Qubit is an open-source software toolkit that will allow institutions such as archives, libraries, museums, and art galleries to manage and host web-based collections of information resources. Qubit supports multi-lingual and multi-repository collections.
The goal is to provide an easy-to-use, flexible toolkit that complies with open standards (e.g. Dublin Core, ICA-ISAD, MODS, EAD, METS) and is developed using an open architecture that takes advantage of emerging web-based tools and practices.
Who?
Qubit is the collaborative effort of two seperate open-source software projects that have decided to work together to leverage time, knowledge and skills. Each of these projects is using and contributing to Qubit as the underlying toolkit to build their own applications.
Thinking Rock allows you to collect your thoughts and process them into actions, projects, information or future possibilities. Actions can be done by you, delegated to someone else or scheduled for a particular date. Projects can be organised with ordered actions and sub-projects. You can review all of your actions, projects and other information quickly and easily to see what you need to do or to choose what you want to do at a particular time.
This page will try to explain one particular process that can be used to version your projects, as a developer. While the process covered here will use one example of how to accomplish effective versioning, the concepts can be used anywhere.
Infoenthusiasts may exult in the sheer volume of raw data, & just as industrial revolution society learned how to process a glut of "atoms," we must now learn how to process this glut of "information."
TiddlyWiki is a wiki that runs completely inside your web browser, without requiring a server (or even a web connection). It handles micro-content superbly and is great for managing stuff like your personal to-do lists.