This is an archive of past discussions. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the
current talk page.
It won't. Most discussion pages are exactly as efficient as they need to be, and most of the rest are as efficient as they can be made to be, with the size being due to many one-off comments from the outside world. In any case, spamming a large number of pages with this message is the opposite of efficiency. —
Gavia immer (
talk)21:58, 20 November 2010 (UTC)
In any case, the statistics are way off.
T:MP is currently quoted as 83k in the editing window.
WT:DYK, on the other hand, which is listed at #38 on Wavelength's list, is obviously much longer than this one and comes out at 423k in the editing window.
Physchim62(talk)22:02, 20 November 2010 (UTC)
Only four events, of which three are to do with the US? None of which is earlier than 1978? Seriously? Where's the balance? Where's the reporting of important events (a cartoon and a fatal bonfire collapse?) Where's the historical spread? Where's the geographical spread? It's hard to swallow Wikipedia's claim to be a serious encyclopaedia with this kind of selection.
86.134.26.42 (
talk)
09:12, 18 November 2010 (UTC)
Done, but it was actually pretty difficult to find good articles to put for November 18. Some of the ones listed on
November 18 did not actually happen today, and others are stubs or of poor quality. The best I could do was get two North American ones (one US/Canada and one Canada), but I believe that temporally speaking there is now a bit more diversity. howcheng {
chat}17:46, 18 November 2010 (UTC)
What is the WP equivalent of Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells? It is a platitude that most peopel will be occasionally annoyed/dislike certain entries on the main page - or 'repeated appearance of items in certain categories' (and filtering devices rather more so). Given that 'some people in some situations' are more flexible in what they view is there some way of having 'unfiltered access' and 'filtered so as not to annoy by subject/frequency of appearance of "the usual topics" and so on'?
Jackiespeel (
talk)
15:38, 18 November 2010 (UTC)
Comment:Selected anniversaries should not be featuring poorly sourced and low quality articles on the
Main Page. High quality
WP:GA and
WP:FA articles should not be removed and replaced with poor quality improperly sourced pages. -- Cirt (
talk)
17:52, 18 November 2010 (UTC)
Hold on,
Wikipedia:Selected anniversaries#Criteria for listing items on this set of pages says nothing about FA and GA articles taking precedence over others. Only stubs and articles with red and orange-level maintenance tags are prohibited. In fact, going by the criteria there, both Calvin & Hobbes and the Aggie Bonfire should definitely be excluded because neither are "of moderate to great historical significance". As such, I respectfully request that revert your
last edit. howcheng {
chat}20:33, 18 November 2010 (UTC)
Agreed. There's nothing in the criteria about FAs or GAs. Whilst it's nice to have a good article, and all other things being equal we should use them, there's also a need to have a balance of items. The items listed should (IMO) be of historical importance, cover a range of time periods, a range of topics (not all items about battles, for example) and a range of geographic locations.
Modest Geniustalk20:40, 18 November 2010 (UTC)
Just wanna add that Wikipedia's strength is not only its depth in selected topics such as military history and recent stuffs, but also its breadth. While problematic pages should be avoided, we really should be able to select items for SA/OTD to showcase articles, FA or otherwise. Making the quality standard sky high also mean shutting out under-serviced areas and underrepresenting what we have on the wide variety of topics/fields that are available in the wiki. Let's have some balance and diversity. --
PFHLai (
talk)
02:59, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
Sorry, but no. We should expect a high standard of quality for material selected for featured presentation in sects on the Main Page. -- Cirt (
talk)
03:04, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
For TFA, yes. But we apply different standards to each section of the MP - DYK articles are hardly of a high standard, for example. The primary point in TFA is to showcase top quality articles, for ITN it's articles of timely relevance, for DYK it's recently created articles, and for OTD it's depth and breadth of historical coverage. Article quality does not trump historical coverage when it comes to OTD.
Modest Geniustalk05:00, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
I agree in principle, but I don't think Wikipedia is there yet. Maybe 2018? 2020? Hopefully sooner. For now, there are too many underserviced areas. We should avoid bad pages for SA/OTD, but we should not exclusively use FAs and GAs. Maintaining a high standard is good, but we don't have enough FAs and GAs in wide enough variety of topics. It's part of systemic bias. --
PFHLai (
talk)
03:24, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
(
edit conflict) Sorry, but no. The overwhealming majority of our readers couldn't give an
aerialaccouplement for the WikiProcesses which determine FA or GA quality, which would presumably be those applied by Cirt and are explicitly those applied by YellowMonkey in his comments above. We have four sections that apply different criteria so as to appeal to a wide spectrum of readers. FA status is no guarantee of "quality" in any meaningful sense of the word, but it is traditional to have a "featured article" on the Main Page: that doesn't mean that the same criteria should apply for the other three sections.
Physchim62(talk)03:31, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
I did not say we should only use GAs and FAs. But I did say that GAs and FAs should not be removed, and replaced with poorer quality material. -- Cirt (
talk)
03:40, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
And that's where we disagree ;) The quality of the material is relative to the section where it appears, not absolute. An FA which is bad for OTD should not appear in that section.
Physchim62(talk)03:46, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
If we only have articles in the few topics that Wikipedia is strong in, but not have a variety of topics, then we'll end up with poorer quality SA/OTD templates. Having said that, I do like to see more FAs & GAs on SA/OTD. We just can't ignore the need for diversity. --
PFHLai (
talk)
04:07, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
That would lead to controversy such as has been seen previously at
WT:DYK, leading to possible unsourced, unreferenced, poorly sourced, material appearing on the
Main Page. That is simply inappropriate. -- Cirt (
talk)
16:17, 20 November 2010 (UTC)
AFAIK we already exclude extremely poor quality articles for SA/OTD, even for significant events. Very poor is usually take to mean articles with any cleanup tags
Nil Einne (
talk)
17:10, 20 November 2010 (UTC)
Yes, that's what I meant by "problematic pages should be avoided" for SA/OTD yesterday. Ignoring the need for diversity and balance is also inappropriate. --
PFHLai (
talk)
19:42, 20 November 2010 (UTC)
Is there somewhere I can go to complain about wikipedia's fundraising tactics? It seems odd there is not already stuff on the main page. I guess I'll be moved on soon. IP. —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
78.143.204.5 (
talk)
00:21, 21 November 2010 (UTC)
Anyway the substance of my complaint is that the appeal does not make clear the difference between wikipedia and wikimedia, infact the wording of the appeal suggests that they are the same , i.e. it mentions wikipedia in an appeal for wikimedia. The appeal link has no way to comment on it. —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
78.143.204.5 (
talk)
00:43, 21 November 2010 (UTC)
A few questions. Can I donate to wikipedia without donating to wikimedia?
Does wikipedia have the ability to separate itself from wikimedia?
If wikipedia is a separate entity from wikimedia why does it allow appeals from wikimedia to appear on it's main page? Why not appeal directly?
Thanks for that. the assumption 'donating to Wikimedia, you're funding Wikipedia' is false. Thats like saying all cats are mammals, therefore all mammals are cats. It does not follow.
78.143.204.5 (
talk)
01:14, 21 November 2010 (UTC)
I do mean thanks for that info, it does confirm that wikipedia and wikimedia are not the same in finacial terms. Operating something does not make it the same organisation. If I carry on here I will probably become very tedious, there must be other folk who have raise similar concerns. Please point me to them.
78.143.204.5 (
talk) —Preceding
undated comment added
01:41, 21 November 2010 (UTC).
By far the vast majority of Wikimedia work and money is devoted to Wikipedia. The other projects that are also supported by the Foundation, like Wikisource, Wikibooks, Wikiversity, Commons, etc. are also educational free culture projects like Wikipedia. Currently there is no way to donate money specifically to one of the projects and not to the Foundation in general. This is more of an issue for the smaller projects, however, as Wikipedia definitely gets the lion's share of attention from the Foundation.
Kaldari (
talk)
04:56, 22 November 2010 (UTC)
TFA pics
I just looked up the TFA queue for November and noticed that quite a few TFAs in the next week or so have no pics. I have no suggestions for Nov. 26th and 27th. But, does anyone want to pick the TFA pic for use on Nov. 24th? Candidates are
here. --
PFHLai (
talk)
07:00, 22 November 2010 (UTC)
Wikipedia size: Implementation of proposed changes
In the previous discussion (
now archived) there was significant support for two changes:
Remove number of English Wikipedia articles from the top of the page, as it is duplicated in the bottom section.
Display top size category of other language Wikipedias as a range (i.e. 500,000 to 1,200,000), given that current display is misleading and counter-productive.
I'm not sure I'd call the support for these changes "significant." But I suppose we'll find out.
I disagree with both proposals. We should look at the purpose behind these sections. For the first, the number of articles the English Wikipedia has is advertising. We are showing off a sexy fact about Wikipedia, and indeed one of the most distinctive things Wikipedia is known for is its vast size. It should absolutely go "above the fold." I don't see what's wrong with duplication, either; we duplicate the list of foreign language Wikipedias, too, in both the left sidebar and the bottom navbox. Should we remove one on the basis that people can surely use the other? If people still did find the two separate page counts undesirable, it'd probably be better to remove the count from the bottom section rather than the top notice.
As for the second proposal, this also misses the point of what exactly the bottom section is for. If the count on top is "advertising," the list of foreign language Wikipedias is utilitarian. It is there for those who want to look something up in what is probably their native language who ended up at the English Wikipedia, or at least a language they have an interest in. While casual visitors to the English Wikipedia may well find the number of articles in English Wikipedia a cool fact and a selling point, that doesn't describe at all the intended audience for the Wikipedia languages section. See David Levy's points in the archived discussion, basically; if you want the Hebrew Wikipedia, it really doesn't matter at all how many articles are in it. The reason why the number of articles is listed / used at all is simply to sort the Wikipedias most likely to be relevant to the top of the list. It would be no great harm to have, say, organized the section alphabetically and then bolded the most visited Wikipedias as an alternative method of showing other Wikipedias while highlighting "relevant" ones. What matters is screen layout and real estate, and this proposal would distract viewers with numbers entirely beside the point. (Unnecessary numbers, too, with the exception of the highest tier - it's already clear that "more than 100,000 articles" means 100,000 - 150,000 on the current display.)
SnowFire (
talk)
00:00, 4 November 2010 (UTC)
Regarding the proposed removal of the article count from the top of the page, you're quite correct that this serves as advertising. And in the days before Wikipedia was well known, its presence made sense.
But Wikipedia has become one of the most popular websites, so we no longer need to worry that the public is unaware of its comprehensive nature. By continuing to display our article count so prominently, we proclaim to the world that we value quantity above quality. We else would we boast that the site contains 6,857,706 articles (many of which are poorly written)? —
David Levy03:13, 4 November 2010 (UTC)
I oppose the proposals, per SnowFire. The number of articles of Wikipedia is relevant, and that it values quantity over quality is only a paranoid interpretation. It's a wow. It's a hell of a lot. It's impressive. It blows all other encyclopedias away. Leave it up there.
As SnowFire pointed out, the range is already implicit in the scale. I think we should have a new level added at 1,000,000 articles since that is a significant milestone, and waiting for other Wikipedias to reach it before such a level is created is plain silly. "Over 1,000,000" is twice as impressive as over "500,000", in more ways than one.
1. Seeking to "impress" readers with the sheer number of articles — advertised at the top of the main page — literally is placing quantity before quality. Many of those articles are very poorly written, and we're bragging about them.
2. 1,000,000 articles (as we define it) "is a significant milestone" because we happen to use a decimal numeral system. The section is designed with a practical layout (not an assortment of arbitrary "milestones") in mind.
3. I explained in the previous discussion why double the quantity of articles isn't "twice as impressive" at this scale. But again, the section's purpose isn't to impress. —
David Levy02:56, 6 November 2010 (UTC)
I think you're reading too much into it. An emphasis on quality is admirable. That doesn't take away from the fact that quantity is undeniably a selling point as well. We can, in fact, have our cake and eat it too - I'd argue that "Today's Featured Article" is fulfilling the role of emphasizing well-written Wikipedia content. I'm also not quite in the Wikipedia chest-beaters crowd about how "bad" some of our articles are - as noted, Britannica Micropedia articles are often the equivalent of stubs. They were still useful. The same with short / choppy Wikipedia articles.
SnowFire (
talk)
06:16, 6 November 2010 (UTC)
Indeed, we feature some of our best articles on the main page...below the article count (the first thing that we display after the welcome message). Hence my statement that we literally place quantity before quality.
You've stated that you wouldn't mind removing the article count from the Wikipedia languages section, but it was inserted there as part of a plan to relocate it from the top of the page (which was postponed due to the excitement surrounding the 2,000,000th article). No one has advocated eliminating the article count from the page, but its placement should reflect an emphasis on quality. —
David Levy06:34, 6 November 2010 (UTC)
I agree with removing the count from the top (for the reason articulated by David Levy) and disagree with the ranges (because the range is understood). --
Khajidha (
talk)
01:14, 6 November 2010 (UTC)
My sentiments echo Khajidha's, for the most part: I oppose the ranges and am neutral about removing the count from the top. Also, it seems to me that the two proposals pursue opposite goals. Removing the count from the top could de-emphasize the size (in terms of quantity) of the English Wikipedia, but adding ranges at the bottom does nothing except to emphasize the size (in terms of quantity) of other Wikipedias. -- Black Falcon(
talk)03:45, 6 November 2010 (UTC)
The goals are not opposite, but distinct. The first goal is to eliminate overemphasis on numbers through repetition and placement. The second goal is to simply correct the present misleading appearance of a huge quantitative gap between the English Wiki with 3,400,000+ articles and the next largest Wikipedias shown as 500,000+... As far size matters, this is under-representing Wikimedia projects as a whole, and is remarkably inaccurate for an encyclopaedia, as many have noted. It is strange to see complicated arguments in favour of no change by stating that the same kind of numbers at the top of the page would be beneficial marketing while at the bottom utilitarian aesthetics. I also note that 1,000,000 is double of 500,000 in any numeral system.
Elekhh (
talk)
05:09, 6 November 2010 (UTC)
I'm confused. Do you deny that there is not a gigantic quantitative gap between English Wikipedia and other Wikipedias? Because there is. Now I agree that bringing this up is irrelevant, which is why I've noted that I'd be fine with removing the "English Wikipedia has X articles" from the bottom section which emphasizes that section as some kind of count. I have no idea what you're getting at with "1M is double 500K" either.
I don't see what's so complicated about what I said, either. As you put it yourself: the top number is advertising, the bottom interwiki section is utilitarian. Number of articles is a fluffy but not terribly useful fact, so it works as advertising but isn't necessary for utility. Do you deny this? Hopefully you at least understand my point. It's really not complicated at all.
SnowFire (
talk)
06:16, 6 November 2010 (UTC)
You kind of avoid addressing the raised issues: if the quantitative gap is "gigantic" anyway, why creating the impression is double as much as it actually is? If the bottom section is "utilitarian", why is so difficult to present the real numbers? If the number is not so relevant, why displaying it starting at the very top? And what do you mean with "number of articles is a fluffy but not terribly useful fact, so it works as advertising", does this mean that the majority of our readers are unable to make the difference? --
Elekhh (
talk)
10:54, 6 November 2010 (UTC)
I do not disagree with your first point about reducing overemphasis on numbers by removing the count at the top of the page (though I do kind of see SnowFire's point about "fluffy" advertising). On the second point, however, I think that adding ranges increases emphasis on numbers. It is, after all, no more or less accurate to say that de.wikipedia contains "500,000–1,200,000 articles" versus "more than 500,000 articles". -- Black Falcon(
talk)17:07, 7 November 2010 (UTC)
So to the question "What do you think is the size of de.wiki (x) knowing that" (a) 500,000< x , or (b) 500,000<x<1,200,000, the
accuracy of responses would be the same... On the other point, I of course have no arguments against "fluffy"-ness, if that's what the community wants. --
Elekhh (
talk)
17:36, 7 November 2010 (UTC)
You're right, the accuracy of the responses likely would not be the same. "500,000 < x" and "500,000 < x < 1,200,000" are both accurate, but the latter is more informative. The key question is, I suppose, whether we need or want (from an aesthetic or other standpoint) to be more informative regarding the numerical size of other Wikipedias. As for the count at the top ... well, I'm mostly neutral on that, leaning toward removal, but ultimately it is (as you say) partly a matter of personal preference and perspective. -- Black Falcon(
talk)06:30, 8 November 2010 (UTC)
Sure, but then 3,466,070 repeated twice could be also seen as overly informative. I can imagine many "milder" solutions to the raised issues: the article count at the top of the page could be replaced with something like "the largest encyclopedia" to solve the duplication issue and slightly reduce emphasis on numbers. Another alternative would be, in the bottom section to simply pace the English wiki in the row with the top category, with a similar effect. --
Elekhh (
talk)
07:27, 8 November 2010 (UTC)
If anything, "the largest encyclopedia" places more emphasis on quantity (because it stresses the encyclopedia's sheer size without even the pretense of conveying useful data).
Also keep in mind that we already display "the free encyclopedia that anyone can edit" directly above (rightly so, as that is what we need to promulgate). Wikipedia's size is well known nowadays, so there simply is no need to continue advertising it at the top of the page. Doing so, especially in proximity to the aforementioned encouragement to edit, makes it seem that our top priority is creating as many articles as possible.
By the way, I realize that you support the top article count's removal and merely noted a possible alternative. :) —
David Levy16:20, 8 November 2010 (UTC)
I think I've said before I don't really consider the categorisation a big problem. Even if people are really silly enough to think when you have 4 cats that are 50k, 100k, 150k and 500k it's resonable to expect a cat for 1 million (if the cat was 250k then perhaps but with the 150k and then jump to 500k this hardly seems like a series to me so I don't see any reason anyone will expect 1 million), ultimately it's questionable if it matters. Anything with over 500k is surely good enough that from the readers POV, it doesn't really matter if it's 500k or 1.2 million and if they aren't interested in it when it is only 500k, they are likely to be interested in it with 1.2 million (and a primary reason is just so we have some way of seperating the listings anyway). (Between 1000 and 500k there's quite a resonable change the difference in size will matter.) But if people care that much, I'm not going to oppose including a range. I agree that removing the number of articles at the top is fine. BTW while it's true that 0xF4240 is double 0x7A120, I'm not sure why this is relevant. Definitely if we were using hexadecimal I doubt people would be so desperate to have a seperate cat for F4240
Nil Einne (
talk)
07:39, 6 November 2010 (UTC)
Hexadecimal would be an improvement indeed :) and I wouldn't mind removing numbers altogether. Is just if numbers are displayed they should reflect the facts. Is puzzling why is so hard to achieve simple accuracy here, instead repeated statements implying that 1.2 million is about the same as 500k. Surely there must be an aesthetic-utilitarian solution which is also accurate, or at least not misleading. --
Elekhh (
talk)
11:22, 6 November 2010 (UTC)
I support removing the article count. As David Levy said, it puts quantity above quality, and at this point Wikipedia has nothing to prove to the world as far as quantity goes. At this point it has become like the old running tally on the McDonald's sign; eventually, you just change it to "billions and billions served" and move on with your life.
KafzielComplaint Department: Please take a number18:19, 7 November 2010 (UTC)
(de-indent) Sorry about the slow reply. Sticking my responses down here because they'd likely be lost above.
David Levy: " Indeed, we feature some of our best articles on the main page...below the article count (the first thing that we display after the welcome message). Hence my statement that we literally place quantity before quality."
Literally is not figuratively, though. We literally place the "view source" tab above everything too, which means... nothing. Now wanting to adjust the prominence is fair enough, but I don't feel we're overemphasizing quantity. We advertise quantity, yes (and I think we should), but we give far more space to the Featured Article and In The News. TFA in particular is an emphasis on quality. So I feel that the current page successfully sells both, and further I don't think that mentioning quantity prominently degrades Wikipedia's mission of improving quality as well.
SnowFire (
talk)
05:09, 10 November 2010 (UTC)
Indeed, prominence is the relevant issue. We advertise the sheer quantity of articles in the page's most prominent location (at the top, paired with the "welcome" message). That we assign more space to other elements doesn't change the fact that the article count is one of the first things that a reader sees. By all appearances, it's what we're proudest of and most eager to promulgate (apart from the fact that Wikipedia is "the free encyclopedia that anyone can edit").
Also keep in mind that many casual readers have no understanding of what a "featured article" is. A common misconception is that "today's featured article" is simply an article that we're "featuring" on the main page today. So the fact that we value quality isn't necessarily conveyed.
As noted above, it's widely known that Wikipedia contains an enormous number of articles. By displaying a running tally at the top of the page, we imply that our main goal is to drive that number higher and higher. Conversely, the Wikipedia languages section provides a suitable context. (There's a valid reason, apart from boasting, to mention the article count.) —
David Levy18:06, 10 November 2010 (UTC)
Elekhh: "You kind of avoid addressing the raised issues: if the quantitative gap is "gigantic" anyway, why creating the impression is double as much as it actually is? If the bottom section is "utilitarian", why is so difficult to present the real numbers? If the number is not so relevant, why displaying it starting at the very top? And what do you mean with "number of articles is a fluffy but not terribly useful fact, so it works as advertising", does this mean that the majority of our readers are unable to make the difference?"
I'm not sure we're on the same page here. As already stated, the reason why the gap appears a mere "double" the size (which is Not A Big Deal) is because we don't want to either create a 2-Wikipedia sized section, or to waste even more space on irrelevant-in-this-context article counts to show the range. That's all that's "difficult" about it. The primary goal of that section are the Wikipedia language links, so we shouldn't waste space or lay it out poorly. The article counts are incidental. As for your last point, I don't understand what you mean by "make the difference." All I'm saying is that number of articles is a cool factoid, and yes, I trust readers to know that this is just a cool factoid.
SnowFire (
talk)
05:09, 10 November 2010 (UTC)
We need to keep the article count at the top of the Main Page
We're approaching the 4,000,000 article milestone pretty fast. There's going to be just as much excitement around that as there was for passing the 2,000,000th article mark.
And the excitement will grow as our $upporter$ see that number getting closer to 4 million. We need to remain positioned for this, because it is a promotional opportunity we $hould not mi$$. Promoting Wikipedia is our responsibility. It helps bring in the dollars that keep all the Wikipedias running and made available for free to everyone worldwide. That number posted up there is a major selling feature of Wikipedia, because...
Quantity does matter — it is synonymous with coverage. More articles on more things. More chance of finding something on what you are looking for.
Wikipedia's scope is expanding, from major subjects in general to major subjects for smaller and smaller localities. What's major for someone planning to visit or move to
Hershey, Pennsylvania USA is different for someone living in
Wagga Wagga in New South Wales, Australia. So for the former we have articles like
Hershey Public Library, and for the latter, there's
Wagga Wagga Botanic Gardens. Wikipedia's scope is represented in that number at the top of the Main Page.
Also relevant to our fund-raising imperative, our running total allows quantitative comparison with other informational resources, such as other encyclopedias (Britannica springs to mind) and other websites. And maybe someday, the Library of Congress!
We should keep our most notable and promotable feature (coverage) right at the top of the main page where everyone can see it.
The 2,000,000th article's creation generated substantially less excitement than that of the 1,000,000th article. The 3,000,000th article's creation generated less excitement still. We've long since reached the point at which Wikipedia's tremendous size and scope became obvious and well known, so we're basically beating a dead horse.
No one is asserting that quantity doesn't matter, but it isn't what we need to promote nowadays. The Internet-using public already is aware that the site contains an enormous quantity of articles on a vast array of subjects (to the extent that this is frequently referenced in popular media, such as print, film and television). The other common belief (also frequently referenced in popular media) is that Wikipedia's quality is highly questionable. Readers know that they probably can find something on what they're looking for, but they're reluctant to trust what they find. By advertising the site's sheer size (of which people already are aware) at the top of the main page, we convey that we value it (and seek to increase it) above all else. This impacts not only the site's perception among readers, but also the participation of some editors (who are led to believe that our prime directive is to create as many articles as possible, rather than improving existing articles). —
David Levy17:39, 8 November 2010 (UTC)
You wish Wikipedia to stop asserting that quantity does matter, and that's just not good marketing. One of the main reasons everybody is aware of Wikipedia's greatest selling feature (coverage, due to its size) is because we have the article count posted at the top of our Main Page. We have it up there for a very good reason. William Wrigley was asked why he continued to advertise so heavily when his chewing gum products were already well known: His answer: "A plane goes about 300 MPH. Why doesn't the pilot just turn off the engines and let the plane fly on its own momentum?"
The Transhumanist17:58, 8 November 2010 (UTC)
I wish to stop asserting that quantity matters more than quality does, even after we've reached 6,857,706 articles.
The article count's presence at the top of the main page undoubtedly played a significant role in bolstering Wikipedia's popularity, but it's long since outlived its usefulness.
The Wrigley analogy is inapplicable for several reasons:
1. Wrigley didn't receive customers via search engines (undoubtedly our primary source of traffic).
2. Wrigley had competitors offering similar products. No website comes close to matching what Wikipedia offers, and if one ever does, that will be good (because our goal is to spread free knowledge).
3. It's generally agreed that Wrigley's advertising was effective. I assert that the article count's placement in the header sends a counterproductive message that lowers the public's confidence in Wikipedia. —
David Levy19:18, 8 November 2010 (UTC)
Considering we always promote the milestone number seperately I would say this whole 4 million thing falls flat on its face anyway. If anything, by removing the count, we give more prominence to the number when it's a milestone like 4 million so we get a better promotional/advertising effect out of it rather then continually having the number on the main page so no one is surprised when we reach 4 million. Also we're still quite far from the 4 million mark, we're less then half way there from 3 million. And as DL said, 3 million didn't really get that much attention. There's no reason to expect 4 million to get more, it's likely to get less. If we're lucky 5 million may but that's even longer.
