BlueSpice for MediaWiki

BlueSpice for MediaWiki
Original author(s) Markus Glaser, Robert Vogel e.a.
Developer(s) Hallo Welt! GmbH
Initial release March 2011 (2011-03)
Stable release
2.27.0 [1] / 9 November 2016 (2016-11-09)
Development status Active
Written in PHP
Operating system Cross-platform
Size 77.2 MB
Available in Multilingual
Type Wiki
License GPLv2 or later
Website bluespice.com

BlueSpice for MediaWiki (BlueSpice for short) is free wiki software based on MediaWiki and licensed by GNU General Public License. It is especially developed for businesses as an enterprise wiki distribution for MediaWiki and used in over 150 countries.

Editions

BlueSpice is published in two editions:

Both editions are software collections, which are based on MediaWiki. The extensions are developed by Hallo Welt! GmbH, its technology partners or independent MediaWiki developers.

Usage scenarios for BlueSpice

BlueSpice is mostly used as

Functionality

BlueSpice VisualEditor, version 2-23-1
BlueSpice PermissionManager, version 2-23-1

Some central features of BlueSpice are:[2]

Technology

BlueSpice is written in the PHP programming language and uses MySQL, Apache/IIS, Tomcat (optional). The editions can be installed on top of an existing MediaWiki installation or as a standalone installation that includes MediaWiki.

The distribution is a collection of extensions, which can be extended with user-specific features or skins. While every single extension can be deactivated, BlueSpice editions integrate and standardize extensions to improve the user experience and maintenance.

Licensing

According to the MediaWiki standard all extensions are published under the GPL 2+ license.

History

The German company Hallo Welt! has been working on developing the open source wiki software BlueSpice since 2007. The project was originally initiated by IBM ("bluepedia"), who wanted to deploy MediaWiki but was unable to live with its downsides.[4]

In 2011, Hallo Welt! decided to publish their wiki as free Open source software. The stable version of BlueSpice for MediaWiki was released July 4, 2011.[5] From this point on, a free download has been available at SourceForge.[6] The first release of BlueSpice was a couple of extensions and is today a complete stand-alone distribution, which has the latest MediaWiki as a core system but offers in the free version more than 50 distinct extensions and a completely different user interface. Following independent sources the BlueSpice free distribution is one of the most popular wiki software for knowledge management in organisations.[7]

In autumn 2013, Hallo Welt! released the completely reworked version BlueSpice 2.[8] According to the BlueSpice developers this release aims for opening up BlueSpice for freelance developers in the global MediaWiki community, and lays the foundation for many new language versions.[9]

In 2014, BlueSpice for MediaWiki became a project of Translatewiki.net.[10] In January 2015 the developers announced that they will change to a subscription model.[11]

Versions

Name Version Date of issue Notable changes
blue spice 1 basic 2010-11-17
1.0.1 2011-09-07
1.1 2012-03-15 Performance improvements, support for postgreSQL and Oracle databases
1.20.0 2012-12-21
1.20.1 2013-01-17
1.21.0 2013-06-12
BlueSpice 2 2.22.0 2013-11-27 Completely reworked skin, reworked PermissionManager and UserManager, new internationalisation framework, FlexiSkin, Dashboards, Notifications extension, StateBar (with "similar pages")
2.22.1 2014-02-13
2.22.2 2014-05-08
2.23.0 2014-12-09 Integrated package installer for MediaWiki and BlueSpice, support of MobileFrontend, rewritten skin, support of memcached caching, translations in more than 40 languages, reworked localisation, context menues
2.23.1 2015-06-25
2.23.2 2015-11-30

Improved integration of Semantic MediaWiki and BlueSpice, compatibility with MediaWiki's VisualEditor

2.23.3 2016-05-31
2.27.0 2016-11-09

New extensions: e.g. PageAssignments, Showtime and ReadConfirmation. Many functional improvements of the WikiFarm Package. Full compatibility with MediaWiki 1.27

Customers and partners

Desertec, the renewable energy company uses BlueSpice as its collaboration platform. Furthermore, XTREMEtech[12] and HAVI Logistics [13] use BlueSpice as an internal or public wiki.

References

  1. "Download". sourceforge.net. Retrieved 2015-12-01.
  2. "BlueSpice features". mediawiki.org. Retrieved 2016-03-08.
  3. Bailey, Matt (12 September 2013). "BlueSpice (fixing MediaWiki)". Nerdnuts.com. Retrieved 18 January 2014.
  4. Eckenfels, Mela (November 2011). "Spicy: BlueSpice for MediaWiki". Linux Magazine. Munich: Linux New Media (132): 28–31.
  5. Eckenfels, 28.
  6. "Download BlueSpice". Soureceforge.net. Retrieved 2013-07-11.
  7. Figura, Maria; Gross, Daphne (13 June 2013). "Die Qual der Wiki-Wahl. Wikis für Wissensmanagement in Organisationen". Pumacy Technologies AG. Retrieved 18 January 2014.
  8. Huber, Mathias (27 November 2013). "Blue Spice 2: Enterprise-Wiki generalüberholt". Linux Magazin. Retrieved 18 January 2014.
  9. Heigl, Richard (4 September 2013). "BlueSpice 2: The new version coming up later this year!". BlueSpice News. Retrieved 18 January 2014.
  10. Muggli, Stephan (9 December 2014). "Translatewiki.net: BlueSpice for MediaWiki project". BlueSpice News. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  11. "New model for BlueSpice". blog.blue-spice.org. Retrieved 2015-03-16.
  12. "Wiki as CMS". Tcworld.info. Retrieved 2013-07-10.
  13. "HAVI Logistics on their way to Enterprise 2.0". Blog.blue-spice.org. Retrieved 2013-07-10.

External links

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.