Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/Single/2011-06-13
Wikipedians 90% male and largely altruist; 800 public policy students add 8.8 million bytes; brief news
First results of editor survey: Wikipedians 90% male, 71% altruist
Mani Pande, the Wikimedia Foundation's Head of Global Development Research, has shared the first results from an online survey among Wikipedia contributors ("Wikipedia editors do it for fun: First results of our 2011 editor survey", the first in a series of postings about the findings). The survey had been translated into 22 languages (English version), it saw over 5000 participants.
Of the participants, 90% identified as male and 9% as female, a number even lower than the 13% found by the earlier UNU-MERIT study (which, despite some questions about its methodology, had formed the basis of widespread discussions about Wikipedia's "gender gap" earlier this year, see Signpost coverage).
The two most frequently selected reasons for continuing to edit Wikipedia were "I like the idea of volunteering to share knowledge" (71%) and "I believe that information should be freely available to everyone" (69%), followed by "I like to contribute to subject matters in which I have expertise" (63%) and "It's fun" (60%).
Last month, WMF Executive Director Sue Gardner had already highlighted another early result of the survey, concerning editors' satisfaction with the work of the WMF/Wikimedia chapters/all volunteers/themselves, in an interview with GerardM (see Signpost coverage).
Public Policy Initiative wraps up
In a blog posting titled "Public Policy Initiative wraps up pilot academic year", the WMF's LiAnna Davis gave some statistics about the achievements of the now concluding Public Policy Initiative (which the Foundation had announced in May 2010, funded by an $1.2 million grant from the Stanton Foundation, see for example the brief summary in the Signpost's "2010 in review"). During the project, more than 800 students from US universities contributed 8.8 million bytes to the English Wikipedia, improving articles they worked on "from an average score of 6.88, before the project, to 16.54".
The pilot project is being generalized and extended to a Global University Program. In the US, the system of "Campus Ambassadors" and participating professors introduced by the PPI will be transformed into "Volunteer Regional Ambassadors", while outside the US, the first Campus Ambassadors have recently been trained, in Pune, India.
In a separate blog posting, Davis described the experiences of one student participant whose additions to the article National Democratic Party (Egypt), made in the fall (northern autumn) term, received unexpectedly high readership numbers during the Egyptian revolution a few months afterwards.
The PPI was the subject of an article on the blog of Creative Commons last week, based on interviews with Pete Forsyth, who as the Wikimedia Foundation’s first Public Outreach Officer had been a "key architect" of the PPI, and others.
Briefly
- Russian president pushes for Creative Commons licencing: Further to his 29 April meeting with Internet representatives, including Wikimedia (Signpost coverage), Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has issued instructions to the Ministry of Culture and Mass Communications to draft amendments to Russian legislation which will "give authors the right to make their works available on a free-licence basis to the public at large (along the lines of Creative Commons, GNU FDL)". According to a 2008 letter to a Wikimedian from Natalya Timakova, the President's Press Attache, Creative Commons licencing is not currently on the statutes of the Russian Federation. As a sidenote, since October 2008, materials from the President's website at http://www.kremlin.ru have been licensed under Creative Commons Attribution Unported 3.0 licencing. Medvedev has given the Ministry until 1 August to act on his instructions.
- Wikimania program: A preliminary schedule for the upcoming Wikimania in Haifa, Israel, has been announced. It will include plenary lectures by Yochai Benkler, Sue Gardner, Joseph Reagle and Jimmy Wales.
- WMF monthly report: The Wikimedia Foundation's report for May 2011 has been published. Among other items that were previously covered in The Signpost, it summarizes the Wikimedia Research Committee's efforts to reorganize the pages about Wikimedia-related research on Meta.
