Diff for Is it possible to create a web knowledge base from existing book manuals?
In pursuit of the ultimate techCom information architecture
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- | The presentation from tcworld 2015 show how taxonomies are used to classify content in several book manuals, managed in the Excosoft Skribenta component content management system. These books are deployed to a responsive web knowledge base (generated by Skribenta Finder), where users use filters and relations to find answers. <a style="font-family: 'Lucida Grande', LucidaGrande, Lucida, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 12.8px; line-height: normal" href="http://excosoft.com/how-do-you-turn-book-content-into-a-knowledge-base/" target="_blank">Read more...</a>
| + | On my presentation from tcworld 2015, I show how taxonomies are used to classify content in several book manuals, managed in the Excosoft Skribenta component content management system. These books are deployed to a responsive web knowledge base (generated by Skribenta Finder), where users use filters and relations to find answers. <a style="font-family: 'Lucida Grande', LucidaGrande, Lucida, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 12.8px; line-height: normal" href="http://excosoft.com/how-do-you-turn-book-content-into-a-knowledge-base/" target="_blank">Read more...</a>
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Current revision:
In pursuit of the ultimate techCom information architecture
Is it possible to create a web knowledge base from existing book manuals?
Watch how to create one (1) mobile-friendly web knowledge base from existing technical documentation books. This, without requiring any manual work to rewrite or re-structure the book content.
On my presentation from tcworld 2015, I show how taxonomies are used to classify content in several book manuals, managed in the Excosoft Skribenta component content management system. These books are deployed to a responsive web knowledge base (generated by Skribenta Finder), where users use filters and relations to find answers. Read more...