User talk:Fgnievinski/Archive1
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TODO (as soon as I'm allowed to edit):
- add "symbolically" to Easter
- move/rename Global climate model to General circulation models.
- remove merge template at climate model and General circulation model.
probation on homeopathy articles
[edit]I'm making you aware that Homeopathy-related articles and the editors editing them are under article probation. Please be careful when making controversial edits and make sure to discuss them first on the talk page. See also Talk:Homeopathy/Article probation --Enric Naval (talk) 04:02, 20 May 2008 (UTC)
September 2009
[edit]Welcome to Wikipedia. Although everyone is welcome to make constructive contributions to Wikipedia, at least one of your recent edits, such as the one you made to Talk:Phasor, did not appear to be constructive and has been automatically reverted by ClueBot. Please use the sandbox for any test edits you would like to make, and take a look at the welcome page to learn more about contributing to this encyclopedia. If you believe there has been a mistake and would like to report a false positive, please report it here and then remove this warning from your talk page. If your edit was not vandalism, please feel free to make your edit again after reporting it. The following is the log entry regarding this warning: Talk:Phasor was moved to Talk:Phasor (disambiguation) by Fgnievinski (u) (t) redirecting article to non-existant page on 2009-09-05T02:36:20+00:00 . Thank you. ClueBot (talk) 02:36, 5 September 2009 (UTC)
Signal-to-noise ratio
[edit]I like what you've done with Signal-to-noise ratio, well done. I'd been trying to improve it, but had got kinda stuck. It's good to have a fresh pair of eyes on the article! GyroMagician (talk) 16:16, 28 March 2010 (UTC)
Transcendent ←→ transcendence
[edit]Generally we ask that merge requests be accompanied by a rationale, given on the talk page. Since discussion should be centralized, one of the two talk pages should direct readers to the discussion at the main talk page. -Stevertigo (w | t | e) 23:40, 15 August 2010 (UTC)
WBC funding
[edit]Look. For the second time, I'm going to remove your edits for being inappropriate in tone. I opened a thread at Talk:Westboro Baptist Church#Funding. Before you add this text again, discuss your edits. — HelloAnnyong (say whaaat?!) 20:19, 5 March 2011 (UTC)
Please be aware that all articles related to the Arab–Israeli conflict, broadly construed, are subject to a "one revert rule" (1RR). That means an editor may not make more than one revert to an article page in a 24-hour period.
For general information about revert restrictions, please see WP:Edit warring. For more information about the revert restrictions that apply to articles related to the Israel–Palestine conflict, please see WP:ARBPIA#Further remedies.
This note isn't meant to suggest you've done something wrong, just to inform you of the 1RR rule so you don't accidentally break it. — Malik Shabazz Talk/Stalk 02:55, 18 October 2011 (UTC)
- Thanks for the heads-up. Fgnievinski (talk) 02:58, 18 October 2011 (UTC)
Decibel
[edit]I am delighted that you wanted (in this edit) to copy material I had written on the talk page into the article. Unfortunately, it comes from a conversation where I am trying to persuade another user not to insert their own sythesis into the article. It would really not be a good idea if my own unsourced synthesis were to appear in the article at this time, consequently I have reverted it. Something backed up by sources though, would be perfectly acceptable. SpinningSpark 09:23, 26 March 2012 (UTC)
I am interested in the reasons why you consider the calculation rules inferred from current practice "overkill". Usually "overkill" means: too complex for the intended purpose. The rules are simply the following:
- (a) Proper rule: x dB = 10^(x/10)
- (b) "User guide": x dB is just a number that combines the with all units in the familiar way. Example: 10 = 10 dB and 20 dBW = 100 W hence 10 x 100 W = 1000 W is the same as 10 dB x 20 dBW = 30 dBW. The same holds for the more "complicated" dBW/Hz/K and so on
Meanwhile I also verified that basic high school mathematics, in the US known as Algebra 2 or Algebra II, is the only background needed, as it contains exponential and logarithmic functions. See Algebra 2 or II under Math Education Standards and Math education in the US. At this time, I am confident that there is no simpler rule that reflects current (or "modern") practice. Any comments? Boute (talk) 17:18, 27 March 2012 (UTC)
- Hi Boute, thanks for following up on that. Well, I said "might be seen as overkill". I myself don't find it difficult, I actually find it easier to follow a well-defined recipe as you have laid down rather than trying to clarify in my head an otherwise messy calculation. Now, I guess people reject your formulation because it is unfamiliar to them. And to be honest, if all they are doing is combining a decibel quantity in a given unit (say, dB (re 1 W)) with another, unitless decibel quantity (such as antenna gain with respect to an isotropic antenna), then business as usual -- simply summing numerical values in decibels -- is indeed simpler than your formulation, and still correct, since the units are trivial. They are thinking more like engineers than mathematicians, i.e., worrying more about the numerical answer than the method or consistency. I can tell you first hand, the way decibels is taught in colleges and universities, is you only care about the numerical value and the units, you just hope for the best! This is a very unfortunate situation, but that's reality -- and the other editors are right when they reject your novel formulation on the basis that it's not the way the majority of experts explain the subject in textbooks. In a sense, I feel like you are ahead of your time -- and Wikipedia can't recognize it.
- Now going back to the current situation, I'm sure it'd have been rectified much sooner were we dealing with editors having better education in mathematics. We need patience. This is just one more case of numerous similar in Wikipedia, see Wikipedia:Expert_retention and, for a good joke, Wikipedia:Astronomer_vs_Amateur. I'm trying to reach a compromise solution: let them add the numerical values as they are used to, then attack the units issue and have them realize how hairy the problem is.
- By the way, are you familiar with the Mathcad software? It is capable of handling units automatically. I found this textbook which seems to implement your formulation, including the postfix operator interpretation and everything, check it out: [1], [2] Fgnievinski (talk) 23:07, 27 March 2012 (UTC)
- Thank you for the reference to the Mathcad book. Unfortunately, I could not find anything there on the decibel, just on the classical units (treated in the manner normally used in physics).
- Please see Fig. 4.33, p.94 in the first ref.; and a note on p.91 in second ref.Fgnievinski (talk) 18:22, 28 March 2012 (UTC)
- Thanks. The first ref is not yet available to me. The note on p.91 in second ref is significant in designating the decibel as a scaling function, which it is, and not as a "unit", which is a contentious designation (as mentioned in the BIPM standard for the SI, page 127). Boute (talk) 07:47, 29 March 2012 (UTC)
- Please see Fig. 4.33, p.94 in the first ref.; and a note on p.91 in second ref.Fgnievinski (talk) 18:22, 28 March 2012 (UTC)
- A very central issue to me is simplicity. In the formulation I described, the equation x dB = 10^(x/10) is the only thing one needs to know about the decibel: it is both a definition (of dB) and yields all the calculation rules simply the properties of the defining expression, for instance
- the calculation x dB x y dB = 10^(x/10) x 10^(y/10) = = 10^((x + y)/10) = (x + y) dB
- yields the rule x dB x y dB = (x + y) dB
- Hence the "arguments" are added in exactly the way people are used to for decibels. So in what sense can the traditional way be simpler than the rule just derived (even when considering "trivial" units)?
- In the sense that you need to explain a lot more than simply x + y, which for some very restricted but common cases is all that the engineer needs to know.Fgnievinski (talk) 18:22, 28 March 2012 (UTC)
- For a fair comparison: the traditional view is not simply x + y but x dB + y dB, and further requires explaining why adding dB expressions corresponds to multiplying power ratios. There is no way around exponential and logarithmic functions, since they are the essence. So in this particular aspect the traditional approach requires no less explanation. In view of the following (the level concept), it actually requires much more. In fact, the standardization documents introduced a crucial error (conceptually, of no pragmatic consequence) in trying to reflect the original decibel definitions. They replaced log with lg, depriving the level concept from its abstract essence, and resulting in B = 1, eliminating all chances for mathematical consistency; see CEI/IEC 60027-3, page 13, the remark after equation (8).
- Incidentally: your "return to the recommendations in the standards" by using the dB (re W) etc. convention is well-meant, but when used to write expressions like dB (re W/Hz/K) it only emphasizes the awkwardness of a convention that I have never seen used in practice. Boute (talk) 07:47, 29 March 2012 (UTC)
- In the sense that you need to explain a lot more than simply x + y, which for some very restricted but common cases is all that the engineer needs to know.Fgnievinski (talk) 18:22, 28 March 2012 (UTC)
- Fundamentally, according to the "traditional" definitions as stated in the original papers (Hartley, 1924) the decibel does not express a power ratio but a level difference, related logarithmically but without specified base. The decibel and the neper correspond to specific choices of base. In fact, the level itself is defined nowhere; only its value expressed in decibel or in neper is knowable. The early papers tried to express all this in a rather clumsy way, which may be the source of all subsequent confusion. Indeed, the "traditional" decibel inherits all its "bewildering" (Horton, 1954) and "elusive" (Chapman and Ellis, 1998) characteristics from the level notion. So the traditional view on the decibel is not simple in any sense, and certainly not the simplest possible.
- Agreed; but although unfortunate, this situation remains the status quo, and as such must be represented in Wikipedia. Fgnievinski (talk) 18:22, 28 March 2012 (UTC)
- The satellite communications engineers have changed the status quo (if there ever was any) since the 1980's. The talk:decibel pages indicate that most editors do not read the literature; some even designated dBK etc. as "something I made up". It is significant that no one thus far dared answering the pertinent question: should Wikipedia reflect current practice or the status quo of 1950? Boute (talk) 07:47, 29 March 2012 (UTC)
- Agreed; but although unfortunate, this situation remains the status quo, and as such must be represented in Wikipedia. Fgnievinski (talk) 18:22, 28 March 2012 (UTC)
- Why most people don't even see the problem is due to the pragmatic simplicity of the decibel: take 10 times the logarithm in base 10 of a given power ratio, and write dB after it. Done. However, this is not a definition, since it does not answer the question: what is 30 dB (or what does it mean)?
- Traditional answer: the level difference corresponding to a power ratio of 1000. What is level? Answer: that is not simple to explain.
- Answer with the x dB = 10^(x/10) definition: simply the value 1000 (indeed, 30 dB = 10^(30/10) = 10^3 = 1000).
- Maybe for the Wikipedia article one should really propose the original definition, which many other editors seem to advocate without having read it. Then we really would have utter confusion, perhaps resulting in catharsis. Boute (talk) 11:20, 28 March 2012 (UTC)
- The concern is that, whatever explanation is given, it must be in harmony with the mindless practice currently adopted -- it's a pragmatics vs. semantics problem.Fgnievinski (talk) 18:22, 28 March 2012 (UTC)
- The satellite communications engineers have long abandoned the mindless practice; so it is not really "currrently adopted" any more. Boute (talk) 07:47, 29 March 2012 (UTC)
- The concern is that, whatever explanation is given, it must be in harmony with the mindless practice currently adopted -- it's a pragmatics vs. semantics problem.Fgnievinski (talk) 18:22, 28 March 2012 (UTC)
- Thank you for the reference to the Mathcad book. Unfortunately, I could not find anything there on the decibel, just on the classical units (treated in the manner normally used in physics).
Square root of a matrix
[edit]Hi, you recently added to Square root of a matrix:
- (If A is real and symmetric, then V is orthogonal and we can avoid the inverse: .)
I could be wrong, but I seem to remember that this is only true if each of the eigenvectors is normalized so the sum of its squared elements equals unity. Is this right? If so, could you add that stipulation to your edit? Thanks! Duoduoduo (talk) 19:35, 20 April 2012 (UTC)
- Thanks for the follow-up. I added a caveat. Although it's not what you mentioned above. Fgnievinski (talk) 00:57, 21 April 2012 (UTC)
- I checked, and what I said above is correct. so I'll put that in. Duoduoduo (talk) 22:20, 24 April 2012 (UTC)
- The numerical experiment below seems to disprove it:
n = 4 temp = rand(n) A = temp + temp' % make it symmetric eig2sqrtm = @(V,D) V * diag(sqrt(diag(D))) * V'; [V,D] = eig(A) sum(diag(D).^2) As = eig2sqrtm(V,D), max(max(abs(As * As - A)))
see output: n =
4
temp =
0.29329 0.92102 0.09234 0.96235 0.74785 0.82847 0.67296 0.40207 0.53474 0.52299 0.71043 0.18692 0.32792 0.12268 0.98087 0.38935
A =
0.58657 1.6689 0.62708 1.2903 1.6689 1.6569 1.196 0.52475 0.62708 1.196 1.4209 1.1678 1.2903 0.52475 1.1678 0.77871
V =
0.69813 0.46787 0.25164 0.47999 -0.43155 -0.2922 0.61819 0.58841 0.26131 -0.59386 -0.5739 0.49968 -0.50803 0.58569 -0.47451 0.41678
D =
-1.1493 0 0 0 0 0.36355 0 0 0 0 0.82321 0 0 0 0 4.4056
ans =
21.54
As =
0.67302 + 0.52249i 0.65151 - 0.32298i 0.20485 + 0.19557i 0.47678 - 0.38022i 0.65151 - 0.32298i 1.1249 + 0.19965i 0.39987 - 0.12089i 0.1454 + 0.23504i 0.20485 + 0.19557i 0.39987 - 0.12089i 1.0355 + 0.073203i 0.47448 - 0.14232i 0.47678 - 0.38022i 0.1454 + 0.23504i 0.47448 - 0.14232i 0.77572 + 0.27669i
ans =
1.792e-015
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Template:Move section portions and Template:Move section portions from
[edit]Hi. I was assuming that you created these templates
because you were not aware of
- {{Move portions|section=y}}
- {{Move portions from|section=y}}
but then I saw you made this edit that added the section parameter to {{Move portions from}}. Please use the older templates rather than the redundant new ones. I know that parameter isn't documented, I'll work on fixing that deficiency. Thanks, Wbm1058 (talk) 01:07, 3 March 2013 (UTC)
- You're missing the point: {{Move section portions}} produces a smaller box than {{Move portions}}. Your edits replacing the former for the latter are disruptive. Please undo. Fgnievinski (talk) 02:35, 3 March 2013 (UTC)
- Maybe we can make the box smaller in the existing template? Wbm1058 (talk) 02:44, 3 March 2013 (UTC)
- If you know how to do that, by all means please go ahead. Thanks. Fgnievinski (talk) 03:03, 3 March 2013 (UTC)
- I modified Template:Move portions to pass through the small parameter to the lower-level template, see [diff], and updated Sample mean and sample covariance (diff]. You just need to use a couple extra prameters to get the desired result. Is that OK? Wbm1058 (talk) 03:54, 3 March 2013 (UTC)
- Almost perfect: can we have {{Move section portions}} as a redirect for {{move portions|#1|section=y|small=left}}?
- Otherwise please undo the modifications in the articles using that template. Thanks. Fgnievinski (talk) 09:03, 3 March 2013 (UTC)
- Many thanks! Fgnievinski (talk) 03:09, 5 March 2013 (UTC)
- I modified Template:Move portions to pass through the small parameter to the lower-level template, see [diff], and updated Sample mean and sample covariance (diff]. You just need to use a couple extra prameters to get the desired result. Is that OK? Wbm1058 (talk) 03:54, 3 March 2013 (UTC)
- If you know how to do that, by all means please go ahead. Thanks. Fgnievinski (talk) 03:03, 3 March 2013 (UTC)
- Maybe we can make the box smaller in the existing template? Wbm1058 (talk) 02:44, 3 March 2013 (UTC)
Nice to see someone is moving/reducing the masses of content from that article into more specialized/suited ones. Thank you! I didn't do so myself to prevent the risk shredding the efforts of others near the time. I agree that the history section of Maxwell's equations would make a good separate article too.
But I disagree with this edit, your deletion reference books. It wasn't "just a collection of links". These are actual texts on the subject that would make the reader more aware of the literature (Landau and Lifshitz? Feynman? Griffiths? Jackson?). This doesn't seem to comply with "WP:LINKFARM". I reverted it. Please don't delete good refs. Thanks, M∧Ŝc2ħεИτlk 21:05, 30 April 2013 (UTC)
- I respectfully disagree. Where could we seek a third opinion? Fgnievinski (talk) 21:52, 30 April 2013 (UTC)
- The WikiProject Physics talk page. Cheers, M∧Ŝc2ħεИτlk 22:17, 30 April 2013 (UTC)
- Thanks for taking the time. Fgnievinski (talk) 22:25, 30 April 2013 (UTC)
Hello! I am Wamiq. Just wanted to know whose names do you require there in the article, because you added the {{who?}} tag to the authors. I have their names. Regards.
- Please cite a source accordingly. Thanks. Fgnievinski (talk) 09:27, 6 May 2013 (UTC)
- The problem is that this notation is used in our books, but I cannot find an online source which says that. What am I to cite, then?
- It doesn't need to be online; use Template:Cite_book. Fgnievinski (talk) 18:04, 6 May 2013 (UTC)
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SMAP
[edit]There was a consensus determined this year that decided that the band was the primary topic and should not be disambiguated. Now you have created an unnecessary mess because you have not bothered to look at the talk page.—Ryulong (琉竜) 13:34, 25 June 2013 (UTC)
Please stop "fixing" everything to go along with your undiscussed and controversial move. The pages will all be at their original titles shortly.—Ryulong (琉竜) 14:03, 25 June 2013 (UTC)
At least file the requested move after your original move has been properly fixed.—Ryulong (琉竜) 14:37, 25 June 2013 (UTC)
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This is an automated message from MadmanBot. I have performed a web search with the contents of Joint Committee for Guides in Metrology, and it appears to include material copied directly from http://www.iso.org/sites/JCGM/JCGM-introduction.htm.
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Your GA nomination of Earth's magnetic field
[edit]Hi there, I'm pleased to inform you that I've begun reviewing the article Earth's magnetic field you nominated for GA-status according to the criteria. This process may take up to 7 days. Feel free to contact me with any questions or comments you might have during this period. Message delivered by Legobot, on behalf of Jamesx12345 -- Jamesx12345 (talk) 20:14, 30 September 2013 (UTC)
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Earth's magnetic field
[edit]Hi. I'm currently reviewing Earth's magnetic field at Talk:Earth's magnetic field/GA1, and have suggested a few changes that might help improve the article. In general it is good, although some more citations are needed in places. Many thanks. Jamesx12345 16:01, 6 October 2013 (UTC)
- Thank you for taking the time! Fgnievinski (talk) 16:50, 6 October 2013 (UTC)
Fgnievinski, as the main contributor to Earth's magnetic field, I thank you for your vote of confidence in this article. However, before nominating another article, I recommend you look at Good_article_nominations/Instructions. In particular, note this passage:
Most reviews will require involvement by an article editor during the review process. We recommend checking that someone is available to do this before nominating an article or assure that you will be able to respond to any comments made by the reviewer during the review. Nominators who are not significant contributors to the article should consult regular editors of the article prior to a nomination.
Since you did not make any of the changes requested by Jamesx12345 (talk · contribs), he was about to close the nomination before I was even aware of it. RockMagnetist (talk) 23:49, 21 October 2013 (UTC)
- Frankly, step 1 is undue red tape; I intended to follow step 5 instead: At the end of the review, the reviewer will either pass or fail the article. If your nomination has failed, you can take the reviewer's suggestions into account and renominate the article. Fgnievinski (talk) 00:17, 22 October 2013 (UTC)
- To me, that seems like more red tape, because you need to renominate it (and then wait for a second review). That also wastes the time of reviewers (who are in short supply and must devote a lot of effort to each review). RockMagnetist (talk) 01:16, 22 October 2013 (UTC)
Your GA nomination of Earth's magnetic field
[edit]The article Earth's magnetic field you nominated as a good article has passed ; see Talk:Earth's magnetic field for comments about the article. Well done! Message delivered by Legobot, on behalf of Jamesx12345 -- Jamesx12345 (talk) 17:22, 22 October 2013 (UTC)
Aha
[edit]Is this the F.G. Nievinski I know who used to work for a certain, sometimes ill-tempered, blond professor with an interest in snow depth? siafu (talk) 05:28, 26 October 2013 (UTC)
- The one and only! :D Fgnievinski (talk) 16:58, 26 October 2013 (UTC)
Telemeter
[edit]Are you intending to provide a rationale for this proposal on the talk page? If you are I will probably oppose (depending on what you say). If not I intend to remove the templates. SpinningSpark 11:15, 29 October 2013 (UTC)
The article Length, distance, or range meter has been proposed for deletion because of the following concern:
- may not meet WP:NOTABILITY
While all constructive contributions to Wikipedia are appreciated, content or articles may be deleted for any of several reasons.
