> >> Has anyone setup a Wiki in their workplace, and if so,
> >> has it been effective in distributing relevant information?
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> Production and Testing, and also for Engineering documents. But I really
> don't want P and T to change things without permission, so is that easy?
Haven't got that deep into it yet I'm afraid, although I have heard you
can restrict editing rights to only certain individuals fairly easily.
It's probaly all detailed in the MediaWiki documentation.
> I'm still considering creating an intranet system for the internal docs, but
> yes, I'm concerned that my time would be taken up with maintaining it, rather
> than the IT admin we've got at the moment.
Intranet systems work great for production and engineering
documentation, as the documents are imediately available to anyone on
the shop floor or wherever with a browser without having to use the
company configuration tool or whatever. And of course you can hyperlink
everything any way you like, so you can break down your pages by
product and then have all the files imediately available - schematics,
BOMs, drawings, firmware, software, procedures etc.
It is an excellent way to "release" documents where everyone is
guaranteed access to the latest versions. Handy for ISO audits too.
Everyone knows how to use a browser, so it makes navigating for
documents real easy.
An intranet can be nothing more than a bunch of HTML documents on a
network drive that you can edit using Microsoft Word (no need for a
proper HTML editor). No need to involve IT at all either, which can be
handy. Although it's good to get IT to set up a domain map to make it
easier to find - eg. "intranet.company.com.au" is better than
"K:\Engineering\intranet\index.html" etc.
Gotta watch out for morons who decide to change a directory name or
move things around and screw up all your hyperlinks!
Dave :)