Nil Einne (
talk)
00:36, 9 November 2010 (UTC)
Approaching 4 million pretty fast?? Really??? its taken over a year and still going to gain 500,000 articles. It will be early 2012 at current rate in which we reach 4 million which, given the potential contributors to wikipedia and sheer amount of very notable content missing is actually very slow. The article count is neither bragging about our size nor it is causing any harm. Its a rough insight to the scope of wikipedia currently which is very useful. The problem is that is doesn't measure quality (which is most important), it paints short stubs or long, poorly written unsourced articles as the same as articles like the
Ming Dynasty.. But anybody who is an active reader/contributor to wikipedia is fully aware of how many articles are lacking...♦
Dr. Blofeld11:57, 11 November 2010 (UTC)
Indeed, when someone becomes an "active reader/contributor," he/she realizes that many of our articles are of poor quality. Our layout implies that we don't particularly care (because our top priority is to create as many articles as possible). For readers, this dampens confidence. For editors, it actively encourages such prioritization.
You noted that the problem isn't the article count's presence, but the lack of context. Okay, so let's pursue a compromise in which the missing context is added.
Until 30 May, we displayed links directly below the grey box. I suggest that we transplant the portal links to this newly vacated area, thereby freeing up the right-hand side of the box for the article count and related information (in a style of prose similar to that contained in
our previous main page design).
In this example, I relocated text from Wikipedia languages (some of which appeared in the header to begin with) and added a link to that section. I included the featured article count, thereby conveying that we value quality. I also restored the longstanding "
Categories" and "
A–Z index" links, which we might have been a bit hasty to remove.
I like the simplification of the layout and removal of some repetition (Not sure however why Portal Arts has been removed). Regarding the right-upper corner, I would include GAs as well, which are quality articles. --
Elekhh (
talk)
01:43, 17 November 2010 (UTC)
The omission of
Portal:Arts was accidental. Thanks for bringing that to my attention.
I like the placement of the Portal links, but not the mass of text on the right. How about a simpler 'Currently: XXX articles, of which <br />XXX are featured articles<br />XXX are good articles' or similar?
Modest Geniustalk02:00, 17 November 2010 (UTC)
I just noticed that the article counts' text is very small in Google Chrome (but not in my other browsers), presumably due to the use of a monospaced font. Obviously, that would need to be fixed. —
David Levy03:00, 17 November 2010 (UTC)
Looks good, though it would be best to lose the colours on the numbers, capitalise each line, and use a normal font (ie not monospaced). Presumably some technical fix would be needed to make the FA and GA numbers updated?
Modest Geniustalk03:06, 17 November 2010 (UTC)
Okay, I've removed the colors.
Do you mean that "featured articles" should become "Featured articles", "good articles" should become "Good articles" and "articles in total" should become "Articles in total"? That looks odd to me, as the numerals (not the words) begin each line.
I'd much prefer using a non-monospaced font, but I need someone whose coding skills are better than mine to implement an alternative method of aligning the values.
I support David's efforts here and agree that this mock-up represents a step forward, and in the right direction. Good work! I would however also prefer 'Featured articles' and 'Good articles' capitalised, or maybe capitalising 'Articles' too, to make it a little clearer that these are official counts and not overly subjective. Capitalising would make the text match the link, too. As it stands, they do look a little like opinions. Or, the numerals could be moved to the end of each line, as in Featured articles: 3,091.
Careful With That Axe, EugeneHello...10:08, 17 November 2010 (UTC)
Ah, I see what you mean. I've incorporated your suggestion to move the numerals to the end of each line. Thank you! —
David Levy17:15, 17 November 2010 (UTC)
(rest indent) One MASSIVE caveat w.r.t. David Levy's layout: "good article" on WP means an article that has passed WP:GA. "Good article" in the English language means "so the other 3 million articles are rubbish?" Think of what message we are conveying to our readers.
Zunaid08:10, 18 November 2010 (UTC)
As I recall, the likelihood of such confusion was the first thing that went through my mind when I learned of the
Wikipedia:Good articles concept years ago. It's a strong argument for changing the name, and I believe that we should.
Apart from that, our choices are to not mention "good articles" on the main page, to mention them in a manner that either explicitly specifies their nature (via a lengthy description) or implies it (e.g. articles designated "
good"), or to hope that readers follow the link. —
David Levy08:57, 18 November 2010 (UTC)
Yes, I have to agree that "Good articles" is confusing. GAs are actually very good articles (VGAs). As an intermediary solution, how about a cryptic "GA articles", almost forcing readers to follow the link, yet by positioning and numbers evident that is something better than most articles but less good than FAs. Or something less confusing like "Promoted good articles"? --
Elekhh (
talk)
10:33, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
"GA articles" is redundant, and as you noted, cryptic (which largely defeats the purpose). "Promoted good articles" makes more sense, but it falls even further into the area of Wikipedia jargon.
In my opinion, "good articles" is an inherently problematic name (irrespective of whether it appears on the main page). Therefore, the ideal solution is to come up with a better name. The trickiest part is thinking of one that doesn't come across as a step above "featured articles." —
David Levy15:08, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
That would entail renaming
Wikipedia:Featured articles, for which I doubt we could reach consensus (especially given the fact that "gold articles" is one letter off from "good articles" and would be referred to by the same initials). —
David Levy17:35, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
"Featured" articles, in the sense that
WP:FA uses it, is already WikiJargon. "Today's featured article" is OK in the sort of English that normal people use, because it is featured on the Main Page. Anyway, absolutely oppose anymore creep of these purely editor-based processes onto the Main Page: it's bad enough with DYK being incapable of providing a set of hooks which actually fit into a section entitled "Did you know?"
Physchim62(talk)18:39, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
To be clear, are you saying that you oppose placing any qualitative article measurements alongside the purely quantitative one? —
David Levy00:23, 20 November 2010 (UTC)
Ditto. Start a new section, (archive-template-box this one), summarize what the suggestion actually is at this point, and link to the various sandboxes. --
Quiddity (
talk)
06:50, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
Is empty space better than fund-raising efforts?
Something we've overlooked is that if we remove the article count from its spot at the top of the Main Page, it will leave a hole up there.
Is empty space better than that spot's current use for promoting Wikipedia?
Do we have something better than the article count to place up there, that will promote Wikipedia more effectively?
Removing that count doesn't create any unsightly white space. If anything the header looks better without it (see
Wikipedia:Main Page/sandbox). Also, I don't see what the article count does to solicit donations - there's no link there or anything to suggest readers should donate if they're impressed with the article count.
Modest Geniustalk18:37, 8 November 2010 (UTC)
Err, there was no idea presented in my post. If you are suggesting adding a 'donate' link there, that's actually a stupid idea which I would strongly oppose.
Modest Geniustalk18:35, 11 November 2010 (UTC)
Indeed, the header looks much better without the article count included. This is because the header box was designed without the article count (which we'd relocated to the bottom). It was tacked on as a temporary measure (due to the aforementioned excitement surrounding the 2,000,000th article), with the intent of removing it shortly thereafter. —
David Levy19:18, 8 November 2010 (UTC)
Dude, how many discussion forks are you going to make? We get it - you support keeping the count. Why couldn't all this have been added to the original discussion, instead of forcing people to follow three different threads and repeat themselves?
KafzielComplaint Department: Please take a number18:55, 8 November 2010 (UTC)
That argument is based on the
assuption that the article count's presence in the header is a positive marketing tool. As I've explained above, this point is contested. I believe that it sends a counterproductive message that lowers the public's confidence in Wikipedia. —
David Levy19:18, 8 November 2010 (UTC)
military response from South Korea?
I am not sure this assertion is correct. I can find no news of a military response from South Korea. On the contrary, all the news stations seem to talk about the unlikelihood of a military response.
Richard Avery (
talk)
11:49, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
It's this logic: There's a major league baseball player of the day, and there are a lot more minor league baseball players than major league ones. Therefore the major league player should share the spotlight. Flawed logic.--
Wehwalt (
talk)
16:19, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
(Yes,
strawman is flawed logic.) Having a Good Article of the Day might have possibly made sense (or perhaps not) if GA was restricted to its original goal of having an "award"-type status for articles that wouldn't qualify for FA status for other-than-quality reasons. However, the current proceedure is to have GA be a stepping stone through which articles pass on their way to FA status. It therefore doesn't make much sense to feature most good articles, as, given enough time, they will be improved even further and hit the main page with FA status. (So if you want any particular GA to be on the main page, the recommendation is to improve it to FA status.) This, of course, leaves out the FA-ineligible-for-other-than-quality articles, but I don't believe there are enough of them which are interesting enough for the main page to make a regular feature worth-while. --
174.24.198.158 (
talk)
16:39, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
What about DYKs? They appear on the main page. In fact multiple articles appear on the main page at once, usually at least 6 times as many FA articles which appear on the main page. Is that right?. So why no mention at all of good articles?♦
Dr. Blofeld16:46, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
I hate baseball (being British). Seriously poor analogy..Of course your view has nothing to do with your unusually high FA count that you view good articles as second-rate... ♦
Dr. Blofeld16:27, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
I suppose that is true, though I think your proposal will be hit for six. I do look at GA as a place for article's I've put effort into but there is some reason I don't feel it can go on to FA. But yes, I do not feel that they are in the same ground. GA are definitely second eleven.--
Wehwalt (
talk)
16:34, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
(
edit conflict) I don't think my count of FAs or GAs is unusually high ;) But I can certainly think of better things to do with the space than a GA of the day. The vast majority of our readers have no idea of the huge bureaucracy that goes into filling the TFA slot: they see it as Today's featured article because it is literally featured on the Main Page. Why should we confuse them even further by having a "featured" article and a "good" article, with the added implication that most of Wikipedia is 'not good' (when it is usually those 'not good' parts they're actually looking for).
Physchim62(talk)16:40, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
I just wanted to see what people thought about the idea of having a good article also featuring on the main page or changing say every 12 hours or so...Maybe then there should at least be some mention of good articles then?
Amazing work BTW.♦
Dr. Blofeld16:37, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
I've never understood why short, Did You Know entries, often created with minimal effort, are given pride of place on the main page, when GAs never get any exposure. But, like every other time this is proposed, it's not going to happen.
AD16:38, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
TFA and DYK have different purposes. TFA is to showcase the best that Wikipedia has to offer. DYK is intentionally limited to very new articles, and is intended to show that Wikipedia is continuously expanding with interesting infromation, as well as to highlight new articles that reader-editors may wish to help expand. GAs in their current form are boggy middle ground: neither polished enough to be highlighted as best-of-the-best, nor new enough to be exciting or expandable-by-casual-editors. --
174.24.198.158 (
talk)
16:44, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
OK, point taken. But if no article at least should there not be how many featured/good articles we have appearing on the main page? We happily reveal we have nearly 3.5 million articles but mention nothing of the recognized content on the main page. We are intentionally hiding it because the figures are an embarrasingly low percentage perhaps?♦
Dr. Blofeld16:51, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
Thing is, featured articles aren't always so great (
Grace Sherwood springs to mind here). Plus, they're often shown months or even years after they were promoted, which means that they may have deteriorated. Showing the figure of whatever for how many FAs we have is a bit pointless, when readers have no idea what the other articles are. I can remember looking at the main page, and thinking FAs were just picked at random out of every article. I think the feeling should be that every article has potential to become a featured article - even if it cannot.
AD16:58, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
I recall David Levy proposing something like 3.5 million articles in english of which ... is featured/recognized content or something. I fully agree with him.The thing is certain articles of "recognized content" are not always the greatest articles on here as Aiken suggests. I know of many B class articles I consider superior articles to several of our FAs in terms of knowledge/comprehension but have some minor issues impeding them from being promoted. ♦
Dr. Blofeld17:10, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
"Featured articles" only really means "on the main page". It doesn't actually reflect their quality. A term like "High quality" or "Excellent" or even "Brilliant prose" would be more appropriate.
AD17:15, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
Yes. All it is doing now is highlighting the article, but doesn't explicitly say this is supposed to be our best work. There's no real reason GAs could not compete for a spot - that's quite a good idea I don't think I've heard yet.
AD18:38, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
Perhaps half of featured articles have appeared on main page. And I think you would find strong resistance to the idea, not only for the standard reasons, but because of the plagiarism problem. A GA is reviewed a lot less than a FA.--
Wehwalt (
talk)
18:43, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
House "Pilot" image
I posted on the talk page
Talk:Pilot (House) about the image for this article, but it applies here too. I think the juxtaposition of a trademarked logo with an amateur photo is questionable, and I also think it's a poor identifier for the pilot episode. —
Noisalt (
talk)
03:09, 24 November 2010 (UTC)
Looks like it's been removed from the article. (After your comment there.)
For what it's worth, I agree that it implies that the image is somehow an official publicity piece for the show.
APL (
talk)
08:30, 24 November 2010 (UTC)
I agree as well. We could get an actual publicity photo, and use it with a Fair Use Criterion. We couldn't have it on the main page, but it's time is almost up anyway.
Buddy431 (
talk)
22:17, 24 November 2010 (UTC)
I'm not sure at what the above edit is trying to hint but I'm a little surprised the
Pike River Mine disaster has not appeared on the main page yet. I know, we are not a news network but NZ's worst mining disaster in 96 years is surely as noteworthy as some kid in the UK marrying his girlfriend, and we did have that on the main page last week!
Calistemon (
talk)
07:41, 24 November 2010 (UTC)
Someone added it to
2010 and it was reverted soon after with the Edit summary "Not really internationally notable,happens frequently in other countries." Not sure how true that is.
HiLo48 (
talk)
07:46, 24 November 2010 (UTC)
I'm shocked that this has been deliberately omitted. It has been rectified, per the unanimous consensus on ITN/C.
Daniel (
talk)
10:43, 24 November 2010 (UTC)
Is the consensus still to not place the main page in this category? (see
Talk:Main Page/Archive 136#Category) Because the intro at
Category:Main page currently still reads as if the main page is supposed to be categorized. I suppose that text just hasn't been noticed for a while and hence not updated, but maybe consensus can change, so: Should we add the main page to
Category:Main page or not?
Note, I'm in support of adding it, with my justification being that having the link there is beneficial because it would introduce readers to the category system much earlier than they would otherwise discover it. --
Ϫ02:05, 27 November 2010 (UTC)
Note: Despite this discussion and the ongoing merger proposal, Rich has gone ahead and added the category. (Apparently, it's too much to expect him to actually monitor his automated/semi-automated edits and refrain from making poor ones on his own.) —
David Levy15:58, 28 November 2010 (UTC)
Er.. it's on the basis that any error one person makes is an error someone else is likely to make. Maybe my level of stupidity is unique in the universe, but again maybe not. It seems a trivial defence against what is admittedly a fairly trivial problem. My experience is also that any exceptions generally lead to problems "make things as simple as possible but no simpler". Having one uncategorised page is basically not a great idea. I'll have a quick look at the archive too. RichFarmbrough,
16:58, 28 November 2010 (UTC).
1. No one attributed the error to stupidity, so please step away from that straw man.
Your mistake stemmed from carelessness. You obviously used AWB without paying attention to what you were editing. I don't believe that we should encourage such behavior by creating safeguards intended to accommodate it.
(ec w/David) Respectfully, Rich, you're the only person I've ever seen make this particular mistake. Perhaps it would be better if you could modify your AWB code to skip fully protected pages or something?
HJ Mitchell |
Penny for your thoughts? 17:18, 28 November 2010 (UTC)
It seems like the Main Page is used for administration of the Wikipedia project, making it a giant exception to the usual mainspace rules as David points out. It contains information that does not amount to an article and is not part of the encyclopedia. {{Uncategorized}} only is for articles ("This article has not been added to any categories."). --
Uzma Gamal (
talk)
07:24, 29 November 2010 (UTC)
The archive refers back to an earlier archive, and the decision was on the basis that a category "spoiled the look of the page". This is a hidden cat, which we probably didn't have at the time of the original discussion, and
Category:Main Page is not. RichFarmbrough,
17:01, 28 November 2010 (UTC).
Indeed, that rationale doesn't apply to a hidden category. The applicable rationale is that we shouldn't accommodate and encourage careless editing. —
David Levy17:16, 28 November 2010 (UTC)
That's a nonsensical analogy. Page protection tools counter vandalism. You seek to implement a setup that would accommodate your abuse (i.e. unattended/poorly monitored use) of AWB, of which bad edits are an unintended consequence.
In other words, you want us to create a safeguard to mitigate the damage stemming from your refusal to edit responsibly. Yes, that also describes page protection tools, but the situations obviously aren't comparable (unless you wish to equate your bad edits with vandalism). —
David Levy 17:32/
17:37, 29 November 2010 (UTC)
Main Page doesn't appear.
Main page does. However I agree this issue is dead, no one cares that Main Page doesn't appear other then RF and no one I've seen has given a good enough argument why it should.
Nil Einne (
talk)
17:50, 29 November 2010 (UTC)
Haryana Cuisine Article
The article
here is licensed as CC-BY-SA. Is it legal for this article to be transferred to Wikipedia? It has a large deal of information that we could use. --
92.3.150.185 (
talk)
17:57, 28 November 2010 (UTC)
It's legal, but it's in such a wildly different format that full-on transfer would be strongly discouraged.
f o x18:47, 28 November 2010 (UTC)
Not that while legal, you still need to make sure you comply with the license and wikipedia's expectations for content copied from other sources (i.e. ensure the attribution is done properly). There must be a guideline on this somewhere although I can't find it but this question has nothing to do with the main page anyway I suggest you try a more appropriate place, as suggested in the header like
WP:Help desk if you want to carry out any copying
Nil Einne (
talk)
17:54, 29 November 2010 (UTC)
Is there any reason why we shouldn't put the wikileaks logo up as the ITN picture? The licensing seems fine but I just wanted to check there was no quaint rule about putting up logos of organisations or something. --
Mkativerata (
talk)
05:08, 29 November 2010 (UTC)
Main page is bland and white like any other Wikipedia page, which makes it read like a paper encyclopedia instead. Suggest some coloring scheme such as
this in my sandbox.
:| TelCoNaSpVe :|08:09, 30 November 2010 (UTC)
I'm somewhat sick of beating around the bush to avoid offending people whenever these perenial proposals come up that don't appear to have looked in to the history at all so I'll just say it, man that's ugly!
Nil Einne (
talk)
10:47, 30 November 2010 (UTC)
Okay, then, what color would you suggest? Surely something more than just white? (And no, I haven't looked at the history, so please forgive me.) :P
:| TelCoNaSpVe :|15:09, 30 November 2010 (UTC)
I'm all for giving the main page a fresh, up to date look that doesn't look so drab, but your suggested change is awful.
AD20:31, 30 November 2010 (UTC)
The good thing about white is, it works well with the many images on the main page, which can be all sorts of random colors. -
Doctorx0079 (
talk)
23:53, 30 November 2010 (UTC)
Too much of a good thing isn't! Go into your preferences, click on appearance and then click on whichever one you want. Then you can change the look without offending anyone. Dusty777 18:34, 1 December 2010 (UTC) —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
Dusty777 (
talk •
contribs)
The Featured Article, Featured Picture and On This Day sections update every 24 hours. Did You Know updates every 6 hours. And In The News just posted 3 new items in 4 hours (admittedly there was a couple of days' gap before that). I don't see the problem.
Modest Geniustalk22:41, 2 December 2010 (UTC)
In theory ITN is suppose to be updated every 24 hours I believe. In reality we don't always meet that, more often we get bursts of new enteries then a lull for a variety of reasons. I suspect we do have an average greater then 1/24 hours though so if we really wanted to we could just delay enteries so it doesn't seem like we have such big gaps sometimes but that seems a little silly IMHO.
Nil Einne (
talk)
00:13, 3 December 2010 (UTC)
Grammys
Not the place for this post in the first place, and it's really not the place to make less-than-pleasant comments about each other, either.
BencherliteTalk12:13, 3 December 2010 (UTC)
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it.
Hi, I'm very sorry if this is not the right place to post this, but apparently nobody has read the talk page so far, and I find it unlikely.
The problem is that Lady Gaga's album, The Fame Monster, was nominated for 6 Grammys this year, not 2, as the article states. I'll leave my message below. I'd appreciate any type of help.
This album was nominated for 6 Grammies, not only 2. According to the Grammy's official
nominations page, this are Gaga's following nominations:
Album of the Year, The Fame Monster
Best Female Pop Vocal Performance, Bad Romance
Best Pop Collaboration With Vocals, Telephone ft. Beyonce
You could at least point them in the right direction, especially as they admitted knowing this wasn't the best place to put it. - See
Wikipedia:New contributors' help page for assistance on getting started with Wikipedia. See
Wikipedia:Help for general questions about using Wikipedia. (By the way, both links are in the header at the top of the page, and on the submission page.) For your particular issue, see
Wikipedia:Bold for the relevant guideline. --
140.142.20.229 (
talk)
20:05, 2 December 2010 (UTC)
I don't know how stating fact makes me a butthead. I'm pointing out this is the wrong page for this - and I'm letting the previous commenter know that this notice was placed on the album article's talk page before it was placed here.
Y2Kcrazyjoker4 (
talk •
contributions)
22:47, 2 December 2010 (UTC)
I largely agree. If you aren't receiving attention from the talk page and you are sure changes are needed, try {{editsemiprotected}}. If you aren't try one of the links above. Do note however it's not unresonable to wait more then 1:30 hours for changes or feedback which isn't urgent such as mundane changes to articles like this. In any case, Talk:Main Page is indeed completely the wrong place to get extra attention.
Nil Einne (
talk)
23:59, 2 December 2010 (UTC)
Well people have provided you plenty of links suggesting more appropriate places which I would consider 'nice'. Of course the big header at the top which says "Please note: The purpose of this page is to discuss improvements relating only to the Main Page. It is not a place to ask general questions or submit content" also provides plenty of links suggesting other places if your stuck in the future.
Nil Einne (
talk)
01:45, 3 December 2010 (UTC)
LOL, someone is on a bad mood, huh? Chill, buddie. I find really funny geeks trying to follow the "Wikipedia Rules". What of you get a life, Nil? [I hear a geekrage comming from the distance] --
200.106.17.220 (
talk)
03:11, 3 December 2010 (UTC)
Bad mood? No. You may want to see
WP:NPA however. And it's not a matter of following rules, it's a matter of courtesy to fellow editors not posting random irrelevant suggestions in random irrelevant places particularly when there's a big header which tells you not to. Given that you apparently come from Peru, I originally wondered if perhaps a limited understanding of English explained the inability to read and follow simple, clear and obvious instructions. But this doesn't seem to be the case. In that case, from your messagge I wonder if perhaps your lack of what you told other people to get explains the lack of understanding of simple things like courtesy or reading clear instructions as these are things which people with lives generally find an expected and easy to obey part of everyday life but I guess those without are perhaps not aware. It does seem to be the case that often people tell people to 'get something' because they are embarassed and trying to hide their own shortcomings. Of course only you can answer that, it's not up to any of us here to judge.
Nil Einne (
talk)
12:03, 3 December 2010 (UTC)
Donation Ads
The frequency of the donation banners was mildly irritating, but I understood it as a necessary evil. However, the one for Lilaroja can't even be closed (for me, at any rate - using Firefox). For the first time I am using Adblock Plus on anything on Wikipedia to block this. I understand that this is a once a year thing, I understand it gets complaints, and I hate to be "that guy" but this really is getting out of hand. -
OldManNeptune⚓19:43, 2 December 2010 (UTC)
Well as discussed in the earlier thread that's still on this page, there's nothing we can do about it. If you have bugs, you're welcome to go to
Meta:Fundraiser 2010 and find where to report them. If you want to block the ads, as I understand it the gadget available in preferences works well and should in theory ensure you never see them again now or for any future fundraisers as long as you're logged in.
Nil Einne (
talk)
12:22, 3 December 2010 (UTC)
I don't feel strongly about any of these old FAs to put in a request, but I thought that they should be featured on MainPage before they start to deteriorate. I don't know. Maybe they already need to go thru' FAR ..... --
PFHLai (
talk)
22:00, 4 December 2010 (UTC)
Perhaps a comment at the top of the talk page that this is not the place for discussing '1 million (or any multiples thereof) articles - or a list of perennial topics (million articles, too many things on the front page dealing with sport/America/other pet annoyance of choice, things which upset
Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells, etc). Until the WP equivalent of those magazine isses with several different covers is developed (so we can choose vanilla/sports-centric/country-centric/high article count in given languages displayed/other varieties of choice) we will have to put up with these discussions on occasion.
Jackiespeel (
talk)
22:10, 4 December 2010 (UTC)
The top of this page already mentions the FAQ. The FAQ should be kept more up to date, but one of mine was removed. The million articles issue is covered
here, though that could also be more current.
Art LaPella (
talk)
04:39, 5 December 2010 (UTC)
Jimmy Wales' photo
Am I the only one that's starting to get fed up with Jimmy Wales staring out at me every time I go to Wikipedia? I've already donated money, so enough! Or, is Jimmy Wales trying to compete with Bono? Anyway, let's curtail the personality cult and get back to business - drop the pictures. Otherwise, thanks to Jimmy and everyone for Wikipedia, a great service. —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
211.124.135.29 (
talk)
01:25, 21 November 2010 (UTC)
I believe you only see the banner if you're not logged in, but, anyway, this isn't the place to discuss it (because this page is for discussion of the Main Page) and there's not much we can do about it because any admin who removed the banner from whatever MediaWiki page is generating it probably wouldn't keep their bit for very long.
HJ Mitchell |
Penny for your thoughts? 01:56, 21 November 2010 (UTC)
it is on main page this is the place! 02:07, 21 November 2010 (UTC) —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
78.143.204.5 (
talk)
I share the discussion-starter's opinion. Why not instead bring on the ads for 2 months; they have the same annoying, distracting effect and would maybe have raised more money. —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
129.67.76.27 (
talk)
16:04, 2 December 2010 (UTC)
Nope. The Wikimedia Foundation owns and operates Wikipedia (and all the other Wikimedia projects) so they can do as they please, basically. If you create an account and log into it, you can set a preference to hide the banner by default, but that's the best I can offer.
