You can connect Paligo to many different third-party tools, including help desks and translation software (see Work with a Translation Service).
To connect them, use the Integrations tab. For details on how to set up each type of integration, refer to the section about that application.
Note
Paligo has an upload file size limit that applies to all "upload-integrations" (FTP, GitHub, Bitbucket, S3), with the exception of GitHub where the limit is 100 MB.
The upper file size limit is 500 MB. The reason is primarily to protect Paligo from choking on really large files. This upper limit can be raised upon request.
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
A "fork" is a special type of link between a publication and its content. This means that it's not the topic or subpublication itself, but a reference (link) that is used in a publication. Learn more, see Forks.
-
Fork, only a reference (link) to the actual topic
-
Actual origin topic, where you write your content
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