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Jackson's death, new data center, more

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By Phoebe

The King of Pop vs. Wikipedia

Michael Jackson's hospitalization and death on Thursday, June 25 was immediately picked up by news sources and widely broadcast through online social networks, which in turn caused a vast number of people to turn to the Wikipedia article on Jackson. According to the Wikimedia Techblog, the number of people checking the Jackson article caused a load spike that briefly took Wikipedia offline. Developer and member of the Board of Trustees Domas Mituzas described what happened.

This story was in turn picked up by CNN, which also discussed the effects of Jackson's death on other major websites: Twitter and Google News also reported problems. Noam Cohen of The New York Times also reported on the traffic to Wikipedia in the wake of Jackson's death, with nearly a million visitors to the article in the space of an hour, which Jay Walsh of the Foundation said may be the "most in a one-hour period of any article in Wikipedia history." According to Henrik's statistics server, the Jackson article received 5.9 million views on June 26, more than the main page this day, with 12.5 million views total this month so far. William Beutler in a blog post compared this spike to the 2.5 million visitors that the article on Sarah Palin received in the wake of McCain's announcement of her as his running mate in the 2008 United States presidential election, and speculated that the traffic to the article on Jackson may be unprecedented.

Apache web server load spike for Wikimedia sites following news of Michael Jackson's death

Data center donation

The Wikimedia Foundation announced that it has signed a contract with EvoSwitch, a carbon-neutral data center based in Amsterdam. The data center will become Wikimedia's European hub. According to the announcement, EvoSwitch is offering over €300,000 of in-kind support in bandwidth and hosting. There will be around 50 servers installed at the EvoSwitch site.

Donation button feedback

The Wikimedia Usability project is soliciting feedback on a possible "donation button" to go in the left-hand sidebar. Mockups are available for comment on Meta. The Usability Project also continues to seek feedback on their prototype sites.

"Bookshelf" volunteer sought

The public outreach group at the Wikimedia Foundation is seeking a volunteer to help with the "bookshelf" project to develop short educational materials (such as fliers) about Wikipedia. The volunteer will lay out documents in Scribus, a free desktop publishing program. More information is available on Meta.

Algae articles created, deleted

Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Anybot's_algae_articles resulted in the deletion of 4077 articles, which is possibly the largest number of deletions ever from a bulk AfD. According to the AFD, "Anybot created 4092 algae articles by scraping information out of the AlgaeBase database, and formatting it into articles. In doing so, it introduced numerous serious errors into more-or-less every article." An attempt was made to correct the errors by bot, but it was unsuccessful.

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==Realist2==

I'd say it's definitely worth mentioning the hard work of Realist2 (talk · contribs) in maintaining the MJ article. Even Jimbo felt it was worth mentioning. J Milburn (talk) 10:14, 30 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

your opinion is noted, but wiki editing has no rewards. remind yourself that.Talk to Magibon 01:54, 6 July 2009 (UTC)[reply]



       

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