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- Duration: 3:20
- Published: 20 Apr 2007
- Uploaded: 26 Jul 2011
- Author: ramitsethi
Company name | PBworks |
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Company logo | |
Slogan | Make your team vastly more productive |
Company type | Private |
Foundation | May 30, 2005 |
Key people | Jim Groff (CEO), David Weekly (founder) |
Location | San Mateo, California |
Key people | David Weekly, FounderJim Groff, CEO |
Products | A free/premium hosted workspace service which allows collaborative editing of pages and files |
Num employees | 30 |
Homepage | PBworks |
PBworks (formerly PBwiki) is a commercial real-time collaborative editing (RTCE) system created by David Weekly, with Ramit Sethi and Nathan Schmidt joining shortly thereafter as co-founders. Based in San Mateo, California, The company operates on a freemium basis, with basic features being offered for free and more advanced features for a fee.
PBworks' investors include Mohr Davidow Ventures and the Seraph Group, as well as angel investors Ron Conway and Chris Yeh.
In June 2008 the company hired Jim Groff, a former employee of Oracle Corporation and Apple Inc., for its new CEO. David Weekly, the former CEO, remains its Chief Product Officer and Chairman. Together with some programmer friends, Weekly quickly coded the first implementation of PBworks; the original beta test of PBworks was released for public comment on 31 May 2005.
The site was formally launched in June 2005, and within 48 hours, over 1000 wikis had been created. Today it contains over 1,000,000 wikis, 6.91 million pages of user content and 3.43 million user-uploaded files.
Users can create free basic wiki workspaces, or upgrade to a premium plan to access additional features. Workspaces can be public or private (only viewable by those who have been invited to join the workspace).
Premium workspaces offer extra features, including enhanced security management with secure HTTP, CSS support and JavaScript support, the ability to hide pages, more generous space allowances (unlimited for business accounts), and custom domain names; free wikis have a 2 GB restriction, and a limited selection of color schemes.
Historically, PBworks focused on being simpler and easier-to-use than other solutions, but the company has been adding functionality.
In early 2008 the company launched PBworks 2.0, an improved version with a new layout, more granular security, and a more easily customizable color scheme.
In Fall 2008, PBworks Document Management Release added the ability to place (and permission) files in folders and a new wiki navigation system.
In Spring 2009, PBworks's Notification release added starred pages for selective notifications, a sidebar workspace navigator, and a simple mechanism for sharing page links with others.
Its Legal Edition release added features designed for law firms such as expanded security measures and a comprehensive audit log, while its Project Edition release added multi-workspace networks and project management tools such as tasks and milestones.
Its Campus Edition provided schools and school districts with an enterprise solution, with unlimited workspaces and a centralized Administrator Dashboard for managing them.
PBworks also launched a Mobile Edition in early 2009.
In Fall 2009, PBworks launched two major updates. In September, the Social Collaboration Update added social-networking-style user profiles and Twitter-style microblogging. In November, the Real-time Collaboration Update added integrated web-based chat (including group chat), live Facebook-style notifications, and the ability to share live edits with other users.
In early 2009, PBworks launched a Template Store for its business customers, which provides wiki/workspace templates for specific uses and industries.
This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.