You may prevent the proposed deletion by removing the {{proposed deletion/dated}}
notice, but please explain why in your edit summary or on the article's talk page.
Please consider improving the article to address the issues raised. Removing {{proposed deletion/dated}}
will stop the proposed deletion process, but other deletion processes exist. In particular, the speedy deletion process can result in deletion without discussion, and articles for deletion allows discussion to reach consensus for deletion. --[[Tariqmudallal · my talk]] 22:41, 29 October 2013 (UTC)
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Merge proposals
[edit]Hi, you put several proposed merge tags on a number of articles. It would be perhaps be helpful if you would explain in the appropriate places (by clicking the "discuss" links) what exactly you are proposing. As the different proposals are kind of related, you could also centralize the discussion in one place and provide a link to there from the others. --Randykitty (talk) 20:34, 6 December 2013 (UTC)
- I've tagged with duplication, that's the reason. Fgnievinski (talk) 20:35, 6 December 2013 (UTC)
- I think you missed my point, which is that you didn't provide any rationale for your proposal(s). --Randykitty (talk) 20:55, 6 December 2013 (UTC)
Geodesics on an ellipsoid
[edit]Thanks for your comments on this Geodesics on an ellipsoid. It is currently under review at Talk:Geodesics_on_an_ellipsoid/GA1. I would appreciate your commenting on the review so far and your adding your own opinion. Thanks for your help. cffk (talk) 12:31, 7 December 2013 (UTC)
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Merge 'Cooperative Learning' and 'Collaborative Learning'
[edit]Back in October you proposed merging Cooperative learning and Collaborative learning without starting a discussion. This discussion has now started and I think your input would be helpful. Jojalozzo 23:56, 25 January 2014 (UTC)
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Badge
[edit]Hi,
You requested speedy deletion of Badge under CSD G6, stating that the page was obstructing a page move. May I ask what page move you had in mind? Best wishes, Xoloz (talk) 05:18, 23 February 2014 (UTC)
- List of types of badges Fgnievinski (talk) 05:19, 23 February 2014 (UTC)
- Why it's not a G6 speedy??? Fgnievinski (talk) 05:23, 23 February 2014 (UTC)
- Ok. I've just double-checked the article's history, and cannot really grasp why it was moved from Badge to List of types of badges in the first instance. This might not be a G6 is the strictest sense, because the recent move you propose to undo might have had a good reason. Still, I cannot see what that reason might have been, so I'll move the page for you. Best wishes, Xoloz (talk) 05:36, 23 February 2014 (UTC)
- Next time, please ask before undoing. Fgnievinski (talk) 05:41, 23 February 2014 (UTC)
- Ok. I've just double-checked the article's history, and cannot really grasp why it was moved from Badge to List of types of badges in the first instance. This might not be a G6 is the strictest sense, because the recent move you propose to undo might have had a good reason. Still, I cannot see what that reason might have been, so I'll move the page for you. Best wishes, Xoloz (talk) 05:36, 23 February 2014 (UTC)
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K-means clustering
[edit]You added the statement "Jenks natural breaks optimization: k-means applied to univariate data" to this article.
However, if I am not mistaken, the original use case of Lloyd was univariate, wasn't it?
This sounds as if k-means would not work with univariate data. I don't know much about Jenks, so maybe there are some other differences (does it sort the data first?) that make it faster for univariate data? --Chire (talk) 08:39, 5 May 2014 (UTC)
- My only point is that Jenks is a special case of the more general k-means; I'm not familiar with Lloyd's, sorry. The first two should be at least inter-linked, which was not the case before. Fgnievinski (talk) 12:26, 5 May 2014 (UTC)
- I don't object the link; the description should just be improved; but I'm not familiar with Jenks. Lloyd is the classic 2-phase approach everybody uses: reassign to nearest center, update center estimation - which of course also works in univariate data. He did pulse code modulation, where his variate was the voltage, and k was known beforehand as the number of voltage levels used for transmission. k-means clustering can help recognizing the signal even when the exact voltage drop (line quality, weather conditions etc.) is hard to predict. --Chire (talk) 13:16, 5 May 2014 (UTC)
- I'm not sure how to improve this easily. The current link description is not incorrect. If there's any inconsistency more pressing, it'd be to merge Lloyd's and k-means. Fgnievinski (talk) 13:37, 5 May 2014 (UTC)
- I had proposed that before, but there were good arguments to keep them separate, see Talk:K-means clustering#Merge proposal: Lloyd's seems to be also used outside of clustering. After all, it is a very general principle, and more of a vector quantization method than actually clustering as in "structure discovery": it will happily "cluster" uniform data, where no structure / clusters exist. --Chire (talk) 13:51, 5 May 2014 (UTC)
May 2014
[edit]Please refrain from making unconstructive edits to Wikipedia, as you did at Yoni. Your edits appear to constitute vandalism and have been reverted or removed. If you would like to experiment, please use the sandbox. Administrators have the ability to block users from editing if they repeatedly engage in vandalism. Thank you. JustBerry (talk) 22:09, 18 May 2014 (UTC)
- is this an automated message? that edit was done totally on good-faith. Fgnievinski (talk) 23:38, 18 May 2014 (UTC)
June 2014
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Reversion at Mathematics education
[edit]Seems to me, you only wanted me to separate my edits to make it easier for you to undo only the changes you disagreed with. If this is the case, you should have just told me upfront which changes you wanted undone. - dcljr (talk) 03:44, 4 July 2014 (UTC)
- Sorry, I thought I was being considerate for not reverting the whole thing... Fgnievinski (talk) 13:36, 4 July 2014 (UTC)
- The most considerate change would have been to simply reinstate the deleted section as the next edit to the article. - dcljr (talk) 22:44, 8 July 2014 (UTC)
- You're right, will do next time. Fgnievinski (talk) 02:21, 9 July 2014 (UTC)
- The most considerate change would have been to simply reinstate the deleted section as the next edit to the article. - dcljr (talk) 22:44, 8 July 2014 (UTC)
Revert
[edit]What is the point of deleting a whole section of Mean? Staglit (talk) 21:19, 9 July 2014 (UTC)
- Its overly detailed treatment detracts from the rest of the article. Fgnievinski (talk) 21:21, 9 July 2014 (UTC)
Speedy deletion nomination of Public awareness of science (journal)
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Hello, and welcome to Wikipedia. This is a notice to inform you that a tag has been placed on Public awareness of science (journal) requesting that it be speedily deleted from Wikipedia. This has been done under section A3 of the criteria for speedy deletion, because it is an article with no content whatsoever, or whose contents consist only of external links, a "See also" section, book references, category tags, template tags, interwiki links, images, a rephrasing of the title, a question that should have been asked at the help or reference desks, or an attempt to contact the subject of the article. Please see Wikipedia:Stub for our minimum information standards for short articles. Also please note that articles must be on notable subjects and should provide references to reliable sources that verify their content.
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Local Attraction
[edit]Hi I am owais khursheed. I have removed your tag for merging the article Local Attraction into magnetic deviation because this is the topic about surveying not magnetic devaition. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Owais khursheed (talk • contribs) 08:54, 17 July 2014 (UTC)
- Please discuss it there: Talk:Local attraction#Suggested Redirect. Thanks. Fgnievinski (talk) 13:55, 17 July 2014 (UTC)
{{Duplication}}
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FYI, I've made a suggestion for the functionality you wanted. -- 65.94.171.126 (talk) 05:12, 22 July 2014 (UTC)
Proposed deletion of Mega journal
[edit]The article Mega journal has been proposed for deletion because of the following concern:
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Nomination of Mega journal for deletion
[edit]A discussion is taking place as to whether the article Mega journal is suitable for inclusion in Wikipedia according to Wikipedia's policies and guidelines or whether it should be deleted.
The article will be discussed at Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Mega journal until a consensus is reached, and anyone is welcome to contribute to the discussion. The nomination will explain the policies and guidelines which are of concern. The discussion focuses on high-quality evidence and our policies and guidelines.
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Your edit summary claims that i is indexed by Thomson Reuters, but when I search for the ISSN (2046-6390) in their Master List, I don't find anything, which is why I redirected it. Where did you find that ISI indexes it? Thanks. --Randykitty (talk) 12:59, 27 September 2014 (UTC)
- In the journal about page: [3] Fgnievinski (talk) 13:03, 27 September 2014 (UTC)
- I think Thomson Reuters is probably a better source for what they cover than the journal itself. It's not necessarily incorrect, but it wouldn't be the first time that a journal claims to be indexed by Web of Science without it being true. One possibility is that they were notified about future inclusion by ISI, but that this is not in the database yet. Whatever may be the case, I suggest to restore the redirect until an independent source confirms listing. --Randykitty (talk) 13:29, 27 September 2014 (UTC)
- It might be that Thomson didn't update their website. Doubting the publisher's claims is unreasonable. Fgnievinski (talk) 13:38, 27 September 2014 (UTC)
- It's not as unreasonable as you think, I have seen such incorrect claims before. The publisher is an interested party and not independent. WP cannot put up stuff that is not confirmed by independent reliable sources (but you undoubtedly already knew that). --Randykitty (talk) 13:44, 27 September 2014 (UTC)
- OK, I'll reinstate the redirect. Better not to given the benefit of the doubt. I'm taking the liberty of moving this discussion to the article's talk page. Fgnievinski (talk) 14:09, 27 September 2014 (UTC)
- It's not as unreasonable as you think, I have seen such incorrect claims before. The publisher is an interested party and not independent. WP cannot put up stuff that is not confirmed by independent reliable sources (but you undoubtedly already knew that). --Randykitty (talk) 13:44, 27 September 2014 (UTC)
- It might be that Thomson didn't update their website. Doubting the publisher's claims is unreasonable. Fgnievinski (talk) 13:38, 27 September 2014 (UTC)
- I think Thomson Reuters is probably a better source for what they cover than the journal itself. It's not necessarily incorrect, but it wouldn't be the first time that a journal claims to be indexed by Web of Science without it being true. One possibility is that they were notified about future inclusion by ISI, but that this is not in the database yet. Whatever may be the case, I suggest to restore the redirect until an independent source confirms listing. --Randykitty (talk) 13:29, 27 September 2014 (UTC)
Dab blanking
[edit]Why did you blank Harmonic analysis (disambiguation)? You must be aware that's not how you nominate it for deletion. KJ Discuss? 22:27, 30 September 2014 (UTC)
- I'm sorry, I got confused with {{db-blanked}}. Fgnievinski (talk) 22:30, 30 September 2014 (UTC)
October 2014
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List of academic ranks
[edit]Hi. I reverted your recent edits at List of academic ranks because, while these edits may be great improvements, it seems you are making a major change to the article without discussing it with the editors there. I noticed you referenced a discussion among a few editors at Talk:Professor but I think it is inappropriate to apply a decision for one page to another page without notifying editors at both pages (unless we are addressing a policy violation). I started an RFC to give those involved at the Lists page a chance to weigh in. If all goes well, we'll all agree with your edits, you can restore the edits I reverted, and continue. Cheers. Jojalozzo 03:15, 3 November 2014 (UTC)
Other Orthogonal Decompositions
[edit]Really, an edit war. About the Circular polarization article. I think there are two important points alluded to here, first that the orthogonal Cartesian components do not need to be "horizontal" and "vertical". S and P polarizations are very useful, for instance. Second, that any polarization state can be described as the sum of a right and a left handed circular component. Maybe there is a better way to say it. I do think this is a good place to point it out, and not irrelevant. --AJim (talk) 03:33, 14 November 2014 (UTC)
- @AJim: Not in my user talk page please: Talk:Circular polarization#Other Orthogonal Decompositions. Fgnievinski (talk) 12:20, 14 November 2014 (UTC)
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In any case, thanks again! Brirush (talk) 00:32, 7 December 2014 (UTC)
Hello, Fgnievinski. I wanted to let you know that I’m proposing an article that you started, Solid Earth, for deletion because I don't think it meets our criteria for inclusion. If you don't want the article deleted:
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You can leave a note on my talk page if you have questions. —Swpbtalk 23:03, 7 December 2014 (UTC)
- @Swpb: After reading WP:NOT#DICT, I have to agree with your judgment. Should we treat Geosphere similarly? Thanks. Fgnievinski (talk) 00:03, 8 December 2014 (UTC)
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December 2014
[edit]Your recent editing history at Predatory open access publishing shows that you are currently engaged in an edit war. To resolve the content dispute, please do not revert or change the edits of others when you get reverted. Instead of reverting, please use the article's talk page to work toward making a version that represents consensus among editors. The best practice at this stage is to discuss, not edit-war. See BRD for how this is done. If discussions reach an impasse, you can then post a request for help at a relevant noticeboard or seek dispute resolution. In some cases, you may wish to request temporary page protection.
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Category:Members of the Open Access Scholarly Publishers Association
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[edit]Please do not add inappropriate external links to Wikipedia, as you did to Bentham Science Publishers. Wikipedia is not a collection of links, nor should it be used for advertising or promotion. Inappropriate links include, but are not limited to, links to personal websites, links to websites with which you are affiliated (whether as a link in article text, or a citation in an article), and links that attract visitors to a website or promote a product. See the external links guideline and spam guideline for further explanations. Because Wikipedia uses the nofollow attribute value, its external links are disregarded by most search engines. If you feel the link should be added to the page, please discuss it on the associated talk page rather than re-adding it. Thank you. Theroadislong (talk) 14:51, 8 January 2015 (UTC)
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Categories question
[edit]Hi, you have created several categories, but I find them a bit confusing. At a minimum, each of these cats needs an explanatory note so that people like me understand what they are supposed to contain. Let me try to explain what I do not understand. First, there's a category "Full text scholarly databases". One of the articles that you added to this is Dialog (online database). But you also created a subcategory "Full text scholarly online databases". Does the latter mean that there are full-text scholarly databases that are not online? And why is Dialog in the top cat and not in the lower cat? Then there is the category "Academic journal online publishing platforms". All these platforms will not only contain full-text of articles, but also archives of the journals that they publish. What then is the difference between an "Academic journal online publishing platform" and a "Full text scholarly online database"? The Handel Reference Database is categorized in "Full text scholarly databases", but, as far as I can see, is fully online. Why is the category "Academic journal online publishing platforms" categorized in "Bibliographic databases" (it is no such thing), "Digital libraries" (one could perhaps argue that it resembles a library, but a very limited one at best), "Online archives" (a publishing platform seems a very different beast from an archive), "Online databases" (perhaps "online archives" should be in "online databases", but platforms again seems to be a very different thing from a database), and "Academic journals" (platforms are not journals, but most likely contain one or more journals). I'd appreciate some explanation of all this. Thanks. --Randykitty (talk) 16:48, 10 January 2015 (UTC)
- Just discovered "Scholarly search engines" (that's the first time I see somebody referring to MEDLINE as a search engine...). What's the difference with a scholarly database? I take it that Google Scholar is not a database and could be called a "Scholarly search engines", but, say, SciELO seems to be a very different category. --Randykitty (talk) 16:59, 10 January 2015 (UTC)
- Hi Randykitty. Here's the rationale, part by part.Fgnievinski (talk) 20:55, 10 January 2015 (UTC)
First, Category:Full text databases already existed and contained well-known entries such as JSTOR and Astrophysics Data System. Reading the main article on Full text databases there was some confusion with Document-oriented databases (thus also Category:Document-oriented databases) so I put disamb hatnotes saying the former is more about the content while the latter is more about the software (as in the difference between databases and DBMS). Then I realized most most entries in Category:Full text databases were scholarly, which reflects the fact that that category had been created by a self-declared librarian years ago. Admitting the possibility of non-scholarly full text databases (e.g., patents full text database, enterprise full text database), I refrained from renaming the original cat and created a sub-category instead, followed by recategorization of entries such as Smithsonian Research Online to substitute Online databases and Full text databases for Full text scholarly online databases. The intermediary Category:Full text scholarly databases admits instances that are available only in CD (e.g., Bar Ilan Responsa Project) or internally to a given institution (CERN Document Server), in contrast to being not publicly available on the Internet (or by other similar means in the past). The fine granularity seemed to fit well with existing categories, e.g., Category:Online databases, Category:Academic publishing, etc. I've now put a hatnote in Category:Full text scholarly databases distinguishing its child and parent categories. Initially I equaled online with Internet-access, reason why Dialog was not considered online; now I've extended the scope of online to include similar past networks and recategorized accordingly. The Handel Reference Database miscategorization was a blunder. Fgnievinski (talk) 20:55, 10 January 2015 (UTC)
Second, I created Category:Academic journal online publishing platforms, to accommodate entries such as EServer.org ("an open access electronic publishing cooperative") and D-Scribe Digital Publishing, "an open access electronic publishing program". It already has hatnotes documenting its scope -- feel free to rewrite these hatnotes for clarity, as I fell like running around my tail if I try to rephrase myself. The publishing aspect is lacking in both Category:Full text scholarly online databases and Category:Bibliographic databases; e.g., if articles have been assigned a DOI, it will resolve to those publishing platforms. Compared to Category:Bibliographic databases and Category:Full text scholarly online databases, the latter can contain the bibliographic information (the "article metadata", if you will) of any article (print or online), while the former (e.g., PubMed Central) can harvest and host the full text of articles published elsewhere. That's why Category:Eprint archives and Category:Open-access archives are members of Category:Full text scholarly online databases and not members of Category:Academic journal online publishing platforms. Finally, this category could include commercial platforms, such as Safari PubFactory, if they ever have a WP article. One last caveat: I've mentioned in the hatnote that this cat is not about the underlying software, so now I've included membership in Category:Online services for clarification. Fgnievinski (talk) 20:55, 10 January 2015 (UTC)
Third, about related categories that are not parent nor a child of Category:Academic journal online publishing platforms, I've tried and followed this existing explanation in Bibliographic databases:
Many bibliographic databases evolve into digital libraries, providing the full-text of the indexed contents. Others converge with non-bibliographic scholarly databases to create more complete disciplinary search engine systems, such as Chemical Abstracts or Entrez.
3.b) Many academic articles were tagged as Category:Domain-specific search engines, so it seemed natural to sub-categorize them in Category:Scholarly search engines (I wrestled a bit with the title Category:Academic search engines but thought scholarly would better encompass the medical field as well); there are now several entries, including some well-known such as Google Scholar, which was unreachable through the academic publishing categorization tree before. The reason why Virtual Health Library and LILACS were tagged is because PubMed Central and MEDLINE were too, and there seems to be a one-to-one correspondence between the two Latin-American initiatives and their American counterparts. (MEDLINE was originally tagged Domain-specific search engines; I replaced with Category:Scholarly search engines.) If you think these four should not be tagged Scholarly search engines, I wouldn't insist otherwise. Scielo had been was mistagged.
3.b) I wasn't sure if Category:Bibliographic databases should include only dedicated bibliographic databases or also digital libraries and Category:Full text scholarly online databases that obviously include bibliographic records as well; in other words, is a bibliographic database a database of bibliographic records and nothing else?
3.c) Then there was Digital library, which seems a chimera of different things; in didn't dig too deep in their cat tree. Some Full text scholarly online databases are self-declared Category:Aggregation-based digital libraries but not all of them are, so I've included membership in the base Category:Digital libraries, as the block quote above seemd to imply that full-text content (not just metadata or bibliography) is required as part of the definition of digital libraries.
