In 2005, staff member Marie Deatherage began investigating knowledge management options for Meyer Memorial Trust, studying its use by corporations and other foundations. Rather than merely develop a system for internal use only, MMT decided at an early stage to create something for use by foundations, nonprofits, state agencies, and citizens. The first phase of development was done by Marie Deatherage and Aaron Nelson, using MediaWiki. After Brandon C.S. Sanders introduced programmers from Grass Commons, a software developmentnonprofit organization, to MMT, the foundation decided to use Wagn rather than MediaWiki in order to create a wiki that has attributes of a database. The first phase of development was completed in late 2006, when it was introduced to MMT staff members. The name connectipedia was adopted in early 2007, reflecting the tool's ability to connect users with one another and different types of information. During the second phase, which also began in early 2007, Amy Sample Ward was hired to populate connectipedia with content to demonstrate its use and to work with the WagN developers to refine additional features. In early 2008, connec+ipedia was introduced to the first users outside MMT. Early adopters included Northwest Health Foundation and members of Grantmakers of Oregon and Southwest Washington. June 10, 2008 was the public launch of connec+ipedia, with a live event in Portland that included presentations by Marie Deatherage and Amy Sample Ward, Ward Cunningham, Mark Dilley, Grass Commons, and DataPlace.
Functionality
Connec+ipedia ran on Wagn, a free and open sourcesoftware project combining the editing and linking capabilities of a wiki with the ability to create more complex relationships, like a database. The geography or 'places' sections of Connec+ipedia included data from DataPlace. Connec+ipedia is the first use of DataPlace's API. The datasets chosen were based on recommendations from the Oregon State Data Center. Connec+ipedia was freely available to read and search; to edit existing cards and create new ones, users needed an account. Registration was free and open, requiring only agreement to proper use statements.
Wagn
Wagn is a wiki application written in Ruby on Rails, which incorporates a wiki, a database, and a content management system. Wagn was developed under Grass Commons by Lewis Hoffman and Ethan McCutchen with the intention of it being a collaborative and community building tool. Wagn was created with the help of a grant from Meyer Memorial Trust and its first larger scale implementation was for Connectipedia. Wagn was praised by Ward Cunningham, inventor of the wiki, who said, "Wagn lets you express fairly complex relationships in a way that's simple, but powerful, making it one of the freshest contributions to wiki since I coined the term."