For those of you old enough, you might be humming a tune in your head right now, one of the more pop-flavored releases by the 80’s band “Talk Talk”. And now my abrupt segue into Talking.
We like to talk. Online communities thrive when people of similar interests find ways to talk to one another effectively. Discussion forums are a natural product of that desire. This is great in situations where conversations are the best way to communicate the information we desire. But at times there’s a need for greater structure, something more akin to a reference, but still one that grows from the vast knowledge of people with similar interests and varying levels of skill. Hence, the wiki model. Wikipedia is so successful (in terms of contribution anyway) because people who are deeply interested in a topic are given a sense of ownership of the content, and strive to make it the best it can be.
But wikis do a poor job with the former type of communicating, the conversational variety. And as a glance at any of the Wikipedia discussion pages shows, there is a close tie to the quality of the content with the participation in the discussions. But blech, it’s just another article, editable by anyone, cleverly disguised as a discussion with headings, indenting, and a table of contents. Why don’t wikis let us talk with the sophistication of a discussion forum? Thanks to ExpressionEngine’s extensible nature, the wiki and forum modules can talk, and now, so can you.