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Volume 5, Issue 14 | 6 April 2009 | About the Signpost |
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A new initiative is underway to make OpenStreetMap available as interactive maps within Wikipedia. OpenStreetMap is a collaborative project to create free, open source street map data, mostly generated from user-submitted GPS tracks. To get the project going, Wikimedia Deutschland (WM-DE, the German Chapter of Wikimedia) is providing €15,000 (~$20,000) for a map toolserver, which will be a place for the project team to setup a prototype infrastructure and for developing other mapping-related ideas.
The maps will be integrated into Wikipedia pages that have coordinates. The default option will be to have a link in the coordinates template that allows the maps to pop up and expand, similar to how the WikiMiniAtlas currently works. There will also be a tag (e.g. <map>) that can be used (with parameters) to place an individual inline map in an article or infobox. The map will be rendered as a .png static map, which works whether or not the reader has JavaScript enabled, and the static map images can be cached. If the reader does have JavaScript enabled, then they will also be able to click on the map and interact—zoom, pan, etc.—similar to how Google Maps works. The dynamic maps work by displaying map tiles, which are .png images and also can easily be cached.
Wikimedia Deutschland is providing three servers: one that can host an independent copy of the OpenStreetMap planet.osm data; another for rendering and tile caching; and a third server for developing new applications and other mapping ideas, tools, and uses for OpenStreetMap data. With this setup, the project team can determine the exact technical setup that would be needed for deployment on the main Wikimedia production servers. Another part of the project is to develop a MediaWiki extension, expanding upon the existing SlippyMap, Simple image, and other extensions, making them robust and very reliable, and working to make the whole map system usable and well-integrated with Wikipedia.
The plan is to get the maps ready for implementation on English and other language Wikipedia versions as quickly as possible; developers hope to have mapping ready for deployment by the time of the Wikimania conference at the end of August 2009. The initial implementation will be kept simple, just focused on OpenStreetMap. Once the maps are working, there are many possibilities to improve them, such as integrating satellite imagery from NASA World Wind and adding map icons showing the location of Wikipedia articles. At some point the project developers would also like to provide a number of different map style options, as a street map is not a good fit for all types of articles (e.g. showing bird species ranges and migration patterns).
Erik Zachte posted new reports about traffic to the Wikimedia projects and where it comes from. Some of the results that Zachte found are that around half of the external daily traffic requests come from Google, 31% of requests come from Firefox, and nearly 0.9% of requests are from an iPhone.
A research group called "Project Information Literacy" at the University of Washington Information School, which is studying young adult research habits and information literacy, released their first report recently. It focuses on how college students do research, including using the library and web for assignments and "everyday life" needs. In a section called "Use of Wikipedia," the authors write: "We found Wikipedia was a unique and indispensable research source for students. The online, collaborative, community-based online encyclopedia gave students a workaround for obtaining the big picture and language contexts they frequently lacked for course-related and to a lesser degree, everyday life research."
The study also explored student perceptions of Wikipedia's limitations, finding that "In our sessions, students also discussed concerns over Wikipedia and accuracy. However, most participants believed that they, themselves, had the ability to discern the credibility of a Wikipedia source, based on their 'gut level' interpretation of Wikipedia’s rating system (e.g., posted notes by editors such as, 'This article needs additional citations for verification')."
Finally, the study found that even when students did use Wikipedia, " Most students depended on and used Wikipedia for information cited in papers, but just never included Wikipedia entries on their Works Cited page."
The study consisted of interviews with 86 college students. A larger version of the study is planned for next year.
Felipe Ortega's dissertation, called "Wikipedia: A Quantiative Analysis" has been posted for download. It uses the WikiXRay tool to analyze the top-10 language editions of Wikipedia, focusing on community and the future sustainability of Wikipedia.
Jimbo Wales has pulled the plug on Wikia Search, a community based search engine, as reported by eWeek. Wales stated on his personal blog, "While I personally believe in the opportunity for free software to make serious inroads into the search space, our project, Wikia Search, has not been enjoying the kind of success that we had hoped." According to Nielsen Online, Wikia—which hosts a wide range of wiki projects such as Memory Alpha, Wookieepedia, and Uncyclopedia—was one of the fastest growing community websites, after Twitter, Zimbio, Facebook and Multiply. However, Wikia Search was a departure from Wikia's main focus, which has been community-specific encyclopedia projects that, to varying degrees, follow the model of Wikipedia. Wales said he cares about the search industry deeply and will return to it in the future.
In "University confronts cheats in the age of Wikipedia", the Edmonton Journal reports that the problem of students plagiarizing from Wikipedia has prompted the University of Alberta to take steps to stop such academic dishonesty. Students who need help with their writing can go to the campus Centre for Writing. Other teachers are giving proper instruction on how to properly cite sources, to prevent confusion about quoting vs. stealing.
On April 2, the Minister of Internal Affairs of New Zealand, Richard Worth, was questioned about whether he had edited his own Wikipedia article and asked whether he intended "to take the advice Wikipedia gave him yesterday afternoon that he should consult Wikipedia’s conflict of interest guidelines?" This was apparently related to edits made in December 2008 and March 2009, which are discussed in a post dated April 1 on talk:Richard Worth. The story was picked up by TVNZ, with no mention of the age of the edits.
Beginning April 1, 2009, Featured article candidates (FAC) started using stable subpages—like AFD's subpages—that will not need to be moved when the FAC is promoted or archived.
Rather than using {{FAC}} on an article talk page to start a FAC discussion, nominators will use {{subst:FAC}}. Featured article review will function similarly with the {{FAR}} template.