HJ Mitchell |
Penny for your thoughts? 02:27, 21 November 2010 (UTC)
The fact that 'Wikimedia Foundation owns and operates Wikipedia' does not mean that they are not forcing unwanted media on wikipedia, seems to me they are. Anyway do you like it? —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
78.143.204.5 (
talk)
02:33, 21 November 2010 (UTC)
I would think that the appropriate response would be "Yes, of course, we need the fundraiser so that the website can stay up, and so that the foundation can keep advancing the Wikimedia movement". Does the community have a say in how the fundraiser is done? Yes. Do the Jimbo appeals do far better than any other banner tested? Yes. Is Wikipedia part of the Wikimedia movement and does it benefit hugely from these banners? Yes. I don't see what the problem could be. Anyway, that's what I would answer :) --
Yair rand (
talk)
04:17, 21 November 2010 (UTC)
I'm the one who complained re the photos - thanks for pointing out the little "X". I really greatly respect Wales and the whole WMF crew and their achievements, just got tired of him staring out at me, think it a bit too much. The "X" solved that. —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
211.124.135.29 (
talk)
09:53, 21 November 2010 (UTC)
I don't mind the appeals for money, but the head shots on the black banner and on the bronze banner with the closeup of a bug-eyed Wales looking toward the right of the screen look like stills from an audition to play
Gollum in Jackson's Hobbit. Real turnoffs.
μηδείς (
talk)
19:11, 21 November 2010 (UTC)
This is something regular contributors don't notice, because the vast majority of them will hide the banner immediately. You could try raising your concerns at
meta:Talk:Fundraiser 2010, but as HJ pointed out we have no control over the banners here.
Modest Geniustalk22:43, 21 November 2010 (UTC)
It would not be so bad if Jimmy was a lot better looking. Or if there was more in the photograph than just his bearded face. Thank goodness for the 'x'. I wonder what nationality Jimmy is... he obviously likes looking at himself. I would look him up but do not want to be confronted by his features any more than necessary. :-)
B. Fairbairn (
talk)
04:21, 26 November 2010 (UTC)
In all honesty I'd say Wales is a lot better looking that Sanger and a lot of the
Wayne's World look alike four-eyed web geeks with the "my gosh he really needs to go to Specsavers look" or slobby looking trolls with greasy long hair who seems to roam the Internet these days.. At least we have somebody who looks relatively normal pictured in the campaigns....Sure the side photo is one of his least flattering photos, the one of him in the blue shirt looks decent. ♦
Dr. Blofeld16:39, 27 November 2010 (UTC)
I bet Wales will be running for office later on, using his pic here to build recognition. You can bet Wikipedia won't get a dime from me under these circumstances.-Richard Peterson
24.7.28.186 (
talk)
14:43, 27 November 2010 (UTC)
I doubt that the foundation will allow Jimbo Wales to use foundation resources to run for office. I don't even think that's legal in the US, see
[3]. He can of course use any pictures in accordance to the license they were released under with on his own servers, the same as you or I can.
Jimbo Wales has been the public face of wikipedia for a long time and many people will probably ignore the campaign appeals after seeing them once or twice so it's not clear how much these pictures are increasing recognition (there's obviously some) nor for that matter how much this is going to help any hypothetical future political campaign (while I don't know about the US, often what the candidate has done can be just as important as does he look familiar?).
BTW, I would like some evidence for the claim the 'vast majority' of 'regular contributors' turn off the ads. Some obviously do, but I'm not aware there are any stats to show it's the 'vast majority'. I myself don't generally bother, I'm rarely looking at the top of a page anyway and I've never been that concerned about ads when they don't get in my way.
P.S. AFAIK Jimbo Wales has had limited involvement in the design of this campaign. The decision to use his face was made by the campaign team based on their stats it gained the most donors. I've seen some criticism of those stats, but I haven't see any evidence JW influenced them. In other words, blaming him for this, or suggesting he's using it for some hypothetical future political campaign seems a bit silly. I can't help wondering if he'd prefer they weren't using his face so external sources aren't mocking him and people aren't continuously complaining to his user page about stuff he has little involvement in and apparently little desire to be involved in
I have no stats, it's purely speculation on my part, albeit based upon a handful of anecdotal examples. Everyone I've spoken to about them (both registered and unregistered, you'd be surprised how often I end up in such real-life conversations) has complained about the pics and wanted to remove them - I think it's safe to assume that the majority of people who could & knew how will have done so.
Modest Geniustalk22:10, 28 November 2010 (UTC)
Anecdotally everyone I've spoken to hasn't so I don't. Perhaps the reason why most people ask for actual evidence when bold claims are made? To be honest, I'm not even sure if we can safely assume most people you know have turned them off or don't like them. To state the obvious, it seems possible that perhaps one of the reasons they came up is because the people involved didn't like them or wanted to turn them off.
Nil Einne (
talk)
00:19, 29 November 2010 (UTC)
in prior years I recall having to go into settings to turn off the donation ads, but this year, after clicking the X on the box, it hasn't come back. So I imagine anyone who has clicked the X has effectively blocked the ad. I use
AdBlock/
Ad Muncher while browsing, so anything that's not blocked by either catches me by surprise.
hbdragon88 (
talk)
05:16, 30 November 2010 (UTC)
So we can have a banner ad from Mr. Wales, but we can't have normal banner ads like every other website? I know it's annoying, but you scroll down and ignore it like every other webiste... Seems ironic that we're using a banner ad to promote our fundraising so we don't have to have banner ads... —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
204.153.84.10 (
talk)
14:13, 2 December 2010 (UTC)
Honestly - how obnoxious are these ads? If I click the X, I have decided not to donate. I should not see the banners again. It should be the equivalent of opting-out. Yet, visiting a new page or refreshing shows them again. I downloaded the AdBlock extension just so I could avoid seeing these banner ads on every page.
Y2Kcrazyjoker4 (
talk •
contributions)
19:23, 2 December 2010 (UTC)
There's a gadget available in preferences which in theory blocks the ads now and forever (including future campaigns)
Nil Einne (
talk) 00:15, 3 December 2010 (UTC) P.S. Realised I forgot to specify obviously it only works as long as you're logged in and on en.wikipedia and other wikis where you turn it on where available.
Nil Einne (
talk)
12:25, 3 December 2010 (UTC)
Thank you, "generous donor"! And I think Jimmy, either looks like O'Brien or Winston Smith from Nineteen Eighty Four.
Buggie111 (
talk)
14:37, 5 December 2010 (UTC)
It should happen some time in the following hours. Is there a plan to put a banner on the Main page or is 3.5 M not such a big mark? --Tone14:56, 12 December 2010 (UTC)
Yeah, I oppose the use of a banner in this instance. 3.5 million isn't a particularly noteworthy number, and the Internet-accessing public is well aware of the site's large size nowadays.
On top of that, the timing is far from ideal, as the fundraising banners have been the objects of much derision (as usual). Those are extremely important and do far more good than harm, of course, but let's not fuel further criticism by adding yet another banner to the site's most visible page. —
David Levy16:04, 12 December 2010 (UTC)
It has been common practice at least to put a banner on the milestone article's talk page (see
Talk:Joe Connor). If we can track down the right article we can do that at least.
Lampman (
talk)
16:06, 12 December 2010 (UTC)
The article in question almost certainly was created by
Dr. Blofeld (who saved numerous pages in rapid succession, perhaps with the 3.5 million mark in mind). —
David Levy16:19, 12 December 2010 (UTC)
Are misleading news allowed?
In this case "The PCRM receives the most votes in the Moldovan parliamentary election, while the Alliance for European Integration wins a majority of seats."
IMHO this suggests misrepresentation, with the two statements being connected like that. The first statement is only true if you consider parties, not political alliances, and the second only if you consider political alliances, not parties.
Ambi Valent (
talk)
09:33, 6 December 2010 (UTC)
The statement is 'perfectly reasonable' to anyone in a parliamentary election system - there are several examples in which 'Labour/Tory' and 'Tory/Labour' (or vice versa) and 'the UK' could be substituted.
Jackiespeel (
talk)
15:04, 6 December 2010 (UTC)
-Irrelevant - Algore conceded, twice. IE, He quit, twice. AND in the final count conducted by Time Magazine, Bush won, barely, but he won. So get your facts straight.--
Degen Earthfast (
talk)
16:04, 11 December 2010 (UTC)
This isn't really the same as those two examples though: as I understand it, the PCRM won the most votes and the most seats of any individual party, but if you group the parties in the Alliance for European Integration (the ruling coalition) together, they won a majority of both votes and seats. The line does seem a little misleading (though I suppose it won't be on the main page for much longer).
81.98.38.48 (
talk)
00:20, 7 December 2010 (UTC)
Degen sorry but what are you talking about? Our
United States presidential election, 2000 says Al Gore won the popular vote (by over 540k votes). If you have sources which say otherwise, please add them to the article rather then making OT and unsupported claims here. And it is relevant to this discussion because the issue here is that in many electoral systems it is possible for someone or a party to effectively win the election even if someone else wins the popular vote. From what I can tell, in the Moldovan case this didn't even happen but the claim was made so people responded accordingly pointing out it is likely to be something many reader would understand if that actually happened. Note in particular, no one made any comments on the fairness or whatever of such an occurence which is indeed irrelevant because our opinions on things not affecting wikipedia always are on wikipedia. Nor did anyone dispute whether Bush won the electoral vote so I'm not sure what the relevance of Gore conceding is to this discussion nor why you repeated what people had already said, i.e. Bush won the electoral vote. (Whether who won the popular vote has any relevance in general is moot in this discussion.)
Nil Einne (
talk)
23:41, 11 December 2010 (UTC)
Well,,, Your Right. And that's exaclty why out of random thoughts,,, I think we should recognize the GHPPBA or The Grand Hopeless, Poor and Pathetic Bastards of America organization right here on Wikipedia. —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
64.134.155.199 (
talk)
02:57, 9 December 2010 (UTC)
There seem to be a 'sufficiently high number' of items on the main page involving animals to justify a discussion on the subject. ;)
Jackiespeel (
talk)
15:14, 13 December 2010 (UTC)
Did you know
Could "... that a turning enthusiast built the most elaborate commercial building (pictured) in New Ulm, Minnesota?" be better phrased with "New Ulm's most elaborate commercial building" because otherwise it somehow looks like it features as one of the most elaborate commercial buildings anywhere and that has its own problems of objectivity??
Eugene-elgato (
talk)
11:50, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
People have given up on Wikipedia's front page.
The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section.
It's obvious the last couple of years Wikipedia front page lost its appeal to the people (nobody cares to even debate it anymore, with so few visitors about it) because it refuses to allow democratic procedures other than "we'll take into consideration your petty suggestions, peasant". If you want to improve it, stop putting Directors, "Arbitrators" and Know-it-alls in general on any section of the front page sub-themes and start learning from websites like reddit.com. Let people submit whatever and the best news, 'did you know', whatever, even page will go top *by simple visitor 'upvoting'*. Because your Elitism of having "enlightened" or only regular visitors with the process of writing in a wiki format with lengthy reasonings is not justified. You will never replace Democracy with "Enlightened Elites". This was the vision of every fascist regime in the history of the world and it failed. --
Leladax (
talk)
16:51, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
To submit and vote on "Did you Know" Items,
Click Here
To submit and vote on "In the News" items,
Click Here
To submit and vote on "Featured Articles"
Click Here (To request that they appear on a particular day
Click Here.
To submit and vote on "Featured Pictures"
click here. (They appear in order, and there's a long queue, so be patient.)
Sorry that the selection process isn't exactly the same as Digg or something, but in most things Wikipedia prefers intelligent debate over mindless voting. So be prepared to back up your opinions with a brief argument.
Ultimately, though, the end result is similar, our users choose and "vote" on the articles that go up on the main page.
The only un-democratic step is the Featured Article selection process. It's moderated by a single editor to avoid unseemly "clumping" of topics, but he's usually pretty open to suggestions and requests.
72.10.110.109 (
talk)
17:08, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
Responding to Leladax's screed above, I've
beencomplaining for almost two weeks that there haven't been enough main page featured article requests. See
this thread. I'll give you guys a tip - if there's a featured article you want on the main page, request it in the non-specific date slot. That almost guarantees I'll use it the next time I schedule some featured articles.
Raul654 (
talk)
17:37, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
You are a propagandist troll. If you don't provide evidence of the lie you just said remove your comment. I never said all wikipedians are fascists because, moron, I'm one of them. --
Leladax (
talk)
20:21, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
Let's just all move on, shall we? I think the past few comments make it clear nothing will be gained from continuing this particular discussion.--
Fyre2387(
talk •
contribs)23:11, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
As the reference in the article does not confirm this (that Voyager reached heliopause), I have withdrawn that ITN item. I should also remove that line from the article, but am waiting for reaction.
Materialscientist (
talk)
10:37, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
This wasn't a copyvio or anything urgent, so should not have been removed from the template before discussion. The blurb made no mention of it actually reaching it—just states the fact the scientists say it has shown signs of doing so. As there was consensus (albeit with limited discussion) to list it at ITN and the removal was unilateral and without discussion, it should be restored.
Strange Passerby (
talk •
contribs)
11:03, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
Many people wonder what the main page looked like on a given day. I suggest archiving the main page daily by getting a bot to use
Special:ExpandTemplates on the source and save the result in a dated page. I just created
Wikipedia:Main Page history/2010 December 16 as an example. All templates and parser functions are recursively expanded by
Special:ExpandTemplates so the result should look almost constant except for some details like sitenotices, deleted or changed images, and design changes in the software. It could also be done every 4 or 6 hours to capture DYK changes but daily seems enough to me.
PrimeHunter (
talk)
16:46, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
I would like to hear what people think before going to bot requests. I don't think anything like this has been done before. Is there interest in such an archive which would grow to thousands of pages in a decade? It would make lots of bot generated pages meant to never be edited again. I don't want to watch them all for vandalism or unwanted changes, which would be nearly all changes including corrections. Would it be acceptable to fully protect all of them? Are there license problems if contributors to the substituted templates are hard to track down? And for something affecting the Main Page, should such an archive be linked directly from there or only from the talk page? Without a Main Page link, the archive would have lower profile and there would be less reason to make it.
PrimeHunter (
talk)
13:28, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
Today's featured article, The Simpsons Game, has wrong image
Instead of an image of the game itself, it shows a picture of a sign in front of a game studio that makes thousands of games. The article is about the game, not the company that distributed it. Can someone change that?
DreamFocus01:08, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
I imagine that was because it is the only non fair use rationale image there was in the article. Fair use images are not allowed on the main page. −
Jhenderson77701:16, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
I disagree. This game is not only made by Electronic Arts, it is about Electronic Arts. The game makes fun of the company consistently throughout the plot and the game's antagonist is Will Wright, who was, at the time, an employee of Electronic Arts. The image is an appropriate one.
Neelix (
talk)
17:00, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
If the featured article were
Electronic Arts, the image would be reasonably illustrative. But for a video game produced by Electronic Arts (and even spoofing it in its story), it was a desperate stretch to include anything remotely relevant to the article's subject, purely for the sake of having an image. I support the image's removal. —
David Levy17:21, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
While that would be less bad, it still doesn't strike me as preferable to no image at all. Even the display of a book's author (for which the video game equivalent would be, for example, a photograph of
David Crane alongside a blurb about
Pitfall!) is less than ideal.
The article isn't about Matt Selman, so it once again comes down to including an image purely for the sake of including an image.
Two questions that are helpful to ask are:
Will the image's general nature be readily apparent to most readers seeing the blurb (before they read the caption)?
Would we seriously consider including the image in the article's infobox?
This probably passes the first question
David included above. A book's author is better-connected to his work in the public eye than a primary writer of a video game. LFaraone02:16, 19 December 2010 (UTC)
The difference is that a book is widely acknowledged and marketed as the work of one or more authors, and as such, having a picture of the author makes sense. We've also done this for other similar works (
a Nine Inch Nails album comes to mind). But the video game is a product of Electronic Arts and the branding is mostly about the game itself, not any particular individual. howcheng {
chat}02:21, 19 December 2010 (UTC)
[replying to both LFaraone and Howcheng]
Exactly. Even if I've never heard of a book/album or its author[s]/recording artist[s], I'll automatically assume that the photograph depicts the latter.
Conversely, I'm familiar with The Simpsons Game, but if I'd seen the photograph of Matt Selman alongside its blurb, my reaction would have been "Who's that guy?". —
David Levy02:35, 19 December 2010 (UTC)
Indeed, inferring that there is somehow a bias against video game articles here is frankly ridiculous. In fact, one of the most frequent complaints we see here is that there are too many video game articles showing up as TFA. howcheng {
chat}05:53, 19 December 2010 (UTC)
Maybe this discussion should go on the TFA page, but this is an issue that has come up before and will come up again, and should be resolved. Personally, I think the embargo on non-free images on the MP is foolish, but that's not getting changed anytime soon and is not really worth the effort even bringing up. I understand the rationale behind not putting the game producer's photo as the TFA image, as most readers will be unaware of the link between the photo and and article/blurb. However, I feel a good compromise is to include an image of the studio, where possible, as most people can clearly appreciate "hey, this is a videogame, and that's a videogame company, I bet they're related"; as Howcheng said above "a book is widely acknowledged and marketed as the work of one or more authors ... the video game is a product of Electronic Arts". In the same way that author pics are relevant to a book article, an EA image would be relevant to a game they have produce or released. Readers have come to generally expect an image alongside the blurb, and generally it looks good visually to provide one.
Random8917:04, 20 December 2010 (UTC)
Howcheng's point (with which I agree) is that most video games lack anything contextually comparable to a book's author[s] or an album's recording artist[s]. (There are some notable exceptions, but this wasn't one of them.)
A video game's association with its studio is no greater than a motion picture's association with its studio. Can you imagine displaying an exterior photograph of the Paramount Pictures lot for The Godfather (as a random example)?
It's unfortunate that our current procedures prevent us from maintaining the visual style to which readers are accustomed, but including a decorative, tangential image is not a good solution. —
David Levy18:28, 20 December 2010 (UTC)
No love for the Wright Brothers?!?
On Dec. 17th (today) I was surprised to find no mention anywhere -- "Did you know.." "On this day..", Featured article, nor photo -- of the Wright Brothersn historic first flight. Dec. 17, 1903 is generally accepted as the first human flight in a heavier-than-air powered vehicle. Just wondering why such an Earth changing event wasn't highlighted.
Sector001 (
talk)
16:24, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
I had originally swapped out the Wright Brothers item because they'd been on for several years consecutively and other articles should get their shot on OTD as well. Today also was the 75th anniversary of the Douglas DC-3, and I felt one airplane item was enough. Remember that OTD doesn't highlight every event every year. howcheng {
chat}16:50, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
I do like how the invention of a new ridiculous neologism "earth-changing" was necessary to present your point.
f o x19:50, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
Glad I could help Fox. Consider it your Christmas prezzie. Actually, the event was more "sky-changing" than "earth-changing".lol
Sector001 (
talk)
20:22, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
Seems fine to me. It's not like we're the German Wikipedia putting up a picture of someone's vagina on the MP. This is barely anything. /
ƒETCHCOMMS/04:11, 23 December 2010 (UTC)
Hardly nude. Topless maybe, and discretely topless at that. I'm not a fan of gratuitous nudity, but removing that pic would be censorship.
HiLo48 (
talk)
04:14, 23 December 2010 (UTC)
Again, as someone else has mentioned, this is not gratuitous. It's more artistic than anything, and if textbooks let that slide, so can an online encyclopedia.--
WaltCip (
talk)
19:22, 23 December 2010 (UTC)
Again Vietnam?
there are so many otd about vietnam again. nice there are many FA's about that but they shouldn't appear otd 3 times a month. there should be a rule prohibiting users from pushing there articles too much even if they are good —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
91.61.19.99 (
talk)
21:17, 25 December 2010 (UTC)
You realize that US and UK have 1+ items appearing in OTD daily, right? So you're going to complain about Vietnam showing up a few times a month?? Seems a little out-of-whack there. howcheng {
chat}01:01, 28 December 2010 (UTC)
Going to beat HTD to the "but at least they speak English" punch here. Not getting why a little extra knowledge on Vietnamese history is hurting anyone.
ƒox01:37, 28 December 2010 (UTC)
There was a problem recently involving huge numbers 1960s Vietnamese politics stories showing up. However, this item was entirely unrelated Vietnamese history from the 1920s, which seems rather reasonable in comparison to the other possibilities for that day.
Modest Geniustalk17:04, 28 December 2010 (UTC)
More than 1,000,000 articles
Since both French and German Wikipedia now have more than 1,000,000 articles, why not add an appropriate line in the list of other Wikipedias.--
Wetman (
talk)
07:53, 28 December 2010 (UTC)
This has been discussed a lot. I can't remember the reasons for not doing it, but the consensus is not to at this moment (I believe they're waiting for more to reach 1m). I for one would also favor creating a new group for those above a million. DC07:59, 28 December 2010 (UTC)
Quoth the instructions at the top of the page, "if your question is related to the Main Page, please search the archives first to make sure it hasn't been answered before."
This excludes numerous earlier discussions in which the community rejected proposals to add a new tier for a small number of Wikipedias (based upon whatever arbitrary milestone had been reached at the time). —
David Levy17:00, 28 December 2010 (UTC)
Wouldn't it be simpler to just make a new category for Wikipedias with more than 1,000,000 articles, rather than have this discussion over and over again?
87.114.184.255 (
talk)
19:43, 28 December 2010 (UTC)
That is simply not true. Several of them have ended with somebody opposed to the proposal calling the poster names, such as
Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells, instead of producing an actual argument (see just below for an example. Nice attitude, people!). A few of them have "concluded that it would be a bad idea", but not every one. Are you perhaps exaggerating because you are short of arguments to support the appearance of en-wiki being 7 times larger than any other, instead of just 3? I know that's not what it actually says, but it's how it obviously appears, considering the number of times this is brought up. If it is so important to you to preserve the status quo, can't you at least have the decency to add it to some FAQ, instead of just being rude when a change is suggested? This discussion will appear over and over until the change inevitably happens, and you'll get more and more tired of it each time, and will likely be ruder and ruder. Instead, shouldn't there be a link somewhere that explains why the "consensus" has decided that a 2-item 1,000,000 category looks bad? (and by you, I don't mean any individual, but the collective of Talk:Main_Page regulars) /
Coffeeshivers (
talk)
00:03, 30 December 2010 (UTC)
Besides, it is 'one of the (ten) standard Main Page talk page discussions' (the others including over-representation of the US, of sport, of wildlife, topics which annoy various filters, those which annoy
Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells...' (Any further suggestions?)
Jackiespeel (
talk)
22:55, 28 December 2010 (UTC)
What happened to the proposal to put ranges anwyay? As I remarked when it came up it never seemed necessary to me but it also seems like a resonable compromise to avoid these needless discussions
Nil Einne (
talk)
20:40, 31 December 2010 (UTC)
Shame, when I read the heading I thought maybe some entrepreneurial soul had begun selling coffee mugs with Jimbo's terrifying stare plastered over it. So he can watch you while you sleep.
GeeJo(t)⁄(c) •
16:00, 13 December 2010 (UTC)
I also thought you ment mugs as in tea and coffee mugs; but it Caught your attention didn't it? mission acomplished woudln't you say seeing as it's a fundraising banner? :) --
Connelly90[AlbaGuBràth] (
talk)
16:08, 13 December 2010 (UTC)
As someone who's had a hand in fundraising in the past, I'll point out for the sake of argument, that catching people's attention can be a useful aspect of fundraising, but if a line is crossed into irritation, it's not a good thing. Whether the Jimbo banner is irritating or not seems to be the OP's point, not whether it's eye-catching. If I came to an office as a
one man band and suddenly began playing, with the aim of prompting donations, I'm sure I'd get noticed, but I'm not sure I'd get much money (or goodwill). --
Dweller (
talk)
16:59, 13 December 2010 (UTC)
Me, I found it so irritating that I looked in the source files to find the filename of the Jimbo photo used, and add it to my browser's content filter. Whenever a new image was used, I'd add it to the blocklist. Now that it's no longuer Jimbo, I don't mind as much. Still, they could make the banner not so huge.
76.10.140.44 (
talk)
02:37, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
I for one enjoy being greeted by his lovely visage while perusing wikipedia. Perhaps him and Andy Shclafay and do a callander —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
142.22.16.52 (
talk)
21:28, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
I would much rather have ads on Wikipedia than this desperate cry for donations. Targeted ads would easily raise what Wikimedia needs and would help a lot of businesses reach their potential clients. And yes, the ugly mug is creepy. —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
70.91.210.249 (
talk)
17:23, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
This "urgent" appeal is embarrassing. The Wikipedia fundraiser has been wildly successful; it is not good PR to seem desperate to milk every penny out of your users. Wikipedia is not in dire financial straights. --
64.53.233.71 (
talk)
08:22, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
And it would be better PR to say "please donate but don't feel too obliged to, we've got plenty money either way"? Nah.
f o x12:01, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
It depends -- are you sending the message that the goal is to get as much money as you can, or to get as much as you need. The former is offensive.
86.26.60.18 (
talk)
14:25, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
This banner is extremely obnoxious and irritating. Please someone get rid of it. This is like some really bad joke... Can't be serious.
Genjix (
talk)
14:23, 19 December 2010 (UTC)
AFAIK, the fundraising target was set long before the fundraiser started
[4]. Similarly the deadline was I presume set (the fundraisers always seem to end about the same time anyway). Whether or not the current campaign was 'wildly successful' the fact remained the fundraiser was still quite a bit off the target. I presume donations have dropped off as they are liable to do over time so from that POV, as 'wildly successful' as the current campaign allegedly was, there was some urgency since it's possible the target may not have been met. In any case, I'm not aware of many charities with broad purposes who only really try to get as much as 'they need', since most charities can always find something to do with any extra (if they really find they have too much, stopping donations is far easier then getting them). In any case, it's irrelevant for logged in users since the banners have been turned off for them until the final push in January.
