Using a Wiki from an iPhone
July 26th, 2009 — samirSummary: Use of both wikis and iPhones is growing within enterprises. Using wikis from iPhones is not very easy yet, though there are some promising applications/approaches in the works. A notable application is Mini Confluence for the iPhone.
Wiki usage is growing rapidly in enterprises, and the success of Wikipedia has encouraged information technology (IT) and business units to try and set up something similar to a Wikipedia within their organizations as well.
A concurrent trend is the growth of smartphone use by business users. The Blackberry devices, currently the favorites of enterprise users, have always had top-notch email capabilities, but have not focused on the web browsing experience, though that’s changing rapidly.
The Apple iPhone is the real game-changer when it comes to mobility. Now comes the news that it is making big strides in enterprise adoption. Via GigaOm, we have the following quote from the Apple COO, Tim Cook:
The phone is particularly doing well with small business and with large organizations that allow people to purchase the phones for individual use, and this is both in corporate and government settings. Specifically, to give you some numbers, almost 20% of the Fortune 100 have purchased at least 10,000 units or more and there’s now multiple corporations and government agencies who have purchased in excess of 25,000 each.
Business users will soon want to access their wikis from their iPhones. In most cases, they will want read-only access and for that, a variety of options are already available. For example, there is an iPhone app out for the the popular Confluence wiki. The app’s called Mini Confluence

and it allows for browsing, searching and commenting. Editing does not seem to be supported.
Other wikis are taking a different approach. SocialText made an announcement in 2006 for something called the Miki, which, for all practical purposes, seems like a ’skin’ or a stylesheet that makes the wiki content readable on a mobile device. Many other wikis (including Twiki) follow the same model.
Yet a third approach is that of dumping the entire wiki on to the phone, since these phones have plenty of memory. Wikipedia-iPhone, for example, lets you take the whole encyclopedia with you on your device.

