Possible uses of email with Deki Wiki.

Watchlist Notifications

Users should have the option to receive email notifications about watched pages or areas of the wiki. Most wikis offer this ability, and I think it's critical for successful adoption.  Most of my users have no idea what RSS is--if it doesn't appear in their Inbox, it isn't real, and it will be forgotten.

Use Cases

Having the option to get change summaries as emails advances several key uses.

"Walled Garden" Editors

Appointed or self-appointed editors of the wiki, or areas of the wiki, will want regular updates about changes or new pages in their areas of interest.

Discussion Pages

If discussion pages are to be useful, participants will want a convenient means of seeing updates.  Again, email makes the most sense here.

Implementation

Some thoughts on how to do it.

  • Offer truncated summaries of each change, perhaps as a giant table.
  • Offer immediate, daily/nightly, or weekly notifications (per-user, not per watched page or area).
  • Permit users the ability to manipulate other users' watchlists, or at least administrators
    • Part of the thinking here is that the the very users who are reluctant to use the wiki will most need someone else to manage watchlists for them.

Email as print option

To encourage wiki users to generate and record their content directly into the wiki, there needs to be a means of sharing that content easily with other users--even those who never touch the wiki.

Business users will want and need an easy way to go from the old system (email) to the new system (wikis). 

TWiki has an add-on for this, and this one of the more frequently used features of our dear old, pre-DekiWiki TWiki installation.

Implementation

How to do it.

  • Include HTML version of page as body of email
  • Option to add brief note at the top of the page
  • Include a link back to the original page
  • Preserve as much formatting as possible, embedding CSS in tags if necessary

Document Email-in Capability

Users can send an email to a Deki instance with the document(s) in attachment and the page title as subject line. If there's any text in the email, it'll get posted as comment. Contact pub.msu -at- gmail.com if you need any elaboration. I'll try to elaborate on this here.

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How about a general email service that run's curl/deki-api commands (from a configuration file) and passes the results through xslt and emails them off. You guys provide some base examples/functionality (e.g. page, watchlists) but the rest of the community can develop their own library of reports to share.

I see it as much more flexible and less work for you ;)
edited 04:02, 3 Nov 2007
Posted 04:01, 3 Nov 2007
This email integration functionality with watched pages has been identified as High importance by our users.

John Whitlock
wik.is customer
Posted 23:39, 11 Feb 2008
I'd also add my vote for an emailing of watched pages, with an additional feature:

Add a checkbox to allow the author (or moderator) making the change decide if it's 'major' enough to be emailed to those subscribing to changes, and include a feature for including/not including new comments as a 'Watch Item' to be emailed.

Emailing without spamming is always going to be a tricky balancing act, but such a large part of our community uses email as their sole e-communication portal that we are forced to strike a compromise, as you are obviously aware.

Does this sound like a reasonable idea to others?

- Marc

(Cross-posting from my entry in the forum thread at http://forums.opengarden.org/showpost.php?p=12660&postcount=17 )
Posted 03:24, 2 Apr 2008
+1. Yes, this feature is critical to our users as well.

Case in point, will anyone be notified of this comment?!
Posted 06:44, 11 May 2008
Our users would like this too.
Posted 23:09, 6 Jan 2009
Adoption of the wiki will not take place without this feature for our user-base. All the 50+ users of our wiki are volunteers with full-time jobs elsewhere. They simply do not have the time to log on to the wiki to see what has been posted in their area. They are also not computer savvy to get RSS feeds. But all volunteers check their emails several times a day, usually for official purposes. E-mail is the most critical feature for this user-group. edited 02:12, 18 Jan 2009
Posted 02:08, 18 Jan 2009
I vote for this too. I would really like to see an alternative to public folders. A wiki based e-mail in option, where the e-mails gets autoposted as a page, or subsequent replies to an e-mail gets posted as comments, is right up that alley.

But please - create it so e-mail addresses can be related to specific secure areas that are restricted in access, so it can be used with sensitive mails also.
Posted 11:39, 23 Apr 2009
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