Nil Einne (
talk)
15:48, 22 December 2010 (UTC)
I don't see how the word 'urgent' is unethical. I presume from the WMF's POV, it is urgent since they have a target to meet and it's not clear if they will meet it. From a donators POV, it may or may not be urgent. It's up to each donator to decide for themselves whether it's urgent or not. The target and amount collected so far is even shown in the banner itself and I'm pretty sure from the links you can find out why such a target was set and what they intend to do with the money. If people don't think it's urgent, that's up to them, but it's odd to claim that it's unethical to call it urgent (when one presumes the foundation does consider it urgent) just because not everyone agrees, even more so when you've provided the info for people to decide for themselves whether they consider it urgent. Ultimately the banner is primarily intended to convey the impression the foundation has an appeal they consider urgent, not to dictate to other people whether or not they should consider the foundations needs urgent.
Nil Einne (
talk)
15:44, 24 December 2010 (UTC)
I favor having Jimbo's head on a mug as in the banner, but if you pour hot liquid into it, horns and a pitchfork become visible.--
Wehwalt (
talk)
14:32, 19 December 2010 (UTC)
If Wikimedia needs to raise funds then so be it, but the photos of Jimmy Wales they are using to help publicise this are, shall we say, unfortunate. They aren't exactly his best, and he looks a little smug in some. Just one of him looking a little less pleased with himself would be much better - but nevermind: Merry Christmas everyone!
Hugahoody (
talk)
21:17, 24 December 2010 (UTC)
If everybody reading this donated $5 our fundraiser would be over today. Please donate to keep Wikipedia free. Ha, ha, ha. Now that's sad. --
200.121.195.245 (
talk)
18:02, 29 December 2010 (UTC)
I just had the misfortune to visit WP whilst logged out, and wow that's an annoying advert. Worse, it's incredibly misleading - if everyone did donate £5 as it asks (and I note in passing it's asking for more from UK users than US users, thanks to currency differences), there's no way the fundraiser would end. They'd keep it running and milk people for everything they could - we've already raised plenty of money.
Modest Geniustalk20:28, 30 December 2010 (UTC)
I clear my cache every five minutes or so, and therefore I have to click the stupid x every five minutes or so. It's been two months already, when is the banner coming down?
80.123.210.172 (
talk)
21:16, 2 January 2011 (UTC)
Christmas
So why isn't Christmas the main article on the main page as it is the most celebrated Holiday/Holiday in the Western/English speaking world? Is political correctness creeping its way into wikipedia?--
Degen Earthfast (
talk)
17:32, 25 December 2010 (UTC)
You say it's the most celebrated. Do you have a source for that? Wouldn't New Years Eve/Day be more universal? (I don't have a source either.)
HiLo48 (
talk)
22:57, 25 December 2010 (UTC)
Our article on
Christmas was featured quite prominently at the top of the On This Day section, in the area specifically set aside for holidays.
Christmas Eve and
Boxing Day have all been featured there over the last 3 days - I can think of no other holiday that we cover not only the day itself, but the days before and after. That seems perfectly sufficient to me.
Modest Geniustalk00:31, 26 December 2010 (UTC)
Everybody's. Did you read the comments above? If you want it to be a featured article, it needs to get back to featured article status; it hasn't been for four years and has some obvious issues. Feel free to help out. Acroterion(talk)14:57, 26 December 2010 (UTC)
I believe the "Whose wikipedia this" is was a statement not a question. It stated that this being the English wikipedia so Christmas should be the Featured article no matter it bureaucratically imposed lack of status..--
209.213.220.227 (
talk)
17:48, 26 December 2010 (UTC)
Obviously you haven't thought this through. To start with, Featured Article status is reserved for the best of the best. It's not bestowed upon just any article for arbitrary reasons. Those that qualify have to be well-researched, well-documented, and well-written. These criteria have been decided by the community as a whole -- it's not a decision that was imposed by any one person or small committee of people. If any article could potentially appear on the Main Page in the TFA section, that would include those that are full of {{citation needed}} or {{unreferenced}} or {{original research}} tags as well, and for Main Page, we like to show off our quality content. As to why each Featured Article only gets one shot at the Main Page, well there are (as of right now)
1,343 articles that haven't appeared yet. Each one of those is the result of a lot of effort by one or more editors. Are YOU going to tell them, you'll just have to wait a bit longer because
Christmas is always going to appear on the Main Page on Dec 25, leaving only 364 days when other articles get to appear? And actually, why limit it to this one holiday? Why not New Year's Day, Valentine's Day, St Patrick's Day, etc. And then if you open it to major holidays celebrated in English-speaking countries, that's still the US, UK, Canada, Australia, South Africa, and India (apologies if I've missed anyone), so the available slots open to non-holiday ones is getting limited. And now that you've opened the floodgates, is there any reason why Pearl Harbor Day, 9/11, 3/11, Armistice Day, or any other day that's significant to people shouldn't get the same treatment? So if by "bureaucratically imposed", you mean, "Do you guys have a good reason why this rule exists", then yes, I would say that is true. howcheng {
chat}04:14, 27 December 2010 (UTC)
Today (26.12.2010) the Western Christian Churches (incl. the Catholic Church) DO NOT celebrate St. Stephen's Day, because the feast of the
Holy Family takes precedence. It should be corrected...
Second, it's just a thought, but puzzling: Many Christian feast days have the modifier "Christianity" or "Eastern/Western Christianity" added in brackets. But Christmas Eve, Christmas Day and Easter do not have. I fail to see the difference. Granted, many atheists/agnostics now say they celebrate Christmas (what they actually do is not that important), but would they do so without the Western Christian heritage? Very likely no.
Jancikotuc (
talk)
15:35, 26 December 2010 (UTC)
Very likely yes, but perhaps with a different name. Family and community feast days at or near the
Winter solstice have been very common from way before Christianity. Should it be the featured article?
HiLo48 (
talk)
23:12, 26 December 2010 (UTC)
Why very likely? Yes I know about celebrating winter solstice in pre-Christian times, but do we globally celebrate summer solstice these days? Why should we suppose that winter solstice celebrations would have survived, if summer solstice celebrations have not? Anyway, Christmas would never have reached global popularity without presents-giving (which was not common until the 1940s). And until that time, the "western" world was still predominantly Christian.
Jancikotuc (
talk)
17:50, 27 December 2010 (UTC)
Some "Western Christian churches" did celebrate St Stephen on 26 December this year. The Church of England, for example, allows
Festivals to displace Sundays (except in Advent, Lent, and Easter, or if the Sunday is a
Principal Feast), or to be celebrated on the next available day. For 26 to 29 December my lectionary allowed either <Christmas 1, John, Holy Innocents, Stephen> or <Stephen, John, Holy Innocents, Thomas Becket>.
DTOx (
talk)
18:27, 2 January 2011 (UTC)
Probably won't happen
Those of us with long enough tenure here remember that, for two years running (2004 and 2005, I think).
Christmas was indeed once an FA, with those responsible intending for it to have a Main Page turn on December 25.
However ... both years, as the holiday approached, the editors found themselves working overtime to revert or lessen the impact of innumerable well-meaning edits to maintain something like what they had gotten to FA. Both years, it was such that other articles had to be substituted a few days before Christmas. The second year they got wise and realized this would always recur. So, with sadness,
they had it defeatured.
Daniel Case (
talk)
15:54, 29 December 2010 (UTC)
i'm wondering whether we are too narrow in our discussion. couldn't we simply have a satisfactory article that has a christmas theme? this would also allow a decentralization of the christian-christmas as it would cover a different narrative of the
holiday each year. how feasible is this? wouldn't this only give a potential FA editor(ial staff 2.0) a deadline to work toward?
LazyMapleSunday (
talk)
21:45, 29 December 2010 (UTC)
For the date, yes. But it would also get other points (widely covered, lack of other 'holiday' articles on the MP and in FAs). But the points only come into it if there is competition over which article gets which date (and total number of requests); since TFAR has been rather quiet recently almost anything that's proposed gets used.
Modest Geniustalk17:35, 30 December 2010 (UTC)
It's not apophenia...I noticed the same and thought, even if only half of the letters were as common an initial as "L"....well, do the math. It's a big coincidence or someone is trying to be noticed. Archbishop of Canterbury is less intriguing since choices of featured articles are often related to anniversaries and holidays.--
71.232.14.151 (
talk)
07:09, 29 December 2010 (UTC)
Why not have alphabet-themed days? Having all entries on the MP exclude a given letter might be more of a challenge. (What was the e-less book?) Or will alphabetism be added to the list of topics mentioned above?
Jackiespeel (
talk)
15:58, 29 December 2010 (UTC)
I just noticed that that picture isn't even used in his article any more. Obviously it considers the MP home now, and refuses to be used elsewhere.
Modest Geniustalk18:29, 31 December 2010 (UTC)
Geejo, you got me. After I had scheduled lemur, lindow man, and lincoln cent, I saw the pattern and decided to run with it. So no, not an accident - more like a small joke to see if anyone was paying attention :)
Raul654 (
talk)
06:22, 3 January 2011 (UTC)
So what would the main page for 'Day X' cover -
X-Men, the
X-Ray of the 'hand with a ring',
Xerxes,
Xenophon and what/who else?
People the awards that have been listed in Grand Theft Auto IV main page are all "Game of the Year" awards rather than "Action game of the year". Then why after several times editing that page, the awards change back to "Action game of the year".
There is one other issue too. The reviews are mostly of PC version rather than PS3/X360. The game is the highest rated game of all time and that rating is represented by its PS3 and Xbox 360 version.
Thank you for your interest in Wikipedia and for your attempts to improve these videogame articles. This is, however, not the forum for discussing the
Grand Theft Auto IV page specifically; this area is intended for discussing the Main Page only. When editing this
Talk Page you should be presented with a whole host of links to suggested areas that you may find useful and I would direct you to the
New Contributors' Help Page in the first instance. To discuss GTA4, please post your comments on the
Talk Page of that article. Happy editing!
Careful With That Axe, EugeneHello...10:26, 5 January 2011 (UTC)
Man, Eugene, that has got to the politest "re-direct the newbie" post I have ever seen!! Maybe we should keep it as a template somewhere and just modify it with new topics each time it's needed! Most excellent!! Keep up the good work! :)
Rhodesisland (
talk)
01:35, 6 January 2011 (UTC)
Clicking on the "recent deaths" link on the main page goes to Deaths in 2010. Should that be changed to Deaths in 2011 for the new year now that the new year has begun?
Bcperson89 (
talk)
09:23, 1 January 2011 (UTC)
It's only in redirects it doesn't work. It works fine in
Recent deaths but I think a yearly manual update is better than an automatic link to a page which may have no deaths yet.
PrimeHunter (
talk)
01:48, 2 January 2011 (UTC)
Now all we need is a means to insure the appropriate new page is in place at the start of each coming new year (decreeing that an unnamed somebody will take care of a problem that only appears once a year is a good way to ensure the task is forgotten between now and the next occurrence of January 1). Otherwise the traditional avoidance of
WP:REDLINKs on the Main Page will be violated. --Allen3talk20:38, 5 January 2011 (UTC)
Adapting the fallback code we already use for TFP should work for that, and ensure (;)) there's no redlink. I reckon:
{{#ifexist:Deaths in {{CURRENTYEAR}}|[[Deaths in {{CURRENTYEAR}}|Recent deaths]]|[[Deaths in {{#time:Y|-1 years}}|Recent deaths]]}}
it's always annoying when i see there is a Christian festival and then it's followed by western Christianity and not also eastern when they are in fact both celebrating on that day. The reason i think this needs changing is two-fold
on article pages for saints and Christian festivals, in the info-box it has a "observed by" column which will list the churches which do celebrate, e.g. Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, Lutheran, Some Anglicans etc....so if it just says western Christianity, on the main-page it may be misleading
secondly, although the main rationale i presume for exclusing eastern Christianity for say, the epiphany today, is because numerically the greater portion of us keep a 13 day behind calendar, e.g. Russia, Serbia, Jerusalem,... Greece, Cyprus, Albania, Bulgaria, almost all the Greeks outside the home countries, e.g., millions in the Americas, Europe, Oceania, celebrate today and the Russians ARE celebrating on the 6th of January anyway it's just they cannot count properly!! they think 6th January is the correct date for the epiphany too, it's just they think 6th of January is when it's 19th January.
Eugene-elgato (
talk)
10:23, 6 January 2011 (UTC)
What? All those nations are using gregorian calendar, just the holidays fall on different days, so it is perfectly fine as it is. Regarding the first point, it would be better to address it to a dedicated wikiproject. --Tone10:28, 6 January 2011 (UTC)
OK, but i still would argue that essentially they hold Xmas on 25th December, and their calendar is out of synch- apparently in a few years they will be celebrating Xmas on our 8th December and no longer 7th even, which indicates not that their Xmas is simply on the 7th January, but that their 25th December is way out of synch and not even linearly. If that makes any sense??
Eugene-elgato (
talk)
11:58, 6 January 2011 (UTC)
We would, the same as we do for other holidays which change. We use the gregorian calendar on wikipedia, and it's also what a lot of the world uses in a variety of circumstances. The fact that some events are based on a calendar related to the gregorian one which therefore has the same month names doesn't change the fact it's a different calendar. More importantly, ultimately whatever you want to call the date the events fall whenever they fall (sometimes it depends on where you live or what system you use), the fact that Chinese New Year falls on the first day of the first month of the year of the
Chinese lunar calendar or
Eid ul-Fitr on 1
Shawwal doesn't change that. Those who follow the different practices were not celebrating Christmas several days ago whatever you want to call the date. The will be soon, whatever you want to call the date
Nil Einne (
talk)
13:13, 6 January 2011 (UTC)
PS: Yes, I know it has happened and that it has had coverage. I guess my real question is about why this is WP's main headline if the BBC don't even appear to have a story on it. --
FormerIP (
talk)
12:29, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
Reply to your PS: "In the news" doesn't have a main headline, it just has a most recent headline at the top. See the ITN discussion for more, well, discussion of reasons for inclusion.
BencherliteTalk12:32, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
Okay, but Wakefield was struck off by the General Medical Council some time last year over this research. The BMJ calling him a fraud now is obvious extremely significant to his biography, but it doesn't seem like an earth shattering event, particularly if major news outlets are ignoring altogether. --
FormerIP (
talk)
13:09, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
I'll admit it's lost a lot of impact in terms of newsworthiness since he was struck off so long ago, but we didn't report on it then. It's a big story, both with the striking off and the fraud announcement, and covering it now is better than never. (Also, a
good amount of news outlets have covered BMJ's announcement, a lot of them not giving it premier placement.)
狐 FOX13:26, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
Yeah, I was a bit surprised by the timing of this as well - the wider picture has been known for quite a while, and this doesn't seem hugely surprising in that context. But if we didn't cover it last time, then I guess it's good to get it out there.
Trebor (
talk)
13:52, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
The breaking news aspect is the revelation that he faked data in the original study, this is what prompted the BMJ labelling him a fraud, and it only happened in the last couple of days.
cyclosarin (
talk)
15:09, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
Wikipedia is allowed to be ahead of the BBC and other news broadcasters - and sometimes it is appropriate to make use of 'an event' even if minor, to remind people of a developing story that is intermittently in the news.
Jackiespeel (
talk)
16:17, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
I'm not sure we are so much "ahead" of the BBC. Is it not more likely simply that we have deemed something to be newsworthy when they haven't? --
FormerIP (
talk)
16:44, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
Wikipedia languages section
Now that we have more than a million articles in both German and French we should have a section of "More that a million article" at the bottom to give them he credit they deserve.
Doc James (
talk ·
contribs ·
email)
07:02, 8 January 2011 (UTC)
I'm surprised to be typing (mostly copying and pasting, actually) this response to an administrator, but...
Quoth the instructions at the top of the page, "if your question is related to the Main Page, please search the archives first to make sure it hasn't been answered before."
This excludes numerous earlier discussions in which the community rejected proposals to add a new tier for a small number of Wikipedias (based upon whatever arbitrary milestone had been reached at the time). —
David Levy07:32, 8 January 2011 (UTC)
I guess it is such a good idea and this is why it keeps coming up. I do not know how many times the little green plus sign was suggested before it was added to articles but it must have been dozens. Remember consensus can and does change.
Doc James (
talk ·
contribs ·
email)
07:42, 8 January 2011 (UTC)
On reviewing past comments I guess it would be reasonable to wait until four wikis reached this mark. But I do agree with others that it would also be reasonable to add it now and maybe remove / merge one of the smaller categories if we wish to save on space.
Doc James (
talk ·
contribs ·
email)
07:48, 8 January 2011 (UTC)
News about spy to Renault-Nissan about the electric vehicle
I have read and listen news about the spy of Renault-Nissan by the Chinese, to obtain industrial secrets related to the
electric vehicle, where this automotive group is the world leader. The revelation has also affected the production of the electric vehicle in Spain (Twizzy model and so on). I suggest include this relevant information in the Wikipedia news headlines.--
Diamondland (
talk)
08:47, 8 January 2011 (UTC)
I am constantly confused by the pictures used with In the news and On this day blurbs. Nice picture of a old guy in a shirt and tie next to Andrew Wakefield's blurb -- but it's not Mr Wakefield, it's the assassinated Pakistani governor. This catches me every time, and I've been around long enough to know better.
Same thing in OTD: old guy with handlebar mustache and wing collar probably isn't Bonnie Prince Charlie -- but you can't find out who it really is unless you read through ALL the rest of the blurbs.
We're really not doing our casual readers a service with this misleading picture placement; and even an experienced reader such as myself still finds it annoying that I have to slog through each and every bullet to find "(pictured)".
Can this be easily fixed? Or am I the only person who's bothered by it? (And, apologies if this is beating a dead horse; I'm not up to speed on restricting searches to just certain pagesets.)
Crap; didn't find that earlier. Still, one thing isn't clear to me, since the French seem to be able to do it "sometimes": is it impossible, or is it merely difficult, to float the picture to its appropriate bullet? Thanks!
DaHorsesMouth (
talk)
04:22, 8 January 2011 (UTC)
It isn't particularly difficult, but it purportedly would cause layout problems on other pages on which the templates are transcluded. And if I recall correctly, some people expressed a preference for the current aesthetics. —
David Levy04:29, 8 January 2011 (UTC)
For DYK we currently have: "From Wikipedia's newest articles:". As both expanded (but pre-existing articles) as well as genuinely new articles are featured, wouldn't it be more accurate to have "From Wikipedia's newest content:"?
Greenshed (
talk)
23:01, 10 January 2011 (UTC)
I agree that the current phrasing doesn't cover expanded articles. But 'newest content' would include small amounts (paragraphs) of new material added to existing large articles, which are not eligible for DYK. Perhaps
WT:DYK might have some ideas?
Modest Geniustalk23:20, 10 January 2011 (UTC)
The use of the modifier 'although' in the first sentence of the featured article, 'John Helm', is misplaced
The use of the modifier 'although' in the first sentence of the featured article, 'John Helm', is inappropriate. The fact that he was the 18th and 24th Governor of Kentucky is in no way diminished by the total amount of time he spent serving in that office. Perhaps it should read "John L. Helm (1802–1867) was the 18th and 24th governor of Kentucky. In contrast to other Governors of Kentucky of the era, his aggregate service in that office was, in total, less than fourteen months."
174.58.42.212 (
talk)
00:18, 9 January 2011 (UTC)
I disagree. The word "although" refers to the disparity between the likely assumption that a two-time governor served more than 14 months in office and the fact that he didn't, not the disparity between his time in office and that of other governors. —
David Levy00:26, 9 January 2011 (UTC)
No. Why would an assumption be made that having served 14 months in office is more exceptional for a one-term Governor than a two-term Governor, regardless of whether it was sequential or non-sequential? A lack of attention to the non-sequentiality of his terms in office is negated by the use of the word 'aggregate'. Its use draws attention of that Helm's terms in office were not continuous.
It would be similar or analogous to stating "Jerry Brown is and was 39th and 34th Governor of California, although 27 years elapsed between his two terms in office." The fact that 27 years elapsed between Brown's two terms as Governor of California does not diminish the significance and the exceptionality of the fact. The only rational assumption that ought to be made is that the use of the modifier "although" somehow makes the fact of the the statement made by second clause diminish the significance of the statement made by the first clause. It doesn't--Jerry Brown is and was 39th and 34th Governor of California, and the fact that 27 years elapsed between Brown's terms in office is irrelevant to the fact or to the significance that Jerry Brown is and was 39th and 34th Governor of California.
It might be appropriate to write "Richard Nixon was 37th President of the United States, although he was the only President ever to resign the office." Or it might be (arguably less) appropriate to write "Bill Clinton was 42nd President of the United States, although he was only one of two Presidents to be impeached" (it's arguably less appropriate because although Clinton was impeached by the U.S. House of Representatives, Clinton was not convicted by the U.S. Senate, nor was Clinton thereby removed from office). The fact that Clinton was impeached but not convicted and removed from office did not diminish the significance of the fact of his Presidency, i.e., the duration of time Clinton was in office, or the significance of the policies for which his was responsible for having made in office.
By contrast, to say "Richard Nixon was 37th President of the United States, although he was the only President ever to resign the office" would be inappropriate, because of the exceptionality of the fact of his resignation does not diminish the fact that Nixon was 37th President. Whether or not Nixon's resignation diminished the amount of time he spent in office does not diminish the fact that Nixon was 37th President of the United States, but the fact that he was the only President to resign is of significance, although not to the fact that Nixon was 37th President.
It would be appropriate to state "Gerald Ford was 38th President of the United States, although Ford was never elected to that office or to the office of Vice President." The use of the word "although" is appropriate there, because the essence of being President of the United States, as envisaged by the U.S. Constitution, is the quality of having been elected President or Vice President. The fact of that missing quality from the fact of Ford's Presidency would, therefore, definitely warrant the use of the modifier "although".
174.58.42.212 (
talk)
01:16, 9 January 2011 (UTC)
Why would an assumption be made that having served 14 months in office is more exceptional for a one-term Governor than a two-term Governor, regardless of whether it was sequential or non-sequential?
No one is claiming any such thing. You're badly misunderstanding the statement, which is entirely unrelated to the fact that the two terms were nonconsecutive.
The term of office is four years, so a likely assumption is that someone who served in said office (particularly twice, irrespective of chronology) did so for a total of significantly more than 14 months. —
David Levy01:34, 9 January 2011 (UTC)
Why should that be an assumption? Simply because the U.S. Constitution specified a limitation of the Presidential term to four years--and the States, in adopting a "republican form of government", followed suit for their Chief Executives? In the
Westminster System utilized in Canada (where there is a "fusion" of the executive and legislative branches in that the
Ministry is comprised of Members of Parliament who are also elected legislators) for example, as to the term of a chief executive, the maximum duration of one term of office for the
Prime Minister (through a limitation on the maximum time a Parliament can remain constituted) is limited to five years. However, governments in the Westminster System often fall on non-confidence votes, mostly on national budgets. Also, since the Prime Minister is also the titular leader of the political party which is elected in the most Parliamentary seats, if that Member of Parliament is voted out as Leader of the Party, by very strong position, it also means that Member of Parliament is no longer Prime Minister, because such a departure would lead to a non-confidence vote.
174.58.42.212 (
talk)
03:54, 9 January 2011 (UTC)
The statement turns on an issue of the duration of time spent on office during two non-sequential terms in office. It does not diminish the fact that Helm was both 18th and 24th Governor of Kentucky. The use of the modifier "although" implies that Helm was somehow "less" the 18th and 24th Governor of Kentucky for having served in that office an aggregate fourteen months.
174.58.42.212 (
talk)
04:21, 9 January 2011 (UTC)
"I watched two baseball games, although not full games."
"I went to school during spring and fall semesters, although only for two weeks total."
This is entirely reasonable and normal English. It doesn't "diminish" anything, it clarifies that while these things were done, they were not done with the completeness that they normally imply.
APL (
talk)
18:09, 9 January 2011 (UTC)
Non-Americans probably won't be immediately familiar with term-lengths of US Governers, while they would with seasons/school semesters. --
Kurr12:09, 10 January 2011 (UTC)
I don't know, but knowing that two terms are 8 years total puts the 14-month total term into (a meaningful) context. -
Kurr22:57, 10 January 2011 (UTC)
The context seems fine to me. Even if an average term length was 2 years, saying although for 14 months would still be fine. If people are interested in precisely what is normal they are welcome to check out the articles.
Nil Einne (
talk)
15:51, 11 January 2011 (UTC)
Increase in account creation or number of editors?
Hi. I would be interrested in statistics regarding the current banners displayed (those that encourage editing Wikipedia). Are we seeing an immediate effect on the editing? Cheers,
131.111.28.35 (
talk)
13:27, 13 January 2011 (UTC)
Are you referring to the 10th anniversary banners? If so I don't think their primary intention is to encourage editing
Nil Einne (
talk)
13:52, 13 January 2011 (UTC)
No, after the fundraising banners and the fundraising thank you banners, but before the anniversary banners, there was a banner encouraging editing. I clicked it, and there were choices such as
WP:GOCE.
Art LaPella (
talk)
14:56, 13 January 2011 (UTC)
Now I'm wondering why I haven't seen any of these banners... I enabled the gadget that hid the fundraising banners, which presumably hid these too. Anyway, what does this have to do with the Main Page?
Modest Geniustalk23:50, 13 January 2011 (UTC)
Whether it's useful or not to put banners encouraging editing in the main page, even though the current main page doesn't have them.
187.107.0.168 (
talk)
07:41, 14 January 2011 (UTC)
Hi all. Just dropping by to suggest that Main Page patrollers and error reporters install the above script to their Monobook/Vector skin as appropriate. What is does is to highlight links to redirect pages, pages that are up for deletion and disambiguation pages by changing the colour of the displayed links from the standard blue. The last one is most useful, it identifies where a link does not go to the intended target and will help us to pre-emptively clean these up in TFA, OTD, TFP and DYK blurbs. I've suggested this to all editors involved in the FA and Main Page content processes. Regards.
Zunaid12:58, 14 January 2011 (UTC)
This is an archive of past discussions. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the
current talk page.
