Smelling like a wiki

From creative crowd wiki
Revision as of 14:47, 8 May 2025 by Manetta (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Writing

In a wiki, writers become contributors, shifting the understanding of what writing can be from a traditional understanding of an individual (genius) author, towards someone contributing to a distributed practice of writing text.

This text is written in a wiki with 479 pages, made through 4,706 edits, written by 33 contributors, of which 0 are considered active, and in the middle of 238 uploaded files. We're writing in the WikiEditor, which is the simple text editor that is enabled by default when you install a new MediaWiki instance. I had to check the Special:Version page to find the name of this text editor.

Who else has been around on this wiki recently?

List of abbreviations:
N
This edit created a new page (also see list of new pages)
m
This is a minor edit
b
This edit was performed by a bot
(±123)
The page size changed by this number of bytes

8 May 2025

     14:47  Smelling like a wiki‎‎ 5 changes history +223 [Manetta‎ (5×)]
     
14:47 (cur | prev) +19 Manetta talk contribs
     
14:24 (cur | prev) +3 Manetta talk contribs
     
14:23 (cur | prev) +11 Manetta talk contribs (→‎Writing)
     
14:23 (cur | prev) +57 Manetta talk contribs (→‎Writing)
     
14:22 (cur | prev) +133 Manetta talk contribs (→‎Writing)

Who else has an account?

What were the latest pages that were made?

Which are pages yet to be made?

What are the 5 last files that have been uploaded?

Date Name Thumbnail Size User Description Versions
10:00, 19 April 2025 Publishing-partyline-viewpoint-cards.pdf (file) 209 KB Simoon   1
15:40, 28 February 2025 Bulletin-6-0.jpg (file) 671 KB Manetta   1
11:56, 12 February 2025 9013499601 a4daccfd8f c.jpg (file) 142 KB Manetta   1
11:48, 12 February 2025 9014869362 830c3728f4 k.jpg (file) 717 KB Manetta   1
11:37, 12 February 2025 Print-shop-Infoworld-1984-04-23-44-copy.png (file) 643 KB Manetta   1


And who contributed to this page?

...

Rendering layout

Wiki-to-print as a practice

Wiki-to-print is part of a broader interest in making publications using code and layout engines, instead of canvas and GUI based tools, as it allows us to work in collective modes and explore what this means, while being entangled with other communities of practice through the open standards (HTML and CSS) and tools (Mediawiki, Paged.js) we use. This means that books are being generated through scripts, newspapers rendered from multiple networked sources, or zines written HTML and CSS.

Using a wiki as an editing-design environment shifts multiple things around. What we currently refer to as wiki-to-print or wiki-layouting [i think we need a cute catchy name!] is actually a genealogy of practices of generating publications through a wiki. The trail includes work done at Constant in Brussels, Open Source Publishing in Brussels, the making of the book Volumetric Regimes in between Barcelona-Brussels-London-Rotterdam by Possible Bodies and Manetta Berends, the setup at The Institute for Technology in the Public Interest (TITiPI) by Femke Snelting and Martino Morandi in Brussels, the book Making Matters made by Hackers & Designers in Amsterdam, the making of the research newspapers Toward a Minor Tech and Content/Form with Geoff Cox, Christian Ulrikson, Winnie Soon and Varia/CC represented by Simon Browne and Manetta Berends in London-Rotterdam-Berlin. In all these occasions, wiki is used as a shared place for materials, editorial work and the making of the layout. Writing and design work can happen in a non-linear way and evolve parallel to each other, which invites to rethink editorial production workflows. Publications can be re-rendered over time, embracing the changes and transformations that might have emerged in between now and the previous edition. The versioning tracker and features like transclusion challenge traditional notions of authorship and modes of writing. Often a wiki becomes a rich messy archive and plays an important role as community infrastructure.