3.d) The reason why Category:Academic journal online publishing platforms is a member of Category:Full text scholarly online databases is because they offer "Full text scholarly online" content, although the nuance among "content", "database", and "archive" is lost (similar confusion persists in Content management and Information management, see also Data management). I'm not gonna fret over this, but what is the difference between, e.g., "Open access archives", "Open access respositories", "Open access (publishing) databases"? Fgnievinski (talk) 20:55, 10 January 2015 (UTC)
- I'm sorry, but I find this all highly confusing. I think you're going backwards about this. To get to a coherent categorization scheme, it is best to first define the characteristics that define the categories (in this case, for example, defining the difference between online publishing platforms and bibliographic databases, and so on). Once that has been done satisfactorily, a coherent categorization scheme usually follows very logically. Here it seems that you have started categorizing and now try to define things so that they fit the categories. --Randykitty (talk) 21:06, 10 January 2015 (UTC)
- Please give it some more thought; it took you 11 min to reply to an explanation that took me more than an hour to write. I've split up my answer in three blocks so that each one could be addressed separately. I stand by the categorization as it is perfectly defensible. If it is not immediately self-evident, it's okay for your to figuratively wrestle a bit with it, try and find individual miscategorizations (as you did above), then raise specific issues so that the tree can be refined one piece at a time. Remember WP is supposed to be collaborative. Thanks. Fgnievinski (talk) 21:23, 10 January 2015 (UTC)
- Yep, WP is supposed to be collaborative. However, the abvove is so muddled, that I really don't understand the subtleties that you are trying to introduce and that effectively makes it impossible to propose any improvements. I just see that you think that the Web of Knowledge is a search machine. really, I have no clue what you are doing. Sorry. --Randykitty (talk) 21:31, 12 January 2015 (UTC)
- "Web of Knowledge (formerly known as ISI Web of Knowledge) is an academic ... search service", thus a member of Category:Scholarly search engines. I'm only categorizing the entries in the List of academic databases and search engines (talking about muddled!). It's so simple: if it's abstract-only, it goes in Category:Bibliographic databases; if it's full-text, it's in Category:Full text scholarly online databases; if it's non-downloadable, it's in Category:Scholarly search engines. Like 1,2,3. Fgnievinski (talk) 22:30, 12 January 2015 (UTC)
- I just found Category:Patent search services; how about if Category:Scholarly search engines be renamed as Category:Scholarly search services (and likewise, List of academic databases and search services). Is "search service" any better than "search engine"? Fgnievinski (talk) 01:10, 13 January 2015 (UTC)
Every database or journal publishing platform that I know of has a search function. So are those all "search services"? --Randykitty (talk) 19:20, 15 January 2015 (UTC)
- I think such trivial cases should be excluded. I'm trying to make Google Scholar reachable through the Category:Academic publishing tree; it is clearly a member of Category:Scholarly search services. Admittedly this is inductive categorization, i.e., deriving the commonalities among members, instead of a deductive categorization, i.e., prescribing the properties then finding the members. Fgnievinski (talk) 22:43, 17 January 2015 (UTC)
Invitation to comment
[edit]Given your activity on the WP: Revert_only_when_necessary essay page, I'd invite your input on a recent edit of that essay that was, very ironically, instantly reverted. See the talk page [4] if you wish to participate.–GodBlessYou2 (talk) 18:51, 13 January 2015 (UTC)
Category talk
[edit]Hi, I just had a look at your recent contributions and see that you posted some notes asking for input on category talk pages. Almost nobody watches categories (I certainly don't), so it is unlikely that you will get much input. For things like this, it is better to post notes on the talk page of an appropriate wikiproject. Hope this helps. --Randykitty (talk) 19:31, 13 January 2015 (UTC)
- (tip of the hat) Fgnievinski (talk) 19:37, 13 January 2015 (UTC)
The Signpost: 14 January 2015
[edit]- WikiProject report: Articles for creation: the inside story
- News and notes: Erasmus Prize recognizes the global Wikipedia community
- Featured content: Citations are needed
- Traffic report: Wikipédia sommes Charlie
Hi, what's the purpose of this category, given that it only contains one single subcat? --Randykitty (talk) 20:46, 17 January 2015 (UTC)
- I should have renamed it sorry. I just nominated it for (speedy?) delete now. Thanks. Fgnievinski (talk) 21:21, 17 January 2015 (UTC)
The Signpost: 21 January 2015
[edit]- From the editor: Introducing your new editors-in-chief
- Anniversary: A decade of the Signpost
- News and notes: Annual report released; Wikimania; steward elections
- In the media: Johann Hari; bandishes and delicate flowers
- Featured content: Yachts, marmots, boat races, and a rocket engineer who attempted to birth a goddess
- Arbitration report: As one door closes, a (Gamer)Gate opens
Category:Scientific societies by country
[edit]Category:Scientific societies by country, which you created, has been nominated for possible deletion, merging, or renaming. If you would like to participate in the discussion, you are invited to add your comments at the category's entry on the Categories for discussion page. Thank you. Randykitty (talk) 09:22, 23 January 2015 (UTC)
Category:Elsevier academic journals associated with learned societies
[edit]Category:Elsevier academic journals associated with learned societies, which you created, has been nominated for possible deletion, merging, or renaming. If you would like to participate in the discussion, you are invited to add your comments at the category's entry on the Categories for discussion page. Thank you. Randykitty (talk) 14:13, 26 January 2015 (UTC)
Category:Online-only journals
[edit]Category:Online-only journals, which you created, has been nominated for possible deletion, merging, or renaming. If you would like to participate in the discussion, you are invited to add your comments at the category's entry on the Categories for discussion page. Thank you. Randykitty (talk) 13:46, 28 January 2015 (UTC)
The Signpost: 28 January 2015
[edit]- From the editor: An editorial board that includes you
- In the media: A murderous week for Wikipedia
- Traffic report: A sea of faces
Category:Law journals edited by students
[edit]Category:Law journals edited by students, which you created, has been nominated for possible deletion, merging, or renaming. If you would like to participate in the discussion, you are invited to add your comments at the category's entry on the Categories for discussion page. Thank you. Randykitty (talk) 10:38, 31 January 2015 (UTC)
Category:Journal series
[edit]Category:Journal series, which you created, has been nominated for possible deletion, merging, or renaming. If you would like to participate in the discussion, you are invited to add your comments at the category's entry on the Categories for discussion page. Thank you. Randykitty (talk) 10:57, 31 January 2015 (UTC)
ITN
[edit]Please visit the ITNC page regarding your nomination. Thanks 331dot (talk) 11:36, 4 February 2015 (UTC)
The Signpost: 04 February 2015
[edit]- Op-ed: Is Wikipedia for sale?
- In the media: Gamergate and Muhammad controversies continue
- Traffic report: The American Heartland
- Featured content: It's raining men!
- Arbitration report: Slamming shut the GamerGate
- WikiProject report: Dicing with death – on Wikipedia?
- Technology report: Security issue fixed; VisualEditor changes
- Gallery: Langston Hughes
WikiProject X Newsletter • Issue 1
[edit]Hi! Thank you for subscribing to the WikiProject X Newsletter. For our first issue...
Has WikiProject X changed the world yet? No.
We opened up shop last month and announced our existence to the world. Our first phase is the "research" phase, consisting mostly of reading and listening. We set up our landing page and started collecting stories. So far, 28 stories have been shared about WikiProjects, describing a variety of experiences across numerous WikiProjects. A recurring story involves a WikiProject that starts off strong but has trouble continuing to stay active. Most people describe using WikiProjects as a way to get feedback from other editors. Some quotes:
- "Working on requested articles, utilising the reliable sources section, and having an active WikiProject to ask questions in really helped me learn how to edit Wikipedia and looking back I don't know how long I would have stayed editing without that project." – Sam Walton on WikiProject Video Games
- "I believe that the main problem of the Wikiprojects is that they are complicated to use. There should be a a much simpler way to check what do do, what needs to be improved etc." – Tetra quark
- "In the late 2000s, WikiProject Film tried to emulate WP:MILHIST in having coordinators and elections. Unfortunately, this was not sustainable and ultimately fell apart." – Erik
Of course, these are just anecdotes. While they demonstrate what is possible, they do not necessarily explain what is typical. We will be using this information in conjunction with a quantitative analysis of WikiProjects, as documented on Meta. Particularly, we are interested in the measurement of WikiProject activity as it relates to overall editing in that WikiProject's subject area.
We also have 50 people and projects signed up for pilot testing, which is an excellent start! (An important caveat: one person volunteering a WikiProject does not mean the WikiProject as a whole is interested; just that there is at least one person, which is a start.)
While carrying out our research, we are documenting the problems with WikiProjects and our ideas for making WikiProjects better. Some ideas include better integration of existing tools into WikiProjects, recommendations of WikiProjects for people to join, and improved coordination with Articles for Creation. These are just ideas that may or may not make it to the design phase; we will see. We are also working with WikiProject Council to improve the directory of WikiProjects, with the goal of a reliable, self-updating WikiProject directory. Stay tuned! If you have any ideas, you are welcome to leave a note on our talk page.
That's all for now. Thank you for subscribing!
– Harej 17:21, 9 February 2015 (UTC)
Prime meridians
[edit]You have proposed to merge Prime meridian and Prime meridian (Greenwich) but have not started any discussion. Is this an oversight? Jc3s5h (talk) 14:23, 10 February 2015 (UTC)
"Military suicide" vs. "Suicide in the military"
[edit]Aren't these terms pretty similar? Displaying the actual name of the other article is probably the best way to deal with potential confusion here. --BDD (talk) 19:22, 11 February 2015 (UTC)
- The confusion is not apparent unless the similarly-named redirect is used, IMHO; a dissimilar title wouldn't need disambiguation. Fgnievinski (talk) 19:26, 11 February 2015 (UTC)
- Well, pretend you're a reader who's typed in "suicide in the military". If it takes you where you wanted, great. If not, "military suicide" isn't going to look much more promising, is it? If we assume there's such a reader who isn't happy with the current redirect, they're either looking for suicide attacks or something else. If they're looking for suicide attacks, we can make the navigational aid that much clearer. If they're looking for something else, *shrug*, they're kind of on their own at that point. --BDD (talk) 21:29, 11 February 2015 (UTC)
- I think we'll be both pleased with a new redirect: Military suicide attack. Fgnievinski (talk) 23:35, 11 February 2015 (UTC)
- Well, pretend you're a reader who's typed in "suicide in the military". If it takes you where you wanted, great. If not, "military suicide" isn't going to look much more promising, is it? If we assume there's such a reader who isn't happy with the current redirect, they're either looking for suicide attacks or something else. If they're looking for suicide attacks, we can make the navigational aid that much clearer. If they're looking for something else, *shrug*, they're kind of on their own at that point. --BDD (talk) 21:29, 11 February 2015 (UTC)
Bibliographic databases/indexes
[edit]Hi, I'm confused again. The respective cats tell us not to confuse bibliographic databases with bibliographic indexes, but for the life of me, I cannot fathom what the difference would be. The articles bibliographic database and bibliographic index are not very helpful here, either. I previously removed "database" from the Norwegian index article, thinking that a simple list of journals probably would be an index and not a database, but you reverted that. Can you enlighten me? Thanks. --Randykitty (talk) 23:00, 11 February 2015 (UTC)
- I'm puzzled too: I've started a similar discussion at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Academic Journals#National lists of approved journals, where I suggested such lists might go simply into Category:Bibliography. Part of the root problem is that Category:Bibliographic databases has become a chimera. The other day I made a proposal at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Libraries#Diffusing Category:Bibliographic databases based on Template:Infobox bibliographic database? that would highlight any miscategorizations. Maybe a real librarian can shed some light on these issues -- @BDD and DGG? Fgnievinski (talk) 23:34, 11 February 2015 (UTC)
The Signpost: 11 February 2015
[edit]- From the editors: We want to know what you think!
- In the media: Is Wikipedia eating itself?
- Featured content: A grizzly bear, Operation Mascot, Freedom Planet & Liberty Island, cosmic dust clouds, a cricket five-wicket list, more fine art, & a terrible, terrible opera...
- Traffic report: Bowled over
- WikiProject report: Brand new WikiProjects profiled
- Gallery: Feel the love
The Signpost: 18 February 2015
[edit]- In the media: Students' use and perception of Wikipedia
- Special report: Revision scoring as a service
- Gallery: Darwin Day
- Traffic report: February is for lovers
- Featured content: A load of bull-sized breakfast behind the restaurant, Koi feeding, a moray eel, Spaghetti Nebula and other fishy, fishy fish
- Arbitration report: We've built the nuclear reactor; now what colour should we paint the bikeshed?
The Signpost: 25 February 2015
[edit]- News and notes: Questions raised over WMF partnership with research firm
- In the media: WikiGnomes and Bigfoot
- Gallery: Far from home
- Traffic report: Fifty Shades of... self-denial?
- Recent research: Gender bias, SOPA blackout, and a student assignment that backfired
- WikiProject report: Be prepared... Scouts in the spotlight
The Signpost: 25 February 2015
[edit]- News and notes: Questions raised over WMF partnership with research firm
- In the media: WikiGnomes and Bigfoot
- Gallery: Far from home
- Traffic report: Fifty Shades of... self-denial?
- Recent research: Gender bias, SOPA blackout, and a student assignment that backfired
- WikiProject report: Be prepared... Scouts in the spotlight
The Signpost: 04 March 2015
[edit]- From the editor: A sign of the times: the Signpost revamps its internal structure to make contributing easier
- Traffic report: Attack of the movies
- Arbitration report: Bradspeaks—impact, regrets, and advice; current cases hinge on sex, religion, and ... infoboxes
- Interview: Meet a paid editor
- Featured content: Ploughing fields and trading horses with Rosa Bonheur
- Technology report: Bugs, Repairs, and Internal Operational News
The Signpost: 11 March 2015
[edit]- Special report: An advance look at the WMF's fundraising survey
- In the media: Gamergate; a Wiki hoax; Kanye West
- Traffic report: Wikipedia: handing knowledge to the world, one prank at a time
- Featured content: Here they come, the couple plighted –
- Op-ed: Why the Core Contest matters
WikiProject X Newsletter • Issue 2
[edit]For this month's issue...
Making sense of a lot of data.
Work on our prototype will begin imminently. In the meantime, we have to understand what exactly we're working with. To this end, we generated a list of 71 WikiProjects, based on those brought up on our Stories page and those who had signed up for pilot testing. For those projects where people told stories, we coded statements within those stories to figure out what trends there were in these stories. This approach allowed us to figure out what Wikipedians thought of WikiProjects in a very organic way, with very little by way of a structure. (Compare this to a structured interview, where specific questions are asked and answered.) This analysis was done on 29 stories. Codes were generally classified as "benefits" (positive contributions made by a WikiProject to the editing experience) and "obstacles" (issues posed by WikiProjects, broadly speaking). Codes were generated as I went along, ensuring that codes were as close to the original data as possible. Duplicate appearances of a code for a given WikiProject were removed.
We found 52 "benefit" statements encoded and 34 "obstacle" statements. The most common benefit statement referring to the project's active discussion and participation, followed by statements referring to a project's capacity to guide editor activity, while the most common obstacles made reference to low participation and significant burdens on the part of the project maintainers and leaders. This gives us a sense of WikiProjects' big strength: they bring people together, and can be frustrating to editors when they fail to do so. Meanwhile, it is indeed very difficult to bring editors together on a common interest; in the absence of a highly motivated core of organizers, the technical infrastructure simply isn't there.
We wanted to pair this qualitative study with quantitative analysis of a WikiProject and its "universe" of pages, discussions, templates, and categories. To this end I wrote a script called ProjAnalysis which will, for a given WikiProject page (e.g. Wikipedia:WikiProject Star Trek) and WikiProject talk-page tag (e.g. Template:WikiProject Star Trek), will give you a list of usernames of people who edited within the WikiProject's space (the project page itself, its talk page, and subpages), and within the WikiProject's scope (the pages tagged by that WikiProject, excluding the WikiProject space pages). The output is an exhaustive list of usernames. We ran the script to analyze our test batch of WikiProjects for edits between March 1, 2014 and February 28, 2015, and we subjected them to further analysis to only include those who made 10+ edits to pages in the projects' scope, those who made 4+ edits to the projects' space, and those who made 10+ edits to pages in scope but not 4+ edits to pages in the projects' space. This latter metric gives us an idea of who is active in a certain subject area of Wikipedia, yet who isn't actively engaging on the WikiProject's pages. This information will help us prioritize WikiProjects for pilot testing, and the ProjAnalysis script in general may have future life as an application that can be used by Wikipedians to learn about who is in their community.
Complementing the above two studies are a design analysis, which summarizes the structure of the different WikiProject spaces in our test batch, and the comprehensive census of bots and tools used to maintain WikiProjects, which will be finished soon. With all of this information, we will have a game plan in place! We hope to begin working with specific WikiProjects soon.
As a couple of asides...
- Database Reports has existed for several years on Wikipedia to the satisfaction of many, but many of the reports stopped running when the Toolserver was shut off in 2014. However, there is good news: the weekly New WikiProjects and WikiProjects by Changes reports are back, with potential future reports in the future.
- WikiProject X has an outpost on Wikidata! Check it out. It's not widely publicized, but we are interested in using Wikidata as a potential repository for metadata about WikiProjects, especially for WikiProjects that exist on multiple Wikimedia projects and language editions.
That's all for now. Thank you for subscribing! If you have any questions or comments, please share them with us.
Harej (talk) 01:44, 21 March 2015 (UTC)
The Signpost: 18 March 2015
[edit]- From the editor: A salute to Pine
- Featured content: A woman who loved kings
- Traffic report: It's not cricket
.
The Signpost – Volume 11, Issue 12 – 25 March 2015
[edit]- News and notes: Wikimedia Foundation adopts open-access research policy
- Featured content: A carnival of animals, a river of dung, a wasteland of uncles, and some people with attitude
- Special report: Wikimedia Commons Picture of the Year 2014
- Traffic report: Oddly familiar
- Recent research: Most important people; respiratory reliability; academic attitudes
The Signpost, 1 April 2015
[edit]- In the media: Wiki-PR duo bulldoze a piñata store; Wifione arbitration case; French parliamentary plagiarism
- Featured content: Stop Press. Marie Celeste Mystery Solved. Crew Found Hiding In Wardrobe.
- Traffic report: All over the place
- Special report: Pictures of the Year 2015
The Signpost: 01 April 2015
[edit]- In the media: Wiki-PR duo bulldoze a piñata store; Wifione arbitration case; French parliamentary plagiarism
- Featured content: Stop Press. Marie Celeste Mystery Solved. Crew Found Hiding In Wardrobe.
- Traffic report: All over the place
- Special report: Pictures of the Year 2015
Category:Wiley-Blackwell academic journals associated with learned societies
[edit]Category:Wiley-Blackwell academic journals associated with learned societies, which you created, has been nominated for possible deletion, merging, or renaming. If you would like to participate in the discussion, you are invited to add your comments at the category's entry on the Categories for discussion page. Thank you. Randykitty (talk) 17:24, 5 April 2015 (UTC)
The Signpost: 08 April 2015
[edit]- Traffic report: Resurrection week
- Featured content: Partisan arrangements, dodgy dollars, a mysterious union of strings, and a hole that became a monument
- WikiProject report: WikiProject Christianity
- Arbitration report: New Functionary appointments
- Technology report: Bugs, Repairs, and Internal Operational News
The Signpost: 08 April 2015
[edit]- Traffic report: Resurrection week
- Featured content: Partisan arrangements, dodgy dollars, a mysterious union of strings, and a hole that became a monument
- WikiProject report: WikiProject Christianity
- Arbitration report: New Functionary appointments
- Technology report: Bugs, Repairs, and Internal Operational News
The Signpost: 15 April 2015
[edit]- Traffic report: Furious domination
WikiProject X Newsletter • Issue 3
[edit]Greetings! For this month's issue...
We have demos!
