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Hi,
On the Fisher–Yates shuffle history page I notice that you wrote the following comment when you reverted the page to the version before the addition of my C language example:
"(rvt C implementation; have pseudo code imp already; rand() % index is biased without accept/reject)"
I was slightly confused by the bias point, as I had looked up and followed "Algorithm P" from Knuth's The Art of Computer Programming Vol 2. I decided to have another look today. By chance I looked in the 3rd edition and saw the description was slightly different. On investigation I realised that the version I had looked up originally was from the 2nd edition. The 2nd edition makes no mention that "division by j should not be used to determine k" (j being the index and k being the random number), that requirement was added in the 3rd edition.
In the past I've always used the % operator to get random numbers within the required range and had no idea that this was not good practice. If instead I had used the following line, would that resolve your bias concerns? The line is suggested in the FAQ of the comp.lang.c newsgroup.
int randomNum = (int) ((double) rand() / ((double) RAND_MAX + 1) * index);
The full amended code can be seen here: http://pastebin.com/MW7TUTJ4
I would also like to understand why you feel there's no need for a C example of "Algorithm P"? I was just trying to improve the page by adding it. Is it really superfluous rather than helpful?
Best wishes, Matthew Mattstan ( talk) 16:44, 4 February 2012 (UTC)
Could you expand on your "There is a small concern that he wants perfect information" comment as I'm intrigued by it. Dpmuk ( talk) 20:21, 13 February 2012 (UTC)
For the kittens -- could you consider smerging Joe Dan Mills Elementary School into the Austin schools article?
Bearian (
talk)
22:42, 5 March 2012 (UTC)
Hi Glrx. Have moved the Talk:Electronic oscillator discussion here as per Chetvorno's suggestion. Hope that is okay with you - please advise otherwise.
I agree that there is confusion around feedback - unfortunately the replies I'm getting aren't useful. I'm not trying to be disruptive; I have encountered a lot of confusion about what seems to be a simple enough concept, and most of that confusion I put down to the use of ambiguous terms. So I'm looking for some sort of guiding context to sort out the ambiguity.
Your comments about the restorative force may be a point in question. Agreed that the sign of the quantity isn't important. The fact that the force is "restorative" is enough to label it "negative feedback" (isn't it?) After all, the point of NF is to restore the status quo by opposing the change (positional difference) that gave rise to the feedback. Regards a positional difference vs a force... I understood that the direction of the force defines the type of feedback: positive = increasing the difference, etc.
And with that understanding, I don't see positive feedback as having any part in either oscillation or amplification. Where do we differ? What is your understanding? Trevithj ( talk) 00:12, 6 March 2012 (UTC)
Maybe the stumbling block is the harmonic oscillator (LC circuit). An electronic oscillator doesn't necessarily have to have a harmonic oscillator (for example, RC oscillators don't) (although I believe it does have to have energy storage devices such as capacitors or inductors to create a phase shift) All it needs is a circuit that forms a feedback loop, with an amplifier in it to replace the energy dissipated in resistances to give a loop gain of one, and the correct phase shift around the loop, 2πN. -- Chetvorno TALK 02:16, 8 March 2012 (UTC)
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=Please Remove {{proposed deletion/dated 27 March 2012}}== and Refer to "Talk:SpiderGraph chart" for Author's "Objection to Deletion" and Response to the concerns mentioned in the 3/27 "Notice of Proposed Deletion" of the WP Article "SpiderGraph chart." Gregory L. Chester 00:00, 1 April 2012 (UTC) Gregory L. Chester 00:13, 1 April 2012 (UTC)
email address added: [email address deleted by Glrx] Gregory L. Chester 00:15, 1 April 2012 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by GregLChest ( talk • contribs)
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ATTN: Glrx
Per your request, I read Mabdul's response to your question #5. In my opinion, as a new Author and having dealt with him from the beginning, when I first contacted the Help Desk, Mabdul & others teased me & gave me the run-around & even placed a 4 letter word in the middle of my article's title! I was so mad that I almost threw in the towel, but I didn't want to let kids get me down. I wanted to report him to his superior, but I didn't want any retaliation!
When I responded to your proposal for deletion, Mabdul was the one that I referred to as being one of the non-technical kids. Mabdul was not totally truthful with you when he mentioned in Question #5that he explained why he deleted my article's Additional reading section. He did not, all he said was "what does this have to do with a spider chart, not realising that the article is also trying to clear up the confusion between the types of charts.
I think the only way to really be fair & impartial, is to reprint his & Charlie's concerns and my reply:
Hi,
I was rechecking my decline and it was simply correct.
