sufficient features for a simple website > > Primarily text based so low bandwidth requirement > > Small footprint > > Good idea – all these points are the very same reasons I use JSPWiki. I > use Confluence a fair amount in other roles, which is like the Microsoft > Word of wiki software: does everything, but boy is it over engineered if > you just want to do quick documentation. > > > -- > Dave Koelmeyer > http://blog.davekoelmeyer.co.nz > GPG Key ID: 0x238BFF87 > >