After a lengthy research and design process, we decided for WikiProject X to focus on two things:
- A WikiProject workflow that focuses on action items: discussions you can participate in and tasks you can perform to improve the encyclopedia; and
- An automatically updating WikiProject directory that gives you lists of users participating in the WikiProject and editing in that subject area.
We have a live demonstration of the new WikiProject workflow at WikiProject Women in Technology, a brand new WikiProject that was set up as an adjunct to a related edit-a-thon in Washington, DC. The goal is to surface action items for editors, and we intend on doing that through automatically updated working lists. We are looking into using SuggestBot to generate lists of outstanding tasks, and we are looking into additional options for automatic worklist generation. This takes the burden off of WikiProject editors to generate these worklists, though there is also a "requests" section for Wikipedians to make individual requests. (As of writing, these automated lists are not yet live, so you will see a blank space under "edit articles" on the demo WikiProject. Sorry about that!) I invite you to check out the WikiProject and leave feedback on WikiProject X's talk page.
Once the demo is sufficiently developed, we will be working on a limited deployment on our pilot WikiProjects. We have selected five for the first round of testing based on the highest potential for impact and will scale up from there.
While a re-designed WikiProject experience is much needed, that alone isn't enough. A WikiProject isn't any good if people have no way of discovering it. This is why we are also developing an automatically updated WikiProject directory. This directory will surface project-related metrics, including a count of active WikiProject participants and of active editors in that project's subject area. The purpose of these metrics is to highlight how active the WikiProject is at the given point of time, but also to highlight that project's potential for success. The directory is not yet live but there is a demonstration featuring a sampling of WikiProjects.
Each directory entry will link to a WikiProject description page which automatically list the active WikiProject participants and subject-area article editors. This allows Wikipedians to find each other based on the areas they are interested in, and this information can be used to revive a WikiProject, start a new one, or even for some other purpose. These description pages are not online yet, but they will use this template, if you want to get a feel of what they will look like.
We need volunteers!
WikiProject X is a huge undertaking, and we need volunteers to support our efforts, including testers and coders. Check out our volunteer portal and see what you can do to help us!
As an aside...
Wouldn't it be cool if lists of requested articles could not only be integrated directly with WikiProjects, but also shared between WikiProjects? Well, we got the crazy idea of having experimental software feature Flow deployed (on a totally experimental basis) on the new Article Request Workshop, which seeks to be a place where editors can "workshop" article ideas before they get created. It uses Flow because Flow allows, essentially, section-level categorization, and in the future will allow "sections" (known as "topics" within Flow) to be included across different pages. What this means is that you have a recommendation for a new article tagged by multiple WikiProjects, allowing for the recommendation to appear on lists for each WikiProject. This will facilitate inter-WikiProject collaboration and will help to reduce duplicated work. The Article Request Workshop is not entirely ready yet due to some bugs with Flow, but we hope to integrate it into our pilot WikiProjects at some point.
Harej (talk) 00:57, 19 April 2015 (UTC)
The Signpost: 22 April 2015
[edit]- In the media: UK political editing; hoaxes; net neutrality
- Featured content: Vanguard on guard
- Traffic report: A harvest of couch potatoes
- Gallery: The bitter end
The Signpost: 29 April 2015
[edit]- Featured content: Another day, another dollar
- Traffic report: Bruce, Nessie, and genocide
- Recent research: Military history, cricket, and Australia targeted in Wikipedia articles' popularity vs. quality; how copyright damages economy
- Technology report: VisualEditor and MediaWiki updates
Template:Infobox magnetosphere
[edit]Hi, I have seen a lot of action of you in relation to Field strength. It is not a field where I am comfortable, so I hope you can help solving the link to a disambiguation page in the Template:Infobox magnetosphere]]. Indeed, it is the link to Field strength there that is the problem. Are you able to solve it and let it point to the right article? The Banner talk 20:37, 3 May 2015 (UTC)
- I've split that page so that dab doesn't apply. Fgnievinski (talk) 20:52, 3 May 2015 (UTC)
The Signpost: 06 May 2015
[edit]- News and notes: "Inspire" grant-making campaign concludes, grantees announced
- Featured content: The amorous android and the horsebreeder; WikiCup round two concludes
- Special report: FDC candidates respond to key issues
- Traffic report: The grim ship reality
By the way...
[edit]In this edit notice, I can tell you that when I replaced all of the transclusions of Template:Merge sections back in January 2015, I ensured that "section=yes" was added to every single transclusion I replaced. If there are examples in sections that now have the word "article" in them, it's user error that happened after January 2015 when placing the template and not reading the documentation. Steel1943 (talk) 17:01, 10 May 2015 (UTC)
Nomination for deletion of Template:Merge section from
[edit]Template:Merge section from has been nominated for deletion. You are invited to comment on the discussion at the template's entry on the Templates for discussion page. Steel1943 (talk) 23:30, 10 May 2015 (UTC)
The Signpost: 13 May 2015
[edit]- Foundation elections: Board candidates share their views with the Signpost
- Traffic report: Round Two
- In the media: Grant Shapps story continues
- Featured content: Four first-time featured article writers lead the way
A cup of coffee for you!
[edit]Thanks for your interest in open access topics. Blue Rasberry (talk) 13:41, 20 May 2015 (UTC) |
The Signpost: 20 May 2015
[edit]- From the editor: Your voice is needed: strategic voting in the WMF election
- Traffic report: Inner Core
- News and notes: A dark side of comedy: the Wikipedia volunteers cleaning up behind John Oliver's fowl jokes
- Featured content: Puppets, fungi, and waterfalls
- In the media: Jimmy Wales accepts Dan David Prize
- WikiProject report: Cell-ebrating Molecular Biology
- Arbitration report: Editor conduct the subject of multiple cases
The Signpost: 27 May 2015
[edit]- News and notes: WMF releases quarterly reports, annual plans
- Discussion report: A relic from the past that needs to be updated
- Featured content: When music was confined to a ribbon of rust
- Recent research: Drug articles accurate and largely complete; women "slightly overrepresented"; talking like an admin
- Traffic report: Summer, summer, summertime
- Technology report: MediaWiki blows up printers
The Signpost: 03 June 2015
[edit]- News and notes: Three new community-elected trustees announced, incumbents out
- Discussion report: The deprecation of Persondata; RfA – A broken process; Complaints from users on Swedish Wikipedia
- Featured content: It's not over till the fat man sings
- Technology report: Things are getting SPDYier
- Special report: Towards "Health Information for All": Medical content on Wikipedia received 6.5 billion page views in 2013
- Traffic report: A rather ordinary week
The Signpost: 10 June 2015
[edit]- News and notes: Chapter financial trends analyzed, news in brief
- Traffic report: Two households, both alike in dignity
- Featured content: Just the bear facts, ma'am
- Technology report: Wikimedia sites are going HTTPS only
Meh
[edit]I think your "solution" on Seamount is a solution to the wrong problem. See my reasoning here. ResMar 03:32, 15 June 2015 (UTC)
- @Resident Mario: I read your comments but I'm not sure what action you're proposing now. I tried a change here: [5]. Is it in the right or wrong direction? Thanks. Fgnievinski (talk) 03:42, 15 June 2015 (UTC)
- Hmm. Yes, that is better, because I am not a fan of having more than one redirection template: one ought to be enough. I am not sure what your reasoning is for adding the additional links: there is an organizational problem in this topic, but...this new article (extremely short!) doesn't address the issue. I'm not sure what the best way to address the difference between "hotspots" and "chains" and between "seamounts" and "underwater volcanoes" would be, really; the literature is unclear and switches around often, as does Wikipedia. ResMar 03:49, 15 June 2015 (UTC)
WikiProject X Newsletter • Issue 4
[edit]Hello friends! We have been hard at work these past two months. For this report:
For the first time, we are happy to bring you an exhaustive, comprehensive WikiProject Directory. This directory endeavors to list every single WikiProject on the English Wikipedia, including those that don't participate in article assessment. In constructing the broadest possible definition, we have come up with a list of approximately 2,600 WikiProjects. The directory tracks activity statistics on the WikiProject's pages, and, for where it's available, statistics on the number of articles tracked by the WikiProject and the number of editors active on those articles. Complementing the directory are description pages for each project, listing usernames of people active on the WikiProject pages and the articles in the WikiProject's scope. This will help Wikipedians interested in a subject find each other, whether to seek feedback on an article or to revive an old project. (There is an opt-out option.) We have also come up with listings of related WikiProjects, listing the ten most relevant WikiProjects based on what articles they have in common. We would like to promote WikiProjects as interconnected systems, rather than isolated silos.
A tremendous amount of work went into preparing this directory. WikiProjects do not consistently categorize their pages, meaning we had to develop our own index to match WikiProjects with the articles in their scope. We also had to make some adjustments to how WikiProjects were categorized; indeed, I personally have racked up a few hundred edits re-categorizing WikiProjects. There remains more work to be done to make the WikiProject directory truly useful. In the meantime, take a look and feel free to leave feedback at the WikiProject X talk page.
What have we been working on?
- A new design template—This has been in the works for a while, of course. But our goal is to design something that is useful and cleanly presented on all browsers and at all screen resolutions while working within the confines of what MediaWiki has to offer. Additionally, we are working on designs for the sub-components featured on the main project page.
- A new WikiProject talk page banner in Lua—Work has begun on implementing the WikiProject banner in Lua. The goal is to create a banner template that can be usable by any WikiProject in lieu of having its own template. Work has slowed down for now to focus on higher priority items, but we are interested in your thoughts on how we could go about creating a more useful project banner. We have a draft module on Test Wikipedia, with a demonstration.
- New discussion reports—We have over 4.8 million articles on the English Wikipedia, and almost as many talk pages as well. But what happens when someone posts on a talk page? What if no one is watching that talk page? We are currently testing out a system for an automatically-updating new discussions list, like RFC for WikiProjects. We currently have five test pages up for the WikiProjects on cannabis, cognitive science, evolutionary biology, and Ghana.
- SuggestBot for WikiProjects—We have asked the maintainer of SuggestBot to make some minor adjustments to SuggestBot that will allow it to post regular reports to those WikiProjects that ask for them. Stay tuned!
- Semi-automated article assessment—Using the new revision scoring service and another system currently under development, WikiProjects will be getting a new tool to facilitate the article assessment process by providing article quality/importance predictions for articles yet to be assessed. Aside from helping WikiProjects get through their backlogs, the goal is to help WikiProjects with collecting metrics and triaging their work. Semi-automation of this process will help achieve consistent results and keep the process running smoothly, as automation does on other parts of Wikipedia.
Want us to work on any other tools? Interested in volunteering? Leave a note on our talk page.
The database report which lists WikiProjects according to the number of watchers (i.e., people that have the project on their watchlist), is back! The report stopped being updated a year ago, following the deactivation of the Toolserver, but a replacement report has been generated.
Until next time,
Harej (talk) 22:20, 17 June 2015 (UTC)
Merger discussion for Radar imaging
[edit]An article that you have been involved in editing, Radar imaging , has been proposed for merging with another article. If you are interested, please participate in the merger discussion. Thank you. Pierre cb (talk) 12:46, 19 June 2015 (UTC)
The Signpost: 17 June 2015
[edit]- Arbitration report: An election has consequences
- News and notes: Labs outage kills tools, self; news in brief
- Featured content: Great Dane hits 150
- Discussion report: A quick way of becoming an admin
- WikiProject report: Western Australia speaks – we are back
Moving categories
[edit]Hi, I noticed that you moved the "science magazines" cat to "popular science magazines". However, that is not proper procedure. While creating cats can be done without any prior discussion being needed, they cannot be renamed/moved without a listing at WP:CfD. Hope this helps. --Randykitty (talk) 08:47, 24 June 2015 (UTC)
- @Randykitty: Thanks for the note; I've started a related discussion at Wikipedia:Categories for discussion/Log/2015 June 24#Category:Science and technology magazines. Fgnievinski (talk) 17:28, 24 June 2015 (UTC)
The Signpost: 24 June 2015
[edit]- From the editor: The Signpost tagging initiative
- Featured content: One eye when begun, two when it's done
- Technology report: 2015 MediaWiki architecture focus and Multimedia roadmap announced
- News and notes: Board of Trustees propose bylaw amendments
- Arbitration report: Politics by other means: The American politics 2 arbitration
Hi, please have a look at the article on SciELO. It is not a publisher, but a platform providing access to journals, much like JSTOR, AJOL, and ScienceDirect. I think it is therefore incorrect to categorize journals published through this platform as "SciELO academic journals" (and put that category under Category:Academic journals published by non-profit publishers). --Randykitty (talk) 15:18, 3 July 2015 (UTC)
- @Randykitty: I think the confusion stems from Scielo being both a publishing platform and a cooperative open access publisher, very much like Category:Open Humanities Press academic journals. In contrast, ScienceDirect is only the publishing platform of Elsevier. Cooperative publishers fulfill the same roles as traditional publishers, as when we say "published by X on behalf of Y"; in fact, often times a journal migrates from being published by Scielo to a commercial entity. Compared to JSTOR, the distinguishing feature is when you type a DOI, that it resolves to a version of record deposited at Scielo; whereas with JSTOR, the ownership of a DOI lies with the actual publisher or can be transferred back to it [6], which is simply not a separate entity in the case of Scielo. As for AJOL and BanglaJOL, although I'd like to see their journals present in Wikipedia, they do seem to just host previously published journals [7], contrary to Scielo. Fgnievinski (talk) 17:59, 3 July 2015 (UTC)
Same goes for Category:HighWire academic journals. --Randykitty (talk) 15:28, 3 July 2015 (UTC)
- There are two usage cases for HighWire, based on its customer type: learned societies or traditional publisher (which may be serving a learned society, in their turn). So I included only journals published directly by HighWire Press, and avoided including journals that only use the HighWire Platform indirectly, in which case the categorization is made through that traditional publisher. If the distinction between these two cases is too subtle, I can let go of Category:HighWire academic journals. Fgnievinski (talk) 17:59, 3 July 2015 (UTC)
- And if we decide to go ahead with the deletion of this category, we should make HighWire a member of Category:Information technology companies and Category:Academic publishing instead of the current Category:Academic publishing companies. Fgnievinski (talk) 18:48, 3 July 2015 (UTC)
- Sorry, but there are several incorrect things here. ScienceDirect is used mostly for Elsevier journals, but they also host some other publisher's journals. As for Scielo and Highwire, those journals that I saw where you put those cats in, had other publishers listed in their infoboxes (basically being categorized under two different publishers). Far as I can see, Scielo does not publish a single journal on its own, same for Highwire. I think you are making things way too complicated, creating cats that are only very subtly different from each other, with the subtleties mostly only being clear to yourself. In any case, I just wanted to bring this to your attention. I'm getting too tired of these continuous squabbles about incorrect cats and uninformed categorizations to care much any more. Do whatever you like. I'm not watchlisting any of this, so no need to answer. --Randykitty (talk) 19:05, 3 July 2015 (UTC)
- @Randykitty: It's frustrating when the world doesn't agree with you, isn't? Fgnievinski (talk) 19:14, 3 July 2015 (UTC)
The Signpost: 01 July 2015
[edit]- News and notes: Training the Trainers; VP of Engineering leaves WMF
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Category:Popular scholarship magazines
[edit]Category:Popular scholarship magazines, which you created, has been nominated for possible deletion, merging, or renaming. If you would like to participate in the discussion, you are invited to add your comments at the category's entry on the Categories for discussion page. Thank you. Randykitty (talk) 09:09, 4 July 2015 (UTC)
Category:Project MUSE
[edit]Category:Project MUSE, which you created, has been nominated for possible deletion, merging, or renaming. If you would like to participate in the discussion, you are invited to add your comments at the category's entry on the Categories for discussion page. Thank you. Randykitty (talk) 09:30, 4 July 2015 (UTC)
Category:SciELO academic journals
[edit]Category:SciELO academic journals, which you created, has been nominated for possible deletion, merging, or renaming. If you would like to participate in the discussion, you are invited to add your comments at the category's entry on the Categories for discussion page. Thank you. Randykitty (talk) 11:06, 6 July 2015 (UTC)
The Signpost: 08 July 2015
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What did you have in mind? Some of the entries, although called "rate"s, are really ratios or percentages. You need to provide a definition of the category, or I will request deletion. — Arthur Rubin (talk) 06:33, 21 July 2015 (UTC)
- Definition as per category main page: Rate (mathematics). Fgnievinski (talk) 06:35, 21 July 2015 (UTC)
The Signpost: 22 July 2015
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Speedy deletion nomination of Dilution ratio
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Wikidata weekly summary #168
[edit]- Discussions
- Successful request for adminship: Nikki
- Open request for oversightership: Sjoerddebruin
- Closed request for comments: Administrative divisions and populated places, Given names and surnames
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- Continued migrating away from an older serializer to the DataModel Serialization component.
- Released Wikibase DataModel Serialization 1.7.0
- Depreacting the parameter ungroupedlist in the api modules GetClaims and GetEntities
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The Signpost: 29 July 2015
[edit]- News and notes: BARC de-adminship proposal; Wikimania recordings debate
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Wikidata weekly summary #169
[edit]- Discussions
- Open requests for Oversight: Sjoerddebruin
- Enable Flow on Wikidata?
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- Early version of a reconcile API for Wikidata by Magnus
- PagePile: a new tool by Magnus
- Mix-n-Match got a number of new catalogs and now shows a thin red line in front of a catalog that does not yet have a property on Wikidata
- 1.700 biographical items without gender, but with image. Go go go!
- Interested in art movements? Check out this
- Did you know?
- Development
- Minor fixes to property edit mode
- Some fixes for the cucumber test errors
- Released Wikibase DataModel 4.0
- Released Wikibase DataModel Services 1.0
- Continued work to migrate away from old serializers in Wikibase Lib to those in WikibaseDataModelSerialization.
- Working on scripts for importing entities from another Wikibase instance (e.g. Wikidata), so that development instances can have some sample data.
- Fixed the counting of references
- Changed style of the Entitytermsview inputs
- Entity Selector displays alias in brackets behind label
- Monthly Tasks
- Hack on one of these.
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The Signpost: 05 August 2015
[edit]- Op-ed: Je ne suis pas Google
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Wikidata weekly summary #170
[edit]- Discussions
- Successful request for oversight rights: Sjoerddebruin
- Events/Blogs/Press
- Wikimedia UK is organizing a Wikidata training session. You can sign up here.
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- Talk pages on Wikidata can now be converted to use Flow. You can request migrating your talk page at d:Wikidata:Flow.
- Mix-n-Match got a bunch of new catalogs for you to match up with Wikidata. Currently matching is happening at about 500 items per day. Pretty sweet :)
- @happybirthdayauthors is a new Twitter account posting reading suggestions based on Wikidata data.
- Arbitrary access is rolling out to a large number of wikis over the next two weeks.
- Duplicity can help you match up unlinked Wikipedia articles to a Wikidata item.
- Did you know?
- Development
- Made some small changes to the style of the edit warning and sitelinks so they are easier to notice and understand
- Added error messages for Special:GoToLinkedPage and Special:ItemByTitle so you get a useful message in case no result is found
- The Entity Selector now displays alias in brackets behind label
- The number of entities loaded via the {{#property:…}} parser function and via Lua will be reported in the “Parser profiling data” (which can be found below a page preview or within the Html of a page)
- Prepared for next rounds of arbitrary access rollout
- Investigated growing lag of dispatching of changes to Wikipedia and co. We'll need to investigate further and change things so the lag between an edit on Wikidata and it being send to the Wikipedias and other projects is not too high.
- Added the property ID to Special:ListProperties
- Moved two extensions (Wikidata.org and WikimediaBadges) from Github to Gerrit. More will follow.
- We'd like to drop a database table. Discussion is ongoing.