This "diff" (a difference between the last decline and your resubmit) shows that you only removed a new line and didn't changed anything. Since I trust User:Ktr101 (the last decliner) and I'm familiar with this draft - I had defacto nothing to check since nothing changed. Moreover I could have declined the draft as advertising or maybe being not neutral because containing: ®, ©, many boldings and italics, advises for readers ( "NOTE: None of the above 6 obscure limitations of Radar charts exists when using SpiderGraph charts, because area is not a factor and all measurements are linear and straight foreward! Consequently, trade-off decisions can be calculated and not estimated, as done with Radar charts!") (which aren't encyclopedic), etc.
I also don't believe that the references you included show any notability since most referring to "radar charting", are unreliable (blogs) or have other problems.
Regards, mabdul 12:28, 22 January 2012 (UTC)
Dear Mabdul,
The previous last change to my article was to remove underlines from the "6 Comments section." The person that declined it said that the article would be "GOOD TO GO" after the underlines where removed! After I did that, I was declined because of Notability, which I answered and then waited several days. After not hearing anything, I resubmitted to get someone's attention, thinking that the objection was corrected. I still haven't heard anything about my reply since it was entered on the 15th. You said that nothing changed. WRONG, the thing that changed was that I answered a Notability decline and heard nothing about my answer.
This article is definitely not about advertising! It's an impartial comparison of two charting methods that the public is confused about! Unfortunately for the Radar Chart, I can't help it that my research turned up so many negative articles about using the Radar Chart, while I was trying to be neutral! I didn't write the articles, I just referenced them!
The NOTE you mentioned, only points out the difference between the two charting methods, which is what the article is all about. Also, I don't understand the ® & © comment?? In the Wikipedia articles that mention Microsoft, it's always followed by ® symbol. The word SpiderGraph also has a Registered Trademark, why can't that be followed by a ® too! A trademark symbol only shows creditability!
I don't think you understand! The Notability is NOT about the references that find fault with the Radar chart, it's about Wikipedia having an article on Radar Charts and NOT HAVING an article about a competitive charting method that's being confused with the Radar chart by the public, that appears to be better after reading all the user comments! By not clearing up the confusion, it says Wikipedia is promoting the confusion!
In the "6 Comments section" you pointed out a problem, so per your comments, I have removed ALL italics, quotation marks and BOLD areas that highlighted the difference between the two charting methods. Unfortunately, that's the reason for the article, which points out the differences between the two charting methods and explains where the confusion may have come from, as well as references 8 examples (out of approx. 45 confused articles that I found).
To address your comment about Blog References: My two (2) largely used references were 1) Ref #1 is from Microsoft and 2) Ref #2 is from a Microsoft & Sun Microsystems Partner by the name of Scott Logic LTD., a rather large technical consultancy with offices in the London, Bristol, Edinburgh, and Newcastle, England. Below is an excerpt taken from their website:
Our (Scott Logic's) Logical Approach The market for nearshore outsourcing within the global financial sector is vast, and is set to grow in the future. Scott Logic is a world-class consultancy geared towards attracting, developing and retaining elite talent to offer world-beating consultancy and create enterprising solutions for our clients.
Our corporate ethos is founded on three central beliefs that underpin all of our team and client management decisions: We build unique working relationships with all our clients, continually striving to appreciate and work in line with their cultural values.
We attract, develop and retain truly world-class talent, and forge tight bonds with our region’s academic community, to assist the development of our client services. We provide a thriving and creative workplace for our team, which helps to deliver the very best results for our clients. END
May I suggest that you look up their website (www.ScottLogic.co.uk). You will discover that it is not your run-of-the-mill Blog! Their Blog critiques on any and all of the latest technical achievements!
In fairness, I would say that most Blogs, in general, have a reputation to guard and only try to offer their comments as a user, finding a problem and offering a possible solution to other users.
Respectfully submitted, GregLChest Gregory L. Chester 23:52, 2 April 2012 (UTC)
MABDUL's REPLY:
Hi Greg, "The person that declined it said that the article would be "GOOD TO GO" after the underlines where removed!" - I was really sad that a new (==unexperienced) user was declining with this reason - because it is simply untrue. Wikipedia is an encyclopedia and I don't think that there is really a place for your article. "After I did that, I was declined because of Notability, which I answered and then waited several days." - "we" reviewers should read a draft independently and with a neutral and fresh opinion and checking all. Mostly this is rather easy, but if somebody thinks that your draft is "good to go" and the next has another opinion - well that's life. I requested User:CharlieEchoTango (an experienced reviewer and administrator) to help us.
"Also, I don't understand the ® & © comment?? In the Wikipedia articles that mention Microsoft, it's always followed by ® symbol. The word SpiderGraph also has been Registered, why can't that be followed by a ® too! A trademark symbol only shows creditability!"
