I use JotSpot and really like it’s simplicity, having implemented it for a group that I work with that isn’t the most technologically savvy group of people.
Thanks for your feedback. I wish I could get a trial account with jotSpot before making up my mind. I like seedwiki. quite simple, but is not hosted on my server. I like phpWIKI and would try it out this weekend.
[Which Open Source Wiki Works For You?](http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/onlamp/2004/11/04/which_wiki.html)
http://www.seedwiki.com
PMWiki (http://www.pmwiki.org/) is pretty simple, no DB and has plenty of skins, which should be easily modifiable.
very quick wiki – java based, fast and with a clean look.
phpwiki – supports file, postgres or mysql back ends, maybe oracle too. skinable, fast. supports plugins
twiki – feature rich, slow, default skin is ugly beyond belief
I use JotSpot and really like it’s simplicity, having implemented it for a group that I work with that isn’t the most technologically savvy group of people.
Thanks for your feedback. I wish I could get a trial account with jotSpot before making up my mind. I like seedwiki. quite simple, but is not hosted on my server. I like phpWIKI and would try it out this weekend.
I would recommend against phpWiki. Go with MediaWiki, it’s the best wiki software out there. (It’s what the wikipedia uses.)
Try Instiki. It’s default skin is beautiful, it is very easy and simple, yet powerful, and it is easy to install. I think you’ll like it.
MediaWiki is also very good.