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January Engineering Update; Dutch Hack-a-ton; brief news

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By Jarry1250 and Tilman Bayer

January Engineering Update published

The Foundation's Engineering Update for January (and covering the activities of December) was published last week on the Wikimedia Techblog, giving a brief overview of all Foundation-sponsored technical operations in the last month. It summarised the developments:

In addition to the increasing focus on the 1.17 release of the MediaWiki software and other major developments covered in recent editions of the Signpost, a number of items had their statuses updated since the last Engineering Update. For example, as touched upon in the report's executive summary, technicians travelled to India during the month "to assess technical gaps to success in India." The report noted some of the conclusions of this work: "some areas of localization were identified to standardize on Indic language wikis, such as editing tools and font rendering... [and] offline reading was a recurring topic". In other news, an invitation-only "data summit", cancelled last year, was rescheduled for early February; work progressed rapidly on a new "virtualization cluster" for improved testing; a minor update to the "pending changes" software was released; and a contract was signed with PediaPress to add openZim support to the Collection (PDF-generating) extension. Developers are also looking into better integrating with Kiwix to provide offline copies of Wikipedia to areas with poor or patchy internet coverage, including India.

December also saw the appointment of CT Woo as the Foundation's new Director of Technical Operations (Signpost coverage). The position of "bugmeister" - overseeing the creation and maintenance of bug reports - was removed from the hiring list, but without an appointment. Developer Robert Lanphier explained the decision (wikitech-l mailing list):

Hackaton in the Netherlands

This week also saw a get-together of GLAM (Galleries-Libraries-Archives-Museums) staff, Wikipedia contributors and MediaWiki hackers in the Netherlands (Gerard Meijssen, TheDJ). The meetup, timed to coincide with Wikipedia's tenth anniversary (see this week's "News and notes", saw a number of topics discussed and work completed:

According to Ziko, the Wikisnaps tool coded by TheDJ "has a good chance to become the most famous result [of the Hack-a-ton]: With this Apple App, you can take a photograph with your iPhone and upload it within a few seconds to Wikimedia Commons. An Android version is about to come. At the presentation, this tool received a long warm applause."

In brief

Not all fixes may have gone live to WMF sites at the time of writing; some may not be scheduled to go live for many weeks.

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Sorry, what is a parallelised dump? Thank you. 131.111.28.82 (talk) 01:04, 20 January 2011 (UTC)[reply]

See Parallel computing. Basically, the end result is that dumps will be quicker to generate in future. - Jarry1250 [Who? Discuss.] 19:38, 20 January 2011 (UTC)[reply]



       

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