2005 International Symposium on Wikis
Oct 17-18, 2005, San Diego, California, U.S.A.
Co-located with ACM OOPSLA 2005 http://www.wikisym.org/
OVERVIEW
The 2005 International Symposium on Wikis brings together wiki researchers,
implementers, and users for the first time. The goal of the symposium is to
find a voice for the community. The symposium has a rigorously reviewed
research paper track as well as plenty of space for practitioner reports,
demonstrations, and discussions. We are honored to announce that Ward
Cunningham, the inventor and host of the original WikiWikiWeb, will present
the opening keynote talk at WikiSym 2005. Anyone who is involved in using,
researching, or developing wikis is invited to WikiSym 2005!
We are seeking submissions for
research papers
practitioner reports
demonstrations
workshops
panels
Research paper and practitioner report submissions are due
April 29, 2005
Workshop, and panel submissions are due
April 8, 2005
Demonstration submissions are due
July 1, 2005
Topics of interest to the symposium include, but are not limited to:
wikis as social software
wiki user behavior, user dynamics
wiki user experiences, usability
wiki implementation experiences and technology
wiki administration, processes, dealing with abuse
wiki scalability, social and technical
domain-specific/special-purpose wikis
We are particularly interested in papers that discuss the relationship
between software engineering processes and wikis. How do wikis most
effectively support software engineering processes, from ad-hoc over agile
to highly formalized processes? The versatility of wikis makes them a
flexible tool but how do you customize them to make them a sharp tool as
well? What have software engineering organizations learned in terms of user
adoption, user behavior and scaling up the wiki? As the wiki is growing,
what processes need to be in place to maintain the ease of use and general
usefulness that led to the wiki introduction in the first place?
SUBMISSION DETAILS
Research papers will be reviewed by the committee to meet rigorous academic
standards of publication. Research papers are expected to advance the state
of the art by describing substantiated new research or novel technical
results or by reporting on significant experience or experimentation. They
are reviewed both with respect to conceptual quality and clarity of
presentation.
Accepted research papers will be provided as part of the conference
proceedings. They will be put into the ACM Digital Library and can be
referenced as papers that appeared in the Proceedings of the 2005
International Symposium on Wikis. At the symposium, the presenter will be
given a 25min + 5min Q&A presentation slot. Research papers should not be
longer than 10000 words and should meet the ACM SIG Proceedings Format, see
http://www.acm.org/sigs/pubs/proceed/template.html.
Practitioner reports will be reviewed for suitability of presentation to
the community. The primary evaluation criterion is the interest to the
community. Practitioner reports will be provided as part of the companion
to the conference proceedings handed out at the symposium and can be
referenced as papers that appeared in the Companion to the Proceedings of
the 2005 International Symposium on Wikis. Practitioner reports should not
be longer than 6000 words and should meet the ACM SIG Proceedings Format.
Demonstration, workshop, and panel submissions will be reviewed for their
interest to the community. Submit two pages of description of what you
intend to do and how you meet this criterion. Please include a 100-word
abstract and one-paragraph bios of all people relevant to the submission.
Demonstrations will get 45min slots in a booth of their own, workshops will
get a half-day and a room of their own, and panels will get a 90min slot at
the symposium.
Please submit your papers or proposals in PDF format (or postscript, if you
must) by the respective deadline to submissions@wikisymPLEASENOSPAM.org.
SYMPOSIUM LOGISTICS
The 2005 International Symposium on Wikis will be held at the Town and
Country Resort & Convention Center, San Diego, California, on Oct 17 and
18, 2005. WikiSym 2005 will be co-located with the ACM OOPSLA 2005
conference, and participants may register for the symposium alone, or may
jointly register for OOPSLA 2005.
If you have any questions, please contact Dirk Riehle through
chair@wikisymPLEASENOSPAM.org.
SYMPOSIUM COMMITTEE
Dirk Riehle, Independent (chair)
Ward Cunningham, Microsoft
Mark Guzdial, Georgia Institute of Technology
Matthias Jugel, Fraunhofer FIRST
Helmut Leitner, HLS Software
James Noble, Victoria University of Wellington
David Ornstein, Microsoft
Sebastien Paquet, National Research Council of Canada
So, what sort of workshops are people thinking about for the WikiSym
conference? This friday is the due date for submitting workshop
proposals.
