Bazsites.com Wiki Engines
Directory Topics
On the Web
- Project/Open Wiki Engine - An open-source wiki engine integrated with the Project/Open open-source project management system. Written in TCL and running on top of the OpenACS community system.
- Wiki Engines - Links to dozens of Wiki system types, in many programming languages.
- net.nemein.wiki - Open source wiki engine written in PHP for the Midgard Content Management System.
- On-wiki - Free wiki hosting based on MoinMoin Open Source wiki engine. URLs of form "http://yourtopic.on-wiki.net/". WYSIWYG editing, file upload, custom permissions, ads on each wiki page.
- Wacko Wiki - Small, lightweight, handy, expandable, multilingual Wiki-engine based on Wakka Wiki. WYSIWYG editor, easy installer, many localizations, email notification on changes/comments, several cache levels, design themes (skins) support, XHTML compliance, page rights (ACLs), page comments.
- Wikepage - Wikepage is an easy to use and small dual-mode wiki engine that can act as wiki sites and personal homepages.
- Particle Wiki - A light PHP/MySQL wiki engine with archived history, search, admin panel and skins (released under proprietary Particle Soft End User Licence).
- CGI::Wiki - A Perl toolkit for developing wikis.
- Vanilla - An extensible wiki engine written in REBOL, with weblog features and a streamlined interface.
- Perspective - Open Source wiki engine, written in C#/XSLT, that supports WYSIWYG editing, file attachments, searching across pages and attachments (including MS Office documents) and a flexible security model.
Wikipedia Articles
- The Wiki Way - The Wiki Way: Quick Collaboration on the Web by Bo Leuf and Ward Cunningham is a book about the WikiWiki collaborative editing system, such as that used on Wikipedia. Ward Cunningham is the creator of the original Wiki software (today there are many different wiki engines).
- Stationary steam engine - Stationary steam engines are fixed steam engines used for pumping or driving mills and factories, and for power generation. They are distinct from locomotive engines used on railways, traction engines for heavy steam haulage on roads, steam motor vehicles, agricultural engines used for ploughing or threshing, and marine engines.
- Waukesha Engines - Waukesha Engines was founded in Waukesha, Wisconsin in 1906, and is now a manufacturer of large stationary reciprocating engines although it once built smaller engines as well, including automotive engines.
- Kempton Park Steam Engines - The Kempton Park Steam Engines (also known as the Kempton Great Engines) are two large triple-expansion steam engines, at the Kempton Park waterworks, Middlesex, London. Each engine is of a similar size to that used in RMS Titanic and rated at about 1008hp.
- Rolls-Royce Merlin - The Rolls-Royce Merlin engines were a series of 12 cylinder, 60° "V", 27 litre, liquid cooled piston aircraft engines built during World War II by Rolls-Royce, at Ford in ManchesterMerlin Engines in Manchester and under licence in the United States by Packard. They are widely considered to be among the most successful aero engines produced during World War II, and perhaps the finest piston engines ...