It won't. Most discussion pages are exactly as efficient as they need to be, and most of the rest are as efficient as they can be made to be, with the size being due to many one-off comments from the outside world. In any case, spamming a large number of pages with this message is the opposite of efficiency. —
Gavia immer (
talk)21:58, 20 November 2010 (UTC)
In any case, the statistics are way off.
T:MP is currently quoted as 83k in the editing window.
WT:DYK, on the other hand, which is listed at #38 on Wavelength's list, is obviously much longer than this one and comes out at 423k in the editing window.
Physchim62(talk)22:02, 20 November 2010 (UTC)
Only four events, of which three are to do with the US? None of which is earlier than 1978? Seriously? Where's the balance? Where's the reporting of important events (a cartoon and a fatal bonfire collapse?) Where's the historical spread? Where's the geographical spread? It's hard to swallow Wikipedia's claim to be a serious encyclopaedia with this kind of selection.
86.134.26.42 (
talk)
09:12, 18 November 2010 (UTC)
Done, but it was actually pretty difficult to find good articles to put for November 18. Some of the ones listed on
November 18 did not actually happen today, and others are stubs or of poor quality. The best I could do was get two North American ones (one US/Canada and one Canada), but I believe that temporally speaking there is now a bit more diversity. howcheng {
chat}17:46, 18 November 2010 (UTC)
What is the WP equivalent of Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells? It is a platitude that most peopel will be occasionally annoyed/dislike certain entries on the main page - or 'repeated appearance of items in certain categories' (and filtering devices rather more so). Given that 'some people in some situations' are more flexible in what they view is there some way of having 'unfiltered access' and 'filtered so as not to annoy by subject/frequency of appearance of "the usual topics" and so on'?
Jackiespeel (
talk)
15:38, 18 November 2010 (UTC)
Comment:Selected anniversaries should not be featuring poorly sourced and low quality articles on the
Main Page. High quality
WP:GA and
WP:FA articles should not be removed and replaced with poor quality improperly sourced pages. -- Cirt (
talk)
17:52, 18 November 2010 (UTC)
Hold on,
Wikipedia:Selected anniversaries#Criteria for listing items on this set of pages says nothing about FA and GA articles taking precedence over others. Only stubs and articles with red and orange-level maintenance tags are prohibited. In fact, going by the criteria there, both Calvin & Hobbes and the Aggie Bonfire should definitely be excluded because neither are "of moderate to great historical significance". As such, I respectfully request that revert your
last edit. howcheng {
chat}20:33, 18 November 2010 (UTC)
Agreed. There's nothing in the criteria about FAs or GAs. Whilst it's nice to have a good article, and all other things being equal we should use them, there's also a need to have a balance of items. The items listed should (IMO) be of historical importance, cover a range of time periods, a range of topics (not all items about battles, for example) and a range of geographic locations.
Modest Geniustalk20:40, 18 November 2010 (UTC)
Just wanna add that Wikipedia's strength is not only its depth in selected topics such as military history and recent stuffs, but also its breadth. While problematic pages should be avoided, we really should be able to select items for SA/OTD to showcase articles, FA or otherwise. Making the quality standard sky high also mean shutting out under-serviced areas and underrepresenting what we have on the wide variety of topics/fields that are available in the wiki. Let's have some balance and diversity. --
PFHLai (
talk)
02:59, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
Sorry, but no. We should expect a high standard of quality for material selected for featured presentation in sects on the Main Page. -- Cirt (
talk)
03:04, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
For TFA, yes. But we apply different standards to each section of the MP - DYK articles are hardly of a high standard, for example. The primary point in TFA is to showcase top quality articles, for ITN it's articles of timely relevance, for DYK it's recently created articles, and for OTD it's depth and breadth of historical coverage. Article quality does not trump historical coverage when it comes to OTD.
Modest Geniustalk05:00, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
I agree in principle, but I don't think Wikipedia is there yet. Maybe 2018? 2020? Hopefully sooner. For now, there are too many underserviced areas. We should avoid bad pages for SA/OTD, but we should not exclusively use FAs and GAs. Maintaining a high standard is good, but we don't have enough FAs and GAs in wide enough variety of topics. It's part of systemic bias. --
PFHLai (
talk)
03:24, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
(
edit conflict) Sorry, but no. The overwhealming majority of our readers couldn't give an
aerialaccouplement for the WikiProcesses which determine FA or GA quality, which would presumably be those applied by Cirt and are explicitly those applied by YellowMonkey in his comments above. We have four sections that apply different criteria so as to appeal to a wide spectrum of readers. FA status is no guarantee of "quality" in any meaningful sense of the word, but it is traditional to have a "featured article" on the Main Page: that doesn't mean that the same criteria should apply for the other three sections.
Physchim62(talk)03:31, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
I did not say we should only use GAs and FAs. But I did say that GAs and FAs should not be removed, and replaced with poorer quality material. -- Cirt (
talk)
03:40, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
And that's where we disagree ;) The quality of the material is relative to the section where it appears, not absolute. An FA which is bad for OTD should not appear in that section.
Physchim62(talk)03:46, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
If we only have articles in the few topics that Wikipedia is strong in, but not have a variety of topics, then we'll end up with poorer quality SA/OTD templates. Having said that, I do like to see more FAs & GAs on SA/OTD. We just can't ignore the need for diversity. --
PFHLai (
talk)
04:07, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
That would lead to controversy such as has been seen previously at
WT:DYK, leading to possible unsourced, unreferenced, poorly sourced, material appearing on the
Main Page. That is simply inappropriate. -- Cirt (
talk)
16:17, 20 November 2010 (UTC)
AFAIK we already exclude extremely poor quality articles for SA/OTD, even for significant events. Very poor is usually take to mean articles with any cleanup tags
Nil Einne (
talk)
17:10, 20 November 2010 (UTC)
Yes, that's what I meant by "problematic pages should be avoided" for SA/OTD yesterday. Ignoring the need for diversity and balance is also inappropriate. --
PFHLai (
talk)
19:42, 20 November 2010 (UTC)
Is there somewhere I can go to complain about wikipedia's fundraising tactics? It seems odd there is not already stuff on the main page. I guess I'll be moved on soon. IP. —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
78.143.204.5 (
talk)
00:21, 21 November 2010 (UTC)
Anyway the substance of my complaint is that the appeal does not make clear the difference between wikipedia and wikimedia, infact the wording of the appeal suggests that they are the same , i.e. it mentions wikipedia in an appeal for wikimedia. The appeal link has no way to comment on it. —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
78.143.204.5 (
talk)
00:43, 21 November 2010 (UTC)
A few questions. Can I donate to wikipedia without donating to wikimedia?
Does wikipedia have the ability to separate itself from wikimedia?
If wikipedia is a separate entity from wikimedia why does it allow appeals from wikimedia to appear on it's main page? Why not appeal directly?
Thanks for that. the assumption 'donating to Wikimedia, you're funding Wikipedia' is false. Thats like saying all cats are mammals, therefore all mammals are cats. It does not follow.
78.143.204.5 (
talk)
01:14, 21 November 2010 (UTC)
I do mean thanks for that info, it does confirm that wikipedia and wikimedia are not the same in finacial terms. Operating something does not make it the same organisation. If I carry on here I will probably become very tedious, there must be other folk who have raise similar concerns. Please point me to them.
78.143.204.5 (
talk) —Preceding
undated comment added
01:41, 21 November 2010 (UTC).
By far the vast majority of Wikimedia work and money is devoted to Wikipedia. The other projects that are also supported by the Foundation, like Wikisource, Wikibooks, Wikiversity, Commons, etc. are also educational free culture projects like Wikipedia. Currently there is no way to donate money specifically to one of the projects and not to the Foundation in general. This is more of an issue for the smaller projects, however, as Wikipedia definitely gets the lion's share of attention from the Foundation.
Kaldari (
talk)
04:56, 22 November 2010 (UTC)
TFA pics
I just looked up the TFA queue for November and noticed that quite a few TFAs in the next week or so have no pics. I have no suggestions for Nov. 26th and 27th. But, does anyone want to pick the TFA pic for use on Nov. 24th? Candidates are
here. --
PFHLai (
talk)
07:00, 22 November 2010 (UTC)
Wikipedia size: Implementation of proposed changes
In the previous discussion (
now archived) there was significant support for two changes:
Remove number of English Wikipedia articles from the top of the page, as it is duplicated in the bottom section.
Display top size category of other language Wikipedias as a range (i.e. 500,000 to 1,200,000), given that current display is misleading and counter-productive.
I'm not sure I'd call the support for these changes "significant." But I suppose we'll find out.
I disagree with both proposals. We should look at the purpose behind these sections. For the first, the number of articles the English Wikipedia has is advertising. We are showing off a sexy fact about Wikipedia, and indeed one of the most distinctive things Wikipedia is known for is its vast size. It should absolutely go "above the fold." I don't see what's wrong with duplication, either; we duplicate the list of foreign language Wikipedias, too, in both the left sidebar and the bottom navbox. Should we remove one on the basis that people can surely use the other? If people still did find the two separate page counts undesirable, it'd probably be better to remove the count from the bottom section rather than the top notice.
As for the second proposal, this also misses the point of what exactly the bottom section is for. If the count on top is "advertising," the list of foreign language Wikipedias is utilitarian. It is there for those who want to look something up in what is probably their native language who ended up at the English Wikipedia, or at least a language they have an interest in. While casual visitors to the English Wikipedia may well find the number of articles in English Wikipedia a cool fact and a selling point, that doesn't describe at all the intended audience for the Wikipedia languages section. See David Levy's points in the archived discussion, basically; if you want the Hebrew Wikipedia, it really doesn't matter at all how many articles are in it. The reason why the number of articles is listed / used at all is simply to sort the Wikipedias most likely to be relevant to the top of the list. It would be no great harm to have, say, organized the section alphabetically and then bolded the most visited Wikipedias as an alternative method of showing other Wikipedias while highlighting "relevant" ones. What matters is screen layout and real estate, and this proposal would distract viewers with numbers entirely beside the point. (Unnecessary numbers, too, with the exception of the highest tier - it's already clear that "more than 100,000 articles" means 100,000 - 150,000 on the current display.)
SnowFire (
talk)
00:00, 4 November 2010 (UTC)
Regarding the proposed removal of the article count from the top of the page, you're quite correct that this serves as advertising. And in the days before Wikipedia was well known, its presence made sense.
But Wikipedia has become one of the most popular websites, so we no longer need to worry that the public is unaware of its comprehensive nature. By continuing to display our article count so prominently, we proclaim to the world that we value quantity above quality. We else would we boast that the site contains 6,857,706 articles (many of which are poorly written)? —
David Levy03:13, 4 November 2010 (UTC)
I oppose the proposals, per SnowFire. The number of articles of Wikipedia is relevant, and that it values quantity over quality is only a paranoid interpretation. It's a wow. It's a hell of a lot. It's impressive. It blows all other encyclopedias away. Leave it up there.
As SnowFire pointed out, the range is already implicit in the scale. I think we should have a new level added at 1,000,000 articles since that is a significant milestone, and waiting for other Wikipedias to reach it before such a level is created is plain silly. "Over 1,000,000" is twice as impressive as over "500,000", in more ways than one.
1. Seeking to "impress" readers with the sheer number of articles — advertised at the top of the main page — literally is placing quantity before quality. Many of those articles are very poorly written, and we're bragging about them.
2. 1,000,000 articles (as we define it) "is a significant milestone" because we happen to use a decimal numeral system. The section is designed with a practical layout (not an assortment of arbitrary "milestones") in mind.
3. I explained in the previous discussion why double the quantity of articles isn't "twice as impressive" at this scale. But again, the section's purpose isn't to impress. —
David Levy02:56, 6 November 2010 (UTC)
I think you're reading too much into it. An emphasis on quality is admirable. That doesn't take away from the fact that quantity is undeniably a selling point as well. We can, in fact, have our cake and eat it too - I'd argue that "Today's Featured Article" is fulfilling the role of emphasizing well-written Wikipedia content. I'm also not quite in the Wikipedia chest-beaters crowd about how "bad" some of our articles are - as noted, Britannica Micropedia articles are often the equivalent of stubs. They were still useful. The same with short / choppy Wikipedia articles.
SnowFire (
talk)
06:16, 6 November 2010 (UTC)
Indeed, we feature some of our best articles on the main page...below the article count (the first thing that we display after the welcome message). Hence my statement that we literally place quantity before quality.
You've stated that you wouldn't mind removing the article count from the Wikipedia languages section, but it was inserted there as part of a plan to relocate it from the top of the page (which was postponed due to the excitement surrounding the 2,000,000th article). No one has advocated eliminating the article count from the page, but its placement should reflect an emphasis on quality. —
David Levy06:34, 6 November 2010 (UTC)
I agree with removing the count from the top (for the reason articulated by David Levy) and disagree with the ranges (because the range is understood). --
Khajidha (
talk)
01:14, 6 November 2010 (UTC)
My sentiments echo Khajidha's, for the most part: I oppose the ranges and am neutral about removing the count from the top. Also, it seems to me that the two proposals pursue opposite goals. Removing the count from the top could de-emphasize the size (in terms of quantity) of the English Wikipedia, but adding ranges at the bottom does nothing except to emphasize the size (in terms of quantity) of other Wikipedias. -- Black Falcon(
talk)03:45, 6 November 2010 (UTC)
The goals are not opposite, but distinct. The first goal is to eliminate overemphasis on numbers through repetition and placement. The second goal is to simply correct the present misleading appearance of a huge quantitative gap between the English Wiki with 3,400,000+ articles and the next largest Wikipedias shown as 500,000+... As far size matters, this is under-representing Wikimedia projects as a whole, and is remarkably inaccurate for an encyclopaedia, as many have noted. It is strange to see complicated arguments in favour of no change by stating that the same kind of numbers at the top of the page would be beneficial marketing while at the bottom utilitarian aesthetics. I also note that 1,000,000 is double of 500,000 in any numeral system.
Elekhh (
talk)
05:09, 6 November 2010 (UTC)
I'm confused. Do you deny that there is not a gigantic quantitative gap between English Wikipedia and other Wikipedias? Because there is. Now I agree that bringing this up is irrelevant, which is why I've noted that I'd be fine with removing the "English Wikipedia has X articles" from the bottom section which emphasizes that section as some kind of count. I have no idea what you're getting at with "1M is double 500K" either.
I don't see what's so complicated about what I said, either. As you put it yourself: the top number is advertising, the bottom interwiki section is utilitarian. Number of articles is a fluffy but not terribly useful fact, so it works as advertising but isn't necessary for utility. Do you deny this? Hopefully you at least understand my point. It's really not complicated at all.
SnowFire (
talk)
06:16, 6 November 2010 (UTC)
You kind of avoid addressing the raised issues: if the quantitative gap is "gigantic" anyway, why creating the impression is double as much as it actually is? If the bottom section is "utilitarian", why is so difficult to present the real numbers? If the number is not so relevant, why displaying it starting at the very top? And what do you mean with "number of articles is a fluffy but not terribly useful fact, so it works as advertising", does this mean that the majority of our readers are unable to make the difference? --
Elekhh (
talk)
10:54, 6 November 2010 (UTC)
I do not disagree with your first point about reducing overemphasis on numbers by removing the count at the top of the page (though I do kind of see SnowFire's point about "fluffy" advertising). On the second point, however, I think that adding ranges increases emphasis on numbers. It is, after all, no more or less accurate to say that de.wikipedia contains "500,000–1,200,000 articles" versus "more than 500,000 articles". -- Black Falcon(
talk)17:07, 7 November 2010 (UTC)
So to the question "What do you think is the size of de.wiki (x) knowing that" (a) 500,000< x , or (b) 500,000<x<1,200,000, the
accuracy of responses would be the same... On the other point, I of course have no arguments against "fluffy"-ness, if that's what the community wants. --
Elekhh (
talk)
17:36, 7 November 2010 (UTC)
You're right, the accuracy of the responses likely would not be the same. "500,000 < x" and "500,000 < x < 1,200,000" are both accurate, but the latter is more informative. The key question is, I suppose, whether we need or want (from an aesthetic or other standpoint) to be more informative regarding the numerical size of other Wikipedias. As for the count at the top ... well, I'm mostly neutral on that, leaning toward removal, but ultimately it is (as you say) partly a matter of personal preference and perspective. -- Black Falcon(
talk)06:30, 8 November 2010 (UTC)
Sure, but then 3,466,070 repeated twice could be also seen as overly informative. I can imagine many "milder" solutions to the raised issues: the article count at the top of the page could be replaced with something like "the largest encyclopedia" to solve the duplication issue and slightly reduce emphasis on numbers. Another alternative would be, in the bottom section to simply pace the English wiki in the row with the top category, with a similar effect. --
Elekhh (
talk)
07:27, 8 November 2010 (UTC)
If anything, "the largest encyclopedia" places more emphasis on quantity (because it stresses the encyclopedia's sheer size without even the pretense of conveying useful data).
Also keep in mind that we already display "the free encyclopedia that anyone can edit" directly above (rightly so, as that is what we need to promulgate). Wikipedia's size is well known nowadays, so there simply is no need to continue advertising it at the top of the page. Doing so, especially in proximity to the aforementioned encouragement to edit, makes it seem that our top priority is creating as many articles as possible.
By the way, I realize that you support the top article count's removal and merely noted a possible alternative. :) —
David Levy16:20, 8 November 2010 (UTC)
I think I've said before I don't really consider the categorisation a big problem. Even if people are really silly enough to think when you have 4 cats that are 50k, 100k, 150k and 500k it's resonable to expect a cat for 1 million (if the cat was 250k then perhaps but with the 150k and then jump to 500k this hardly seems like a series to me so I don't see any reason anyone will expect 1 million), ultimately it's questionable if it matters. Anything with over 500k is surely good enough that from the readers POV, it doesn't really matter if it's 500k or 1.2 million and if they aren't interested in it when it is only 500k, they are likely to be interested in it with 1.2 million (and a primary reason is just so we have some way of seperating the listings anyway). (Between 1000 and 500k there's quite a resonable change the difference in size will matter.) But if people care that much, I'm not going to oppose including a range. I agree that removing the number of articles at the top is fine. BTW while it's true that 0xF4240 is double 0x7A120, I'm not sure why this is relevant. Definitely if we were using hexadecimal I doubt people would be so desperate to have a seperate cat for F4240
Nil Einne (
talk)
07:39, 6 November 2010 (UTC)
Hexadecimal would be an improvement indeed :) and I wouldn't mind removing numbers altogether. Is just if numbers are displayed they should reflect the facts. Is puzzling why is so hard to achieve simple accuracy here, instead repeated statements implying that 1.2 million is about the same as 500k. Surely there must be an aesthetic-utilitarian solution which is also accurate, or at least not misleading. --
Elekhh (
talk)
11:22, 6 November 2010 (UTC)
I support removing the article count. As David Levy said, it puts quantity above quality, and at this point Wikipedia has nothing to prove to the world as far as quantity goes. At this point it has become like the old running tally on the McDonald's sign; eventually, you just change it to "billions and billions served" and move on with your life.
KafzielComplaint Department: Please take a number18:19, 7 November 2010 (UTC)
(de-indent) Sorry about the slow reply. Sticking my responses down here because they'd likely be lost above.
David Levy: " Indeed, we feature some of our best articles on the main page...below the article count (the first thing that we display after the welcome message). Hence my statement that we literally place quantity before quality."
Literally is not figuratively, though. We literally place the "view source" tab above everything too, which means... nothing. Now wanting to adjust the prominence is fair enough, but I don't feel we're overemphasizing quantity. We advertise quantity, yes (and I think we should), but we give far more space to the Featured Article and In The News. TFA in particular is an emphasis on quality. So I feel that the current page successfully sells both, and further I don't think that mentioning quantity prominently degrades Wikipedia's mission of improving quality as well.
SnowFire (
talk)
05:09, 10 November 2010 (UTC)
Indeed, prominence is the relevant issue. We advertise the sheer quantity of articles in the page's most prominent location (at the top, paired with the "welcome" message). That we assign more space to other elements doesn't change the fact that the article count is one of the first things that a reader sees. By all appearances, it's what we're proudest of and most eager to promulgate (apart from the fact that Wikipedia is "the free encyclopedia that anyone can edit").
Also keep in mind that many casual readers have no understanding of what a "featured article" is. A common misconception is that "today's featured article" is simply an article that we're "featuring" on the main page today. So the fact that we value quality isn't necessarily conveyed.
As noted above, it's widely known that Wikipedia contains an enormous number of articles. By displaying a running tally at the top of the page, we imply that our main goal is to drive that number higher and higher. Conversely, the Wikipedia languages section provides a suitable context. (There's a valid reason, apart from boasting, to mention the article count.) —
David Levy18:06, 10 November 2010 (UTC)
Elekhh: "You kind of avoid addressing the raised issues: if the quantitative gap is "gigantic" anyway, why creating the impression is double as much as it actually is? If the bottom section is "utilitarian", why is so difficult to present the real numbers? If the number is not so relevant, why displaying it starting at the very top? And what do you mean with "number of articles is a fluffy but not terribly useful fact, so it works as advertising", does this mean that the majority of our readers are unable to make the difference?"
I'm not sure we're on the same page here. As already stated, the reason why the gap appears a mere "double" the size (which is Not A Big Deal) is because we don't want to either create a 2-Wikipedia sized section, or to waste even more space on irrelevant-in-this-context article counts to show the range. That's all that's "difficult" about it. The primary goal of that section are the Wikipedia language links, so we shouldn't waste space or lay it out poorly. The article counts are incidental. As for your last point, I don't understand what you mean by "make the difference." All I'm saying is that number of articles is a cool factoid, and yes, I trust readers to know that this is just a cool factoid.
SnowFire (
talk)
05:09, 10 November 2010 (UTC)
We need to keep the article count at the top of the Main Page
We're approaching the 4,000,000 article milestone pretty fast. There's going to be just as much excitement around that as there was for passing the 2,000,000th article mark.
And the excitement will grow as our $upporter$ see that number getting closer to 4 million. We need to remain positioned for this, because it is a promotional opportunity we $hould not mi$$. Promoting Wikipedia is our responsibility. It helps bring in the dollars that keep all the Wikipedias running and made available for free to everyone worldwide. That number posted up there is a major selling feature of Wikipedia, because...
Quantity does matter — it is synonymous with coverage. More articles on more things. More chance of finding something on what you are looking for.
Wikipedia's scope is expanding, from major subjects in general to major subjects for smaller and smaller localities. What's major for someone planning to visit or move to
Hershey, Pennsylvania USA is different for someone living in
Wagga Wagga in New South Wales, Australia. So for the former we have articles like
Hershey Public Library, and for the latter, there's
Wagga Wagga Botanic Gardens. Wikipedia's scope is represented in that number at the top of the Main Page.
Also relevant to our fund-raising imperative, our running total allows quantitative comparison with other informational resources, such as other encyclopedias (Britannica springs to mind) and other websites. And maybe someday, the Library of Congress!
We should keep our most notable and promotable feature (coverage) right at the top of the main page where everyone can see it.
The 2,000,000th article's creation generated substantially less excitement than that of the 1,000,000th article. The 3,000,000th article's creation generated less excitement still. We've long since reached the point at which Wikipedia's tremendous size and scope became obvious and well known, so we're basically beating a dead horse.
No one is asserting that quantity doesn't matter, but it isn't what we need to promote nowadays. The Internet-using public already is aware that the site contains an enormous quantity of articles on a vast array of subjects (to the extent that this is frequently referenced in popular media, such as print, film and television). The other common belief (also frequently referenced in popular media) is that Wikipedia's quality is highly questionable. Readers know that they probably can find something on what they're looking for, but they're reluctant to trust what they find. By advertising the site's sheer size (of which people already are aware) at the top of the main page, we convey that we value it (and seek to increase it) above all else. This impacts not only the site's perception among readers, but also the participation of some editors (who are led to believe that our prime directive is to create as many articles as possible, rather than improving existing articles). —
David Levy17:39, 8 November 2010 (UTC)
You wish Wikipedia to stop asserting that quantity does matter, and that's just not good marketing. One of the main reasons everybody is aware of Wikipedia's greatest selling feature (coverage, due to its size) is because we have the article count posted at the top of our Main Page. We have it up there for a very good reason. William Wrigley was asked why he continued to advertise so heavily when his chewing gum products were already well known: His answer: "A plane goes about 300 MPH. Why doesn't the pilot just turn off the engines and let the plane fly on its own momentum?"
The Transhumanist17:58, 8 November 2010 (UTC)
I wish to stop asserting that quantity matters more than quality does, even after we've reached 6,857,706 articles.
The article count's presence at the top of the main page undoubtedly played a significant role in bolstering Wikipedia's popularity, but it's long since outlived its usefulness.
The Wrigley analogy is inapplicable for several reasons:
1. Wrigley didn't receive customers via search engines (undoubtedly our primary source of traffic).
2. Wrigley had competitors offering similar products. No website comes close to matching what Wikipedia offers, and if one ever does, that will be good (because our goal is to spread free knowledge).
3. It's generally agreed that Wrigley's advertising was effective. I assert that the article count's placement in the header sends a counterproductive message that lowers the public's confidence in Wikipedia. —
David Levy19:18, 8 November 2010 (UTC)
Considering we always promote the milestone number seperately I would say this whole 4 million thing falls flat on its face anyway. If anything, by removing the count, we give more prominence to the number when it's a milestone like 4 million so we get a better promotional/advertising effect out of it rather then continually having the number on the main page so no one is surprised when we reach 4 million. Also we're still quite far from the 4 million mark, we're less then half way there from 3 million. And as DL said, 3 million didn't really get that much attention. There's no reason to expect 4 million to get more, it's likely to get less. If we're lucky 5 million may but that's even longer.