Here are three of my ideas. If you would be
interested in hosting or attending any of these, please let me know at ucsd_email_small.jpg:
* InterWiki workshop: discuss how to make wikis interoperate with each other and with other software; also topics like WikiMarkupStandard (although if there is a lot of interest in WikiMarkupStandard, that could be its own workshop)
* PICA workshop: PICA is an idea for an organization like IETF but for rapid, non-intimidating, semiformal proto-standards development (that is, probably like what IETF used to be). See http://communitywiki.org/PICA
* Wiki moderation/filtering workshop: to discuss potential technologies for conserving the attention/time of wiki users in a busy world. Examples: SubscribedPages, PageCluster, RecentChanges digests in various forms, WebOfTrustModeration, ViewPoint, RatingGroups.
thanks,
-- BayleShanks
-- BayleShanks - 07 Apr 2005
Argh, I am late for this. I would be interested in a "Wikis for the enterprise" panel discussion with some experts in the field like SocialText and TWiki.org. May be next time...
Is there an interest in a workshop for "Open source software development with a Wiki"? The process in Codev is now in the second generation (thanks to SamHasler and others), it would be a good base to discuss with others. If there is interest we have to act fast, we need to fly, not run to compile the material by Friday evening PDT. The good thing is that we are very familiar with the subject.
"Workshop submissions will be reviewed for their interest to the community. Submit two [PDF] pages of description of what you intend to do and how you meet this criterion. Please include a 100-word abstract and one-paragraph bios of all people relevant to the submission."
So, below is a copy of the OnlineDeliberationConference2005 . If interested, help modeling it to the required content and format. And yes, please refactor the draft mercilessly smile
If you would like to participate as a host/cosponsor/moderator please add a short bio to the Participants section below.
Another focus of the workshop could be "Agile software development with a Wiki for the enterprise", focusing more on the target market of TWiki. We should go for this if there is more interest in this subject.
Hey, I am looking forward meeting you in sunny San Diego!
-- PeterThoeny - 08 Apr 2005
Peter: I for one am looking forward to meeting you in Palo Alto in May smile
Others: You may also be interested in the interwiki workshop proposal; see http://www.usemod.com/cgi-bin/mb.pl?InterWikiWorkshopProposal
-- BayleShanks - 08 Apr 2005
I will present the use of TWiki in the ILOG intranet. For the workshop submission, here is my bio:
Colas Nahaboo has led a research team in User Interfaces technology at Bull in France, was involved in the X and W3C consortium, and is now the Architect of ILOG intranet, which has been designed around web technologies, and mainly TWiki
. His current interests is in how enterprise intranets can take advantages of the usages and technologies developed on the internet, among which wiki play a central role.
-- ColasNahaboo - 08 Apr 2005
Good news, I submitted two proposals:
Colas: Thanks for participating smile . I massaged the OSS dev proposal a bit to include the software dev and intranet aspect. Nowhere perfect, but "good enough" to go I hope. Please update the proposal if you wish, I can send an update (if acceptable).
On very short notice I got the OK and support from Joe Kraus, co-founder and CEO of JotSpot. We need one more participant and a moderator. Please let me know by e-mail if know someone suitable. I need to send an updated version of the proposal (if acceptable).
-- PeterThoeny - 09 Apr 2005
BTW, I don't like one part in my bio and was struggling to find the right words. Founder and author sounds too much one person centric; I would like to convey also the message that TWiki and TWiki.org is a team effort. Suggestions to change the wording are welcome.
-- PeterThoeny - 09 Apr 2005
Why not use 'Father of TWiki'? smile
-- FranzJosefSilli - 09 Apr 2005
"Founding Father"?
I'd love to be there, but I just can't raise the money (it's peak season for flights).
-- CrawfordCurrie - 09 Apr 2005
How about 'creator and key co-developer of TWiki'?