- Board minutes: The minutes for the May 11 IRC meeting of the Wikimedia Foundation's Board of Trustees have been published. They mostly concern the draft for the 2011–12 annual plan, mentioning "suggestions to reduce targets for staff growth to match recent actual growth rates"; and the Foundation's operating reserve (cf. Signpost coverage: "IRC office hour with Sue Gardner and others on Foundation's financial planning"). Several outstanding minutes for earlier meetings were published: October 2009, May 2010 (mentioning early discussions about offensive content, and a rejected resolution "to strengthen the Board's earlier statement on educational content" – a different resolution about offensive content was adopted recently, see last week's "News and notes"), June 2010 and April 2011.
- Offline edition of Malayalam Wikisource: On his blog, Indian Wikimedian Santhosh Thottingal (a member of the Wikimedia Foundation's Language Committee) discussed the technical background to the first offline version of the Malayalam Wikisource. In related news, The Hindu reported on "the fourth annual meeting of Malayalam Wikimedia activists".
- New Indian newsletter: On the website of the Indian Wikimedia chapter, a new edition of "WikiPatrika" has been published – an independent monthly community-written and -edited newspaper, partly modeled after The Signpost, covering the increasing Wikimedia-related activities in the country. Last September had already seen the publication of an earlier Indian community newsletter (Signpost coverage).
- Wikimedia Österreich reports: The Austrian Wikimedia chapter has published its report for May and started its report for June. Among other activities, they describe preparations for the "Fundraiser Summit" which will bring together representatives from various Wikimedia chapters and the WMF in Vienna this week to discuss the upcoming annual fundraiser.
- Wikimedia Argentina report: The Argentinian Wikimedia chapter has published its report for May 2011. Among other activities, it describes a Wikicontest to write articles about Ibero-American women on the Spanish-language Wikipedia to counter the possible effects of the gender gap among Wikipedia contributors.
- Wikimedia Sverige report: The Swedish Wikimedia chapter has published its report for May 2011. Among other activities, it mentions talks "with parliamentarians and other institutions" about the possibilities of a digitized cultural heritage ("a potential billion-worth").
- Today's featured list debuts on the Main Page: After a formal proposal concluded with unanimous support, a new feature has been added to the Main Page: Today's featured list. Starting June 13, each Monday, one featured list will be showcased on the Main Page. See this week's "Featured content" for full coverage.
- Wikipedia learning game: User:Ocaasi and others are developing a concept for "an educational, interactive, web-game using a simulated Wikipedia interface that leads new users through a series of realistic "missions" to familiarize them with the mechanics, navigation, philosophy, and practices of actual editing", tentatively titled "The Wikipedia Adventure".
- Wikipedia for Afghanistan families: Wikimedia Trustee Sj blogged about "Introducing Afghan families to Wikipedia" with the help of the XO laptops distributed by One Laptop per Child (where Sj serves as Director of Outreach).
- IRC logs: The IRC logs for the June 10 Office hour with Sue Gardner and the June 4 general Wikimedia meeting have been published.
Reader comments
Revere, Palin and Colbert generate activity; British Wikipedia "cleanser"; brief news
Palin remarks lead to further media coverage and Colbert Report inspired vandalism
As reported in last week's "In the news", recent remarks by US politician Sarah Palin about Paul Revere (a historical figure during the American Revolution) drew criticism for being historically inaccurate, which in turn moved her supporters to modify the article about Revere, to better suit her version of the events. At first, both the media coverage and the editing activity was rather limited, but the incident was soon taken up from Little Green Footballs blog by other media.
In a piece about the gaffe on the Monday broadcast of The Colbert Report, Stephen Colbert told his viewership:
Unfortunately, the hard-core fact addicts at Wikipedia have undone the changes and locked Paul Revere's page. [Instead,] I want all of you to go to the Wikipedia page for bells and make sure it reads "Bells, used by Paul Revere to warn the British that, hey, you're not going to succeed in taking our guns. USA! USA!"
