< Back to Blogs
MindTouch, Microsoft, and Social Enterprise Collaboration by Peter Galli on December 16, 2008 07:33PM

In this, our second video filmed at an open source company, the spotlight falls on MindTouch, whose Deki Wiki enables users to connect teams, enterprise systems, publishing systems, Web services and Web 2.0 applications.

The first video talked to developers at BitRock about their product as well as their thoughts on open source versus proprietary software, and can be viewed here.

The MindTouch Deki,  which is built on top of the Mono, the open source .Net implementation, is downloaded some 2,000 times a day.

You'll see and hear Damien, a graphics designer, talk about his one-eyed  fish and the disappearance of Phil, the filter feeder,  and how he is only going to have community fish in his next tank, fish who like one another and work well together.

Aaron Fulkerson, the CEO and one of the company's founders, talks about his passion for getting the product running on Windows, with Windows Server 2008 and a Microsoft installer. For him, it really doesn't matter what technology the solution is implemented on, as long as the company has delivered a great product to the market that is "free, as in freedom, as in free speech."

While there is a groundswell of community adoption around MindTouch's Linux deployments, lots of large companies are also asking for deployments on Windows. In fact, its core market is those people who like both .Net and open source.

Take a look for yourself, and see what they have to say.

Comments RSS
  1. eglence said:

    very thank you

    posted at 03:53PM 12/17/2008
  2. eglence said:

    very thanks....

    posted at 03:53PM 12/17/2008
  3. It has been a while since I last guest wrote at Port25, which is always a pleasure. Today, I am writing

    posted at 02:26PM 08/05/2009