Nil Einne (
talk)
00:36, 9 November 2010 (UTC)
Approaching 4 million pretty fast?? Really??? its taken over a year and still going to gain 500,000 articles. It will be early 2012 at current rate in which we reach 4 million which, given the potential contributors to wikipedia and sheer amount of very notable content missing is actually very slow. The article count is neither bragging about our size nor it is causing any harm. Its a rough insight to the scope of wikipedia currently which is very useful. The problem is that is doesn't measure quality (which is most important), it paints short stubs or long, poorly written unsourced articles as the same as articles like the
Ming Dynasty.. But anybody who is an active reader/contributor to wikipedia is fully aware of how many articles are lacking...♦
Dr. Blofeld11:57, 11 November 2010 (UTC)
Indeed, when someone becomes an "active reader/contributor," he/she realizes that many of our articles are of poor quality. Our layout implies that we don't particularly care (because our top priority is to create as many articles as possible). For readers, this dampens confidence. For editors, it actively encourages such prioritization.
You noted that the problem isn't the article count's presence, but the lack of context. Okay, so let's pursue a compromise in which the missing context is added.
Until 30 May, we displayed links directly below the grey box. I suggest that we transplant the portal links to this newly vacated area, thereby freeing up the right-hand side of the box for the article count and related information (in a style of prose similar to that contained in
our previous main page design).
In this example, I relocated text from Wikipedia languages (some of which appeared in the header to begin with) and added a link to that section. I included the featured article count, thereby conveying that we value quality. I also restored the longstanding "
Categories" and "
A–Z index" links, which we might have been a bit hasty to remove.
I like the simplification of the layout and removal of some repetition (Not sure however why Portal Arts has been removed). Regarding the right-upper corner, I would include GAs as well, which are quality articles. --
Elekhh (
talk)
01:43, 17 November 2010 (UTC)
The omission of
Portal:Arts was accidental. Thanks for bringing that to my attention.
I like the placement of the Portal links, but not the mass of text on the right. How about a simpler 'Currently: XXX articles, of which <br />XXX are featured articles<br />XXX are good articles' or similar?
Modest Geniustalk02:00, 17 November 2010 (UTC)
I just noticed that the article counts' text is very small in Google Chrome (but not in my other browsers), presumably due to the use of a monospaced font. Obviously, that would need to be fixed. —
David Levy03:00, 17 November 2010 (UTC)
Looks good, though it would be best to lose the colours on the numbers, capitalise each line, and use a normal font (ie not monospaced). Presumably some technical fix would be needed to make the FA and GA numbers updated?
Modest Geniustalk03:06, 17 November 2010 (UTC)
Okay, I've removed the colors.
Do you mean that "featured articles" should become "Featured articles", "good articles" should become "Good articles" and "articles in total" should become "Articles in total"? That looks odd to me, as the numerals (not the words) begin each line.
I'd much prefer using a non-monospaced font, but I need someone whose coding skills are better than mine to implement an alternative method of aligning the values.
I support David's efforts here and agree that this mock-up represents a step forward, and in the right direction. Good work! I would however also prefer 'Featured articles' and 'Good articles' capitalised, or maybe capitalising 'Articles' too, to make it a little clearer that these are official counts and not overly subjective. Capitalising would make the text match the link, too. As it stands, they do look a little like opinions. Or, the numerals could be moved to the end of each line, as in Featured articles: 3,091.
Careful With That Axe, EugeneHello...10:08, 17 November 2010 (UTC)
Ah, I see what you mean. I've incorporated your suggestion to move the numerals to the end of each line. Thank you! —
David Levy17:15, 17 November 2010 (UTC)
(rest indent) One MASSIVE caveat w.r.t. David Levy's layout: "good article" on WP means an article that has passed WP:GA. "Good article" in the English language means "so the other 3 million articles are rubbish?" Think of what message we are conveying to our readers.
Zunaid08:10, 18 November 2010 (UTC)
As I recall, the likelihood of such confusion was the first thing that went through my mind when I learned of the
Wikipedia:Good articles concept years ago. It's a strong argument for changing the name, and I believe that we should.
Apart from that, our choices are to not mention "good articles" on the main page, to mention them in a manner that either explicitly specifies their nature (via a lengthy description) or implies it (e.g. articles designated "
good"), or to hope that readers follow the link. —
David Levy08:57, 18 November 2010 (UTC)
Yes, I have to agree that "Good articles" is confusing. GAs are actually very good articles (VGAs). As an intermediary solution, how about a cryptic "GA articles", almost forcing readers to follow the link, yet by positioning and numbers evident that is something better than most articles but less good than FAs. Or something less confusing like "Promoted good articles"? --
Elekhh (
talk)
10:33, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
"GA articles" is redundant, and as you noted, cryptic (which largely defeats the purpose). "Promoted good articles" makes more sense, but it falls even further into the area of Wikipedia jargon.
In my opinion, "good articles" is an inherently problematic name (irrespective of whether it appears on the main page). Therefore, the ideal solution is to come up with a better name. The trickiest part is thinking of one that doesn't come across as a step above "featured articles." —
David Levy15:08, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
That would entail renaming
Wikipedia:Featured articles, for which I doubt we could reach consensus (especially given the fact that "gold articles" is one letter off from "good articles" and would be referred to by the same initials). —
David Levy17:35, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
"Featured" articles, in the sense that
WP:FA uses it, is already WikiJargon. "Today's featured article" is OK in the sort of English that normal people use, because it is featured on the Main Page. Anyway, absolutely oppose anymore creep of these purely editor-based processes onto the Main Page: it's bad enough with DYK being incapable of providing a set of hooks which actually fit into a section entitled "Did you know?"
Physchim62(talk)18:39, 19 November 2010 (UTC)
To be clear, are you saying that you oppose placing any qualitative article measurements alongside the purely quantitative one? —
David Levy00:23, 20 November 2010 (UTC)
Ditto. Start a new section, (archive-template-box this one), summarize what the suggestion actually is at this point, and link to the various sandboxes. --
Quiddity (
talk)
06:50, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
Is empty space better than fund-raising efforts?
Something we've overlooked is that if we remove the article count from its spot at the top of the Main Page, it will leave a hole up there.
Is empty space better than that spot's current use for promoting Wikipedia?
Do we have something better than the article count to place up there, that will promote Wikipedia more effectively?
Removing that count doesn't create any unsightly white space. If anything the header looks better without it (see
Wikipedia:Main Page/sandbox). Also, I don't see what the article count does to solicit donations - there's no link there or anything to suggest readers should donate if they're impressed with the article count.
Modest Geniustalk18:37, 8 November 2010 (UTC)
Err, there was no idea presented in my post. If you are suggesting adding a 'donate' link there, that's actually a stupid idea which I would strongly oppose.
Modest Geniustalk18:35, 11 November 2010 (UTC)
Indeed, the header looks much better without the article count included. This is because the header box was designed without the article count (which we'd relocated to the bottom). It was tacked on as a temporary measure (due to the aforementioned excitement surrounding the 2,000,000th article), with the intent of removing it shortly thereafter. —
David Levy19:18, 8 November 2010 (UTC)
Dude, how many discussion forks are you going to make? We get it - you support keeping the count. Why couldn't all this have been added to the original discussion, instead of forcing people to follow three different threads and repeat themselves?
KafzielComplaint Department: Please take a number18:55, 8 November 2010 (UTC)
That argument is based on the
assuption that the article count's presence in the header is a positive marketing tool. As I've explained above, this point is contested. I believe that it sends a counterproductive message that lowers the public's confidence in Wikipedia. —
David Levy19:18, 8 November 2010 (UTC)
military response from South Korea?
I am not sure this assertion is correct. I can find no news of a military response from South Korea. On the contrary, all the news stations seem to talk about the unlikelihood of a military response.
Richard Avery (
talk)
11:49, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
It's this logic: There's a major league baseball player of the day, and there are a lot more minor league baseball players than major league ones. Therefore the major league player should share the spotlight. Flawed logic.--
Wehwalt (
talk)
16:19, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
(Yes,
strawman is flawed logic.) Having a Good Article of the Day might have possibly made sense (or perhaps not) if GA was restricted to its original goal of having an "award"-type status for articles that wouldn't qualify for FA status for other-than-quality reasons. However, the current proceedure is to have GA be a stepping stone through which articles pass on their way to FA status. It therefore doesn't make much sense to feature most good articles, as, given enough time, they will be improved even further and hit the main page with FA status. (So if you want any particular GA to be on the main page, the recommendation is to improve it to FA status.) This, of course, leaves out the FA-ineligible-for-other-than-quality articles, but I don't believe there are enough of them which are interesting enough for the main page to make a regular feature worth-while. --
174.24.198.158 (
talk)
16:39, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
What about DYKs? They appear on the main page. In fact multiple articles appear on the main page at once, usually at least 6 times as many FA articles which appear on the main page. Is that right?. So why no mention at all of good articles?♦
Dr. Blofeld16:46, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
I hate baseball (being British). Seriously poor analogy..Of course your view has nothing to do with your unusually high FA count that you view good articles as second-rate... ♦
Dr. Blofeld16:27, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
I suppose that is true, though I think your proposal will be hit for six. I do look at GA as a place for article's I've put effort into but there is some reason I don't feel it can go on to FA. But yes, I do not feel that they are in the same ground. GA are definitely second eleven.--
Wehwalt (
talk)
16:34, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
(
edit conflict) I don't think my count of FAs or GAs is unusually high ;) But I can certainly think of better things to do with the space than a GA of the day. The vast majority of our readers have no idea of the huge bureaucracy that goes into filling the TFA slot: they see it as Today's featured article because it is literally featured on the Main Page. Why should we confuse them even further by having a "featured" article and a "good" article, with the added implication that most of Wikipedia is 'not good' (when it is usually those 'not good' parts they're actually looking for).
Physchim62(talk)16:40, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
I just wanted to see what people thought about the idea of having a good article also featuring on the main page or changing say every 12 hours or so...Maybe then there should at least be some mention of good articles then?
Amazing work BTW.♦
Dr. Blofeld16:37, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
I've never understood why short, Did You Know entries, often created with minimal effort, are given pride of place on the main page, when GAs never get any exposure. But, like every other time this is proposed, it's not going to happen.
AD16:38, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
TFA and DYK have different purposes. TFA is to showcase the best that Wikipedia has to offer. DYK is intentionally limited to very new articles, and is intended to show that Wikipedia is continuously expanding with interesting infromation, as well as to highlight new articles that reader-editors may wish to help expand. GAs in their current form are boggy middle ground: neither polished enough to be highlighted as best-of-the-best, nor new enough to be exciting or expandable-by-casual-editors. --
174.24.198.158 (
talk)
16:44, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
OK, point taken. But if no article at least should there not be how many featured/good articles we have appearing on the main page? We happily reveal we have nearly 3.5 million articles but mention nothing of the recognized content on the main page. We are intentionally hiding it because the figures are an embarrasingly low percentage perhaps?♦
Dr. Blofeld16:51, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
Thing is, featured articles aren't always so great (
Grace Sherwood springs to mind here). Plus, they're often shown months or even years after they were promoted, which means that they may have deteriorated. Showing the figure of whatever for how many FAs we have is a bit pointless, when readers have no idea what the other articles are. I can remember looking at the main page, and thinking FAs were just picked at random out of every article. I think the feeling should be that every article has potential to become a featured article - even if it cannot.
AD16:58, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
I recall David Levy proposing something like 3.5 million articles in english of which ... is featured/recognized content or something. I fully agree with him.The thing is certain articles of "recognized content" are not always the greatest articles on here as Aiken suggests. I know of many B class articles I consider superior articles to several of our FAs in terms of knowledge/comprehension but have some minor issues impeding them from being promoted. ♦
Dr. Blofeld17:10, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
"Featured articles" only really means "on the main page". It doesn't actually reflect their quality. A term like "High quality" or "Excellent" or even "Brilliant prose" would be more appropriate.
AD17:15, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
Yes. All it is doing now is highlighting the article, but doesn't explicitly say this is supposed to be our best work. There's no real reason GAs could not compete for a spot - that's quite a good idea I don't think I've heard yet.
AD18:38, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
Perhaps half of featured articles have appeared on main page. And I think you would find strong resistance to the idea, not only for the standard reasons, but because of the plagiarism problem. A GA is reviewed a lot less than a FA.--
Wehwalt (
talk)
18:43, 23 November 2010 (UTC)
House "Pilot" image
I posted on the talk page
Talk:Pilot (House) about the image for this article, but it applies here too. I think the juxtaposition of a trademarked logo with an amateur photo is questionable, and I also think it's a poor identifier for the pilot episode. —
Noisalt (
talk)
03:09, 24 November 2010 (UTC)
Looks like it's been removed from the article. (After your comment there.)
For what it's worth, I agree that it implies that the image is somehow an official publicity piece for the show.
APL (
talk)
08:30, 24 November 2010 (UTC)
I agree as well. We could get an actual publicity photo, and use it with a Fair Use Criterion. We couldn't have it on the main page, but it's time is almost up anyway.
Buddy431 (
talk)
22:17, 24 November 2010 (UTC)
I'm not sure at what the above edit is trying to hint but I'm a little surprised the
Pike River Mine disaster has not appeared on the main page yet. I know, we are not a news network but NZ's worst mining disaster in 96 years is surely as noteworthy as some kid in the UK marrying his girlfriend, and we did have that on the main page last week!
Calistemon (
talk)
07:41, 24 November 2010 (UTC)
Someone added it to
2010 and it was reverted soon after with the Edit summary "Not really internationally notable,happens frequently in other countries." Not sure how true that is.
HiLo48 (
talk)
07:46, 24 November 2010 (UTC)
I'm shocked that this has been deliberately omitted. It has been rectified, per the unanimous consensus on ITN/C.
Daniel (
talk)
10:43, 24 November 2010 (UTC)
Is the consensus still to not place the main page in this category? (see
Talk:Main Page/Archive 136#Category) Because the intro at
Category:Main page currently still reads as if the main page is supposed to be categorized. I suppose that text just hasn't been noticed for a while and hence not updated, but maybe consensus can change, so: Should we add the main page to
Category:Main page or not?
Note, I'm in support of adding it, with my justification being that having the link there is beneficial because it would introduce readers to the category system much earlier than they would otherwise discover it. --
Ϫ02:05, 27 November 2010 (UTC)
Note: Despite this discussion and the ongoing merger proposal, Rich has gone ahead and added the category. (Apparently, it's too much to expect him to actually monitor his automated/semi-automated edits and refrain from making poor ones on his own.) —
David Levy15:58, 28 November 2010 (UTC)
Er.. it's on the basis that any error one person makes is an error someone else is likely to make. Maybe my level of stupidity is unique in the universe, but again maybe not. It seems a trivial defence against what is admittedly a fairly trivial problem. My experience is also that any exceptions generally lead to problems "make things as simple as possible but no simpler". Having one uncategorised page is basically not a great idea. I'll have a quick look at the archive too. RichFarmbrough,
16:58, 28 November 2010 (UTC).
1. No one attributed the error to stupidity, so please step away from that straw man.
Your mistake stemmed from carelessness. You obviously used AWB without paying attention to what you were editing. I don't believe that we should encourage such behavior by creating safeguards intended to accommodate it.
(ec w/David) Respectfully, Rich, you're the only person I've ever seen make this particular mistake. Perhaps it would be better if you could modify your AWB code to skip fully protected pages or something?
HJ Mitchell |
Penny for your thoughts? 17:18, 28 November 2010 (UTC)
It seems like the Main Page is used for administration of the Wikipedia project, making it a giant exception to the usual mainspace rules as David points out. It contains information that does not amount to an article and is not part of the encyclopedia. {{Uncategorized}} only is for articles ("This article has not been added to any categories."). --
Uzma Gamal (
talk)
07:24, 29 November 2010 (UTC)
The archive refers back to an earlier archive, and the decision was on the basis that a category "spoiled the look of the page". This is a hidden cat, which we probably didn't have at the time of the original discussion, and
Category:Main Page is not. RichFarmbrough,
17:01, 28 November 2010 (UTC).
Indeed, that rationale doesn't apply to a hidden category. The applicable rationale is that we shouldn't accommodate and encourage careless editing. —
David Levy17:16, 28 November 2010 (UTC)
That's a nonsensical analogy. Page protection tools counter vandalism. You seek to implement a setup that would accommodate your abuse (i.e. unattended/poorly monitored use) of AWB, of which bad edits are an unintended consequence.
In other words, you want us to create a safeguard to mitigate the damage stemming from your refusal to edit responsibly. Yes, that also describes page protection tools, but the situations obviously aren't comparable (unless you wish to equate your bad edits with vandalism). —
David Levy 17:32/
17:37, 29 November 2010 (UTC)
Main Page doesn't appear.
Main page does. However I agree this issue is dead, no one cares that Main Page doesn't appear other then RF and no one I've seen has given a good enough argument why it should.
Nil Einne (
talk)
17:50, 29 November 2010 (UTC)
Haryana Cuisine Article
The article
here is licensed as CC-BY-SA. Is it legal for this article to be transferred to Wikipedia? It has a large deal of information that we could use. --
92.3.150.185 (
talk)
17:57, 28 November 2010 (UTC)
It's legal, but it's in such a wildly different format that full-on transfer would be strongly discouraged.
f o x18:47, 28 November 2010 (UTC)
Not that while legal, you still need to make sure you comply with the license and wikipedia's expectations for content copied from other sources (i.e. ensure the attribution is done properly). There must be a guideline on this somewhere although I can't find it but this question has nothing to do with the main page anyway I suggest you try a more appropriate place, as suggested in the header like
WP:Help desk if you want to carry out any copying
Nil Einne (
talk)
17:54, 29 November 2010 (UTC)
Is there any reason why we shouldn't put the wikileaks logo up as the ITN picture? The licensing seems fine but I just wanted to check there was no quaint rule about putting up logos of organisations or something. --
Mkativerata (
talk)
05:08, 29 November 2010 (UTC)
Main page is bland and white like any other Wikipedia page, which makes it read like a paper encyclopedia instead. Suggest some coloring scheme such as
this in my sandbox.
:| TelCoNaSpVe :|08:09, 30 November 2010 (UTC)
I'm somewhat sick of beating around the bush to avoid offending people whenever these perenial proposals come up that don't appear to have looked in to the history at all so I'll just say it, man that's ugly!
Nil Einne (
talk)
10:47, 30 November 2010 (UTC)
Okay, then, what color would you suggest? Surely something more than just white? (And no, I haven't looked at the history, so please forgive me.) :P
:| TelCoNaSpVe :|15:09, 30 November 2010 (UTC)
I'm all for giving the main page a fresh, up to date look that doesn't look so drab, but your suggested change is awful.
AD20:31, 30 November 2010 (UTC)
The good thing about white is, it works well with the many images on the main page, which can be all sorts of random colors. -
Doctorx0079 (
talk)
23:53, 30 November 2010 (UTC)
Too much of a good thing isn't! Go into your preferences, click on appearance and then click on whichever one you want. Then you can change the look without offending anyone. Dusty777 18:34, 1 December 2010 (UTC) —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
Dusty777 (
talk •
contribs)
The Featured Article, Featured Picture and On This Day sections update every 24 hours. Did You Know updates every 6 hours. And In The News just posted 3 new items in 4 hours (admittedly there was a couple of days' gap before that). I don't see the problem.
Modest Geniustalk22:41, 2 December 2010 (UTC)
In theory ITN is suppose to be updated every 24 hours I believe. In reality we don't always meet that, more often we get bursts of new enteries then a lull for a variety of reasons. I suspect we do have an average greater then 1/24 hours though so if we really wanted to we could just delay enteries so it doesn't seem like we have such big gaps sometimes but that seems a little silly IMHO.
Nil Einne (
talk)
00:13, 3 December 2010 (UTC)
Grammys
Not the place for this post in the first place, and it's really not the place to make less-than-pleasant comments about each other, either.
BencherliteTalk12:13, 3 December 2010 (UTC)
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it.
Hi, I'm very sorry if this is not the right place to post this, but apparently nobody has read the talk page so far, and I find it unlikely.
The problem is that Lady Gaga's album, The Fame Monster, was nominated for 6 Grammys this year, not 2, as the article states. I'll leave my message below. I'd appreciate any type of help.
This album was nominated for 6 Grammies, not only 2. According to the Grammy's official
nominations page, this are Gaga's following nominations:
Album of the Year, The Fame Monster
Best Female Pop Vocal Performance, Bad Romance
Best Pop Collaboration With Vocals, Telephone ft. Beyonce
You could at least point them in the right direction, especially as they admitted knowing this wasn't the best place to put it. - See
Wikipedia:New contributors' help page for assistance on getting started with Wikipedia. See
Wikipedia:Help for general questions about using Wikipedia. (By the way, both links are in the header at the top of the page, and on the submission page.) For your particular issue, see
Wikipedia:Bold for the relevant guideline. --
140.142.20.229 (
talk)
20:05, 2 December 2010 (UTC)
I don't know how stating fact makes me a butthead. I'm pointing out this is the wrong page for this - and I'm letting the previous commenter know that this notice was placed on the album article's talk page before it was placed here.
Y2Kcrazyjoker4 (
talk •
contributions)
22:47, 2 December 2010 (UTC)
I largely agree. If you aren't receiving attention from the talk page and you are sure changes are needed, try {{editsemiprotected}}. If you aren't try one of the links above. Do note however it's not unresonable to wait more then 1:30 hours for changes or feedback which isn't urgent such as mundane changes to articles like this. In any case, Talk:Main Page is indeed completely the wrong place to get extra attention.
Nil Einne (
talk)
23:59, 2 December 2010 (UTC)
Well people have provided you plenty of links suggesting more appropriate places which I would consider 'nice'. Of course the big header at the top which says "Please note: The purpose of this page is to discuss improvements relating only to the Main Page. It is not a place to ask general questions or submit content" also provides plenty of links suggesting other places if your stuck in the future.
Nil Einne (
talk)
01:45, 3 December 2010 (UTC)
LOL, someone is on a bad mood, huh? Chill, buddie. I find really funny geeks trying to follow the "Wikipedia Rules". What of you get a life, Nil? [I hear a geekrage comming from the distance] --
200.106.17.220 (
talk)
03:11, 3 December 2010 (UTC)
Bad mood? No. You may want to see
WP:NPA however. And it's not a matter of following rules, it's a matter of courtesy to fellow editors not posting random irrelevant suggestions in random irrelevant places particularly when there's a big header which tells you not to. Given that you apparently come from Peru, I originally wondered if perhaps a limited understanding of English explained the inability to read and follow simple, clear and obvious instructions. But this doesn't seem to be the case. In that case, from your messagge I wonder if perhaps your lack of what you told other people to get explains the lack of understanding of simple things like courtesy or reading clear instructions as these are things which people with lives generally find an expected and easy to obey part of everyday life but I guess those without are perhaps not aware. It does seem to be the case that often people tell people to 'get something' because they are embarassed and trying to hide their own shortcomings. Of course only you can answer that, it's not up to any of us here to judge.
Nil Einne (
talk)
12:03, 3 December 2010 (UTC)
Donation Ads
The frequency of the donation banners was mildly irritating, but I understood it as a necessary evil. However, the one for Lilaroja can't even be closed (for me, at any rate - using Firefox). For the first time I am using Adblock Plus on anything on Wikipedia to block this. I understand that this is a once a year thing, I understand it gets complaints, and I hate to be "that guy" but this really is getting out of hand. -
OldManNeptune⚓19:43, 2 December 2010 (UTC)
Well as discussed in the earlier thread that's still on this page, there's nothing we can do about it. If you have bugs, you're welcome to go to
Meta:Fundraiser 2010 and find where to report them. If you want to block the ads, as I understand it the gadget available in preferences works well and should in theory ensure you never see them again now or for any future fundraisers as long as you're logged in.
Nil Einne (
talk)
12:22, 3 December 2010 (UTC)
I don't feel strongly about any of these old FAs to put in a request, but I thought that they should be featured on MainPage before they start to deteriorate. I don't know. Maybe they already need to go thru' FAR ..... --
PFHLai (
talk)
22:00, 4 December 2010 (UTC)
Perhaps a comment at the top of the talk page that this is not the place for discussing '1 million (or any multiples thereof) articles - or a list of perennial topics (million articles, too many things on the front page dealing with sport/America/other pet annoyance of choice, things which upset
Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells, etc). Until the WP equivalent of those magazine isses with several different covers is developed (so we can choose vanilla/sports-centric/country-centric/high article count in given languages displayed/other varieties of choice) we will have to put up with these discussions on occasion.
Jackiespeel (
talk)
22:10, 4 December 2010 (UTC)
The top of this page already mentions the FAQ. The FAQ should be kept more up to date, but one of mine was removed. The million articles issue is covered
here, though that could also be more current.
Art LaPella (
talk)
04:39, 5 December 2010 (UTC)
Jimmy Wales' photo
Am I the only one that's starting to get fed up with Jimmy Wales staring out at me every time I go to Wikipedia? I've already donated money, so enough! Or, is Jimmy Wales trying to compete with Bono? Anyway, let's curtail the personality cult and get back to business - drop the pictures. Otherwise, thanks to Jimmy and everyone for Wikipedia, a great service. —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
211.124.135.29 (
talk)
01:25, 21 November 2010 (UTC)
I believe you only see the banner if you're not logged in, but, anyway, this isn't the place to discuss it (because this page is for discussion of the Main Page) and there's not much we can do about it because any admin who removed the banner from whatever MediaWiki page is generating it probably wouldn't keep their bit for very long.
HJ Mitchell |
Penny for your thoughts? 01:56, 21 November 2010 (UTC)
it is on main page this is the place! 02:07, 21 November 2010 (UTC) —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
78.143.204.5 (
talk)
I share the discussion-starter's opinion. Why not instead bring on the ads for 2 months; they have the same annoying, distracting effect and would maybe have raised more money. —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
129.67.76.27 (
talk)
16:04, 2 December 2010 (UTC)
Nope. The Wikimedia Foundation owns and operates Wikipedia (and all the other Wikimedia projects) so they can do as they please, basically. If you create an account and log into it, you can set a preference to hide the banner by default, but that's the best I can offer.