The Colbert Report appears to be popular among Wikipedia administrators: as of 03:41, 7 June 2011, six pre-emptive page protections were issued, four to the same page (User:RoyBoy, User:Fran Rogers, User:Gfoley4, and User:IronGargoyle protected Bells, User:Fran Rogers protected Bell, and User:Grandmasterka protected Bell (instrument)), and User:Blelbach had reported Bell (instrument) to WP:RFP. As the vandalism rolled in, it spread out to other pages yet to be protected, resulting in much activity at WP:RFP ([1]). Between 3:50 and 4:28, nineteen reactive page protections were issued, the first to Warning shot, the last to Bell Orchestre. On the user talk page of an anti-vandalism patroller, the scene was described at 03:58 as "things are crazy out there".
A report on Tuesday by NBC Nightly News (video) featured footage from the Wikimedia Foundation's office in San Francisco, including an interview with Steven Walling, who later observed that "we tried to explain that it was mostly business as usual editorially, but unfortunately even though they said Wikipedians are volunteers, their B roll seemed to imply that we actually edit articles from the office."
A later article by The New York Times' Noam Cohen ("Shedding hazy light on a midnight ride") was clearer on the issue. Other coverage included ReadWriteWeb ("Wikipedia in tug-of-war over Palin's version of revolutionary War") and TIME magazine's "Techland" blog ("How attempts to rewrite history on Wikipedia get quashed").
Unsurprisingly, Conservapedia appears to have been more welcome to Palin's supporters, where the article on Paul Revere currently cites a reference supporting her interpretation of the events.
British PR professional "cleanses" Wikipedia articles
A string of UK senior business figures and a Saudi tycoon have had their Wikipedia entries "polished" by an anonymous "reputation cleanser", believed to be a senior figure in the British public relations industry. The industry's magazine PRWeek has reported how an unnamed senior figure from a London PR company has been removing unflattering content from his clients' Wikipedia articles. Among the clients mentioned are Carphone Warehouse co-founder David Ross, Von Essen Group chairman Andrew Davis, British property developer David Rowland, and billionaire Saudi tycoon Maan Al-Sanea. The story was picked up by British newspapers; The Independent reported that the edits took place from an anonymous IP address in Clerkenwell and were quickly countered by Wikipedia patrollers. The Daily Mail carried the story, but subsequently removed it from its website.
Briefly
- On 12 June, Wikipedia editor Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing) was interviewed by BBC presenter Carl Chinn on his BBC WM radio show, discussing the Birmingham 3 meet-up and Wikipedia in general. During the interview, Mabbett took a photograph of Chinn. He uploaded it to Wikimedia Commons and used it to illustrate the article on Chinn, all within an hour. Chinn then referred to this having been done, near the end of his programme. The interview is on iPlayer, and will remain there until 19 June. Mabbett has written a blog post about the interview.
- Wikinodes iPad app for Wikipedia. WikiNodes, a new app for the iPad, displays Wikipedia articles in a "futuristic way" by breaking articles down into a net of nodes that can be traversed, each with a piece of the article. It was developed by the non-profit Institute for Dynamic Educational Advancement, which says the app has been received positively. Project Manager Michael Douma said "our intent is to enable people to easily jump between pieces of information without having to read long passages of text". When users want to slow down and read in detail, WikiNodes offers a traditional full-page view that displays complete Wikipedia pages. (press release)
- xkcd on Wikipedia – again: The June 13 episode of the webcomic xkcd features Wikipedia in connection with the educational children's book and TV series The Magic School Bus, following two earlier recent episodes about Wikipedia (see the June 6 and May 30 "In the news".)
- Wikipedia files: Chicago public radio station WBEZ resumed their "Wikipedia files" series – video interviews in which celebrities comment on the Wikipedia article about them – with former baseball player Frank Thomas ("The Big Hurt").
- Basketball vandalism: US website SportsGrid.com reported on a vandalism edit in the article about basketball player Dirk Nowitzki.
- Jimmy Wales in James Bond spoof: As reported by TechCrunch and Écrans, at the recent "Founders Forum", an annual meeting of European startups CEOs, a short film was made with participants in the form of a James Bond parody. Jimmy Wales plays CIA agent Felix Leiter, in one brief scene appearing just in time to save Bond from the villain ("But how did you know?" – "We're the CIA, we have access to all kind of information... and Wikipedia").
