Thanks Rachir,
I made this suggestion to illustrate one interactive application which might help change the OGP culture - from an individual producing lengthy and locked reports, to a crowd who co-design and co–produce a constantly updated “article” (as Wikipedia pages are called).
This is a cultural change; little to do with which tool is used. So your question is the right one - communities can’t co-design until they have agreed on a specification for their shared tools. And you’d understand why, if we stand back and look at the larger OGP project from its Support Unit’s perspective, I made this comment to Simon on his thread.
So I will - even though no one around here participates in the voting process - start a thread called “Inter-community communication”. I’ll start by pointing to the tools which are used around the OGP silos that I know off, and ask their managers to pop in here, so we can at least monitor the eyeballs.
Who knows? One day we might even find some more participants who collaborate internationally rather than compare between towns and countries.