Hypertext and hypermedia
Serving information to the Web with Hyper-G
Proceedings of the Third International World-Wide Web conference on Technology, tools and applications
The heart of connection: hypermedia unified by transclusion
Communications of the ACM
The structure of hypertext activity
Proceedings of the the seventh ACM conference on Hypertext
Navigation in hypermedia applications: modeling and semantics
Journal of Organizational Computing and Electronic Commerce - Special issue on hypermedia in information systems and organizations
Fourth generation hypermedia: some missing links for the World Wide Web
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies - Special issue: World Wide Web usability
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies - Special issue: World Wide Web usability
Hypermedia: a design philosophy
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
Hypermedia on the Web: what will it take?
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
The Wiki way: quick collaboration on the Web
The Wiki way: quick collaboration on the Web
Principled design of the modern Web architecture
ACM Transactions on Internet Technology (TOIT)
Hypermedia Presentation Adaptation on the Semantic Web
AH '02 Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Adaptive Hypermedia and Adaptive Web-Based Systems
Ontologies: A Silver Bullet for Knowledge Management and Electronic Commerce
Ontologies: A Silver Bullet for Knowledge Management and Electronic Commerce
Handbook on Ontologies (International Handbooks on Information Systems)
Handbook on Ontologies (International Handbooks on Information Systems)
IEEE Intelligent Systems
Proceedings of the 15th international conference on World Wide Web
User defined structural searches in mediawiki
Proceedings of the nineteenth ACM conference on Hypertext and hypermedia
FlowWiki: A wiki based platform for ad hoc collaborative workflows
Knowledge-Based Systems
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Similarly to the Web Wikis have advanced from initially simple ad-hoc solutions to highly popular systems of widespread use. This evolution is reflected by the impressive number of Wiki engines available and by the numerous settings and disciplines they have found applicability to in the last decade. In conjunction to these rapid advances the question on the fundamental principles underlying the design and the architecture of Wiki technologies becomes inevitable for their systematic further development and their long-lasting success at public, private and corporate level. This paper aims at be part of this endeavor; building upon the natural relationship between Wikis and hypermedia, we examine to which extent the current state of the art in the field (complemented by results achieved in adjacent communities such as the World Wide Web and the Semantic Web) fulfills the requirements of modern hypermedia systems. As a conclusion of the study we outline further directions of research and development which are expected to contribute to the realization of this vision.