Reader comments
WikiProject Aircraft
This week, we took flight with WikiProject Aircraft. The project was started by Cabalamat in September 2003 and has grown to include 14,000 pages. Among these are 5 featured articles, 7 A-class articles, and 64 good articles. The project's scope includes individual famous aircraft, aircraft types, aircraft engines, and related technology. WikiProject Aircraft is a child of WikiProject Aviation (see our August 2010 interview) and sibling of WikiProject Airlines and WikiProject Airports. WikiProject Aircraft contributes to the Aviation, USAF, and RAF portals. We interviewed project members Nimbus227 and Ahunt.
Nimbus227 is an aircraft engineer and private pilot. WikiProject Aircraft seemed like a natural fit for him, although he is not a member of any other aviation projects. One of his favorite aircraft types is the Lockheed F-104 Starfighter, which he has researched for 30 years and collected many books, including original flight manuals. "It was a very advanced design for the early 1950s and the causes of its accident rate in German service are often misunderstood." He owns a share in a de Havilland Tiger Moth.
Ahunt has spent most of his life in aviation, including experience as a civil and military pilot, maintenance test pilot, aviation writer, and aviation association manager. He has an extensive aviation reference library of books and periodicals that he has collected since the 1960s, many of which have been handy when referencing articles. He finds it difficult to pick a favorite aircraft since he's flown more than 50 types of aircraft during his lifetime, although he acknowledges that most of his flying time is spent on UH-1Hs and UH-1Ns. Like Nimbus227, he is not a member of any other aviation projects, "as working on aircraft is busy enough, when you throw in engines, aviation museums, etc, too."
How does WikiProject Aircraft differ from WikiProject Aviation? In what ways do the two projects collaborate?
- Ahunt: WikiProject Aircraft is really a subset of WikiProject Aviation. The latter encompasses aircraft, but also other aviation subjects, such as airports and navaids. I have dabbled in those subjects occasionally when the need comes up.
- Nimbus227: WikiProject Aircraft deals with specific aircraft types and how they work (including engines and components) and WikiProject Aviation covers everything else including biographic articles for designers that I have occasionally created. The two projects overlap at times. Most aircraft editors are members of the aviation project and will direct questions or requests to the right place or deal with it themselves.
Have you been involved in any of the project's 5 featured articles, 7 A-class articles, and 62 good articles? Share with us some interesting experiences or lessons you've learned while improving aircraft articles.
- Nimbus227: Yes, I successfully nominated the Rolls-Royce Merlin article for featured article status in October 2009 and an earlier relative, the Rolls-Royce R in November 2009. The experience was quite exhausting and different for each engine. The Merlin, being a popular article was subject to many edits during the review process, often introducing basic errors. I had to ask very nicely on the talk page for this to be moderated, being very careful not to take over the article at the same time! The Rolls-Royce R was a relatively obscure aero engine even though it was used very successfully for the Schneider Trophy air races. An enthusiast had pasted in the contents of his dying private website, a lot of information needed referencing and as I researched it further I discovered that there was a lot more to the story so I added the missing facts. The 'R' article had been neglected and unlike the Merlin it was not subject to daily edits, I really enjoyed getting it up to scratch. I was very fortunate to have a great copy editor for both articles, Red Sunset, they would not have got the star without his input. Another article we tried to get through FAC was British European Airways Flight 548, a lot of work went into it but we gave up after two failed reviews. I personally felt that we would never please the reviewer. I spend much more time now working on stub or start class articles as it is easy to improve them markedly in a short time.
- Ahunt: No, I tend to avoid working on FAs and especially GAs. The FAs tend to be more political wrangling than article improvement and I prefer to research and write than get into lengthy discussions. Good Articles are an even bigger problem. I have seen articles put through the GA process and come out worse at the end, mostly due to the inflexible use of rules by people who don't necessarily understand the subject matter.
