Forum:Answers Wikis vs Wikis

I'm seeing a fundamental problem here. I thought the purpose of a wiki was to be a large information resource for a certain topic. Let's say I wanted to know who acts as Jack on Lost. Well I could browse on over to Lostpedia, click the Jack page, and find out. Or, if the Lost article didn't have this information, I could go on IMDB, find out, and add it.

With an Answers Wiki, I could just type in a question and sit back and let someone else do the work for me. It seems like the Answers Wikis are completely opposite of the wiki way, that is contributing and sharing, and trying to get others to contribute to the information on a wiki about the subject matter. Instead of browsing the information at Lostpedia, and perhaps contributing what I know, I can just ask question after question at an Answers Wiki, and that's not helping anyone. -- LordTBT Talk! 05:02, April 22, 2010 (UTC)


 * An Answers Wiki is not really a departure from the fundamental definition of a wiki (which according to Wikipedia is "a website that allows the easy creation and editing of any number of interlinked web pages via a web browser using a simplified markup language or a WYSIWYG text editor"), it's just another type of site that still fits the strict definition of a wiki. It is certainly different from the wikis we're used to, all influenced by Wikipedia to some degree, but at the end of the day, Answers Wikis are still editable online, so it is still a wiki.
 * I do know, however, that this is more complex than simply saying "this fits the definition of a wiki; thus, it is a wiki". This will also really depend on what a person perceives a wiki to be, and what is defined as the "wiki way". Is the "wiki way" how Wikipedia does it, or other, smaller wikis who have differing ways of doing things? Perception also is important for the "purpose" of a wiki. Is a wiki's purpose purely to be a large information resource on a topic? Or can it be used for other purposes, like personal or business wikis?
 * What I am trying to say is, a wiki doesn't have to be strictly a site with a couple of articles detailing a subject. Like all mediums, wikis need to be flexible and adapt to a variety of needs. It's true that Answers Wikis do encourage some to simply create a whole lot of questions. But isn't it also true that contributors do this for "normal" wikis as well, in the form of creating dozens of stubs? The 888th Avatar   (talk)  06:55, April 22, 2010 (UTC)