1. If you are here for the first time, please read the introduction.

      1. Enid is still in beta state. Missing are:

        ...
      1. In the history of electronical information organization systems there have been essentially two popular approaches:

        ...
      2. Clearly, there appears a chance to unify both worlds.

      3. However, this turns out a lot harder than one may think.

      4. Enid, my system that aims to fuse above concepts, came in the glimpse of a moment after thinking off and on about these things for roughly three years.

    1. In the history of electronical information organization systems there have been essentially two popular approaches:

      1. ...
      2. ...
    2. Clearly, there appears a chance to unify both worlds.

    3. However, this turns out a lot harder than one may think.

    4. Enid, my system that aims to fuse above concepts, came in the glimpse of a moment after thinking off and on about these things for roughly three years.

      1. The smallest addressible unit of information in Enid is called an "entry". It consists of:

        ...
      2. All of these items are optional.

      3. Links are written as {item to link to} in Enid, paragraphs need to be seperated by empty lines.

      4. After Enid parsed all the entries, the system resolves all links and replaces them with the appropriate content.

      1. Frontends to Enid, for example WebEnid should implement these features:

        ...
      1. Enid now supports Atom feeds for each node. Just append .atom to the URL or use the link on every page.

      2. vuxu.org now runs on kaja.

      1. Added my blogroll.

      2. Enid now supports full-text search with help of Ferret.

      3. Since XHTML is a PITA regarding getting all Content-Types right, I've converted the site to HTML5, which seems to render fine in all browsers I saw so far, and is simply served with text/html.