- Monthly Tasks
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Re predatory duplcated publcations
[edit]Re this edit: I know of at least one instance where a supposedly respectable non-open-source journal (published by Elsevier) reprinted previously published journal papers without obtaining permission from their authors. —David Eppstein (talk) 04:13, 12 August 2015 (UTC)
- That's correct, I've covered it in Elsevier#Sponsored journals; too bad the WP article is restricted to OA predatory practices. fgnievinski (talk) 04:16, 12 August 2015 (UTC)
Bad Faith
[edit]Please be aware that it is WP:BADFAITH to claim to be reverting another users edit as you did here when actually you are only adding extra content of your own. You deliberately added additional content in your previous edit to make it look as though you were removing content that I had added, the only content you removed was your own. Please self-revert your edits with an honest edit description (you can add the disputed title template back onto the page in another separate edit afterwards). If you do not self-revert I will take this further. Ebonelm (talk) 09:29, 12 August 2015 (UTC)
- I removed my previous additions by mistake, sorry. fgnievinski (talk) 13:45, 12 August 2015 (UTC)
The Signpost: 12 August 2015
[edit]- News and notes: Superprotect, one year later; a contentious RfA
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GPS
[edit]Thanks for bringing this to WP:AN. I can't say I'm completely happy with the outcome, but at least we can forge ahead now. Kendall-K1 (talk) 22:47, 15 August 2015 (UTC)
- We still need formal closure from an uninvolved admin; I've restored the automatically archived discussion. fgnievinski (talk) 00:24, 16 August 2015 (UTC)
CfD on journals by country
[edit]Hi, I don't think it is a good idea to include all kinds of discussion about "journals associated with" etc in that discussion, or about what to include in the infobox, in this CfD, because it doesn't belong there. That discussion should be about why we should or should not have "journals by country" cats. The more extraneous discussion we include in that discussion, the larger the probability that the closing admin is not going to wade through all that stuff any more and just closes it "no consensus". I think that up till a few days ago, we were actually making a good case for deleting these cats, but now we have digressed so much that things start to become too muddy. As for "journals associated with learned societies": categories are supposed to be about defining characteristics. I agree that an association is usually easy to verify (much more than that darned "country thing"). However, so is the color of a journal's cover and we don't categorize journals by cover color because that is not a defining characteristic. Similarly for these associations. Many journals that are the "official" journal of one or the other society are (partially) owned by a society and there this may be a defining characteristic, because the society names the editor-in-chief, for example, or decides whether the journal will become OA or not, etc. However, I know of many journals where being an "official" journal of some society is basically a marketing thing: members may get a lower subscription rate (so the publisher expands their subscription base and the society provides a service to its members), but the society has absolutely no influence on anything related to the journal. In the latter case, being "associated with" is absolutely not defining. The problem is, that this is often very difficult to verify. One has to have intimate knowledge of the society and/or the journal in order to know what exactly is going on and nothing of that is usually ever discussed in anything, least of all a reliable source. So "associated with" cats suggest something that may or may not be of relevance for the journal. Finally, categories are supposed to help readers in navigation, that is, finding content they are looking for. I don't think this "associated with" cat is very useful for that. But I agree that this goes for several journal-related cats: who cares which journals are quarterly and such, sure for one particular journal that is important (which is why we mention it in the article and infobox) but as a group? Anyway, I don't intend to start a discussion here, too. I just would like to get those "country cats" whacked and I think that by digressing from the core subject of the CfD, we are making that less likely to happen. --Randykitty (talk) 09:08, 16 August 2015 (UTC)
- Thanks for weighing in. I think we can agree to disagree. I've responded to your main contention in the CfD page. We have to throw a bone to folks proposing journal-by-country categorizations. And we can't predict how the reader will browse content and what they will find interesting; our job is to categorize any traits in common shared by several journals. fgnievinski (talk) 13:54, 16 August 2015 (UTC)
Hello, Fgnievinski. I wanted to let you know that I’m proposing an article that you started, Repetitions per second, for deletion because I don't think it meets our criteria for inclusion. If you don't want the article deleted:
- edit the page
- remove the text that looks like this:
{{proposed deletion/dated...}}
- save the page
Also, be sure to explain why you think the article should be kept in your edit summary or on the article's talk page. If you don't do so, it may be deleted later anyway.
You can leave a note on my talk page if you have questions. Nrwairport (talk) 17:09, 16 August 2015 (UTC)
Wikidata weekly summary #171
[edit]- Discussions
- Events/Blogs/Press
- cooperation between free content projects
- A case is made to concentrate our quality efforts on the differences between Wikidata and other sources
- Ongoing: Several team members are attending the Chaos Communication Camp.
- Upcoming: SmartDataConference
- A Comparative Survey of DBpedia, Freebase, OpenCyc, Wikidata, and YAGO
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- Wikidata needs your vote! It only takes a minute.
- WikiProject Sum of all Paintings reached the milestone of 100.000 paintings. Congrats!
- Arbitrary access is now available on another ~250 Wikipedias].
- See d:Wikidata talk:Arbitrary access#Use cases: testing modules and templates for two general use cases for arbitrary access on Wikipedia's regression testing of Wikidata-related modules and templates and testing infoboxes with Wikidata content.
- List of articles on English Wikipedia without a Wikidata item (also works for other projects)
- You have a bunch of names etc. and want to find Wikidata items with those labels/aliases? Try relabel!
- SourcererBot is adding lots of references to existing statements on several thousand items.
- Mix-n-Match has new catalogs including the National Library of Australia.
- Deaths at Wikipedia are a series of reports comparing items at Wikidata with death-by-year-categories of Wikipedia. For the years since 2000, only about 15% of items at Wikidata lack d:Property:P570 (date of death).
- 93% of items about people have a gender set now.
- Want to make both Wikidata and Inventaire better? You can help by finding those books' authors.
- Did you know?
- Development
- Rolled out arbitrary access to about 250 Wikipedias including German, French and Japanese. More to come in a few days.
- Worked more on quantities. Looks like we'll have it on a demo system for you to try a first version within the next two weeks.
- Bene* is joining us for a month as an intern. Welcome!
- References are now hidden while loading the page, speeding up page load time
- First commit to the ArticlePlaceholder extension
- Expensive parser functions now count each entity only once
- Released a new version of the DataModelServices component and started using it
- Started working on phasing out the wb_entity_per_page table. It will be kept around and updated for some time to allow tool owners to migrate.
- The Wikibase code base now fullfills all of MediaWiki’s PHPCS coding standards
- Added property IDs to Special:ListProperties
- Did a lot of bug triage on Phabricator
- Monthly Tasks
- Hack on one of these.
- Help develop the next summary here!
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Merger discussion for History (journal)
[edit]An article that you have been involved in editing—History (journal) —has been proposed for merging with another article. If you are interested, please participate in the merger discussion. Thank you. Fortuna Imperatrix Mundi 15:03, 20 August 2015 (UTC)
The Signpost: 19 August 2015
[edit]- Travelogue: Seeing is believing
- Traffic report: Straight Outta Connecticut
- Technology report: Tech news in brief
Better explanation - I wasn't just messing with you
[edit]Hi, I owed you a better explanation of why I reverted your edit on Cubic Hermite spline, since I know how annoying it can be to have somebody come from nowhere to change an article you're following. I posted a general reference. Here is a better reference: WP:FNNR. You will notice in this that your way is the most common way, however on most of the bigger articles and the Wikipedia how-to articles they do it my way. Or as in the particular article of which WP:FNNR is a section, WP:Layout, they do it the third most common way which is Footnotes. Anyway, do it whichever way you want, but please know that I wasn't just messing with you. Trilobitealive (talk) 00:29, 24 August 2015 (UTC)
- Hi Trilobitealive, thanks for your consideration. Your impression that the most common way is not followed on most of the bigger articles actually corresponds to WP:CITESHORT, which doesn't seem to be the usage adopted in Cubic Hermite spline. Please correct me if I am wrong. Thanks. fgnievinski (talk) 01:44, 24 August 2015 (UTC)
- Your edits look good to me. Trilobitealive (talk) 02:54, 24 August 2015 (UTC)
Wikidata weekly summary #172
[edit]- Events/Blogs/Press
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- Wikidata made it into the top 10 of the Land der Ideen competition \o/ This means we're part of the final public voting starting on 9th of September. Thanks everyone who voted and spread the word.
- Flow is being tested on selected talk pages.
- New tool: Get new Wikidata items (now or before a given timestamp) as HTML or PagePile
- New tool: Find Wikidata items without an image around a location, then find free images on Flickr taken nearby.
- EventZoom.net extended with OpenStreetMap support, increasing the options for visualizing historical events from Wikidata.
- Did you know?
- Development
- Soon the edit summary for edits through the API will also contain the automatic edit summary that you are used to for edits done through the website. The summary given by the API user will be appended to the automatic summary. (phabricator:T97247)
- Addressed performance issues in usage tracking updates and had to delay the latest round of rollouts because of it
- Fixed a bug where suggestions would show up twice in item and property selectors (phabricator:T109697)
- Improved performance of the mw.wikibase.sitelink Lua method
- More work done on Unit Selector widget
- Started working on the ArticlePlaceholder extension
- Made final changes so we can redirect mobile users to the mobile version by default
- Evaluated the remaining steps to get the extension deployed that lets you do checks against 3rd party databases. Not much left it seems and we'll tackle that in one of the next sprints. Getting the new features deployed for the constraints checks will still take a bit longer.
- More work on making the edit summaries in the watchlist on Wikipedia and co more meaningful
- Monthly Tasks
- Hack on one of these.
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The Signpost: 26 August 2015
[edit]- In focus: An increase in active Wikipedia editors
- In the media: Russia temporarily blocks Wikipedia
- News and notes: Re-imagining grants
- Featured content: Out to stud, please call later
- Arbitration report: Reinforcing Arbitration
- Recent research: OpenSym 2015 report
Wikidata weekly summary #173
[edit]- Discussions
- New request for comments: Merging relationship properties
- Events/Blogs/Press
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- New page: Wikidata:OpenStreetMap to facilitate cooperation with our colleagues at OpenStreetMap
- Inventaire now shows links to ProjectGutenberg ebooks based on Wikidata data (example)
- First version of units is ready for testing
- Did you know?
- Newest properties: ResearchGate ID, GitHub username, African Plant Database, LinkedIn personal profile, Project Gutenberg ebook ID, Category for pictures taken with camera, work period end, work period start, NASA biographical ID, Dictionary of Ulster Biography ID, United States Armed Forces service number, Colour Index International constitution ID, Avibase ID
- Newest WikiProjects: Reasoning
- Newest gadgets: List of missing pairs queries, DuplicateReferences
- Newest External tools: Commons:Database reports/Cameras
- Development
- Lucie posted a sneak-peek of her work on the article placeholder extension
- Optimized Wikidata for viewing on mobile devices. You will be redirected to m.wikidata.org automatically when using a mobile device soon the same way it already happens on Wikipedia. (Editing will only be possible via the special pages!)
- Started working on a page to track how much Wikidata's data is used on each Wikimedia project
- API breaking change coming soon
- API custom summary will no longer override the autocomment (phabricator:T97247)
- Paging and sorting has been added to Special:ListProperties and it now also shows the IDs of the properties
- Worked more on making the edit summaries on the client more meaningful and readable
- Introduced a limit of 250 different entities that can be used on a page in the client via arbitrary access. The limit does not apply to convenience functions in lua, such as
mw.wikibase.label
which use a TermLookup instead of loading a full entity to get labels. (phabricator:T93885) - Properties are now linked in the diff view (phabricator:T105411)
- Ricordisamoa made several improvements to special pages (eg phabricator:T68744, phabricator:T48248, phabricator:T86647)
- Fixed a bug that made aliases too prominent in entity selectors (phabricator:T110021)
- Fixed a bug that made entries show up twice in the entity selector (phabricator:T109697)
- Started working on a special page to list all pages on a wiki with a certain badge
- Fixed remaining blockers for first rollout of unit support
- Bene worked on a new feature for DuckDuckGo to show instant results from Wikidata on their site
- Monthly Tasks
- Hack on one of these.
- Help develop the next summary here!
- Contribute to a Showcase item
- Help translate or proofread pages in your own language!
- Add labels, in your own language(s), for the new properties listed above.
Barnstar
[edit]Hi, Thanks for the Barnstar (implicit curve)!--Ag2gaeh (talk) 10:19, 1 September 2015 (UTC)
Academic journals published by non-profit publishers
[edit]I noticed you created Category:Academic journals published by non-profit publishers as a container category, which by definition means subcategories only, but you have added many articles directly to the cat (so it is no longer a container). I wondered if you were planning to create subcategories to maintain the container, or if perhaps {{catdiffuse}}
is the appropriate choice. Slivicon (talk) 00:53, 3 September 2015 (UTC)
- You're absolutely right:
{{catdiffuse}}
is more appropriate now -- thanks! fgnievinski (talk) 01:59, 3 September 2015 (UTC)
The Signpost: 02 September 2015
[edit]- Special report: Massive paid editing network unearthed on the English Wikipedia
- News and notes: Flow placed on ice
- Discussion report: WMF's sudden reversal on Wiki Loves Monuments
- Featured content: Brawny
- In the media: Orangemoody sockpuppet case sparks widespread coverage
- Traffic report: You didn't miss much
- Technology report: Tech news in brief
Hi, can you tell me on what reliable sources you base the information that this society has any journals? The title of this cat suggests that the journals belong to this society, where did you get that information? Do you have any reliable information about the relationship between these journals and this society? And per WP:SMALLCAT: is there any potential that you see that this society will ever get more than three journals? Thanks. --Randykitty (talk) 09:22, 5 September 2015 (UTC)
- Have you tried checking the journal's websites? The first one I tried was for Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, which says "Official journal of the International Behavioral Neuroscience Society". The WP:JWG says that a lot of information can often be obtained from the journal's website. fgnievinski (talk) 16:07, 5 September 2015 (UTC)
- The website of Physiology & Behavior does not mention anything, neither does the website of Brain Res Bull. And what about the other questions? --Randykitty (talk) 16:11, 5 September 2015 (UTC)
- (talk page stalker) When I go to the website of Physiology & Behavior I see "Official journal of the International Behavioral Neuroscience Society" at the top of the page. [8] The BRB's website, however, makes no mention of the IBNS. [9] Everymorning (talk) 16:31, 5 September 2015 (UTC)
- Indeed, Physiology & Behavior: "Official journal of the International Behavioral Neuroscience Society" (IBNS); as for Brain Research Bulletin, its website no longer says anything about it, but this book published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in 2009 says [10] it was then "Official journal of the International Behavioral Neuroscience Society"; I've updated its WP page accordingly. fgnievinski (talk) 16:35, 5 September 2015 (UTC)
- Any information on when (or even if) the relationship between BRB and the journal ended? Any justification for the "was an official journal" (past tense)? --Randykitty (talk) 17:08, 5 September 2015 (UTC)
- Isn't the OUP book sufficient? fgnievinski (talk) 15:04, 28 September 2015 (UTC)
- It only confirms that a "relation" existed in 2009, not that it ended, nor when it ended. --Randykitty (talk) 15:20, 28 September 2015 (UTC)
- Isn't the OUP book sufficient? fgnievinski (talk) 15:04, 28 September 2015 (UTC)
- Any information on when (or even if) the relationship between BRB and the journal ended? Any justification for the "was an official journal" (past tense)? --Randykitty (talk) 17:08, 5 September 2015 (UTC)
- Still nothing about any of the other questions that I posed. And now we have a category with 2 (TWO) entries and no potential for growth. --Randykitty (talk) 16:41, 5 September 2015 (UTC)
- You'd have to wait for the IBNS to cease operations before you can say there is no potential for growth. fgnievinski (talk) 16:50, 5 September 2015 (UTC)
- Any idea of their plans to launch more journals in the immediate future? Any information about their involvement with these two journals? Any explanation for the fact that the society itself doesn't spend a word about these journals on their own website? --Randykitty (talk) 17:06, 5 September 2015 (UTC)
- Any progress on obtaining information about their publication plans? --Randykitty (talk) 20:46, 26 September 2015 (UTC)
- I've just asked ibns@ibnsconnect.org now. fgnievinski (talk) 15:04, 28 September 2015 (UTC)
- I can predict the answer: three "official journals" (including BRB), no plans whatsoever. The whole "relationship" consists of Elsevier giving members of the society favorable personal subscription rates, no implication whatsoever of the society in the running of the journals... --Randykitty (talk) 15:20, 28 September 2015 (UTC)
- They do seem mindful of their responsibility -- from the Committee Mission Statements: "The primary responsibility of the Publications Committee is to make recommendations to the Council covering the use of the IBNS imprimatur in sponsoring scientific and educational materials, including books, journals, ..." That's exactly the kind of journal quality control to expect from being associated with a learned/professional socieity. I guess I'm advocating for Wikipedia to recognize notability beyond just abstracting and indexing companies -- there's more than IF and friends. fgnievinski (talk) 15:29, 28 September 2015 (UTC)
- Yep, that's the text that was written when the society was formed, sounds good indeed and a perfect example you shouldn't believe everything that is written... If you look at the composition of the different committees, you'll see that they don't have a separate publications ctee any more, but merged it into the membership ctee, because nowadays they think more in terms of "communications" (in the sense of making publicity for the society and its meetings). When they still (nominally) had such a ctee, it never did anything and didn't even submit annual reports to the council. No need to believe me, the IBNS office will tell you the same thing. --Randykitty (talk) 15:40, 28 September 2015 (UTC)
- You seem to have insider information. I guess we should follow Wikipedia:Verifiability, not truth instead. WP should take publishers and socieites by their word. For example, if a bogus paper were to appear in any of these journals, we could note the event in any of the WP articles about the journal itself or its publisher or sponsor -- accountability, no? fgnievinski (talk) 15:59, 28 September 2015 (UTC)
- Yep, that's the text that was written when the society was formed, sounds good indeed and a perfect example you shouldn't believe everything that is written... If you look at the composition of the different committees, you'll see that they don't have a separate publications ctee any more, but merged it into the membership ctee, because nowadays they think more in terms of "communications" (in the sense of making publicity for the society and its meetings). When they still (nominally) had such a ctee, it never did anything and didn't even submit annual reports to the council. No need to believe me, the IBNS office will tell you the same thing. --Randykitty (talk) 15:40, 28 September 2015 (UTC)
- They do seem mindful of their responsibility -- from the Committee Mission Statements: "The primary responsibility of the Publications Committee is to make recommendations to the Council covering the use of the IBNS imprimatur in sponsoring scientific and educational materials, including books, journals, ..." That's exactly the kind of journal quality control to expect from being associated with a learned/professional socieity. I guess I'm advocating for Wikipedia to recognize notability beyond just abstracting and indexing companies -- there's more than IF and friends. fgnievinski (talk) 15:29, 28 September 2015 (UTC)
- I can predict the answer: three "official journals" (including BRB), no plans whatsoever. The whole "relationship" consists of Elsevier giving members of the society favorable personal subscription rates, no implication whatsoever of the society in the running of the journals... --Randykitty (talk) 15:20, 28 September 2015 (UTC)
- I've just asked ibns@ibnsconnect.org now. fgnievinski (talk) 15:04, 28 September 2015 (UTC)
- Any progress on obtaining information about their publication plans? --Randykitty (talk) 20:46, 26 September 2015 (UTC)
- Any idea of their plans to launch more journals in the immediate future? Any information about their involvement with these two journals? Any explanation for the fact that the society itself doesn't spend a word about these journals on their own website? --Randykitty (talk) 17:06, 5 September 2015 (UTC)
- You'd have to wait for the IBNS to cease operations before you can say there is no potential for growth. fgnievinski (talk) 16:50, 5 September 2015 (UTC)
- Indeed, Physiology & Behavior: "Official journal of the International Behavioral Neuroscience Society" (IBNS); as for Brain Research Bulletin, its website no longer says anything about it, but this book published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in 2009 says [10] it was then "Official journal of the International Behavioral Neuroscience Society"; I've updated its WP page accordingly. fgnievinski (talk) 16:35, 5 September 2015 (UTC)
- (talk page stalker) When I go to the website of Physiology & Behavior I see "Official journal of the International Behavioral Neuroscience Society" at the top of the page. [8] The BRB's website, however, makes no mention of the IBNS. [9] Everymorning (talk) 16:31, 5 September 2015 (UTC)
- The website of Physiology & Behavior does not mention anything, neither does the website of Brain Res Bull. And what about the other questions? --Randykitty (talk) 16:11, 5 September 2015 (UTC)
I would say that the fact that the IBNS website list a "mission" for a "publications committee", but then only lists members of a "membership and communications committee" indicates that this website cannot be taken as a good source... Which of their "words" do we believe, the page that says that they have a committee that checks publications and journals and whatnot, or the page that lists members of committees, but doesn't mention that committee any more? One is wrong, both can't be correct, so there goes the verifiability... And all that "inside information" can be obtained from their newsletters (our dept has a complete set, so I can see the print ones that are not online, too). --Randykitty (talk) 16:41, 28 September 2015 (UTC)
Reference errors on 5 September
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Moving content between different articles
[edit]Please be aware that the different moves you have recently been doing constitute a copyvio (specifically, a violation of WP's CC-BY-SA license), because you didn't use the appropriate edit summaries and did not place the required templates on the talk pages of the articles involved. Please see WP:MERGETEXT, WP:FMERGE, and WP:SMERGE on how to perform merges correctly. Thanks. --Randykitty (talk) 08:50, 6 September 2015 (UTC)
Wikidata weekly summary #174
[edit]- Events/Blogs/Press
- Wikimedia Grafana graphs of Wikidata profiling information
- Past: Wikimedia Science Conference (blog posts: Liberating Science Daily With, and To, Wikidata, Wikidata, Wikipedia, and #wikisci)
- Past: Wikidata workshop in Rennes
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- New date for the next Arbitrary access rollout has been set: 16th of September.
