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Top Forums Web Development Header in mobile version UNIX.com Post 303044893 by Neo on Saturday 7th of March 2020 10:41:01 PM
Old 03-07-2020
After thinking about this.....

To be honest, I am inclined to stop development and updates on the current code base and migrate the forums to discourse.

Code:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discourse_(software)

Code:
Discourse is an open source Internet forum and mailing list management software application founded in 2013 by Jeff Atwood, Robin Ward, and Sam Saffron.[2] Discourse received funding from First Round Capital and Greylock Partners.[3] The application is written with Ember.js”¯[4] and Ruby on Rails.[5] PostgreSQL serves as its back-end database management system.

From a usability perspective, Discourse breaks with existing forum software by including features recently popularized by large social networks, such as infinite scrolling, live updates, expanding links, and drag and drop attachments.[6] However, the stated goals of the project are social rather than technical, to improve online discussion quality through improved forum software.

The source code is distributed under the GNU General Public License version 2. Therefore Discourse can be self-hosted by anyone. Alternatively, hosting service can be bought from the company of the founders. As of October 2017, more than 700 businesses or instances have chosen this option.[7] On May 2017, co-founder Jeff Atwood said in an interview that the company is generating approximately 120,000 dollars per month at that time.[8] With the money the company pays salary for its full-time employees who maintain the software and develop new features which benefits those who are self-hosting the open source software, too. This is an example of an open source software business model where a company sells professional services to willing customers.

I think it is about time to "retire" the legacy vB site, in a controlled way.

See / continue:

Under Consideration: Migrate the Forums to Discourse
 

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Kwiki(3pm)						User Contributed Perl Documentation						Kwiki(3pm)

NAME
Kwiki - The Kwiki Wiki Building Framework KWIKI 2.0 STOP. Don't install this CPAN module! Read this section to find out why... Kwiki-0.38 and the large collection of Kwiki CPAN modules has been relatively stable on CPAN for the last couple years. Being stable also means being undeveloped. In December 2006, the Kwiki community started actively developing Kwiki again. We call the revitalized project Kwiki 2.0. This is not a version number (at least not yet), but a code name for the effort. Some goals of Kwiki 2.0 are: * Make Kwiki easier to install and maintain * Make Kwiki fast * Make Kwiki plugins easier to develop * Make Kwiki more fun We've made a lot of headway on these goals and other goals too. Kwiki is *really* simple to install now. _All_ the Perl dependencies come with Kwiki, and are /preinstalled/. This means you just need Perl 5.8.3 and a web server. Well actually we give you a web server too! NOTE: /Preinstalled/ means that the modules are all linked into a lib tree that is separate from your installed Perl modules. This is good for several reasons: 1) Installing modules takes a lot of time. 2) Kwiki is guaranteed to have module versions that work. 3) Kwiki doesn't change anything about your system's Perl lib. 4) You can delete all the modules by just deleting the Kwiki checkout. 5) Upgrading Kwiki is simple as 'svn update'! 6) You can install Kwiki without root permissions. Also Kwiki is now smoking fast if you use Kwiki::FastCGI. There are also some new caching modules that make Kwiki even faster still. The important part is this: all the new stuff is not yet on CPAN. If you want to install Kwiki, get it from our subversion repository (highly recommended) or tarball downloads. You will be amazed at how simple and fast it is to install the new Kwiki which comes with nearly 500 Perl modules. The longest part is simply checking out the repository. See <http://www.kwiki.org/?InstallingKwiki2> for details. Eventually all this work will make it back to CPAN, but likely not for a while. Here's a list of references for more information: * http://www.kwiki.org - Main Kwiki Site * http://www.kwiki.org/?KwikiNews - Kwiki News * http://svn.kwiki.org/kwiki/trunk/ - Kwiki SVN Repository * http://trac.kwiki.org/trac/timeline - Kwiki Project Management * #kwiki on irc.freenode.net - Kwiki IRC Channel * http://www.kwiki.org/downloads/ - Kwiki downloads * http://doolittle.kwiki.org/ - Kwiki Documentation Wiki Finally, there are generally a good amount of helpful people on IRC. Please drop by sometime! Cheers, Ingy Here's the old Kwiki.pm doc. It might be a little out of date... SYNOPSIS
> kwiki -new cgi-bin/my-kwiki Kwiki software installed! Point your browser at this location. NOTE
If you are impatient (don't worry, that's a good thing!) read Kwiki::Command to get the details on how to install and configure a new Kwiki wiki in record time. DESCRIPTION
A Wiki is a website that allows its users to add pages, and edit any existing pages. It is one of the most popular forms of web collaboration. If you are new to wiki, visit http://c2.com/cgi/wiki?WelcomeVisitors which is possibly the oldest wiki, and has lots of information about how wikis work. Kwiki is a Perl wiki implementation based on the Spoon application architecture and using the Spiffy object orientation model. The major goals of Kwiki are that it be easy to install, maintain and extend. All the features of a Kwiki wiki come from plugin modules. The base installation comes with the bare minimum plugins to make a working Kwiki. To make a really nice Kwiki installation you need to install additional plugins. Which plugins you pick is entirely up to you. Another goal of Kwiki is that every installation will be unique. When there are hundreds of plugins available, this will hopefully be the case. CGI
::Kwiki Kwiki is the successor of the popular CGI::Kwiki software. It is a complete refactoring of that code. The new code has a lovely plugin API and is much cleaner and extendable on all fronts. There is currently no automated way to upgrade a CGI::Kwiki installation to Kwiki. It's actually quite easy to do by hand. Instructions on how to do it are here: http://www.kwiki.org/?KwikiMigrationByHand DOCUMENTATION
All of the future Kwiki module documentation is being written at the http://doc.kwiki.org/ wiki. Check there for the latest doc, and help improve it. Each successive release of Kwiki will include the latest doc from that site. CREDITS
I am currently employed by Socialtext, Inc. They make high quality social software for enterprise deployment. Socialtext has a bold new vision of building their products over Open Source software and returning the generic source code to the community. This results in a win/win effect for both entities. You get this shiny new wiki framework, and Socialtext can take advantage of your plugins and bug fixes. The Kwiki project would not be where it is now without their support. I thank them. Of particular note, Dave Rolsky and Chris Dent are two current Socialtext employees that have made significant contributions to Kwiki. --- Iain Truskett was probably the most active Kwiki community hacker before his untimely death in December 2003. The underlying foundation of Kwiki has been named "Spoon" in his honor. Rest in peace Spoon. --- Ian (what's with all these Iai?ns??) Langworth has become a new Kwiki warrior. He helped a lot with the maiden release. Expect a lot of plugins to come from him! Thanks Ian. --- Finally, big props to all the folks on http://www.kwiki.org and irc://irc.freenode.net/#kwiki. Thanks for all the support! SEE ALSO
Kwiki::Command AUTHOR
Ingy dA~Xt Net <ingy@cpan.org> COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2004. Brian Ingerson. All rights reserved. Copyright (c) 2007. Ingy dA~Xt Net. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html perl v5.12.4 2007-03-06 Kwiki(3pm)
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