Before this change, the subpage for discussing the FAC for Article looked like Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/Article. This caused some difficulty if the article did not pass FAC and was later re-nominated. For a subsequent FAC nomination, nominators generally had to move the old subpage to Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/Article/archive1 (or some variation), and then edit the redirect to create a new FAC page. This system caused some difficulties, including:
As a temporary solution, from sometime in 2007 subpages for articles that were not promoted were moved to Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/Article/archiveN (the next open integer N) when the discussion closed. This kept Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/Article open for a later FAC nomination. Most of the links to the FAC subpage were updated when the page was moved, so this avoided most of the problems with the previous system. However, it was difficult for many editors to maintain by hand, and required a bot to help maintain operations.
Beginning April 1, FAC uses stable subpages. These pages should not need to be moved, so links to them should not need updating.
Rather than using
on an article talk page to start a FAC discussion, nominators will use
Template substitution and logic with mw:ParserFunctions will determine an available subpage. The template logic will look for an available page in sequence
until a page is found that doesn't exist. For example, if the first page already exists and the second does not, {{subst:FAC}} will produce the following text on the talk page
Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/Article/archive2 will not conflict with existing pages, should not conflict with future pages, and should not need to be moved. Records in the {{ArticleHistory}} template would link to that page. If an article passes FAC and is removed through Featured article review (FAR), the FAC subpage will not need to be moved for any later FACs.
A similar system has existed for over a year at Peer review (see related story), Portal peer review and Good article nominations.
The template only supports 10 subpages (up to /archive10). After that it will always produce /archiveNN. In these rare cases, using {{featured article candidates|Article/archive11}} on the talk page will provide links to create the appropriate subpage.
{{FAC}} is a template that must be substituted rather than used directly. Once the transition period is over, the output of {{subst:FAC}}, which utilizes {{featured article candidates}}, will require a parameter to specify an archive number (e.g., {{featured article candidates|Nancy Cartwright/archive1}} for first candidacy of Nancy Cartwright).
Reader comments
With a member count of one editor for every five million Chinese people, you would be forgiven for assuming that WikiProject China is too small to cope with such a heaving load of work. However, the project is coping more than well enough without the massive number of participants. In this week's WikiProject Report, we present a special double interview with Danaman5 and PericlesofAthens.
“ | Chinese language abilities are helpful, but not required; there are plenty of people who can help you translate anything that you need to. | ” |
— Danaman5 |
3. Has there been any discussion of a tagging/reassessment drive to help fix that problem?
4. We would certainly expect topics such as Sino-American relations and Communist Party of China to fall victim to POV pushing and contention, but to what extent do these problems spread to WikiProject China's other topics, such as Geography of China?
5. You mentioned bringing Song Dynasty and its satellites to Featured Topic status, as well as the possibility of doing the same with Han Dynasty. Besides the other dynasties, what China-related topics would you like to see featured?
6. Do Chinese-language translations, transliterations, or sources ever pose a problem to you or the other non-speakers of the project?
7. What involvement (if any) did the project and its members have with the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games?
8. Finally, do you think WikiProject China's more contentious articles could benefit from some form of flagged revisions?
One editor was granted admin status via the Requests for Adminship process this week: Paxse (nom).
Anonymous Dissident (nom) was promoted to bureaucrat status this week.
Nine bots or bot tasks were approved to begin operating this week: RussBot (task request), Sambot (task request), Legobot II (task request), SPCUClerkbot (task request), Basketrabbit (task request), DustyBot (task request), MGA73bot (task request) and Mr.Z-bot (task request).
Five articles were promoted to featured status this week: Falaise pocket (nom), Battle of Tippecanoe (nom), Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell (nom), Manchester Mummy (nom) and Tree Sparrow (nom).
Fourteen lists were promoted to featured status this week: Disturbed discography (nom), Big East Conference Men's Basketball Player of the Year (nom), List of Silver Slugger Award winners at first base (nom), List of QI episodes (nom), Davy Medal (nom), Clint Eastwood filmography (nom), List of former championships in World Wrestling Entertainment (nom), List of United States Naval Academy alumni (Medal of Honor) (nom), List of TNA X Division Champions (nom), List of career achievements by Kobe Bryant (nom), List of BBC Sports Personality of the Year awards (nom), List of Silver Slugger Award winners at second base (nom), 1998 Winter Olympics medal table (nom) and List of United States Military Academy alumni (astronauts) (nom).
No topics were promoted to featured status this week.
One portal was promoted to featured status this week: Portal:Buddhism (nom).
The following featured articles were displayed on the Main Page this week as Today's featured article: Main sequence, Museum of Bad Art, Meningitis, Hare coursing, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, Decipherment of rongorongo and State Route 128.
No articles were delisted this week.
Two lists were delisted this week: List of premature obituaries (nom) and List of universities in the Canadian Prairies (nom).
No topics were delisted this week.
The following featured pictures were displayed on the Main Page this week as picture of the day: Convention of Kanagawa, Drawing in the scientific romance style, Zizina labradus, Salvador Dalí, Convair B-36 Peacemaker, Vaccination and Arial refueling.
No media files were featured this week.
No featured pictures were demoted this week.
Eight pictures were promoted to featured status this week and are shown below.
The Committee announced that Mailer Diablo, MBisanz and Tiptoety have been promoted to position as clerks for the committee. Additionally, the {{ArbComOpenTasks}}
template that appears at the top of the requests for arbitration page was modified to mention the name of the designated drafting Arbitrator for each open case.
The Arbitration Committee opened one case this week, and closed none, leaving eight cases open.