- Support for units on Wikidata is coming on Wednesday (9th of September).
- A new version of Kian has been released
- The Wikidata Game has got a new mode: Books without author.
- A new IEG proposal needs your review and support. You can also submit your own until the 29th of September.
- >8K Fellows of the Royal Society have been added to mix’n’match
- You can have a look at the spiffy new mobile view
- Want to work with the data in Wikidata? There is a new release of the Wikidata Toolkit for you.
- Your help is needed with the most important constraint violations.
- A new noticeboard has been created to help with classification issues: d:Wikidata:Classification noticeboard
- Did you know?
- Development
- Worked on search on the mobile site
- Started working on automatically linking identifiers without a gadget and the new datatype for identifiers
- We have a new Special page to query badges (finally!) After the next update it will be at Special:PagesWithBadges on Wikipedia and others
- Fixed some of the remaining known issues with unit support to make it ready for rollout on Wednesday
- Continued with making it possible to show meaningful edit summaries in the watchlist and recent changes on Wikipedia and others
- Made change dispatching faster (This is what makes Wikipedia and others aware of changes happening on Wikidata)
- Monthly Tasks
- Hack on one of these.
- Help develop the next summary here!
- Contribute to a Showcase item
- Help translate or proofread pages in your own language!
- Add labels, in your own language(s), for the new properties listed above.
The Signpost: 09 September 2015
[edit]- Gallery: Being Welsh
- Featured content: Killed by flying debris
- News and notes: The Swedish Wikipedia's controversial two-millionth article
- Traffic report: Mass media production traffic
- Technology report: Tech news in brief
Wikidata weekly summary #175
[edit]- Events/Blogs/Press
- Past: Wikidata edit-a-thon at Wikimedia CEE Meeting 2015 in Estonia
- Upcoming: Office hour on IRC, 23 September
- Upcoming: Mobilizing Open Cultural Data, Helsinki, 2 October
- Upcoming: Wikidata tutorial at SWAT4LS, December
- Un-deleting 500,000 Wikidata items
- Wikimania 2015 report by Multichill
- DSS Wikidata Editathon
- A simple way to write Wikidata bots
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- Please vote for Wikidata to win the people's choice award of Land der Ideen (voting instructions)
- We passed 70M statements.
- Stalagmites and stalactites visualizes items without statements, items with statements, and deleted/redirected items by batches of 100,000 QIDs
- Mix n Match is now available for mobile, has an improved automatic matching algorithm, got speed improvements and new catalogs were added like the National Gallery of Victoria, World Heritage Sites and CulturaItalia
- The annual Wikipedia editing competition organized by the International Society for Computational Biology will include a Wikidata component this year for the first time.
- Matched birth and death days seeks to investigate all pairs of humans (in various subsets) that appear to have the same birth dates and death dates. De-duplication underway!
- You can now use the new special page Special:PagesWithBadges to see which articles on that project have a badge like "featured article".
- New tool by Magnus to suggest links to Wikidata items while you type
- Meta, MediaWiki, Wikispecies and Wikibooks will get (more) access to Wikidata soon
- Wikidata now has an official SPARQL endpoint so you can query the data
- Wikidata now supports units
- Prototype database to store all Wikipedia references
- Duplicity can show you how many (and which) articles on a Wikipedia are not connected to an item on Wikidata (example for frwp)
- Magnus wrote a user script to let you edit Listeria-powered lists on Wikipedia directly
- Musicpedia has been released in beta and is using data from Wikidata
- New tool by Magnus to create a Commons creator page from a Wikidata item
- Did you know?
- Newest properties: length, elevation above sea level, orbital inclination, area, duration, height, width, wingspan, M x sin i, speed, watershed area, density, electrical conductivity, heat capacity, HMDB ID, depositor, luminosity, aspect ratio, HSDB ID, LIPID MAPS ID, KNApSAcK ID, NIAID ChemDB ID, Fusion enthalpy, mass
- Development
- Release of the query service and unit support (see above)
- Made quantities not show URIs when editing a value but instead show the label
- Worked on new datatype for identifiers to be able to split them from the other statements in the user interface, link them without the need for the authority control gadget and be able to link them in JSON/RDF
- Worked more on making the edit summaries in the watchlist on Wikipedia and co more meaningful
- Monthly Tasks
- Hack on one of these.
- Help develop the next summary here!
- Contribute to a Showcase item
- Help translate or proofread pages in your own language!
- Add labels, in your own language(s), for the new properties listed above.
The Signpost: 16 September 2015
[edit]- Editorial: No access is no answer to closed access
- News and notes: Byrd and notifications leave, but page views stay; was a terror suspect editing Wikipedia?
- In the media: Is there life on Mars?
- Featured content: Why did the emu cross the road?
- Traffic report: Another week
- Technology report: Tech news in brief
Wikidata weekly summary #176
[edit]- Events/Blogs/Press
- Past: WikiCon in Dresden
- Upcoming: office hour on IRC
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- The grant proposal "StrepHit: Wikidata Statements Validation via References" is looking for endorsements
- Wikidata and it's dumps are now described according to the DCAT-AP standard. You can add your language by translating the general and the Wikidata specific messages.
- A follow-up to the Wikidata for research proposal has begun to be drafted by the University of Haifa and the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin
- Community page for the new SPARQL query service, including a subpage for interesting or illustrative queries, and a board for suggestions and discussions.
- Wikibooks now has access to the data on Wikidata
- English Wikipedia and a few more got arbitrary access
- Mix'n'match got new catalogs including Open Library authors and AcademiaNet's excellent female authors
- The LinkedWiki extension now supports Wikidata (demo)
- Did you know?
- Newest properties: FISA ID, Power of 10 athlete ID, Library of Congress JukeBox ID, CrunchBase organisation ID, CrunchBase person ID, CDD Public ID, Nikkaji, ZINC ID, Leadscope ID, M.49 code, BLDAM object ID, AcademiaNet, fabrication method, user manual link, pressure, temperature, speed of sound, internetmedicin.se ID, range, CDB Chemical ID, Mémoire des hommes, Fellow of the Royal Society, magnetic moment, thermal conductivity
- Development
- Started writing default Lua modules for the Article Placeholder
- Excluded the Topic namespace from Special:UnconnectedPages
- Fixed a bug where an item link on normal wiki pages was sometimes prepended by a label (in a random language)
- Worked on the remaining blockers for redirecting users on mobile devices to the mobile version of the site
- Fixed an issue where people had login issues when trying to connect an article to an item on the client
- Worked on removing some more places that don't have language fallback yet
- Worked more on making meaningful edit summaries show up in the client watchlist and recent changes
- Monthly Tasks
- Hack on one of these.
- Help develop the next summary here!
- Contribute to a Showcase item
- Help translate or proofread pages in your own language!
- Add labels, in your own language(s), for the new properties listed above.
The Signpost: 23 September 2015
[edit]- In the media: PETA makes "monkey selfie" a three-way copyright battle; Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
- Featured content: Inside Duke Humfrey's Library
- WikiProject report: Dancing to the beat of a... wikiproject?
- Traffic report: ¡Viva la Revolución! Kinda.
- Technology report: Tech news in brief
Hi, if you move a page, please make sure that the associated talk page gets moved too. If that is not directly possible because there is an existing talk page, please use {{db-move}} to have an admin delete the page that is blocking the move. Talk pages must remain with their associated article, for obvious reasons. Thanks. --Randykitty (talk) 20:44, 26 September 2015 (UTC)
- Thanks for the heads-up; I always assumed "When moving a page, the talk page is automatically moved as well." (Wikipedia:Moving_a_page#Talk_subpages). fgnievinski (talk) 14:44, 28 September 2015 (UTC)
- Normally it is (and then the previous talk page should be tagged with a {{WPJournals|class=Redirect}} tag), but you have to click the little box that asks you whether the talk page should be moved, too. In the present case, that would have resulted in the move not being carried out, as the destination talk page had an edit history of more than a redirect. I'm surprised that apparently this box is not already ticked when you move a page, because I thought it was ticked by default (it is for me in any case). --Randykitty (talk) 14:52, 28 September 2015 (UTC)
- Hum, more likely the box was ticked correctly but the existing destination prevented the move; funny that the talk page existed but the article page did not, otherwise I wouldn't be able to move at all. fgnievinski (talk) 15:03, 28 September 2015 (UTC)
- Normally it is (and then the previous talk page should be tagged with a {{WPJournals|class=Redirect}} tag), but you have to click the little box that asks you whether the talk page should be moved, too. In the present case, that would have resulted in the move not being carried out, as the destination talk page had an edit history of more than a redirect. I'm surprised that apparently this box is not already ticked when you move a page, because I thought it was ticked by default (it is for me in any case). --Randykitty (talk) 14:52, 28 September 2015 (UTC)
Wikidata weekly summary #177
[edit]- Events/Blogs/Press
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- Great collaboration between a group of Flemish museums and art collections and Wikidata
- Wikidata timeline is another tool that gives you nice timelines based in Wikidata's data (examples: American Sitcoms, Wars, Meryl Streep)
- Cool new tool by Magnus for dynamic list generation
- nlwiki has made great progress in getting down the number of articles not connected to Wikidata
- The Museum of Modern Art website now includes Wikidata IDs (example)
- 50.79% of all #Wikidata items have none, one or two statements now. Next month it is likely to be less than half. Good progress!
- Some more examples to get you started with Wikidata's query service: 1, 2, 3
- Did you know?
- Newest properties: Membership, YerelNet village ID, prize money, radius, vapor pressure, kinematic viscosity, combustion enthalpy, vaporization enthalpy, NDF-RT ID, Half-Life, sublimation temperature, wing area, power output, Kunstindex Danmark artwork, decomposition point, RXNO Ontology, size of team at finish, size of team at start, boiling point, melting point, Banque de noms de lieux du Québec id, BC Geographical Names ID, substitute/deputy/replacement of office/officeholder, term length of office, image legend, co-driver, qualifies for, short author name, Bildindex der Kunst und Architektur ID
- Development
- You can now find the Wikibase ontology at http://wikiba.se/ontology
- Special:UnconnectedPages will have a namespace filter
- Worked on a small birthday present (One month left!) and party organizing (more info coming in the next days)
- Language fallbacks will be shown also when adding a new statement, in qualifiers and references as well as for badges
- Fixed a long-standing login issue when adding a new language link from Wikipedia and co (phabricator:T50389)
- Worked on RfC for multi-content revisions. This is groundwork for Commons support. (phabricator:T107595)
- More work on making meaningful edit summaries show up in the watchlist and recent changes on Wikipedia and co
- Monthly Tasks
- Hack on one of these.
- Help develop the next summary here!
- Contribute to a Showcase item
- Help translate or proofread pages in your own language!
- Add labels, in your own language(s), for the new properties listed above.
Your tagging of Fundamental categories
[edit]Fgnievinski, I think cleanup templates are intended for articles, not categories. There are some category-related templates, but they are all meant to be placed in articles. Probably the best place to discuss what to include in Category:Fundamental categories is at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Categories. RockMagnetist(talk) 18:53, 30 September 2015 (UTC)
Robert M. Pirsig
[edit]The fundamental categories talk page gives the history, due to Robert M. Pirsig, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance. Propaedia is a more systematic listing. You can lump part 2 in with the concepts category, if you prefer. --Ancheta Wis (talk | contribs) 02:22, 1 October 2015 (UTC)
- Please check the defintion of Category:Concepts; the Earth is not a concept. fgnievinski (talk) 02:31, 1 October 2015 (UTC)
The Signpost: 30 September 2015
[edit]- Recent research: Wiktionary special; newbies, conflict and tolerance; Is Wikipedia's search function inferior?
- Tech news: Tech news in brief
Wikidata weekly summary #178
[edit]- Events/Blogs/Press
- Past: code.talks (slides on migrating Freebase to Wikidata)
- Past: Wikidata:Mobilizing Open Cultural Data (videos, slides)
- Upcoming: Wikidata's 3rd birthday. We will have a party and you should come! (announcement, program and other details, IMPORTANT: sign up so we know how many people to expect)
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- There are now almost 5000 articles in Czech Wikipedia which include an infobox without parameters, only with data from Wikidata.
- Input request about editing Wikidata from clients like Wikipedia
- Freebase to Wikidata: results of Tpt's internship have been published
- Articles without a Wikidata item can now be filtered by category tree. (example for chemists on enwiki)
- Wikidata:Units attempts to list available units and properties they can be used with
- Constraint reports can now check if units are within a user defined list: e.g. report for mass (P2067)
- WikiProject Economics needs more participants to organize all the new properties.
- Did you know?
- Newest properties: Georgian national system of romanization, Hepburn romanization, membership, YerelNet village ID, prize money, radius, vapor pressure, kinematic viscosity, combustion enthalpy, vaporization enthalpy, NDF-RT ID, half-life, sublimation temperature, wing area, power output, Kunstindex Danmark artwork, decomposition point, RXNO Ontology, size of team at finish, size of team at start, boiling point, melting point
- Development
- Changed the default RDF flavor to include all statements (phabricator:T101837)
- Started to work on creating new articles from scratch from the article placeholder
- Continued work on the Lua libraries of the default Article Placeholder layout
- Started the research on client editing with an input page
- More work on making the mobile view fit for being enabled per default for mobile users
- Changed our JavaScript coding style to be more in line with MediaWiki core’s
- In edit mode, the label is now displayed for units instead of a URL
- Added a new “YearMonthDay” date parser that supports many edge cases where all other date parsers fail
- More work on passing full edit summaries to the client wikis.
- Monthly Tasks
- Hack on one of these.
- Help develop the next summary here!
- Contribute to a Showcase item
- Help translate or proofread pages in your own language!
- Add labels, in your own language(s), for the new properties listed above.
Categories:Geographic information systems, Geomatics, Cartography
[edit]Re these edits: [11][12][13][14][15]
WP:SUBCAT is fairly clear that "A ... category should rarely be placed in both a category and a subcategory or parent category (supercategory) of that category... ". If Category:Geographic information systems is in Category:Cartography (which it currently is) and Category:Cartography is in Category:Geomatics (which it currently is), then Category:Geographic information systems ought not be directly in Category:Geomatics because it is already in Category:Geomatics indirectly via Category:Cartography.
Presumably you think that Category:Geographic information systems ought to be in Category:Geomatics, because you added it.
- If you think that Category:Cartography ought not be in Category:Geomatics, then please remove it.
- If you think that one of the exceptions listed in WP:SUBCAT applies, please say so. (I don't believe any of them do.)
- If you think that WP:SUBCAT is wrong, please say so - and take it up at WT:CAT.
- If you think that WP:IAR should apply, please say so. I can't see why it should, though.
Mitch Ames (talk) 12:26, 6 October 2015 (UTC)
- @Mitch Ames: I believe WP:DUPCAT applies here. fgnievinski (talk) 12:08, 7 October 2015 (UTC)
- Then please add the appropriate hatnote(s) - {{Non-diffusing subcategory}} and/or {{All included}} - to the appropriate category page(s), so that the editors know that DUPCAT applies. Mitch Ames (talk) 12:47, 7 October 2015 (UTC)
- I'd like to get this issue resolved. Could you add the appropriate hatnote(s) - {{Non-diffusing subcategory}} and/or {{All included}} - to the appropriate category page(s) where DUPCAT applies? Or shall we remove Category:Geographic information systems from Category:Geomatics? Or is there some other solution? Mitch Ames (talk) 02:16, 17 October 2015 (UTC)
- Then please add the appropriate hatnote(s) - {{Non-diffusing subcategory}} and/or {{All included}} - to the appropriate category page(s), so that the editors know that DUPCAT applies. Mitch Ames (talk) 12:47, 7 October 2015 (UTC)
The Signpost: 07 October 2015
[edit]- Op-ed: Walled gardens of corruption
- Traffic report: Reality is for losers
- Featured content: This Week's Featured Content
- Arbitration report: Warning: Contains GMOs
- Technology report: Tech news in brief
Wikidata weekly summary #179
[edit]- Events/Blogs/Press
- Past: WikiCon USA (slides)
- Ongoing: World Health Summit (slides)
- Upcoming: ODI Summit with a session on the gene-related efforts on Wikidata
- Don't forget to sign up if you are coming to Wikidata's third birthday party.
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- Discussion has started on English WikiProject Football about using Wikidata for player squad templates (example) and player club history (example). Needs more input on best practices and commitment to update data.
- A command line client to the SPARQL query service has been released
- Query example: popularity of the given name Adolf
- MoMa artists have been added to Mix'n'match
- Books without authors on Wikidata are now down to 12.5K from 25K since drive began. You can help get it down even further.
- Number of articles that are not connected to a Wikidata item on Catalan Wikipedia has been brought down significantly. How about yours?
- This Month in GLAM has Wikidata coverage
- Interested in British politics? WikiProject British Politicians has some stats to show where you can help out
- Did you know?
- Newest properties: median lethal dose, first aid measures, official symbol, units used for this property, external subproperty, external superproperty, volume for quantity, semi-major axis, cash, explosive velocity, torque, Max TDP, maximum thrust, metallicity, market capitalization, discharge, spectral line, decay width, gyromagnetic ratio, flux, household wealth, real gross domestic product growth rate, net worth, cruise speed, radial velocity, proper motion, parallax, longitude of ascending node, angular distance, position angle, relative to, SourceForge project, average shot length, Spotify track ID, Discogs release ID, Spotify album ID, minimum explosive concentration, upper flammable limit, lower flammable limit, dipole moment, electric charge, autoignition temperature, (average) gradient, production volume, students count, Soccerbase manager id, PSS-Archi architect id, Soccerbase player id, endangeredlanguages.com ID, NILF author id, C-SPAN identifier of a person, BiblioNet publisher identifier, BiblioNet author identifier, BiblioNet publication identifier, Wiki Loves Monuments ID, DLI, history of topic, ISO 9:1995, Finnish Ministers database ID, Finnish MP ID, Kansallisbiografia ID, ACM Classification Code (2012), solvent, solubility, drug used for treatment, medical condition treated
- Development
- You'll now get redirected to the mobile view automatically on mobile devices (example)
- Made it possible to use more entities on a page via Lua without running into Lua's memory limit
- Added the Article Placeholder extension’s results to the search result page (this is one of a few remaining blockers before we can put it on a testsystem for you to try out and give feedback)
- Added option to create a new article from Article Placeholder
- More work on the new datatype for properties
- More work on making meaningful edit summaries on the client. Found a few remaining bugs during testing.