WikiProject Aircraft maintains one task force devoted to aero engines and aero-derivative engines. Have you had any part in this task force? Has the task force been successful in bringing attention to neglected articles on a major component of most aircraft?
- Nimbus227: Yes!! I set the task force up in December 2008 with the assistance of Rlandmann. There was a lot to do including categorisation, navbox creation and article improvement. There are around 1,400 articles that come under the task force's scope now and I think that there has been a vast improvement in Wikipedia's coverage of aero engines, very satisfying to see that.
- Ahunt: After Nimbus started the task force I signed up right away and remain a continuing participant. In many ways we split up the work and so I decided to take on the two-stroke aircraft engines because I have rebuilt and flown some of them and mainly because no one else was keen to do that niche area. In 2010 I managed to start articles on every two-stroke that I could find references for, so they are fairly complete now.
Does the project have any guidelines regarding military aircraft for which little information is publicly available? For example, how did the project handle coverage of the stealth helicopter used by United States Navy Seals in the recent mission to kill Osama bin Laden?
- Ahunt: It is strictly a matter of WP:RS, if they can be found then we can create articles. If not then they often don’t get done, rather than resort to speculation and hyperbole. The problem is that well-meaning fans tend to add this sort of information without refs, which requires follow-up work, but that is the nature of an open project.
- Nimbus227: I saw the discussion that I think resulted in the Stealth helicopter article but I tend to avoid subjects with little available information as editor speculation often creeps in, is removed, then added again! The Coandă-1910 is a prime example of this with several RfCs being raised although the problem there appeared to be conflicting sources and user bias.
In our interview with WikiProject Aviation last year, Bzuk noted that maintaining a consistent writing style and reference system in articles on various aviation topics has been difficult. Has WikiProject Aircraft had to deal with these inconsistencies? If so, what progress has been made?
- Nimbus227: Absolutely, consistency within articles is very important, it's quite difficult to correct it later to pass a featured article review, much better to get it right at an early stage. I would like to see more consistency of format across the project personally. We have Wikipedia guidelines and project guidelines but they are regularly ignored by some editors, this is either down to lack of knowledge of the guidelines or deliberate imposition of a personal favoured style (differing from one already established in an article). WP:CITEVAR is very clear that citation style should not be changed without good reason, Bzuk spends a lot of time pointing this out and I have as well in the past, it usually meets with a negative response though I have to say. I believe this is an ongoing problem which has a negative effect on editors who are trying to follow the guidelines. As a collaborative project we can only hope that members gradually acknowledge and accept the guidelines and abide by the spirit of them.
- Ahunt: While more consistency across articles is a good thing in an open project like Wikipedia, you do have to accept some style variations as part of the landscape, unless you are willing to re-write everything yourself. We do try to make sure that aircraft type articles conform to Wikipedia:WikiProject Aircraft/page content so that at least the page layout from one type article to another isn't totally bewildering for the casual reader.
What are the project's most pressing concerns? How can a new contributor help today?
- Nimbus227: Better referencing of existing articles would be a step forward, many articles have been tagged for better referencing for several years and others should be tagged where they have not been. There are long lists of missing articles that new contributors could help with creating but as the aircraft types get more obscure it gets more difficult to find specialised reference sources for them, in some cases there are no sources. These lists may not be as accessible as they could be for newcomers. More of a WikiProject Aviation problem perhaps than an aircraft project problem is the notability of air accidents. Many air accident articles are brought to AfD with notability concerns, to my knowledge WP:AIRCRASH is still just an essay but often gets quoted as a guideline, would be nice to put a lid on that problem.
- Ahunt: I agree that referencing is a big issue. Many articles have too much unreferenced text that may or may not be accurate. Much of it is added by aircraft type fans or even owners of aircraft types, but it still has to meet WP:V. It is much easier to add referenced text than try to later go back and find a ref for something that someone else added. Spam and Conflicts of Interest are another problem as advertising budgets for aircraft manufacturers got cut in the recent recession many company internal marketing departments and contract advertising companies saw Wikipedia as a great opportunity to get free advertising. There were some discussions about their attempts to remove all criticism and replace it with spammy marketing text on some aircraft type articles, but we always got it sorted out in the end, though collaboration on the project. Most companies that try to use Wikipedia like that are characterized by very heavy-handed and amateurish work using single purpose accounts and that makes it relatively easy to spot and fix, although they can be persistent.