HJ Mitchell |
Penny for your thoughts? 02:27, 21 November 2010 (UTC)
The fact that 'Wikimedia Foundation owns and operates Wikipedia' does not mean that they are not forcing unwanted media on wikipedia, seems to me they are. Anyway do you like it? —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
78.143.204.5 (
talk)
02:33, 21 November 2010 (UTC)
I would think that the appropriate response would be "Yes, of course, we need the fundraiser so that the website can stay up, and so that the foundation can keep advancing the Wikimedia movement". Does the community have a say in how the fundraiser is done? Yes. Do the Jimbo appeals do far better than any other banner tested? Yes. Is Wikipedia part of the Wikimedia movement and does it benefit hugely from these banners? Yes. I don't see what the problem could be. Anyway, that's what I would answer :) --
Yair rand (
talk)
04:17, 21 November 2010 (UTC)
I'm the one who complained re the photos - thanks for pointing out the little "X". I really greatly respect Wales and the whole WMF crew and their achievements, just got tired of him staring out at me, think it a bit too much. The "X" solved that. —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
211.124.135.29 (
talk)
09:53, 21 November 2010 (UTC)
I don't mind the appeals for money, but the head shots on the black banner and on the bronze banner with the closeup of a bug-eyed Wales looking toward the right of the screen look like stills from an audition to play
Gollum in Jackson's Hobbit. Real turnoffs.
μηδείς (
talk)
19:11, 21 November 2010 (UTC)
This is something regular contributors don't notice, because the vast majority of them will hide the banner immediately. You could try raising your concerns at
meta:Talk:Fundraiser 2010, but as HJ pointed out we have no control over the banners here.
Modest Geniustalk22:43, 21 November 2010 (UTC)
It would not be so bad if Jimmy was a lot better looking. Or if there was more in the photograph than just his bearded face. Thank goodness for the 'x'. I wonder what nationality Jimmy is... he obviously likes looking at himself. I would look him up but do not want to be confronted by his features any more than necessary. :-)
B. Fairbairn (
talk)
04:21, 26 November 2010 (UTC)
In all honesty I'd say Wales is a lot better looking that Sanger and a lot of the
Wayne's World look alike four-eyed web geeks with the "my gosh he really needs to go to Specsavers look" or slobby looking trolls with greasy long hair who seems to roam the Internet these days.. At least we have somebody who looks relatively normal pictured in the campaigns....Sure the side photo is one of his least flattering photos, the one of him in the blue shirt looks decent. ♦
Dr. Blofeld16:39, 27 November 2010 (UTC)
I bet Wales will be running for office later on, using his pic here to build recognition. You can bet Wikipedia won't get a dime from me under these circumstances.-Richard Peterson
24.7.28.186 (
talk)
14:43, 27 November 2010 (UTC)
I doubt that the foundation will allow Jimbo Wales to use foundation resources to run for office. I don't even think that's legal in the US, see
[3]. He can of course use any pictures in accordance to the license they were released under with on his own servers, the same as you or I can.
Jimbo Wales has been the public face of wikipedia for a long time and many people will probably ignore the campaign appeals after seeing them once or twice so it's not clear how much these pictures are increasing recognition (there's obviously some) nor for that matter how much this is going to help any hypothetical future political campaign (while I don't know about the US, often what the candidate has done can be just as important as does he look familiar?).
BTW, I would like some evidence for the claim the 'vast majority' of 'regular contributors' turn off the ads. Some obviously do, but I'm not aware there are any stats to show it's the 'vast majority'. I myself don't generally bother, I'm rarely looking at the top of a page anyway and I've never been that concerned about ads when they don't get in my way.
P.S. AFAIK Jimbo Wales has had limited involvement in the design of this campaign. The decision to use his face was made by the campaign team based on their stats it gained the most donors. I've seen some criticism of those stats, but I haven't see any evidence JW influenced them. In other words, blaming him for this, or suggesting he's using it for some hypothetical future political campaign seems a bit silly. I can't help wondering if he'd prefer they weren't using his face so external sources aren't mocking him and people aren't continuously complaining to his user page about stuff he has little involvement in and apparently little desire to be involved in
I have no stats, it's purely speculation on my part, albeit based upon a handful of anecdotal examples. Everyone I've spoken to about them (both registered and unregistered, you'd be surprised how often I end up in such real-life conversations) has complained about the pics and wanted to remove them - I think it's safe to assume that the majority of people who could & knew how will have done so.
Modest Geniustalk22:10, 28 November 2010 (UTC)
Anecdotally everyone I've spoken to hasn't so I don't. Perhaps the reason why most people ask for actual evidence when bold claims are made? To be honest, I'm not even sure if we can safely assume most people you know have turned them off or don't like them. To state the obvious, it seems possible that perhaps one of the reasons they came up is because the people involved didn't like them or wanted to turn them off.
Nil Einne (
talk)
00:19, 29 November 2010 (UTC)
in prior years I recall having to go into settings to turn off the donation ads, but this year, after clicking the X on the box, it hasn't come back. So I imagine anyone who has clicked the X has effectively blocked the ad. I use
AdBlock/
Ad Muncher while browsing, so anything that's not blocked by either catches me by surprise.
hbdragon88 (
talk)
05:16, 30 November 2010 (UTC)
So we can have a banner ad from Mr. Wales, but we can't have normal banner ads like every other website? I know it's annoying, but you scroll down and ignore it like every other webiste... Seems ironic that we're using a banner ad to promote our fundraising so we don't have to have banner ads... —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
204.153.84.10 (
talk)
14:13, 2 December 2010 (UTC)
Honestly - how obnoxious are these ads? If I click the X, I have decided not to donate. I should not see the banners again. It should be the equivalent of opting-out. Yet, visiting a new page or refreshing shows them again. I downloaded the AdBlock extension just so I could avoid seeing these banner ads on every page.
Y2Kcrazyjoker4 (
talk •
contributions)
19:23, 2 December 2010 (UTC)
There's a gadget available in preferences which in theory blocks the ads now and forever (including future campaigns)
Nil Einne (
talk) 00:15, 3 December 2010 (UTC) P.S. Realised I forgot to specify obviously it only works as long as you're logged in and on en.wikipedia and other wikis where you turn it on where available.
Nil Einne (
talk)
12:25, 3 December 2010 (UTC)
Thank you, "generous donor"! And I think Jimmy, either looks like O'Brien or Winston Smith from Nineteen Eighty Four.
Buggie111 (
talk)
14:37, 5 December 2010 (UTC)
It should happen some time in the following hours. Is there a plan to put a banner on the Main page or is 3.5 M not such a big mark? --Tone14:56, 12 December 2010 (UTC)
Yeah, I oppose the use of a banner in this instance. 3.5 million isn't a particularly noteworthy number, and the Internet-accessing public is well aware of the site's large size nowadays.
On top of that, the timing is far from ideal, as the fundraising banners have been the objects of much derision (as usual). Those are extremely important and do far more good than harm, of course, but let's not fuel further criticism by adding yet another banner to the site's most visible page. —
David Levy16:04, 12 December 2010 (UTC)
It has been common practice at least to put a banner on the milestone article's talk page (see
Talk:Joe Connor). If we can track down the right article we can do that at least.
Lampman (
talk)
16:06, 12 December 2010 (UTC)
The article in question almost certainly was created by
Dr. Blofeld (who saved numerous pages in rapid succession, perhaps with the 3.5 million mark in mind). —
David Levy16:19, 12 December 2010 (UTC)
Are misleading news allowed?
In this case "The PCRM receives the most votes in the Moldovan parliamentary election, while the Alliance for European Integration wins a majority of seats."
IMHO this suggests misrepresentation, with the two statements being connected like that. The first statement is only true if you consider parties, not political alliances, and the second only if you consider political alliances, not parties.
Ambi Valent (
talk)
09:33, 6 December 2010 (UTC)
The statement is 'perfectly reasonable' to anyone in a parliamentary election system - there are several examples in which 'Labour/Tory' and 'Tory/Labour' (or vice versa) and 'the UK' could be substituted.
Jackiespeel (
talk)
15:04, 6 December 2010 (UTC)
-Irrelevant - Algore conceded, twice. IE, He quit, twice. AND in the final count conducted by Time Magazine, Bush won, barely, but he won. So get your facts straight.--
Degen Earthfast (
talk)
16:04, 11 December 2010 (UTC)
This isn't really the same as those two examples though: as I understand it, the PCRM won the most votes and the most seats of any individual party, but if you group the parties in the Alliance for European Integration (the ruling coalition) together, they won a majority of both votes and seats. The line does seem a little misleading (though I suppose it won't be on the main page for much longer).
81.98.38.48 (
talk)
00:20, 7 December 2010 (UTC)
Degen sorry but what are you talking about? Our
United States presidential election, 2000 says Al Gore won the popular vote (by over 540k votes). If you have sources which say otherwise, please add them to the article rather then making OT and unsupported claims here. And it is relevant to this discussion because the issue here is that in many electoral systems it is possible for someone or a party to effectively win the election even if someone else wins the popular vote. From what I can tell, in the Moldovan case this didn't even happen but the claim was made so people responded accordingly pointing out it is likely to be something many reader would understand if that actually happened. Note in particular, no one made any comments on the fairness or whatever of such an occurence which is indeed irrelevant because our opinions on things not affecting wikipedia always are on wikipedia. Nor did anyone dispute whether Bush won the electoral vote so I'm not sure what the relevance of Gore conceding is to this discussion nor why you repeated what people had already said, i.e. Bush won the electoral vote. (Whether who won the popular vote has any relevance in general is moot in this discussion.)
Nil Einne (
talk)
23:41, 11 December 2010 (UTC)
Well,,, Your Right. And that's exaclty why out of random thoughts,,, I think we should recognize the GHPPBA or The Grand Hopeless, Poor and Pathetic Bastards of America organization right here on Wikipedia. —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
64.134.155.199 (
talk)
02:57, 9 December 2010 (UTC)
There seem to be a 'sufficiently high number' of items on the main page involving animals to justify a discussion on the subject. ;)
Jackiespeel (
talk)
15:14, 13 December 2010 (UTC)
Did you know
Could "... that a turning enthusiast built the most elaborate commercial building (pictured) in New Ulm, Minnesota?" be better phrased with "New Ulm's most elaborate commercial building" because otherwise it somehow looks like it features as one of the most elaborate commercial buildings anywhere and that has its own problems of objectivity??
Eugene-elgato (
talk)
11:50, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
People have given up on Wikipedia's front page.
The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section.
It's obvious the last couple of years Wikipedia front page lost its appeal to the people (nobody cares to even debate it anymore, with so few visitors about it) because it refuses to allow democratic procedures other than "we'll take into consideration your petty suggestions, peasant". If you want to improve it, stop putting Directors, "Arbitrators" and Know-it-alls in general on any section of the front page sub-themes and start learning from websites like reddit.com. Let people submit whatever and the best news, 'did you know', whatever, even page will go top *by simple visitor 'upvoting'*. Because your Elitism of having "enlightened" or only regular visitors with the process of writing in a wiki format with lengthy reasonings is not justified. You will never replace Democracy with "Enlightened Elites". This was the vision of every fascist regime in the history of the world and it failed. --
Leladax (
talk)
16:51, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
To submit and vote on "Did you Know" Items,
Click Here
To submit and vote on "In the News" items,
Click Here
To submit and vote on "Featured Articles"
Click Here (To request that they appear on a particular day
Click Here.
To submit and vote on "Featured Pictures"
click here. (They appear in order, and there's a long queue, so be patient.)
Sorry that the selection process isn't exactly the same as Digg or something, but in most things Wikipedia prefers intelligent debate over mindless voting. So be prepared to back up your opinions with a brief argument.
Ultimately, though, the end result is similar, our users choose and "vote" on the articles that go up on the main page.
The only un-democratic step is the Featured Article selection process. It's moderated by a single editor to avoid unseemly "clumping" of topics, but he's usually pretty open to suggestions and requests.
72.10.110.109 (
talk)
17:08, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
Responding to Leladax's screed above, I've
beencomplaining for almost two weeks that there haven't been enough main page featured article requests. See
this thread. I'll give you guys a tip - if there's a featured article you want on the main page, request it in the non-specific date slot. That almost guarantees I'll use it the next time I schedule some featured articles.
Raul654 (
talk)
17:37, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
You are a propagandist troll. If you don't provide evidence of the lie you just said remove your comment. I never said all wikipedians are fascists because, moron, I'm one of them. --
Leladax (
talk)
20:21, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
Let's just all move on, shall we? I think the past few comments make it clear nothing will be gained from continuing this particular discussion.--
Fyre2387(
talk •
contribs)23:11, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
As the reference in the article does not confirm this (that Voyager reached heliopause), I have withdrawn that ITN item. I should also remove that line from the article, but am waiting for reaction.
Materialscientist (
talk)
10:37, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
This wasn't a copyvio or anything urgent, so should not have been removed from the template before discussion. The blurb made no mention of it actually reaching it—just states the fact the scientists say it has shown signs of doing so. As there was consensus (albeit with limited discussion) to list it at ITN and the removal was unilateral and without discussion, it should be restored.
Strange Passerby (
talk •
contribs)
11:03, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
Many people wonder what the main page looked like on a given day. I suggest archiving the main page daily by getting a bot to use
Special:ExpandTemplates on the source and save the result in a dated page. I just created
Wikipedia:Main Page history/2010 December 16 as an example. All templates and parser functions are recursively expanded by
Special:ExpandTemplates so the result should look almost constant except for some details like sitenotices, deleted or changed images, and design changes in the software. It could also be done every 4 or 6 hours to capture DYK changes but daily seems enough to me.
PrimeHunter (
talk)
16:46, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
I would like to hear what people think before going to bot requests. I don't think anything like this has been done before. Is there interest in such an archive which would grow to thousands of pages in a decade? It would make lots of bot generated pages meant to never be edited again. I don't want to watch them all for vandalism or unwanted changes, which would be nearly all changes including corrections. Would it be acceptable to fully protect all of them? Are there license problems if contributors to the substituted templates are hard to track down? And for something affecting the Main Page, should such an archive be linked directly from there or only from the talk page? Without a Main Page link, the archive would have lower profile and there would be less reason to make it.
PrimeHunter (
talk)
13:28, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
Today's featured article, The Simpsons Game, has wrong image
Instead of an image of the game itself, it shows a picture of a sign in front of a game studio that makes thousands of games. The article is about the game, not the company that distributed it. Can someone change that?
DreamFocus01:08, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
I imagine that was because it is the only non fair use rationale image there was in the article. Fair use images are not allowed on the main page. −
Jhenderson77701:16, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
I disagree. This game is not only made by Electronic Arts, it is about Electronic Arts. The game makes fun of the company consistently throughout the plot and the game's antagonist is Will Wright, who was, at the time, an employee of Electronic Arts. The image is an appropriate one.
Neelix (
talk)
17:00, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
If the featured article were
Electronic Arts, the image would be reasonably illustrative. But for a video game produced by Electronic Arts (and even spoofing it in its story), it was a desperate stretch to include anything remotely relevant to the article's subject, purely for the sake of having an image. I support the image's removal. —
David Levy17:21, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
While that would be less bad, it still doesn't strike me as preferable to no image at all. Even the display of a book's author (for which the video game equivalent would be, for example, a photograph of
David Crane alongside a blurb about
Pitfall!) is less than ideal.
The article isn't about Matt Selman, so it once again comes down to including an image purely for the sake of including an image.
Two questions that are helpful to ask are:
Will the image's general nature be readily apparent to most readers seeing the blurb (before they read the caption)?
Would we seriously consider including the image in the article's infobox?
This probably passes the first question
David included above. A book's author is better-connected to his work in the public eye than a primary writer of a video game. LFaraone02:16, 19 December 2010 (UTC)
The difference is that a book is widely acknowledged and marketed as the work of one or more authors, and as such, having a picture of the author makes sense. We've also done this for other similar works (
a Nine Inch Nails album comes to mind). But the video game is a product of Electronic Arts and the branding is mostly about the game itself, not any particular individual. howcheng {
chat}02:21, 19 December 2010 (UTC)
[replying to both LFaraone and Howcheng]
Exactly. Even if I've never heard of a book/album or its author[s]/recording artist[s], I'll automatically assume that the photograph depicts the latter.
Conversely, I'm familiar with The Simpsons Game, but if I'd seen the photograph of Matt Selman alongside its blurb, my reaction would have been "Who's that guy?". —
David Levy02:35, 19 December 2010 (UTC)
Indeed, inferring that there is somehow a bias against video game articles here is frankly ridiculous. In fact, one of the most frequent complaints we see here is that there are too many video game articles showing up as TFA. howcheng {
chat}05:53, 19 December 2010 (UTC)
Maybe this discussion should go on the TFA page, but this is an issue that has come up before and will come up again, and should be resolved. Personally, I think the embargo on non-free images on the MP is foolish, but that's not getting changed anytime soon and is not really worth the effort even bringing up. I understand the rationale behind not putting the game producer's photo as the TFA image, as most readers will be unaware of the link between the photo and and article/blurb. However, I feel a good compromise is to include an image of the studio, where possible, as most people can clearly appreciate "hey, this is a videogame, and that's a videogame company, I bet they're related"; as Howcheng said above "a book is widely acknowledged and marketed as the work of one or more authors ... the video game is a product of Electronic Arts". In the same way that author pics are relevant to a book article, an EA image would be relevant to a game they have produce or released. Readers have come to generally expect an image alongside the blurb, and generally it looks good visually to provide one.
Random8917:04, 20 December 2010 (UTC)
Howcheng's point (with which I agree) is that most video games lack anything contextually comparable to a book's author[s] or an album's recording artist[s]. (There are some notable exceptions, but this wasn't one of them.)
A video game's association with its studio is no greater than a motion picture's association with its studio. Can you imagine displaying an exterior photograph of the Paramount Pictures lot for The Godfather (as a random example)?
It's unfortunate that our current procedures prevent us from maintaining the visual style to which readers are accustomed, but including a decorative, tangential image is not a good solution. —
David Levy18:28, 20 December 2010 (UTC)
No love for the Wright Brothers?!?
On Dec. 17th (today) I was surprised to find no mention anywhere -- "Did you know.." "On this day..", Featured article, nor photo -- of the Wright Brothersn historic first flight. Dec. 17, 1903 is generally accepted as the first human flight in a heavier-than-air powered vehicle. Just wondering why such an Earth changing event wasn't highlighted.
Sector001 (
talk)
16:24, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
I had originally swapped out the Wright Brothers item because they'd been on for several years consecutively and other articles should get their shot on OTD as well. Today also was the 75th anniversary of the Douglas DC-3, and I felt one airplane item was enough. Remember that OTD doesn't highlight every event every year. howcheng {
chat}16:50, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
I do like how the invention of a new ridiculous neologism "earth-changing" was necessary to present your point.
f o x19:50, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
Glad I could help Fox. Consider it your Christmas prezzie. Actually, the event was more "sky-changing" than "earth-changing".lol
Sector001 (
talk)
20:22, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
Seems fine to me. It's not like we're the German Wikipedia putting up a picture of someone's vagina on the MP. This is barely anything. /
ƒETCHCOMMS/04:11, 23 December 2010 (UTC)
Hardly nude. Topless maybe, and discretely topless at that. I'm not a fan of gratuitous nudity, but removing that pic would be censorship.
HiLo48 (
talk)
04:14, 23 December 2010 (UTC)
Again, as someone else has mentioned, this is not gratuitous. It's more artistic than anything, and if textbooks let that slide, so can an online encyclopedia.--
WaltCip (
talk)
19:22, 23 December 2010 (UTC)
Again Vietnam?
there are so many otd about vietnam again. nice there are many FA's about that but they shouldn't appear otd 3 times a month. there should be a rule prohibiting users from pushing there articles too much even if they are good —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
91.61.19.99 (
talk)
21:17, 25 December 2010 (UTC)
You realize that US and UK have 1+ items appearing in OTD daily, right? So you're going to complain about Vietnam showing up a few times a month?? Seems a little out-of-whack there. howcheng {
chat}01:01, 28 December 2010 (UTC)
Going to beat HTD to the "but at least they speak English" punch here. Not getting why a little extra knowledge on Vietnamese history is hurting anyone.
ƒox01:37, 28 December 2010 (UTC)
There was a problem recently involving huge numbers 1960s Vietnamese politics stories showing up. However, this item was entirely unrelated Vietnamese history from the 1920s, which seems rather reasonable in comparison to the other possibilities for that day.
Modest Geniustalk17:04, 28 December 2010 (UTC)
More than 1,000,000 articles
Since both French and German Wikipedia now have more than 1,000,000 articles, why not add an appropriate line in the list of other Wikipedias.--
Wetman (
talk)
07:53, 28 December 2010 (UTC)
This has been discussed a lot. I can't remember the reasons for not doing it, but the consensus is not to at this moment (I believe they're waiting for more to reach 1m). I for one would also favor creating a new group for those above a million. DC07:59, 28 December 2010 (UTC)
Quoth the instructions at the top of the page, "if your question is related to the Main Page, please search the archives first to make sure it hasn't been answered before."
This excludes numerous earlier discussions in which the community rejected proposals to add a new tier for a small number of Wikipedias (based upon whatever arbitrary milestone had been reached at the time). —
David Levy17:00, 28 December 2010 (UTC)
Wouldn't it be simpler to just make a new category for Wikipedias with more than 1,000,000 articles, rather than have this discussion over and over again?
87.114.184.255 (
talk)
19:43, 28 December 2010 (UTC)
That is simply not true. Several of them have ended with somebody opposed to the proposal calling the poster names, such as
Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells, instead of producing an actual argument (see just below for an example. Nice attitude, people!). A few of them have "concluded that it would be a bad idea", but not every one. Are you perhaps exaggerating because you are short of arguments to support the appearance of en-wiki being 7 times larger than any other, instead of just 3? I know that's not what it actually says, but it's how it obviously appears, considering the number of times this is brought up. If it is so important to you to preserve the status quo, can't you at least have the decency to add it to some FAQ, instead of just being rude when a change is suggested? This discussion will appear over and over until the change inevitably happens, and you'll get more and more tired of it each time, and will likely be ruder and ruder. Instead, shouldn't there be a link somewhere that explains why the "consensus" has decided that a 2-item 1,000,000 category looks bad? (and by you, I don't mean any individual, but the collective of Talk:Main_Page regulars) /
Coffeeshivers (
talk)
00:03, 30 December 2010 (UTC)
Besides, it is 'one of the (ten) standard Main Page talk page discussions' (the others including over-representation of the US, of sport, of wildlife, topics which annoy various filters, those which annoy
Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells...' (Any further suggestions?)
Jackiespeel (
talk)
22:55, 28 December 2010 (UTC)
What happened to the proposal to put ranges anwyay? As I remarked when it came up it never seemed necessary to me but it also seems like a resonable compromise to avoid these needless discussions
Nil Einne (
talk)
20:40, 31 December 2010 (UTC)
Shame, when I read the heading I thought maybe some entrepreneurial soul had begun selling coffee mugs with Jimbo's terrifying stare plastered over it. So he can watch you while you sleep.
GeeJo(t)⁄(c) •
16:00, 13 December 2010 (UTC)
I also thought you ment mugs as in tea and coffee mugs; but it Caught your attention didn't it? mission acomplished woudln't you say seeing as it's a fundraising banner? :) --
Connelly90[AlbaGuBràth] (
talk)
16:08, 13 December 2010 (UTC)
As someone who's had a hand in fundraising in the past, I'll point out for the sake of argument, that catching people's attention can be a useful aspect of fundraising, but if a line is crossed into irritation, it's not a good thing. Whether the Jimbo banner is irritating or not seems to be the OP's point, not whether it's eye-catching. If I came to an office as a
one man band and suddenly began playing, with the aim of prompting donations, I'm sure I'd get noticed, but I'm not sure I'd get much money (or goodwill). --
Dweller (
talk)
16:59, 13 December 2010 (UTC)
Me, I found it so irritating that I looked in the source files to find the filename of the Jimbo photo used, and add it to my browser's content filter. Whenever a new image was used, I'd add it to the blocklist. Now that it's no longuer Jimbo, I don't mind as much. Still, they could make the banner not so huge.
76.10.140.44 (
talk)
02:37, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
I for one enjoy being greeted by his lovely visage while perusing wikipedia. Perhaps him and Andy Shclafay and do a callander —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
142.22.16.52 (
talk)
21:28, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
I would much rather have ads on Wikipedia than this desperate cry for donations. Targeted ads would easily raise what Wikimedia needs and would help a lot of businesses reach their potential clients. And yes, the ugly mug is creepy. —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
70.91.210.249 (
talk)
17:23, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
This "urgent" appeal is embarrassing. The Wikipedia fundraiser has been wildly successful; it is not good PR to seem desperate to milk every penny out of your users. Wikipedia is not in dire financial straights. --
64.53.233.71 (
talk)
08:22, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
And it would be better PR to say "please donate but don't feel too obliged to, we've got plenty money either way"? Nah.
f o x12:01, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
It depends -- are you sending the message that the goal is to get as much money as you can, or to get as much as you need. The former is offensive.
86.26.60.18 (
talk)
14:25, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
This banner is extremely obnoxious and irritating. Please someone get rid of it. This is like some really bad joke... Can't be serious.
Genjix (
talk)
14:23, 19 December 2010 (UTC)
AFAIK, the fundraising target was set long before the fundraiser started
[4]. Similarly the deadline was I presume set (the fundraisers always seem to end about the same time anyway). Whether or not the current campaign was 'wildly successful' the fact remained the fundraiser was still quite a bit off the target. I presume donations have dropped off as they are liable to do over time so from that POV, as 'wildly successful' as the current campaign allegedly was, there was some urgency since it's possible the target may not have been met. In any case, I'm not aware of many charities with broad purposes who only really try to get as much as 'they need', since most charities can always find something to do with any extra (if they really find they have too much, stopping donations is far easier then getting them). In any case, it's irrelevant for logged in users since the banners have been turned off for them until the final push in January.