- More work on a birthday present :D
- Monthly Tasks
- Hack on one of these.
- Help develop the next summary here!
- Contribute to a Showcase item
- Help translate or proofread pages in your own language!
- Add labels, in your own language(s), for the new properties listed above.
Category:Cultural works about science
[edit]Category:Cultural works about science, which you created, has been nominated for possible deletion, merging, or renaming. If you would like to participate in the discussion, you are invited to add your comments at the category's entry on the Categories for discussion page. Thank you. Shawn in Montreal (talk) 15:51, 16 October 2015 (UTC)
The Signpost: 14 October 2015
[edit]- WikiConference report: US gathering sees speeches from Andrew Lih, AfroCrowd, and the Archivist of the United States
- News and notes: 2015–2016 Q1 fundraising update sparks mailing list debate
- Traffic report: Screens, Sport, Reddit, and Death
- Featured content: A fistful of dollars
- Technology report: Tech news in brief
Wikidata weekly summary #180
[edit]- Events/Blogs/Press
- How many female scientists are there on Wikipedia? This time with SPARQL! (French)
- Wikidata Enpoint SPARQL and the paintings of Goya Wikidata's SPARQL endpoint and the paintings of Goya (French)
- Upcoming: 3rd Birthday \o/ (Please don't forget to register if you're coming to the party.)
- More wrapups of Wikiconference USA including slides: [16], [17]
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- Magnus overhauled the Wikidata Game! Sweeeeeet! Now includes one where you can match an author and a publication. And it has stats.
- Mix'n'match got skyscrapers to match up for you.
- Sitelinks and P569 compares various Wikipedias by the proportion of items with date of birth (Property:P569)
- Catalan Wikipedia match up all of their articles to items on Wikidata. Congrats!
- Did you know?
- Development
- Worked on adding auto-completion for item and property prefixes to the SPARQL query editor (so you can search by label when entering a query)
- Wrote maintenance script for changing some properties from datatype string to upcoming datatype identifier
- More work on birthday present
- More work on the article placeholder to get it ready for a first demo
- Prepared patch for also publishing JSON dumps with bzip2 compression
- Further improved edit summaries we show on Wikipedia etc
- Prepared for giving Wikispecies, Meta and Mediawiki access to the sitelinks on Wikidata on 20. of October
- Monthly Tasks
- Hack on one of these.
- Help develop the next summary here!
- Contribute to a Showcase item
- Help translate or proofread pages in your own language!
- Add labels, in your own language(s), for the new properties listed above.
The Signpost: 21 October 2015
[edit]- Editorial: Women and Wikipedia: the world is watching
- In the media: "Wikipedia's hostility to women"
- Special report: One year of GamerGate, or how I learned to stop worrying and love bare rule-level consensus
- Featured content: A more balanced week
- Arbitration report: Four ArbCom cases ongoing
- Traffic report: Hiding under the covers of the Internet
- Technology report: Tech news in brief
Wikidata weekly summary #181
[edit]- Discussions
- New request for comments: Derived properties, Are colors instance-of or subclass-of color
- Events/Blogs/Press
- Poof it works - using wikidata to build Wikipedia articles about genes
- Wikidata, SPARQL and huskies (French)
- Wikidata, SPARQL and elected dynasties (French)
- The birth and death of German playwrights
- Distributed stats
- Past: Wikidata training at Wikimedia UK
- Upcoming: Wikidata's 3rd birthday \o/ (on 29th)
- Upcoming: SemWeb.Pro in Paris
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- There's a new Wikidata taxonomy browser
- Meta, MediaWiki and Wikispecies now have access to sitelinks on Wikidata. Welcome to Wikidata, sisters!
- Harvest templates. New tool to copy data from templates to Wikidata.
- Number of articles that are not connected to a Wikidata item on Italian Wikipedia has been brought down significantly. How about yours?
- The Wikidata Game now has a primary sources game and one to match Wikispecies pages to Wikidata items
- The National Gallery of Arts was added to Mix'n'match
- Some more query examples: Dracula movies and their actors, movies with links to videos
- Did you know?
- Development
- ctrl-space now enables autocomplete for labels on http://query.wikidata.org . Should make it easier for you to find the right items and properties.
- Worked on birthday present :)
- From Monday on a bzip2 compressed version of the Wikidata json dumps will be published, along with the gzip compressed version.
- Made it possible to get from the search results page to the article placeholder. This was one of the last holdups for a first demo version.
- Monthly Tasks
- Hack on one of these.
- Help develop the next summary here!
- Contribute to a Showcase item
- Help translate or proofread pages in your own language!
- Add labels, in your own language(s), for the new properties listed above.
WikiProject X Newsletter • Issue 5
[edit]Hello there! Happy to be writing this newsletter once more. This month:
In July, we launched five pilot WikiProjects: WikiProjects Cannabis, Evolutionary Biology, Ghana, Hampshire, and Women's Health. We also use the new design, named "WPX UI," on WikiProject Women in Technology, Women in Red, WikiProject Occupational Safety and Health. We are currently looking for projects for the next round of testing. If you are interested, please sign up on the Pilots page.
Shortly after our launch we presented at Wikimania 2015. Our slides are on Wikimedia Commons.
Then after all that work, we went through the process of figuring out whether we accomplished our goal. We reached out to participants on the redesigned WikiProjects, and we asked them to complete a survey. (If you filled out your survey—thank you!) While there are still some issues with the WikiProject tools and the new design, there appears to be general satisfaction (at least among those who responded). The results of the survey and more are documented in our grant report filed with the Wikimedia Foundation.
There is more work that needs to be done, so we have applied for a renewal of our grant. Comments on the proposal are welcome. We would like to improve what we have already started on the English Wikipedia and to also expand to Wikimedia Commons and Wikidata. Why those? Because they are multilingual projects and because there needs to be better coordination across Wikimedia projects. More details are available in the renewal proposal.
The Wikimedia Developer Summit will be held in San Francisco in January 2016. The recently established Community Tech team at the Wikimedia Foundation is interested in investigating what technical support they can provide for WikiProjects, i.e., support beyond just templates and bots. I have plenty of opinions myself, but I want to hear what you think. The session is being planned on Phabricator, the Wikimedia bug tracker. If you are not familiar with Phabricator, you can log in with your Wikipedia username and password through the "Login or Register: MediaWiki" button on the login page. Your feedback can help make editing Wikipedia a better experience.
Until next time,
The Signpost: 28 October 2015
[edit]- From the editor: The Signpost's reorganization plan—we need your help
- News and notes: English Wikipedia reaches five million articles
- In the media: The world's Wikipedia gaps; Google and Wikipedia accused of tying Ben Carson to NAMBLA
- Arbitration report: A second attempt at Arbitration enforcement
- Traffic report: Canada, the most popular nation on Earth
- Recent research: Student attitudes towards Wikipedia; Jesus, Napoleon and Obama top "Wikipedia social network"; featured article editing patterns in 12 languages
- Featured content: Birds, turtles, and other things
- Technology report: Tech news in brief
- Community letter: Five million articles
Wikidata weekly summary #182
[edit]- Discussions
- How to add dates with undefined calendar (Julian or Gregorian)? is discussed on Project chat.
- Events/Blogs/Press
- Wikidata turned 3! The party doubled as the award ceremony for the Land der Ideen price.
- Page with state of the project editorial, message from the development team and greetings
- Images from the party
- Denny and Erik look back at the beginning of the project - the other recordings are still being cut but you can already see the uncut stream here
- Presents:
- Three presents for Wikidata's third birthday from Amir including artificial intelligence to find vandalism!
- Improved query.wikidata.org by the dev team
- Preview of the Article Placeholder by Lucie (bachelor student of the dev team)
- Special:Nearby by the dev team
- Donation of CC World University & School (WUaS) to CC Wikidata to celebrate its 3rd birthday! by Scott_WUaS
- Your name in Wikidata Morse code from TMg
- Help organize the Wikidata related sessions at Wikimania 2016
- Past: Open Access Week
- Past: DINI Jahrestagung (slides)
- Past: Tehran SFD (video)
- Upcoming: ODI Summit
- Upcoming: SWAT4LS
- Modeling the social network of movie actors of the 1920s and 1930s with Wikidata
- Looking for…science fiction movies on the Linked Data Cloud
- Wikidata turned 3! The party doubled as the award ceremony for the Land der Ideen price.
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- Italian Wikipedia matched up nearly all of their articles to items on Wikidata. Congrats!
- Bene updated the Tours. Please help translate them here.
- The Distributed Game now has a Kian module suggesting statements to add
- Andrew made maps of missing images on Wikidata: South Africa, India, Australia, world
- Nikki imported dates of birth and death for more than 40,000 persons from Japanese Wikipedia.
- Example query: French people with an article on English Wikipedia but not French Wikipedia
- Example query: paintings without dimension (add some?)
- Example query: people or things born or created on the same day of the year as Wikidata
- We passed 15M items.
- Happy 10th anniversary to Semantic MediaWiki! We wouldn't be where we are today without you.
- All 8,860 fellows of the Royal Society have been matched to Wikidata items
- Did you know?
- Newest properties: Wikidata property sample, Emporis building complex ID, Orsay Museum artist ID, Politifact Personality Identifier, Fashion Model Directory ID, mix'n'match catalogue ID, ISOCAT id, draft, beam, ionization energy, ITU-T network identifier, mobile country code, frequency of event
- Newest External tools: Top missing P31 by number of sitelinks list the items with most sitelinks lacking instance of or subclass of
- Development
- Worked on birthday presents (Special:Nearby, article placeholder demo system and improvements to query.wikidata.org)
- Wes, Stas, Dan and James from the WMF came over to talk through current work around Wikidata and plans for the future
- Further poked at editing references at the same time as rest of the statement
- Investigated where we can push next to improve performance
- Monthly Tasks
- Hack on one of these.
- Help develop the next summary here!
- Contribute to a Showcase item
- Help translate or proofread pages in your own language!
- Add labels, in your own language(s), for the new properties listed above.
- Note I do agree with Banedon, DGG and Randykitty, I am merging the sister concern article OMICS Publishing Group with the parent article OMICS Group Inc. I am not sure to imply disputes/controversies to parent article from sister concern. [neutrality is disputed]can be checked later, I am copying all disputes/controversies to parent. You are advised to participate in editing.
The Signpost: 04 November 2015
[edit]- News and notes: Wikimedia Foundation finances; Superprotect is gone
- In the media: Ahmadiyya Jabrayilov: propaganda myth or history?
- Traffic report: Death, the Dead, and Spectres are abroad
- Featured content: Christianity, music, and cricket
- Technology report: Tech news in brief
Wikidata weekly summary #183
[edit]- Discussions
- Open request for adminship: Lakokat
- Events/Blogs/Press
- Wikidata/Wikibase Json Dump Reader
- Wikidata project to tackle language barriers in scientific reserach
- Semantic Cities
- Q167545: Wikidata celebrated its third birthday
- Slides from talk at UCSD on "Open biomedical knowledge using crowdsourcing and citizenscience"
- Past: semwebpro (slides)
- Past: ODI Summit
- Past: MozFest (etherpad)
- Upcoming: WikiConference Seoul
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- List of Wikipedia articles without an image where Wikidata has one
- Want to use data from Wikidata to enrich data in your own application? S wrote a good start.
- Commons misconceptions and how to avoid them by School of Data
- Did you know?
- Newest properties: charted in, Danish parish code, venous drainage, lymphatic drainage, CRIStin ID, arterial supply, periapsis date, price, uses, Groeningemuseum work PID, iTunes album ID, Austrian Parliament ID, ambitus, Member of the Hellenic Parliament ID, Magdeburger Biographisches Lexikon, UEFA player code, World Health Organisation International Nonproprietary Name, Heidelberg Academy for Sciences and Humanities member ID, Hederich article
- Ever noticed ranks?
- Development
- Worked on the tests for the ArticlePlaceholder
- Finished the create article button for the ArticlePlaceholder page
- From Monday on a bzip2 compressed version of the beta Wikidata TTL dumps will be published along the gzip one
- Getting close to make it possible to add the main value of a statement and its reference at the same time
- Worked on adding a new section to item and property pages for identifiers
- Did backend work for making identifiers useful in our machine-readable outputs (by actually linking them instead of just giving the identifier string) - more work needed
- Fixed a bug where dates would have English months on non-English wikis (phabricator:T116503)
- Fixed a bug when editing labels on mobile (phabricator:T117184)
- Worked more on making search work on mobile
- Worked on a fix for a visual glitch in the table of content on mobile (the box is bigger than its content)
- Monthly Tasks
- Hack on one of these.
- Help develop the next summary here!
- Contribute to a Showcase item
- Help translate or proofread pages in your own language!
- Add labels, in your own language(s), for the new properties listed above.
The Signpost: 11 November 2015
[edit]- Arbitration report: Elections, redirections, and a resignation from the Committee
- Discussion report: Compromise of two administrator accounts prompts security review
- Featured content: Texas, film, and cycling
- In the media: Sanger on Wikipedia; Silver on Vox; lawyers on monkeys
- Traffic report: Doodles of popularity
- Gallery: Paris
Wikidata weekly summary #184
[edit]- Discussions
- Successful request for adminship: Lakokat
- Events/Blogs/Press
- Upcoming: Wikimedia Conferentie Nederland
- Upcoming: Ateliers Wikidata
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- Callisto - a tool that shows places depicted in artworks
- Qwery.me - an experiment for a simplified query service with SPARQL
- Whitepaper exploring Wikidata for cultural institutions
- Example query: real numbers with their approximate value
- Pre-print: Centralizing content and distributing labor: a community model for curating the very long tail of microbial genomes
- Did you know?
- Newest properties: constraint, minimal lethal dose, PPP GDP per capita, NSDAP membership number (1925–1945), employment by economic sector, money supply, net profit, current account balance, genetic association, consumption rate
- Newest WikiProjects: Education
- Newest Database reports: Items without claims by site
- Find Wikidata-only infoboxes in the Czech Wikipedia
- Development
- Added language fallback to Special:ConstraintReport
- Fixed a bug that prevented undoing edits via the api (phabricator:T101694)
- Worked more on moving identifiers into their own section and linking them in the machine-readable export formats
- Worked on making search suggestions work on mobile
- Experimented with using icons instead of text for some of the actions in an item
- Made a lot of progress on a good default layout for the ArticlePlaceholder
- Nearly finished simultaneous editing of value and reference
- Improved browser tests and fixed issues with them
- Monthly Tasks
- Hack on one of these.
- Help develop the next summary here!
- Contribute to a Showcase item
- Help translate or proofread pages in your own language!
- Add labels, in your own language(s), for the new properties listed above.
The Signpost: 18 November 2015
[edit]- Special report: ArbCom election—candidates’ opinions analysed
- In the media: Icelandic milestone; apolitical editing
- Discussion report: BASC disbanded; other developments in the discussion world
- Arbitration report: Ban Appeals Subcommittee goes up in smoke; 21 candidates running
- Featured content: Fantasia on a Theme by Jimbo Wales
- Traffic report: Darkness and light
Wikidata weekly summary #185
[edit]Wikidata weekly summary #114
- Discussions
- New request for comments: Improve bot policy for data import and data modification
- Events/Blogs/Press
- Upcoming: Ubuntu Party, Paris
- Upcoming: Wikidata editathon, National Library of Wales
- More mixin’, more matches
- Impact of Wikimania Mexico 2015 on Wikidata
- Myanmar coordinates on Wikidata by Lockal & Widar
- Tasty translations for the Taste of Stockholm food festival
- Bachelor thesis about generating quiz questions from Wikidata
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- Mix'n'match: new catalogs were added
- Whitepaper for GLAM institutions wanting to work with Wikdiata
- MediaWiki, Meta, Wikispecies and Wikinews will get access to the data on Wikidata on Dec. 2nd. (So far they only have access to sitelinks.)
- What kind of information does Wikidata have? Jura made an overview for the types of statements we have.
- You can now use SPARQL instead of WDQ for all Listeria bot-generated lists, on all wikis. See en:Template:Wikidata list
- Alpha release of Wikipedia Gender Inequality Index (using data from Wikidata)
- Query examples: all xkcd comics, English demonyms for countries
- Did you know?
- Newest properties: Cycling Archives ID (team), Cycling Archives ID (race), antagonist muscle, ProCyclingStats ID (team), ProCyclingStats ID (race), GNS Unique Feature Identifier, mean anomaly, quantity buried, Swedish Olympic Committee athlete ID, article ID, general classification, aftershocks, elector, debut participant, call sign, constraint status, comment, min quantity, max quantity, max date, min date, relation, class, namespace, property, item, group by, exception to constraint, property constraint, minimal lethal dose
- Development
- Rolled out simultaneous editing of main part of the statement and reference
- Did a clean-up of the statements section (removing some lines etc) and added icons for the actions on statements
- Worked more on moving identifiers into their own section in item pages and having them linked properly in the exports
- Work on improving ranking of search results on Wikidata
- Decreased size of html of item pages
- Adapted our code to some minor changes in the watchlist code in core
- More work on making the search on mobile work
- Made preparations for constraint definitions through statements on properties
- Fixing size of table of content on mobile
- Prevented merging of items which link to each other
- Monthly Tasks
- Hack on one of these.
- Help develop the next summary here!
- Contribute to a Showcase item
- Help translate or proofread pages in your own language!
- Add labels, in your own language(s), for the new properties listed above.
Hi,
You appear to be eligible to vote in the current Arbitration Committee election. The Arbitration Committee is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the Wikipedia arbitration process. It has the authority to enact binding solutions for disputes between editors, primarily related to serious behavioural issues that the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the ability to impose site bans, topic bans, editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The arbitration policy describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail. If you wish to participate, you are welcome to review the candidates' statements and submit your choices on the voting page. For the Election committee, MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 13:48, 24 November 2015 (UTC)
The Signpost: 25 November 2015
[edit]- News and notes: Fundraising update; FDC recommendations
- Featured content: Caves and stuff
- Traffic report: J'en ai ras le bol
- Arbitration report: Third Palestine-Israel case closes; Voting begins
- Technology report: Tech news in brief
Wikidata weekly summary #186
[edit]- Discussions
- Open request for adminship: Koavf
- Events/Blogs/Press
- Past: Wikipedia and Wikidata editathon (EditatónAlicia) in Mexico
- Past: Wikimedia Conferentie Nederland
- Past: Wikidata Editathon at the National Library of Wales
- Past: Ubuntu Conference, Paris
- Is Wikidata the new Rosetta Stone?
- WordLift 3.0: A brief semantic story – part 1
- Workshop i Wikidata
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- Your help is needed with the most important constraint violations.
- New daily report on Mix'n'match
- Daily updated list of people who's birthday is today
- French Wikisource is using images from Wikidata for their author page headers and more now (example)
- New catalogs have been added to Mix'n'match
- A new author language game has been added to the Wikidata distributed game.
- Mix’n’match now creates a new, pre-filled Wikidata item when no matching one can be found (by humans!), where possible
- Workflow sketch for the OA Signalling project
- example of a Listeria list created from a SPARQL query
- Did you know?
- Newest properties: Australian Stratigraphic Units Database ID, Roman agnomen, Roman cognomen, production code, NMHH film rating, time to altitude, online service, intended public, Roman nomen gentilicium, Roman praenomen, Classification of Instructional Programs code, UNESCO endangered language ID, has list, statistical unit, applies to taxon, number of graves, Speedskatingbase.eu ID, Stuttgart Database of Scientific Illustrators ID, period, YSO ID, Elonet movie ID, AGORHA event identifier, AGORHA work ID, playing range image, AGORHA person/institution ID, indigenous to, CESAR person ID, BoardGameGeek ID, Musopen composer ID, SFDb-identifier of group, SFDb-identifier of soundtrack, SFDb-identifier of company, SFDb movie ID, Norwegian organization number, Dictionary of Art Historians
- Development
- Worked on (and for now finished) a new, prettier layout for the ArticlePlaceholder-generated pages
- Made improvements to page size by removing a lot of unneeded comments in the HTML
- Worked more on putting identifiers into their own section and linking them properly without a gadget
- Looked into making it possible to edit more languages without the labellister gadget
- Worked on improving the ranking of search results on Special:Search
- Monthly Tasks
- Hack on one of these.