-- RichardDonkin - 16 Apr 2005
The WikiSym Speed Geek, organized by Meatball, is a great way to get to know your fellow conference attendees, and more importantly, for them to get to know you. Have you done something cool? Does your project need more attention? Do you have a great new idea that you just need to bounce off people? The Speed Geek is the most important event at WikiSym to get your message out. The Speed Geek offers an informal venue to showcase your work, one-on-one with the audience.
You don't need much to prepare. All you need is a laptop and something to say for five minutes. Five minutes?! Don't worry, you'll just be saying it over and over again. To give you the maximum exposure and feedback, you will present to only a handful of audience members at a time in an intimate setting. Every five minutes, you'll meet a fresh new audience.
It's simple. It's fast. It's fun.
Who should participate?
Anyone who is attending WikiSym that has something they want to show to the world should participate. Don't be coy. A Speed Geek is a lot of fun for both the audience and presenters. And best of all, it's easy. All you need is a laptop and a five minute message.
How does it work?
Each presenter is given their own station. All you need to bring is a laptop and a message. Please bring your own laptop, or sign up at the laptop exchange below. Note, Internet may not be available. Please be prepared to present off-line.
The audience is split into groups. The master of ceremonies will evenly divide audience members across each station.
The Speed Geek begins. Start your pitch! You better be fast. Five minutes goes by faster than you think.
A bell rings. Sooner than you think, the master of ceremonies will ring a bell. Stop your pitch.
The audience rotates stations. The packs of roving audience members have one minute to move to the next station. The next Speed Geek begins right away!
I'd like to propose a casual get-together for TWiki folks on Sunday afternoon/evening. Looking at the conference site, the most promising locale is "Charlies" grill. They have usual grill-fare and over 20 beers (including local microbrews). I checked with them and there is outside seating so we can get away from the big-screen TV. If someone knows another near-by location that might be nicer, that'd be fine.
I could see meeting around 4 or 5 and go until when-ever. smile
-- LynnwoodBrown - 30 Sep 2005
Meal on Sunday sounds a great idea. I'm arriving in San Diego Saturday at 2pm, leaving 10pm on Wednesday back to YYZ, so I'd be happy to meet up with whoever whenever. Staying at the Vagabond Inn.
-- MartinCleaver - 01 Oct 2005
Interesting Technologies Mentioned at WikiSym
Feedster - Search engine for RSS feeds, also indexing wikis
In his blog, Ross Mayfield transcribed Ward Cunningham's keynote on the Crucible of Creativity.
Our panel on Wikis in the "Consumer Enterprise" was well attended. Moderator EugeneKim asked everyone to form a circle, including panelists. That resulted in a very interactive session that got the participants really involved. Shashi Seth, product manager at Google said that Google is built on wikis. They don't have a conventional intranet, wikis are the intranet. He said that 5000 employees use two wikis, TWiki and SparrowWeb. (Although there are some common elements, I do not consider Sparrow a wiki.)
(I did not realize, but my face and eyes turned very red during the panel. After the panel, Joe Kraus of JotSpot asked me if I am OK. I turned around and was shocked when I saw my own face in the mirror wall. That afternoon I ended up in ER where I was diagnosed with a severe allergy. Hmm, OOSLA is a lot about closed source software, may be I am allergic to that?)
Our workshop on Open Source Software Development with a Wiki was not well attended, it was just Colas, Lynnwood and me. That gave us the opportunity to concentrate on TWiki. We identified pluses and minuses of the TWiki dev models we had/have. Next step is to refine our dev model.
Lynnwood mentioned that it was very productive meeting in person compared to working online. I agree. Wondering how we can improve the communication / increase the productivity of the TWiki.org development community.
-- PeterThoeny - 22 Oct 2005
On 07 Nov 2005 there's the first Austrian WikiPosium at the Tech Gate in Vienna where WolfgangSlany will present his use of the XpTrackerPlugin for coordinating large software projects (german title: Koordination gro?er Softwareprojekte mit TWiki). Hopefully this will be well attended.
-- FranzJosefSilli - 22 Oct 2005
The International Symposium on Wikis brings together wiki researchers, implementers, and users. The goal of the symposium is to find a voice for the community. The symposium has a rigorously reviewed research paper track as well as plenty of space for practitioner reports, demonstrations, and discussions.