AliveInTheLab
07.04.2010, 04:00
Way back in May 2007, I opined that a Wiki for help documentation would be a good idea. Many of you liked the idea. Senior Product Manager for Customer Learning, Victor Solano, let me know that the Autodesk Wiki Help beta now offers a collaborative community learning experience to users of the following 2011 Manufacturing products:
Autodesk Inventor // more
AutoCAD Electrical // more
Autodesk Inventor Fusion Technology Preview // more
Autodesk Inventor Publisher // more
This means you can:
Directly edit Help pages
Contribute and Share Videos
Add New Help pages and articles
Add comments to content pages
Rate content and influence the search rankings
Tag content to make information easier to find
Browse and Search content across multiple products
Email forward tool for topics
Subscribe to RSS feeds
The features of the Wiki include:
WYSIWYG Editor: Users can easily contribute content with a familiar rich text editor.
Rich Media and Web Extension Integration: Video streaming from YouTube and Web extension integration with Web widgets such as Twitter, Flickr, digg, LinkedIn, and Dapper.
Share Video from and stream to popular social media sites like iGoogle and MetaCafe.
Editable video: Users can share videos and can optionally make these editable, allowing others to create a video storyboard with the integrated editing studio.
Security and Permissions: Autodesk can create and manage user groups and users with different permissions to view, edit, and share content.
Subscribe to content via feeds and email notifications
Moderation: Moderators insure compliance with Wiki Guidelines and publish content only after review.
Autodesk.com look and feel for easy integration with Autodesk Community sites like the MFG Community site.
User Profile Reuse: Users can use their profile information and autodesk.com login through single sign-on.
This release represents an exciting step toward greater learning collaboration between Autodesk and its product end users. So get involved. Participate and Co-create!
Allowing the voice of many to be heard by many is alive in the lab.
Go to the original post...