This is something I've been considering and looking for an opportunity to implement for a while.
Here are some snips from the article:
Read the entire article here:While chaos would seem to reign with wikis, workers � and especially technology workers, including developers, project managers, QA, and product managers � often prize wikis as a way to keep projects quickly and easily organized. Various organizations, including British Telecom, Disney, Motorola, Texas Instruments, and Yahoo!, have adopted wikis for their IT project teams...
Why use a wiki? According to Vanessa DiMauro, a principal at Leader Networks and an expert in online communities and social networking, wikis excel at uniting geographically dispersed project teams, �connecting project management and senior technical staffs with clients and project managers,� and sharing non-static, internal company information, including �prospecting lists, user manuals, and employee directories.� ...
Wikis differ from other collaborative tools � including groupware, e-mail, online communities, instant messaging, intranets, and Microsoft�s Groove and SharePoint � because they allow information to be shared and retrieved in a free-form yet user-structured manner.
I plan to begin a log here into our deciding on and building a wiki collaboration platform here at my work. I am also planning to work on ways to publish and retrieve the contents through mobile devices, truly fusing mLearning and Web 2.0.
mlearning m-learning mobile-learning mobile+learning podcasting iphone apple web+2.0 learing+2.0 eLearning