Anything else you'd like to mention?
- Nimbus227: Some fairly high profile articles are poorly illustrated, either with few or no images or the existing ones are not particularly good, faded 'tourist snapshots' are creeping in to some articles. It takes effort to search for and upload non-free fair use images but it can be done, a picture paints a thousand words. As the Wikimedia Commons collection of images grows the chances are that better images will become available and I check in there occasionally to see if there are any new images. On the other side of the coin some articles are illustrated with far too many images, added in good faith by enthusiastic editors. They should be trimmed down, leaving only the best ones in place. The Rolls-Royce Limited article is a fantastic example of this and it has been like that for several years now, the article is supposed to be about the company that built many aero engine types as well as luxury cars (which are highly visible there!!).
- Ahunt: One of the biggest challenges the project has taken on is to complete the aircraft type articles on every type ever flown. With over 10,000 type articles you would think that we would be close by now, but my estimate is that we aren't even half way yet. The obvious aircraft types were written up long ago: Cessna 172, Piper Cherokee, Boeing 747. Those were easy to do because there are lots of references available and lots of editors interested in working on them. It is the more obscure types, the pioneering aircraft for example, that need articles started on them. I am often surprised when I come across a relatively well-known type and discover that there is no article in it at all. This is what lead me to start the DFS Weihe article on that legendary glider design and the UFM Easy Riser on the well-known pioneering ultralight. Since then I have been working on filling in the more obscure glider type articles, since I have the refs available. There seems to be a feeling amongst some new editors that all the aircraft articles are already written, but there are lots and lots that need starting. All you need is some references and the persistence of a keen researcher to track down the story of an aircraft type and start the article. Then you need to list it at Wikipedia:New articles (Aircraft) so that it can be reviewed and improved by other project members. It takes research and good refs to start an article, but it is collaboration that makes them better. In the end it is all about building the best and most complete encyclopedia for the readers.
Next week's project will provide an element of excitement. Until then, check out our periodically published articles in the archive.
Reader comments
Featured lists hit the main page
Featured lists on the main page
In the first structural change to the main page in some years, a featured list will now be included there once a week, on Mondays, starting today, 13 June. This is the outcome of an extended debate and a unanimous RfC in which 49 editors participated. The RfC was launched by WFC, who says the hope is that the Today's featured list process "will mature to a point where it's ready to take a daily spot [though] any future expansion would require a fresh proposal" at main-page talk. The featured list is in its own box under "Did you know" and "On this day", and above "Picture of the day". The blurb will be about 1000 characters in length, accompanied by a right-aligned image.
The backend for TFL has been developed by Edokter, with assistance from other editors, including main-page guru Raul654 and RexxS. Adam Cuerden put in a considerable amount of work on the design and coding before leaving Wikipedia. "We are very grateful", says WFC. "The template for submitting new suggestions, {{TFLcontent}}, has been designed for simplicity and efficiency. Detailed, user-friendly instructions are provided at the submissions page. But the real beauty is that the template is used all the way through the process. Once a blurb has been accepted, and if necessary copy-edited, the entire template can be copied and pasted into the pool of main page candidates, currently located here."
FL director The Rambling Man told The Signpost, "a long-held feeling that FLs should be represented on the main page really got going once the featured sounds crew made a serious bid to shake things up. We thought we'd head in on the crest of the revolutionary wave, but eventually it transpired that featured sounds requires more growth in editor input and its collection of promoted files. But featured lists has been pretty stable for a long time; we just needed to hold off until someone could adequately code the solution. That's now done, and that's where we are."
