User:Loadmaster
Loadmaster — David R. Tribble My Wikimedia Commons account → User:Loadmaster |
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→ Current date and time: 00:11, Sunday, November 24, 2024 (UTC)
Articles of interest[edit]
Projects[edit]Projects of which I am a member Contributions[edit]
→ My current edit count Using my work[edit]If you wish to use any of the photographs or images created or uploaded by me, see the "Licensing" section for each image. Also refer to Commons:User:Loadmaster/permissions for more details. Articles Started by Me[edit]Other Pages Added by me[edit]
Images Uploaded[edit]
Picture of the Day[edit]Categories added by me[edit]Templates added by me[edit]
Ideas for Wikipedia proposed by me[edit]Character codes and code set articles[edit]Articles Needing Improvement[edit]Other Sections[edit]Articles in progress[edit]Articles that reference my other works[edit]
Helpful links[edit]
Better screenshot images[edit]To get the best screenshot images from DVDs, I use a technique of sampling two or more consecutive frames from the source film and then combining them together into a single image. Most graphics editing programs (I use Paintshop Pro) allow two (or sometimes more) images to be averaged together into a single image. The averaging smooths out the pixel noise of each individual image, making the result much cleaner than any of the source frames. The only trick to using this technique is getting two or more consecutive images that are alike enough so that the resulting combined image does not appear blurred. Non-moving subjects are usually the best to work from. Example images created using this technique: Fighting Wikipedia Vandalism[edit]The approach I take to fighting vandalism on Wikipedia is pretty simple. I check "my watchlist" page periodically, looking for edits made by unregistered users (i.e., users with IP addresses instead of user names). For each one of those edits, I click on the "diff" link for it. This displays the changes made by that user. If it's obviously vandalism, I then click on the user's name or the "contribs" link on the "diff" page, which shows a page listing all the contributions made by that user. I can then check many edits made from the same IP address. Typically, several edits are made by the same vandal within the span of an hour or so. Reverting the edits is then a straightforward thing to do. If a user looks like he is vandalizing pages, add a Another item to check is the inclusion of image Example.jpg within articles, which is a favorite target of vandals. As an example of vandalism idiocy, see that 98 edits were made to the article on Pythagoras, none of which contributed anything of value. Example of a blocked abusive vandal: User:Lookaroundyou (Oct 2007). I am of the opinion that vandalism could be greatly reduced by simply limiting editing access to Wikipedia articles to only registered users, but apparently this goes against the current policy.
A small percentage of new articles are simply nonsense or vandalism. These articles should be tagged with {{db}} tags so that they can be deleted:
Cool signatures[edit]Interesting, but typically HTML-intensive, signature graphics by some Wikipedia users that I've collected:
Possible signatures that I could use:
Notable People I Have Met or Interacted with[edit](Who have articles on Wikipedia) Made contact[edit]
Exchanged emails[edit]
Other Stuff[edit]
Tags, etc.[edit]
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