- Help develop the next summary here!
- Contribute to a Showcase item
- Help translate or proofread pages in your own language!
- Add labels, in your own language(s), for the new properties listed above.
The Signpost: 02 December 2015
[edit]- Op-ed: Whither Wikidata?
- Traffic report: Jonesing for episodes
- Featured content: This Week's Featured Content
- Technology report: Tech news in brief
Wikidata weekly summary #187
[edit]- Events/Blogs/Press
- Past: Semantic Web Application and Tools 4 Life Science
- Ongoing: Wikidata for Beginners session at DISH 2015, Rotterdam, 8 December 2015
- Upcoming: Wikidata pour la science
- Upcoming: Workshop on "Wikidata as a platform for biocuration" at Biocuration 2016
- Slides for talk "Building the sum of all human citations"
- Op-ed in Signpost (Lydia is working on a piece to address some of the points)
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- Closing in towards 1 million links between Commons categories and Wikidata article-type items -- 8,000 more by next week?
- Help labeling edits to improve the vandalism detection on Wikidata
- Open Science Prize is looking for cool ideas for Open Data and health. How about something awesome with Wikidata?
- The Individual Engagement Grant for StrepHit has been accepted
- Are you between 13 and 17? Join us for Google Code-in and do some Wikidata tasks with Wikimedia
- We want your feedback on how to improve the process of showcasing Wikidata's best content
- I dreamed of a perfect database - Wikidata? ;-)
- Histropedia timeline of National Library of Wales
- Wikinews, Wikispecies and MediaWiki now have access to the data on Wikidata. Do awesome things with it, sisters! Meta will follow on 15th.
- Map of narrative locations in Denmark
- Experimental REST API for Wikidata
- Did you know?
- Newest properties: deprecated in version, issued by, MediaWiki hooks used, superpartner of, has superpartner, natural abundance, Genius artist ID, ODIS ID, FAO risk status, conversion to SI base unit, Soccerway player ID, Sandbox-Property
- Newest Database reports: WikiProject Movies/new films
- Showcase items: Bertus Aafjes
- Development
- Polished the patch that adds icons to the item pages (for actions like edit, remove etc) and makes them cleaner. This will go live later today.
- Worked more on a separate section for identifiers
- Started working on the sorting of statements on the ArticlePlaceholder pages
- Made it possible to use unknown language, no linguistic content and more as languages for the monolingual text datatype
- Experimented more with improvements to the ranking on Special:Search
- Worked on showing more languages in the in other languages box than the ones defined in your babel boxes
- Small improvements to recent changes/watchlist integration on Wikipedia and co
- Worked on making it possible to create a redirect over a deleted item
- Worked on PHP7 support
- Monthly Tasks
- Hack on one of these.
- Help develop the next summary here!
- Contribute to a Showcase item
- Help translate or proofread pages in your own language!
- Add labels, in your own language(s), for the new properties listed above.
The Signpost: 09 December 2015
[edit]- News and notes: ArbCom election results announced
- Gallery: Wiki Loves Monuments 2015 winners
- Traffic report: So do you laugh, or does it cry?
- Featured content: Sports, ships, arts... and some other things
- Technology report: Tech news in brief
Wikidata weekly summary #188
[edit]- Events/Blogs/Press
- Wikidata: knowledge from different points of view (Signpost op-ed on knowledge diversity and our thinking on data quality)
- The Wikimedia Foundation Scholarships Program is now accepting applications for Wikimania 2016 (deadline: 09 January 2016 23:59 UTC)
- Wikidata: A platform for data integration and dissemination for the life sciences and beyond received the prize for best paper at SWAT4LS. Congrats!
- Past: 50 hours of Wikidata and Wikipedia editing at Museo Soumaya
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- Over 16.000 people have contributed to Wikidata over the last month.
- Wikidata Analyst, a tool to help comprehensively analyze the quality of Wikidata (announcement)
- Overview of the current state of Sum of all Paintings and how you can help by Multichill
- query.wikidata.org now more prominently shows example queries in case you missed them before, lets you filter and gives you a preview for them. Additionally you can click a little magnifying glass next to an item ID in a query result and explore it further.
- WikiJourney now has a first release on the Play Store
- Did you know?
- Newest properties: JMDb film identifier, British Council artist ID, MLSSoccer.com ID, YouTube channel ID, image of function, MGI gene symbol, NCBI Locus tag, teaching method, OKPO ID, Ballotpedia ID, organisation directed from the office, office held by head of the organisation, Elonet actor ID, diameter, French diocesan architects ID, statement describes, CTHS person ID, Chemins de mémoire ID, Academic Tree ID, French Sculpture Census ID, deprecated in version, issued by
- Query example: Which "Lincoln" was "Lincoln" named for?, places by elevation span, people who died in 1945 (for upcoming 2016 public domain day)
- Newest Database reports: List of films without article in Wikipedia of the same language
- Development
- Working on sorting of statement groups for the ArticlePlaceholder extension
- Further work on a separate section for identifiers
- Worked on properly linking identifiers in the exports
- Removed a number of lines and boxes in the statement section to make it less busy
- Made it possible to create a redirect over a deleted item without having to undelete it first
- Further work on improving ranking on Special:Search
- Making it possible to show and edit more languages for labels/descriptions/aliases than the ones defined in your babel boxes
- Getting ready for the holidays :)
- Monthly Tasks
- Hack on one of these.
- Help develop the next summary here!
- Contribute to a Showcase item
- Help translate or proofread pages in your own language!
- Add labels, in your own language(s), for the new properties listed above.
The Signpost: 16 December 2015
[edit]- In the media: Wales in China; #Edit2015
- Arbitration report: GMO case decided
- Featured content: An unusually slow week
- WikiProject report: Women in Red—using teamwork and partnerships to elevate online and offline collaborations
- Traffic report: A feast of Spam
Wikidata weekly summary #189
[edit]Wikidata weekly summary #186
- Discussions
- Successful request for adminship: Eurodyne
- Events/Blogs/Press
- World Health Summit yearbook for 2015
- You can apply for a scholarship to attend Wikimania 2016 (deadline: January 9th)
- Talk submissions for Wikimania 2016 are open. We'd love to see many Wikidata-related submissions. If you need help with your submission contact Lydia.
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- Google has launched the Knowledge Graph Search API, replacing the deprecated Freebase API
- Meta now has access to the data on Wikidata as well
- Want to get an overview of the classes and properties on Wikidata? The Miga class and property browser was updated.
- WikiBrowser - semantically browse Wikipedia with the help of Wikidata
- WikiFamou.us lets you compare topics by popularity across languages with the help of Wikidata
- Chronas is a history project linking Wikipedia and Wikidata with a chronological and cartographical view
- Visiting some place for the holidays? Check out the items nearby.
- Did you know?
- Newest properties: Fashion Model Directory magazine ID, Fashion Model Directory designer ID, Artsy gene, WikiPathways ID, NII Article ID, set in period, short-term exposure limit, maximum peak exposure limit, ceiling exposure limit, time-weighted average exposure limit, Total assets, total expenditure, Six Degrees of Francis Bacon ID
- Query example: works created by females who died in 1945
- Development
- <3 Thanks for being awesome. Enjoy the holidays :)
- We will take the "in other projects"-sidebar out of beta features in January (phabricator:T103102)
- Making ranking information like label and statement counts available to the CirrusSearch index in order to improve ranking in search results (phabricator:T110648)
- Continued work on the identifier data type for identifiers like VIAF and ISBN so we can easily put them into a separate section in the items and properly link them in the exports (phabricator:T95682, phabricator:T121274)
- Continued work on making external identifiers clickable links without the help of the authority control gadget (phabricator:T95684)
- Fixed a mistake in the set reference API documentation (gerrit:259171)
- More work on cleaning up the statement section (phabricator:T121390)
- Monthly Tasks
- Hack on one of these.
- Help develop the next summary here!
- Contribute to a Showcase item
- Help translate or proofread pages in your own language!
- Add labels, in your own language(s), for the new properties listed above.
Speedy deletion nomination of JMIR Publications
[edit]If this is the first article that you have created, you may want to read the guide to writing your first article.
You may want to consider using the Article Wizard to help you create articles.
A tag has been placed on JMIR Publications, requesting that it be speedily deleted from Wikipedia. This has been done under section G11 of the criteria for speedy deletion, because the page seems to be unambiguous advertising which only promotes a company, product, group, service or person and would need to be fundamentally rewritten in order to become encyclopedic. Please read the guidelines on spam and Wikipedia:FAQ/Organizations for more information.
If you think this page should not be deleted for this reason, you may contest the nomination by visiting the page and clicking the button labelled "Contest this speedy deletion". This will give you the opportunity to explain why you believe the page should not be deleted. However, be aware that once a page is tagged for speedy deletion, it may be removed without delay. Please do not remove the speedy deletion tag from the page yourself, but do not hesitate to add information in line with Wikipedia's policies and guidelines. If the page is deleted, and you wish to retrieve the deleted material for future reference or improvement, then please contact the deleting administrator. Randykitty (talk) 16:57, 22 December 2015 (UTC)
Wikidata weekly summary #190
[edit]Wikidata weekly summary #186
- Events/Blogs/Press
- Ongoing: 32C3
- Upcoming: Wikimedia Developer Summit
- Upcoming: StrepHit IEG project kick-off seminar
- Upcoming: Office hour on IRC
- Upcoming: FOSDEM (Lucie will give a talk about the ArticlePlaceholder extension)
- Registration and scholarship applications for the Wikimedia Hackathon in Israel are open
- Don't forget your talk submissions for Wikimania 2016. Lydia can help if needed.
- Getting CAS registry numbers out of WikiData
- The quality of SMILES strings in Wikidata
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- Did you know?
- Development
- Some small bugfixes and tweaks.
- Enjoying the holidays and editing on Wikidata. Hope you are too :)
- Monthly Tasks
- Hack on one of these.
- Help develop the next summary here!
- Contribute to a Showcase item
- Help translate or proofread pages in your own language!
- Add labels, in your own language(s), for the new properties listed above.
The Signpost: 30 December 2015
[edit]- News and notes: WMF Board dismisses community-elected trustee
- Arbitration report: Second Arbitration Enforcement case concludes as another case is suspended
- Featured content: The post-Christmas edition
- Traffic report: The Force we expected
- Year in review: The top ten Wikipedia stories of 2015
- In the media: Wikipedia plagued by a "Basket of Deception"
- Gallery: It's that time of year again
A page you started (Sheep dip (disambiguation)) has been reviewed!
[edit]Thanks for creating Sheep dip (disambiguation), Fgnievinski!
Wikipedia editor Animalparty just reviewed your page, and wrote this note for you:
Note: disambiguation pages, unlike articles, should not have any references, and should only have one navigable link per bullet point, per MOS:DAB.
To reply, leave a comment on Animalparty's talk page.
Learn more about page curation.
The Signpost: 06 January 2016
[edit]- News and notes: The WMF's age of discontent
- In the media: Impenetrable science; Jimmy Wales back in the UAE
- Arbitration report: Catflap08 and Hijiri88 case been decided
- Featured content: Featured menagerie
- WikiProject report: Try-ing to become informed - WikiProject Rugby League
- Technology report: Tech news in brief
OpenOffice draft
[edit]I noticed Talk:OpenOffice/Draft. Is there a reason not to move it to Draft:OpenOffice? Paradoctor (talk) 16:04, 8 January 2016 (UTC)
@Fgnievinski: Paradoctor (talk) 17:01, 16 January 2016 (UTC)
Wikidata weekly summary #191
[edit]- Discussions
- Successful request for adminship: Innocent bystander
- Events/Blogs/Press
- The Reference Wars
- Teaching machines to make your life easier – quality work on Wikidata
- Wikidata references from Microdata
- Building applications around Wikidata (a beer example)
- From Freebase to Wikidata: the great migration has been accepted for the industry track of WWW2016
- Gene Wiki and Wikidata: an overview of 2015
- Past: 32C3 in Hamburg
- Past: Wikimedia Developer Summit
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- A Visual Introduction to Machine Learning
- The deadline for submissions for Wikimania has been extended to 17th. Get your talk proposals in!
- IUCN statuses have been removed from taxoboxes in Czech Wikipedia in order to display sourced Wikidata data. Check it out with Comodo dragon, lion, Siamese fighting fish or any of almost 3,000 articles.
- Migrating identifier properties to new identifier datatype
- Listeria lists can now show arbitrary SPARQL results
- Mix'n'match has new catalogs like UNESCO's Atlas of languages in danger
- Initial plans for MetaPipe, a collaborate metadata tool
- Did you know?
- Newest properties: BugGuide ID, elibrary.ru organisation ID, member of the deme, ComLaw ID, Persons of Ancient Athens, IBU biathlete identifier, Mackolik.com footballer ID, Australian National Shipwreck Database Shipwreck ID number, dblp identifier, Species Profile and Threats Database ID, KNAW past member identifier, nominee, GeoNames feature code, MAME ROM, Encyclopædia Britannica contributor identifier, Turkish Football Federation manager ID, Turkish Football Federation player ID, transfermarkt manager id, transfermarkt footballer id, metasubclass of, homoglyph, stage reached, conversion to standard unit, literal translation, transliteration, language, narrator, number of seasons, voltage, PORT person ID, Panarctic Flora ID, gender of a scientific name of a genus, J. Paul Getty Museum artist id, Thyssen-Bornemisza artist id, takeoff roll, expected completeness, RePEc Short-ID, grid global research id, Xeno-canto species ID, service ribbon image, Berlin cultural heritage ID, FIE identifier
- Newest WikiProjects: Broadcasting
- New feature/gadget requests: disambiguator tool, tool to move statements from one item to another
- Development
- Attending the Wikimedia Developer Summit
- Are you a student looking for a thesis topic with impact? There might be some around Wikidata for you. Get in touch with Lydia if interested.
- More work on moving identifiers to their own section and having a separate datatype for them
- Fixed the problem where you could add links to non-existing files on Commons (phabricator:T87263)
- We're adding a "latest" link for the JSON dumps (phabricator:T72247)
- Fixed a bug in the monolingual text datatype when changing the language (phabricator:T95419)
- More work on making it possible to show all languages for a given item without the label lister gadget
- Security review for the ArticlePlaceholder is done \o/
- References in the ArticlePlaceholder are now shown more similar to how they are shown in a regular article (at the bottom)
- SPARQL queries display directly when link to query.wikidata.org is opened
- Monthly Tasks
- Hack on one of these.
- Help develop the next summary here!
- Contribute to a Showcase item
- Help translate or proofread pages in your own language!
- Add labels, in your own language(s), for the new properties listed above.
Your draft article, Draft:Academic ranks
[edit]Hello, Fgnievinski. It has been over six months since you last edited your Articles for Creation draft article submission, "Academic ranks".
In accordance with our policy that Articles for Creation is not for the indefinite hosting of material deemed unsuitable for the encyclopedia mainspace, the draft has been nominated for deletion. If you plan on working on it further, or editing it to address the issues raised if it was declined, simply and remove the {{db-afc}}
or {{db-g13}}
code.
If your submission has already been deleted by the time you get there, and you wish to retrieve it, you can request its undeletion by following the instructions at this link. An administrator will, in most cases, restore the submission so you can continue to work on it.
Thanks for your submission to Wikipedia, and happy editing. Fortuna Imperatrix Mundi 13:53, 14 January 2016 (UTC)
The Signpost: 13 January 2016
[edit]- Community view: Battle for the soul of the WMF
- Editorial: We need a culture of verification
- In focus: The Crisis at New Montgomery Street
- Op-ed: Transparency
- Traffic report: Pattern recognition: Third annual Traffic Report
- Special report: Wikipedia community celebrates Public Domain Day 2016
- News and notes: Community objections to new Board trustee
- Featured content: This Week's Featured Content
- Arbitration report: Interview: outgoing and incumbent arbitrators 2016
- Technology report: Tech news in brief
True airspeed and peculiar velocity
[edit]Hi Fgnievinski. I see your recent edits to interlink True airspeed and Peculiar velocity. I see no similarity between these two, so no benefit in adding each one to the other's "See also" list. Our article on true airspeed is about the speed of aircraft through the air; and our article on peculiar velocity is about galactic astronomy and cosmology. One is about slow speed through the air and the other is about high speed through through a vacuum. Can you clarify why the reader of one article might find the other article relevant or helpful? Thanks. Dolphin (t) 01:21, 17 January 2016 (UTC)
Wikidata weekly summary #192
[edit]- Events/Blogs/Press
- Wikipedia turned 15. Happy birthday, big sister!
- Doing research on Wikidata? Consider submitting to OpenSym.
- Past: ODI summit (video of talk "Making every human gene accessible and linkable" by Andra Waagmeester)
- Past: StrepHit IEG kick-off (video, slides)
- Upcoming: ORCID outreach meeting
- Other Noteworthy Stuff
- Module:Cycling race generates a list of stages and winners for cycling races
- Great use of the Listeria bot to create an artwork gallery
- Wikidata-lang - library to get language code from a Wikidata item for a language
- Live-stream of Wikidata edits by Magnus
- Wikipedia tools for Google Spreadsheet now has a Wikidata function
- Yair rand wrote a user script to experiment with how changes are shown in recent changes and watchlist
- Did you know?
- Development
- Students worked on new datatype to capture mathematical expressions (phabricator:T67397)
- Updated property suggester data to give you more up-to-date suggestions when adding new statements
- Pages in the module namespace now also get interwiki links (phabricator:T123234)
- Reduced number of resource loader modules to improve performance (phabricator:T123233)
- Started experimenting with showing an image in the header area (phabricator:T119493)
- Fixed a bug where the query text would be moved off the screen on the query service website (phabricator:T120196)
- Worked on the remaining blocker for taking the in other projects sidebar out of beta. We need to link to the Commons category and not gallery for articles without frying the servers (phabricator:T94989)
- Monthly Tasks
- Hack on one of these.
- Help develop the next summary here!
- Contribute to a Showcase item
- Help translate or proofread pages in your own language!
- Add labels, in your own language(s), for the new properties listed above.
WikiProject X Newsletter • Issue 6
[edit]Hello there! Happy to be writing this newsletter once more. This month:
Some good news: the Wikimedia Foundation has renewed WikiProject X. This means we can continue focusing on making WikiProjects better.
During our first round of work, we created a prototype WikiProject based on two ideas: (1) WikiProjects should clearly present things for people to do, and (2) The content of WikiProjects should be automated as much as possible. We launched pilots, and for the most part it works. But this approach will not work for the long term. While it makes certain aspects of running a WikiProject easier, it makes the maintenance aspects harder.
We are working on a major overhaul that will address these issues. New features will include:
- Creating WikiProjects by simply filling out a form, choosing which reports you want to generate for your project. This will work with existing bots in addition to the Reports Bot reports. (Of course, you can also have sections curated by humans.)
- One-click button to join a WikiProject, with optional notifications.
- Be able to define your WikiProject's scope within the WikiProject itself by listing relevant pages and categories, eliminating the need to tag every talk page with a banner. (You will still be allowed to do that, of course. It just won't be required.)
The end goal is a collaboration tool that can be used by WikiProjects but also by any edit-a-thon or group of people that want to coordinate on improving articles. Though implemented as an extension, the underlying content will be wikitext, meaning that you can continue to use categories, templates, and other features as you normally would.
This will take a lot of work, and we are just getting started. What would you like to see? I invite you to discuss on our talk page.
Until next time,