Nil Einne (
talk)
15:48, 22 December 2010 (UTC)
I don't see how the word 'urgent' is unethical. I presume from the WMF's POV, it is urgent since they have a target to meet and it's not clear if they will meet it. From a donators POV, it may or may not be urgent. It's up to each donator to decide for themselves whether it's urgent or not. The target and amount collected so far is even shown in the banner itself and I'm pretty sure from the links you can find out why such a target was set and what they intend to do with the money. If people don't think it's urgent, that's up to them, but it's odd to claim that it's unethical to call it urgent (when one presumes the foundation does consider it urgent) just because not everyone agrees, even more so when you've provided the info for people to decide for themselves whether they consider it urgent. Ultimately the banner is primarily intended to convey the impression the foundation has an appeal they consider urgent, not to dictate to other people whether or not they should consider the foundations needs urgent.
Nil Einne (
talk)
15:44, 24 December 2010 (UTC)
I favor having Jimbo's head on a mug as in the banner, but if you pour hot liquid into it, horns and a pitchfork become visible.--
Wehwalt (
talk)
14:32, 19 December 2010 (UTC)
If Wikimedia needs to raise funds then so be it, but the photos of Jimmy Wales they are using to help publicise this are, shall we say, unfortunate. They aren't exactly his best, and he looks a little smug in some. Just one of him looking a little less pleased with himself would be much better - but nevermind: Merry Christmas everyone!
Hugahoody (
talk)
21:17, 24 December 2010 (UTC)
If everybody reading this donated $5 our fundraiser would be over today. Please donate to keep Wikipedia free. Ha, ha, ha. Now that's sad. --
200.121.195.245 (
talk)
18:02, 29 December 2010 (UTC)
I just had the misfortune to visit WP whilst logged out, and wow that's an annoying advert. Worse, it's incredibly misleading - if everyone did donate £5 as it asks (and I note in passing it's asking for more from UK users than US users, thanks to currency differences), there's no way the fundraiser would end. They'd keep it running and milk people for everything they could - we've already raised plenty of money.
Modest Geniustalk20:28, 30 December 2010 (UTC)
I clear my cache every five minutes or so, and therefore I have to click the stupid x every five minutes or so. It's been two months already, when is the banner coming down?
80.123.210.172 (
talk)
21:16, 2 January 2011 (UTC)
Christmas
So why isn't Christmas the main article on the main page as it is the most celebrated Holiday/Holiday in the Western/English speaking world? Is political correctness creeping its way into wikipedia?--
Degen Earthfast (
talk)
17:32, 25 December 2010 (UTC)
You say it's the most celebrated. Do you have a source for that? Wouldn't New Years Eve/Day be more universal? (I don't have a source either.)
HiLo48 (
talk)
22:57, 25 December 2010 (UTC)
Our article on
Christmas was featured quite prominently at the top of the On This Day section, in the area specifically set aside for holidays.
Christmas Eve and
Boxing Day have all been featured there over the last 3 days - I can think of no other holiday that we cover not only the day itself, but the days before and after. That seems perfectly sufficient to me.
Modest Geniustalk00:31, 26 December 2010 (UTC)
Everybody's. Did you read the comments above? If you want it to be a featured article, it needs to get back to featured article status; it hasn't been for four years and has some obvious issues. Feel free to help out. Acroterion(talk)14:57, 26 December 2010 (UTC)
I believe the "Whose wikipedia this" is was a statement not a question. It stated that this being the English wikipedia so Christmas should be the Featured article no matter it bureaucratically imposed lack of status..--
209.213.220.227 (
talk)
17:48, 26 December 2010 (UTC)
Obviously you haven't thought this through. To start with, Featured Article status is reserved for the best of the best. It's not bestowed upon just any article for arbitrary reasons. Those that qualify have to be well-researched, well-documented, and well-written. These criteria have been decided by the community as a whole -- it's not a decision that was imposed by any one person or small committee of people. If any article could potentially appear on the Main Page in the TFA section, that would include those that are full of {{citation needed}} or {{unreferenced}} or {{original research}} tags as well, and for Main Page, we like to show off our quality content. As to why each Featured Article only gets one shot at the Main Page, well there are (as of right now)
1,343 articles that haven't appeared yet. Each one of those is the result of a lot of effort by one or more editors. Are YOU going to tell them, you'll just have to wait a bit longer because
Christmas is always going to appear on the Main Page on Dec 25, leaving only 364 days when other articles get to appear? And actually, why limit it to this one holiday? Why not New Year's Day, Valentine's Day, St Patrick's Day, etc. And then if you open it to major holidays celebrated in English-speaking countries, that's still the US, UK, Canada, Australia, South Africa, and India (apologies if I've missed anyone), so the available slots open to non-holiday ones is getting limited. And now that you've opened the floodgates, is there any reason why Pearl Harbor Day, 9/11, 3/11, Armistice Day, or any other day that's significant to people shouldn't get the same treatment? So if by "bureaucratically imposed", you mean, "Do you guys have a good reason why this rule exists", then yes, I would say that is true. howcheng {
chat}04:14, 27 December 2010 (UTC)
Today (26.12.2010) the Western Christian Churches (incl. the Catholic Church) DO NOT celebrate St. Stephen's Day, because the feast of the
Holy Family takes precedence. It should be corrected...
Second, it's just a thought, but puzzling: Many Christian feast days have the modifier "Christianity" or "Eastern/Western Christianity" added in brackets. But Christmas Eve, Christmas Day and Easter do not have. I fail to see the difference. Granted, many atheists/agnostics now say they celebrate Christmas (what they actually do is not that important), but would they do so without the Western Christian heritage? Very likely no.
Jancikotuc (
talk)
15:35, 26 December 2010 (UTC)
Very likely yes, but perhaps with a different name. Family and community feast days at or near the
Winter solstice have been very common from way before Christianity. Should it be the featured article?
HiLo48 (
talk)
23:12, 26 December 2010 (UTC)
Why very likely? Yes I know about celebrating winter solstice in pre-Christian times, but do we globally celebrate summer solstice these days? Why should we suppose that winter solstice celebrations would have survived, if summer solstice celebrations have not? Anyway, Christmas would never have reached global popularity without presents-giving (which was not common until the 1940s). And until that time, the "western" world was still predominantly Christian.
Jancikotuc (
talk)
17:50, 27 December 2010 (UTC)
Some "Western Christian churches" did celebrate St Stephen on 26 December this year. The Church of England, for example, allows
Festivals to displace Sundays (except in Advent, Lent, and Easter, or if the Sunday is a
Principal Feast), or to be celebrated on the next available day. For 26 to 29 December my lectionary allowed either <Christmas 1, John, Holy Innocents, Stephen> or <Stephen, John, Holy Innocents, Thomas Becket>.
DTOx (
talk)
18:27, 2 January 2011 (UTC)
Probably won't happen
Those of us with long enough tenure here remember that, for two years running (2004 and 2005, I think).
Christmas was indeed once an FA, with those responsible intending for it to have a Main Page turn on December 25.
However ... both years, as the holiday approached, the editors found themselves working overtime to revert or lessen the impact of innumerable well-meaning edits to maintain something like what they had gotten to FA. Both years, it was such that other articles had to be substituted a few days before Christmas. The second year they got wise and realized this would always recur. So, with sadness,
they had it defeatured.
Daniel Case (
talk)
15:54, 29 December 2010 (UTC)
i'm wondering whether we are too narrow in our discussion. couldn't we simply have a satisfactory article that has a christmas theme? this would also allow a decentralization of the christian-christmas as it would cover a different narrative of the
holiday each year. how feasible is this? wouldn't this only give a potential FA editor(ial staff 2.0) a deadline to work toward?
LazyMapleSunday (
talk)
21:45, 29 December 2010 (UTC)
For the date, yes. But it would also get other points (widely covered, lack of other 'holiday' articles on the MP and in FAs). But the points only come into it if there is competition over which article gets which date (and total number of requests); since TFAR has been rather quiet recently almost anything that's proposed gets used.
Modest Geniustalk17:35, 30 December 2010 (UTC)
It's not apophenia...I noticed the same and thought, even if only half of the letters were as common an initial as "L"....well, do the math. It's a big coincidence or someone is trying to be noticed. Archbishop of Canterbury is less intriguing since choices of featured articles are often related to anniversaries and holidays.--
71.232.14.151 (
talk)
07:09, 29 December 2010 (UTC)
Why not have alphabet-themed days? Having all entries on the MP exclude a given letter might be more of a challenge. (What was the e-less book?) Or will alphabetism be added to the list of topics mentioned above?
Jackiespeel (
talk)
15:58, 29 December 2010 (UTC)
I just noticed that that picture isn't even used in his article any more. Obviously it considers the MP home now, and refuses to be used elsewhere.
Modest Geniustalk18:29, 31 December 2010 (UTC)
Geejo, you got me. After I had scheduled lemur, lindow man, and lincoln cent, I saw the pattern and decided to run with it. So no, not an accident - more like a small joke to see if anyone was paying attention :)
Raul654 (
talk)
06:22, 3 January 2011 (UTC)
So what would the main page for 'Day X' cover -
X-Men, the
X-Ray of the 'hand with a ring',
Xerxes,
Xenophon and what/who else?
People the awards that have been listed in Grand Theft Auto IV main page are all "Game of the Year" awards rather than "Action game of the year". Then why after several times editing that page, the awards change back to "Action game of the year".
There is one other issue too. The reviews are mostly of PC version rather than PS3/X360. The game is the highest rated game of all time and that rating is represented by its PS3 and Xbox 360 version.
Thank you for your interest in Wikipedia and for your attempts to improve these videogame articles. This is, however, not the forum for discussing the
Grand Theft Auto IV page specifically; this area is intended for discussing the Main Page only. When editing this
Talk Page you should be presented with a whole host of links to suggested areas that you may find useful and I would direct you to the
New Contributors' Help Page in the first instance. To discuss GTA4, please post your comments on the
Talk Page of that article. Happy editing!
Careful With That Axe, EugeneHello...10:26, 5 January 2011 (UTC)
Man, Eugene, that has got to the politest "re-direct the newbie" post I have ever seen!! Maybe we should keep it as a template somewhere and just modify it with new topics each time it's needed! Most excellent!! Keep up the good work! :)
Rhodesisland (
talk)
01:35, 6 January 2011 (UTC)
Clicking on the "recent deaths" link on the main page goes to Deaths in 2010. Should that be changed to Deaths in 2011 for the new year now that the new year has begun?
Bcperson89 (
talk)
09:23, 1 January 2011 (UTC)
It's only in redirects it doesn't work. It works fine in
Recent deaths but I think a yearly manual update is better than an automatic link to a page which may have no deaths yet.
PrimeHunter (
talk)
01:48, 2 January 2011 (UTC)
Now all we need is a means to insure the appropriate new page is in place at the start of each coming new year (decreeing that an unnamed somebody will take care of a problem that only appears once a year is a good way to ensure the task is forgotten between now and the next occurrence of January 1). Otherwise the traditional avoidance of
WP:REDLINKs on the Main Page will be violated. --Allen3talk20:38, 5 January 2011 (UTC)
Adapting the fallback code we already use for TFP should work for that, and ensure (;)) there's no redlink. I reckon:
{{#ifexist:Deaths in {{CURRENTYEAR}}|[[Deaths in {{CURRENTYEAR}}|Recent deaths]]|[[Deaths in {{#time:Y|-1 years}}|Recent deaths]]}}
it's always annoying when i see there is a Christian festival and then it's followed by western Christianity and not also eastern when they are in fact both celebrating on that day. The reason i think this needs changing is two-fold
on article pages for saints and Christian festivals, in the info-box it has a "observed by" column which will list the churches which do celebrate, e.g. Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, Lutheran, Some Anglicans etc....so if it just says western Christianity, on the main-page it may be misleading
secondly, although the main rationale i presume for exclusing eastern Christianity for say, the epiphany today, is because numerically the greater portion of us keep a 13 day behind calendar, e.g. Russia, Serbia, Jerusalem,... Greece, Cyprus, Albania, Bulgaria, almost all the Greeks outside the home countries, e.g., millions in the Americas, Europe, Oceania, celebrate today and the Russians ARE celebrating on the 6th of January anyway it's just they cannot count properly!! they think 6th January is the correct date for the epiphany too, it's just they think 6th of January is when it's 19th January.
Eugene-elgato (
talk)
10:23, 6 January 2011 (UTC)
What? All those nations are using gregorian calendar, just the holidays fall on different days, so it is perfectly fine as it is. Regarding the first point, it would be better to address it to a dedicated wikiproject. --Tone10:28, 6 January 2011 (UTC)
OK, but i still would argue that essentially they hold Xmas on 25th December, and their calendar is out of synch- apparently in a few years they will be celebrating Xmas on our 8th December and no longer 7th even, which indicates not that their Xmas is simply on the 7th January, but that their 25th December is way out of synch and not even linearly. If that makes any sense??
Eugene-elgato (
talk)
11:58, 6 January 2011 (UTC)
We would, the same as we do for other holidays which change. We use the gregorian calendar on wikipedia, and it's also what a lot of the world uses in a variety of circumstances. The fact that some events are based on a calendar related to the gregorian one which therefore has the same month names doesn't change the fact it's a different calendar. More importantly, ultimately whatever you want to call the date the events fall whenever they fall (sometimes it depends on where you live or what system you use), the fact that Chinese New Year falls on the first day of the first month of the year of the
Chinese lunar calendar or
Eid ul-Fitr on 1
Shawwal doesn't change that. Those who follow the different practices were not celebrating Christmas several days ago whatever you want to call the date. The will be soon, whatever you want to call the date
Nil Einne (
talk)
13:13, 6 January 2011 (UTC)
PS: Yes, I know it has happened and that it has had coverage. I guess my real question is about why this is WP's main headline if the BBC don't even appear to have a story on it. --
FormerIP (
talk)
12:29, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
Reply to your PS: "In the news" doesn't have a main headline, it just has a most recent headline at the top. See the ITN discussion for more, well, discussion of reasons for inclusion.
BencherliteTalk12:32, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
Okay, but Wakefield was struck off by the General Medical Council some time last year over this research. The BMJ calling him a fraud now is obvious extremely significant to his biography, but it doesn't seem like an earth shattering event, particularly if major news outlets are ignoring altogether. --
FormerIP (
talk)
13:09, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
I'll admit it's lost a lot of impact in terms of newsworthiness since he was struck off so long ago, but we didn't report on it then. It's a big story, both with the striking off and the fraud announcement, and covering it now is better than never. (Also, a
good amount of news outlets have covered BMJ's announcement, a lot of them not giving it premier placement.)
狐 FOX13:26, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
Yeah, I was a bit surprised by the timing of this as well - the wider picture has been known for quite a while, and this doesn't seem hugely surprising in that context. But if we didn't cover it last time, then I guess it's good to get it out there.
Trebor (
talk)
13:52, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
The breaking news aspect is the revelation that he faked data in the original study, this is what prompted the BMJ labelling him a fraud, and it only happened in the last couple of days.
cyclosarin (
talk)
15:09, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
Wikipedia is allowed to be ahead of the BBC and other news broadcasters - and sometimes it is appropriate to make use of 'an event' even if minor, to remind people of a developing story that is intermittently in the news.
Jackiespeel (
talk)
16:17, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
I'm not sure we are so much "ahead" of the BBC. Is it not more likely simply that we have deemed something to be newsworthy when they haven't? --
FormerIP (
talk)
16:44, 7 January 2011 (UTC)
Wikipedia languages section
Now that we have more than a million articles in both German and French we should have a section of "More that a million article" at the bottom to give them he credit they deserve.
Doc James (
talk ·
contribs ·
email)
07:02, 8 January 2011 (UTC)
I'm surprised to be typing (mostly copying and pasting, actually) this response to an administrator, but...
Quoth the instructions at the top of the page, "if your question is related to the Main Page, please search the archives first to make sure it hasn't been answered before."
This excludes numerous earlier discussions in which the community rejected proposals to add a new tier for a small number of Wikipedias (based upon whatever arbitrary milestone had been reached at the time). —
David Levy07:32, 8 January 2011 (UTC)
I guess it is such a good idea and this is why it keeps coming up. I do not know how many times the little green plus sign was suggested before it was added to articles but it must have been dozens. Remember consensus can and does change.
Doc James (
talk ·
contribs ·
email)
07:42, 8 January 2011 (UTC)
On reviewing past comments I guess it would be reasonable to wait until four wikis reached this mark. But I do agree with others that it would also be reasonable to add it now and maybe remove / merge one of the smaller categories if we wish to save on space.
Doc James (
talk ·
contribs ·
email)
07:48, 8 January 2011 (UTC)
News about spy to Renault-Nissan about the electric vehicle
I have read and listen news about the spy of Renault-Nissan by the Chinese, to obtain industrial secrets related to the
electric vehicle, where this automotive group is the world leader. The revelation has also affected the production of the electric vehicle in Spain (Twizzy model and so on). I suggest include this relevant information in the Wikipedia news headlines.--
Diamondland (
talk)
08:47, 8 January 2011 (UTC)
I am constantly confused by the pictures used with In the news and On this day blurbs. Nice picture of a old guy in a shirt and tie next to Andrew Wakefield's blurb -- but it's not Mr Wakefield, it's the assassinated Pakistani governor. This catches me every time, and I've been around long enough to know better.
Same thing in OTD: old guy with handlebar mustache and wing collar probably isn't Bonnie Prince Charlie -- but you can't find out who it really is unless you read through ALL the rest of the blurbs.
We're really not doing our casual readers a service with this misleading picture placement; and even an experienced reader such as myself still finds it annoying that I have to slog through each and every bullet to find "(pictured)".
Can this be easily fixed? Or am I the only person who's bothered by it? (And, apologies if this is beating a dead horse; I'm not up to speed on restricting searches to just certain pagesets.)
Crap; didn't find that earlier. Still, one thing isn't clear to me, since the French seem to be able to do it "sometimes": is it impossible, or is it merely difficult, to float the picture to its appropriate bullet? Thanks!
DaHorsesMouth (
talk)
04:22, 8 January 2011 (UTC)
It isn't particularly difficult, but it purportedly would cause layout problems on other pages on which the templates are transcluded. And if I recall correctly, some people expressed a preference for the current aesthetics. —
David Levy04:29, 8 January 2011 (UTC)
For DYK we currently have: "From Wikipedia's newest articles:". As both expanded (but pre-existing articles) as well as genuinely new articles are featured, wouldn't it be more accurate to have "From Wikipedia's newest content:"?
Greenshed (
talk)
23:01, 10 January 2011 (UTC)
I agree that the current phrasing doesn't cover expanded articles. But 'newest content' would include small amounts (paragraphs) of new material added to existing large articles, which are not eligible for DYK. Perhaps
WT:DYK might have some ideas?
Modest Geniustalk23:20, 10 January 2011 (UTC)
The use of the modifier 'although' in the first sentence of the featured article, 'John Helm', is misplaced
The use of the modifier 'although' in the first sentence of the featured article, 'John Helm', is inappropriate. The fact that he was the 18th and 24th Governor of Kentucky is in no way diminished by the total amount of time he spent serving in that office. Perhaps it should read "John L. Helm (1802–1867) was the 18th and 24th governor of Kentucky. In contrast to other Governors of Kentucky of the era, his aggregate service in that office was, in total, less than fourteen months."
174.58.42.212 (
talk)
00:18, 9 January 2011 (UTC)
I disagree. The word "although" refers to the disparity between the likely assumption that a two-time governor served more than 14 months in office and the fact that he didn't, not the disparity between his time in office and that of other governors. —
David Levy00:26, 9 January 2011 (UTC)
No. Why would an assumption be made that having served 14 months in office is more exceptional for a one-term Governor than a two-term Governor, regardless of whether it was sequential or non-sequential? A lack of attention to the non-sequentiality of his terms in office is negated by the use of the word 'aggregate'. Its use draws attention of that Helm's terms in office were not continuous.
It would be similar or analogous to stating "Jerry Brown is and was 39th and 34th Governor of California, although 27 years elapsed between his two terms in office." The fact that 27 years elapsed between Brown's two terms as Governor of California does not diminish the significance and the exceptionality of the fact. The only rational assumption that ought to be made is that the use of the modifier "although" somehow makes the fact of the the statement made by second clause diminish the significance of the statement made by the first clause. It doesn't--Jerry Brown is and was 39th and 34th Governor of California, and the fact that 27 years elapsed between Brown's terms in office is irrelevant to the fact or to the significance that Jerry Brown is and was 39th and 34th Governor of California.
It might be appropriate to write "Richard Nixon was 37th President of the United States, although he was the only President ever to resign the office." Or it might be (arguably less) appropriate to write "Bill Clinton was 42nd President of the United States, although he was only one of two Presidents to be impeached" (it's arguably less appropriate because although Clinton was impeached by the U.S. House of Representatives, Clinton was not convicted by the U.S. Senate, nor was Clinton thereby removed from office). The fact that Clinton was impeached but not convicted and removed from office did not diminish the significance of the fact of his Presidency, i.e., the duration of time Clinton was in office, or the significance of the policies for which his was responsible for having made in office.
By contrast, to say "Richard Nixon was 37th President of the United States, although he was the only President ever to resign the office" would be inappropriate, because of the exceptionality of the fact of his resignation does not diminish the fact that Nixon was 37th President. Whether or not Nixon's resignation diminished the amount of time he spent in office does not diminish the fact that Nixon was 37th President of the United States, but the fact that he was the only President to resign is of significance, although not to the fact that Nixon was 37th President.
It would be appropriate to state "Gerald Ford was 38th President of the United States, although Ford was never elected to that office or to the office of Vice President." The use of the word "although" is appropriate there, because the essence of being President of the United States, as envisaged by the U.S. Constitution, is the quality of having been elected President or Vice President. The fact of that missing quality from the fact of Ford's Presidency would, therefore, definitely warrant the use of the modifier "although".
174.58.42.212 (
talk)
01:16, 9 January 2011 (UTC)
Why would an assumption be made that having served 14 months in office is more exceptional for a one-term Governor than a two-term Governor, regardless of whether it was sequential or non-sequential?
No one is claiming any such thing. You're badly misunderstanding the statement, which is entirely unrelated to the fact that the two terms were nonconsecutive.
The term of office is four years, so a likely assumption is that someone who served in said office (particularly twice, irrespective of chronology) did so for a total of significantly more than 14 months. —
David Levy01:34, 9 January 2011 (UTC)
Why should that be an assumption? Simply because the U.S. Constitution specified a limitation of the Presidential term to four years--and the States, in adopting a "republican form of government", followed suit for their Chief Executives? In the
Westminster System utilized in Canada (where there is a "fusion" of the executive and legislative branches in that the
Ministry is comprised of Members of Parliament who are also elected legislators) for example, as to the term of a chief executive, the maximum duration of one term of office for the
Prime Minister (through a limitation on the maximum time a Parliament can remain constituted) is limited to five years. However, governments in the Westminster System often fall on non-confidence votes, mostly on national budgets. Also, since the Prime Minister is also the titular leader of the political party which is elected in the most Parliamentary seats, if that Member of Parliament is voted out as Leader of the Party, by very strong position, it also means that Member of Parliament is no longer Prime Minister, because such a departure would lead to a non-confidence vote.
174.58.42.212 (
talk)
03:54, 9 January 2011 (UTC)
The statement turns on an issue of the duration of time spent on office during two non-sequential terms in office. It does not diminish the fact that Helm was both 18th and 24th Governor of Kentucky. The use of the modifier "although" implies that Helm was somehow "less" the 18th and 24th Governor of Kentucky for having served in that office an aggregate fourteen months.
174.58.42.212 (
talk)
04:21, 9 January 2011 (UTC)
"I watched two baseball games, although not full games."
"I went to school during spring and fall semesters, although only for two weeks total."
This is entirely reasonable and normal English. It doesn't "diminish" anything, it clarifies that while these things were done, they were not done with the completeness that they normally imply.
APL (
talk)
18:09, 9 January 2011 (UTC)
Non-Americans probably won't be immediately familiar with term-lengths of US Governers, while they would with seasons/school semesters. --
Kurr12:09, 10 January 2011 (UTC)
I don't know, but knowing that two terms are 8 years total puts the 14-month total term into (a meaningful) context. -
Kurr22:57, 10 January 2011 (UTC)
The context seems fine to me. Even if an average term length was 2 years, saying although for 14 months would still be fine. If people are interested in precisely what is normal they are welcome to check out the articles.
Nil Einne (
talk)
15:51, 11 January 2011 (UTC)
Increase in account creation or number of editors?
Hi. I would be interrested in statistics regarding the current banners displayed (those that encourage editing Wikipedia). Are we seeing an immediate effect on the editing? Cheers,
131.111.28.35 (
talk)
13:27, 13 January 2011 (UTC)
Are you referring to the 10th anniversary banners? If so I don't think their primary intention is to encourage editing
Nil Einne (
talk)
13:52, 13 January 2011 (UTC)
No, after the fundraising banners and the fundraising thank you banners, but before the anniversary banners, there was a banner encouraging editing. I clicked it, and there were choices such as
WP:GOCE.
Art LaPella (
talk)
14:56, 13 January 2011 (UTC)
Now I'm wondering why I haven't seen any of these banners... I enabled the gadget that hid the fundraising banners, which presumably hid these too. Anyway, what does this have to do with the Main Page?
Modest Geniustalk23:50, 13 January 2011 (UTC)
Whether it's useful or not to put banners encouraging editing in the main page, even though the current main page doesn't have them.
187.107.0.168 (
talk)
07:41, 14 January 2011 (UTC)
Hi all. Just dropping by to suggest that Main Page patrollers and error reporters install the above script to their Monobook/Vector skin as appropriate. What is does is to highlight links to redirect pages, pages that are up for deletion and disambiguation pages by changing the colour of the displayed links from the standard blue. The last one is most useful, it identifies where a link does not go to the intended target and will help us to pre-emptively clean these up in TFA, OTD, TFP and DYK blurbs. I've suggested this to all editors involved in the FA and Main Page content processes. Regards.
Zunaid12:58, 14 January 2011 (UTC)