"Featured lists has matured as a process over the past three years. But I think the key to the main page bid has been not to run before we could walk: the very last thing we wanted to do was to head to main page, blow it, and suffer premature cancellation. It was going to be two days a week, but to be honest, one day a week for the next couple of months is amazing. I can't recall the last time the main page had a 'make over', but this will be the most recent one, no matter what, and we want it to succeed."
Dabomb87 says "initially it will be down to the FL directors to decide—that is, The Rambling Man, Giants2008, and me—perhaps a couple of weeks in advance so we can queue them up and ensure there are no major issues like deadlinks, dabs. We're following that model until we know things are running smoothly, and then we'll need to work out a more egalitarian method of selection. In this honeymoon period, the FL community will be thrilled to see its work finally acknowledged."
Featured lists
In our regular coverage, eight lists were promoted last week:
- Grammy Award for Best Urban/Alternative Performance (nom). (Nominated by Another Believer)
- List of accolades received by Winter's Bone (nom) (Crystal Clear x3)
- 1968 Summer Paralympics medal table (nom). (Basement12)
- List of Seattle Mariners team records (nom). (Albacore)
- List of Phoenix Suns seasons (nom). (Crzycheetah)
- Rosenborg BK in Europe (nom). (Arsenikk)
- List of defunct and relocated National Hockey League teams (nom) (K. Annoyomous)
- Philadelphia Phillies all-time roster (I–J) (nom). (Killervogel5) (picture at right)
Featured articles
Six articles were promoted to featured status:
- Hurricane Gordon (2006) (nom), completely rewritten by co-nominator Hurricanehink as part of a possible featured topic related to the 2006 season. Co-nominator Juliancolton says, "If you thought hurricanes are only for Florida, think again – individuals affected by Gordon may have well been eating fish and chips, drinking Guinness, or driving on the Autovía de los Pantanos." This photo-like image was acquired via NASA's Aqua satellite. (picture at top)
- Covent Garden (nom), a district on the eastern fringes of London's West End, now a popular shopping and tourist site. The precinct is home to the Royal Opera House, also known as "Covent Garden". (SilkTork) (picture at right)
- Guy Fawkes Night (nom), one of England's most enduring and unique spectacles, celebrated annually on or around 5 November. Initially it commemorated the deliverance of a Stuart king, but it wasn't long before it became embroiled in the religious turmoil between England's Protestant and Catholic religions. (Parrot of Doom)
- Banksia paludosa (nom), commonly known as the marsh or swamp banksia, endemic to the mid-eastern regions of Australia, mostly close to the coast. (Nominated by Casliber)
- Voalavo gymnocaudus (nom), a small rodent on the large island of Madagascar, off south-eastern Africa; the species was discovered only a little over a decade ago. (Ucucha)
- The Sun Also Rises (nom), the first successful novel, written in 1926, by Nobel prize–winning American author Ernest Hemingway; in many ways it was a work that came to define a generation. (Truthkeeper88) (picture at right)
Featured pictures
Five images were promoted. Medium-sized images can be viewed by clicking on "nom":
- Samuel Reshevsky as a kid (nom; related article), a famous chess prodigy and later a leading American chess grandmaster. Here, he is eight years old, in the process of defeating several grandmasters in France (created by Kadel & Herbert, appeared in The New York Times).
- Taos Pueblo Church (nom; related article), a historic landmark—a church—photographed in 1942 by the significant American photographer Ansel Adams (restored by User:Kaldari).
- Salt farmers in Thailand (nom; related article), sea-salt harvesting in Pak Thale, Phetchaburi, Thailand (created by User:JJ Harrison). (picture at bottom)
- Black-breasted Thrush male (nom; related article), a species of bird found in Bangladesh, China, India, Laos, Myanmar, Pakistan, Thailand, and Vietnam. This one was photographed by User:JJ Harrison in the Royal Agricultural Station, Chiang Mai, northern Thailand. Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical dry forests and subtropical or tropical moist montane forests. (picture at right)
- Black-breasted Thrush female (nom; related article), a female of the same species (created by User:JJ Harrison).
Featured sounds
There are nine new featured sounds
- Debussy's "Sarabande" from Pour le piano (nom; related article), Debussy's Sarabande from Pour le piano, composed in 1901, performed by Wikipedian La Pianista in 2011.
- America the beautiful (nom; related article), a patriotic hymn-like piece by an unknown composer, performed by the US Army Band Brass Quintet in 2007.
- Four Central American national anthems (nom), performed by the US Navy Band.
- Two Hispaniola National Anthems (nom), performed by the US Navy Band.
- President Johnson's remarks on signing the Voting Rights Act (1965) (nom; related article), legislation that helped to protect the rights outlined in the 15th and 24th amendments to the US Constitution—an important step towards reducing the widespread disfranchisement of African Americans.
Reader comments
More workshop proposals in Tree shaping case; further votes in PD of other case
The Arbitration Committee opened no new cases. Two cases are currently open.
Open cases
Racepacket (Week 7)
See earlier Signpost coverage for background about this case. Arbitrators submitted further votes and a motion to close in the proposed decision during the week. Proposals relating to two editors and one administrator are being considered.
Tree shaping (Week 7)
See earlier Signpost coverage for background about this case. During the day, drafter Elen of the Roads submitted additional proposals in the workshop for comment, with an apology for the delay in posting these proposals.
Reader comments
1.18 extension bundling; mobile testers needed; brief news
Which extensions should be bundled with MediaWiki 1.18?
With the release of MediaWiki 1.17 to external sites (its so-called "tarball" release) being drawn out by the incidence of a long series of bugs – a release is now expected "within 24 hours" of the publication of this issue – attention is rapidly turning to design decisions regarding the MediaWiki 1.18 tarball release. In particular, the installer included in the release of 1.17 supported the packaging of commonly used extensions with the software itself, in an attempt to make "straight out of the box" MediaWiki work more like a Wikimedia wiki. Although it remains both difficult and undesirable to replicate the look and feel of a Wikimedia wiki entirely, given that they run approximately 80 extensions, at the moment, even basic extensions such as ParserFunctions must be manually installed by the end user. Therefore, to ease the technical knowledge required to set up a basic wiki, Wikimedia developer and bugmeister Mark Hershberger this week opened the call for a shortlist of the most needed extensions of the wikitech-l mailing list. Though there was concern from fellow developer Robert Lanphier that including even a small number of extensions would push back the rapidly approaching target date for release of the 1.18 tarball, former CTO Brion Vibber was unconcerned: "all that's required is to drop some directories into the tarball, and they'll be available for selection in the installer".
In brief
Not all fixes may have gone live to WMF sites at the time of writing; some may not be scheduled to go live for many weeks.
Answer the Foundation's call for testers of its new mobile gateway by grabbing your smartphone, if you have one, and navigating to [2]. Then, leave feedback on the experience via the link at the top.
- The operations team warned that this week's "extensive networking configuration... could potentially impact production" (wikitech).
- With the resolution of bug #28695, if no results are found during a search of the edit filter logs, a message to that effect will appear.
- The WMF's Volunteer Development Coordinator, Sumana Harihareswara, called for suggestions for the hackdays immediately preceding Wikimania 2011, both of which are to be held in August in the Israeli city of Haifa (wikitech-l mailing list).
irc.wikimedia.org
, which provides several Wikimedia-related IRC channels (though not the major chatrooms) was down for a period this week (wikitech-l mailing list).- The Foundation also issued a call for those with internet-enabled phones to test the new "Wikimedia Mobile" gateway, which will eventually replace the existing http://m.wikipedia.org service (Wikimedia blog). The call has already resulted in a considerable amount of feedback (wikitech-l mailing list).
- The English Wikipedia's desire to have the "mark all [my] edits minor by default" preference disabled for all users was finally implemented, a year after it was first proposed (bug #24313).
- The Wikimedia Foundation did not end up participating in World IPv6 Day after switching to the new protocol was found to require "unexpected... changes to our database schema" (English Wikipedia's village pump).
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