Huch? Please show me where in the article Microsoft is a (c) or a (r) or a tm symbol is - moreover show me any article - if you find any - it should be removed! Please read our policy at Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Trademarks: "Do not use the ™ and ® symbols, or similar, in either article text or citations, unless unavoidably necessary for context (for instance, to distinguish between generic and brand names for drugs)." Companies, music related topics, books, etc. have different notability criteria (e.g. a single was/is in a national chart) - but to verify and prove that, we need third party, reliable, independent references - and I don't see that in your draft. There might be a difference between a radar chart and your spider chart - and it is not a easy topic to write an article for an encyclopedia. Please read also related WP:OTHERSTUFFEXISTS. mabdul 13:10, 24 January 2012 (UTC)
My problem with your MS and Scott references are - they are either talking about radar chart, or they are not independent. You stated somewhere (can't find it at the moment), that you license the spider chart - how do I/the reader know that Scott logic haven't/hadn't licensed your product (and thus not being independent any longer)? You didn't included any references with an editor review! mabdul 13:37, 24 January 2012 (UTC)
(Charlie) intervening in discussion after request at my talk page GregLChest, first, three things : you have a conflict of interest as you apparently coined the term in 1985, the article is largely unsourced to the extent required by WP:V, and all instances of (r), (c), (tm) as well as most instances of italics and repeated wikilinks should be removed. That said, the article is not suitable for an encyclopedia in its current form. The 'charting method' paragraph is unsourced, and reads like a how-to. That's a WP:NOT right here. The 'not to be confused' section is completely unsuitable for an encyclopedia. Some of it seems to be original research attempting to prove a point, e.g. “may have begun between the two types of charts”, “where the simularities should end”, “The answer however”. Some parts read like an advertisement, e.g. “that help you make better, smarter decisions”. In any case, the tone is wrong. Wikipedia should not provide “the answer”, nor should it address the reader directly as a “you”.
I fail to see how the rest of the article is relevant. “Comments regarding limitations...”, etc, these are all unsuitable paragraphs that may have editorial value, but have very little encyclopedic value. Bottom line is, there might be a potential article here given some of the sources, but it would have to be written from scratch as an encyclopedic article, not something one would read in a specialized magazine with the kind of in-depth comparison, advantage vs. disadvantage sales pitch, comments by vested parties, etc, we see here. The conflict of interest issue is a serious one, it is very hard for someone with one to understand how having an editorial tone and purpose is incompatible with an encyclopedic tone and purpose. This is why we strongly discourage editors with a conflict of interest to edit articles about topics they are involved with. CharlieEchoTango (contact) 00:19, 25 January 2012 (UTC)
Dear Mabdul & CharlieEchoTango,
Thanx for your input! I sure hope you can help me make my article more encyclopedic! I also hope I can prove to you both that this is definitely a neutral and impartial article, that's very worthwhile and notable, as well as being long over due!
Mabdul, you were right about the Wikipedia articles that I read, so as you will see, I have followed your advice and removed all Trademark & Copyright Symbols found in the article. I just didn't realize that encyclopedias must have some exception to the laws governing registered symbols, that the outside world doesn't have.
I am referring to the Online Technical Writing: Book Design article, found at URL: http://www.prismnet.com/~hcexres/textbook/book_design.html#editionnotice Referring to: Edition Notice - Copyright & Trademark paragraphs and also the following Trademark Section.
As you can see, I have defined what a SpiderGraph chart is and tried to explain in this article, just how easy and straight forward the SpiderGraph charting method (1981) is by using just three simple steps, which will aid in making "directly calculated and visual" trade-off decisions. Also, noting that there has been a lot of disappointment & confusion regarding the Radar charting method, I have tried to impartially compare, item for item, the SpiderGraph charting method to that of the Excel Radar charting method (9-30-85), to help clear up any misinformation and confusion.
Charlie, whether or not I coined the term SpiderGraph is immaterial. How can you say there's a Conflict of Interest on my part, when I go out of my way to make an impartial comparison, item for item, between the two types of charts? In addition, the 6 Limitations were quoted from other users comments and a little lower, you will see that what they said has been backed-up by a Wikipedia article!
Even you Mabdul, seem to be confused, by stating: There might be a difference between a radar chart and "your spider chart" - and it is not a easy topic to write an article for an encyclopedia. You state that you are quite familiar with my draft, which is about "the SpiderGraph being confused with the Spider chart," and yet above you say "your spider chart!" Consequently, I guess it's also not easy to discern a technical difference, if you're not to technically inclined.
Unfortunately, Microsoft (a competitor) won't be to pleased to learn that they spent millions of dollars to develop the Excel (Geometric) charting method software that uses spreadsheets to indirectly make Radar charts that aid in making "trend estimated" trade-off decisions, that are not as precise as desired. This is attested to in my article by mentioning articles written by some of their unhappy Radar chart users. Wikipedia itself has said as much! (Refer to Wikipedia: Microsoft Excel, under the section labeled "Quirks - Statistical functions.")
My problem with your MS and Scott references are - they are either talking about radar chart, (they are definately talking about Radar charts; Scott is the MS partner/consultant that writes a blog!) or they are not independent. You stated somewhere (can't find it at the moment), that you license the spider chart (I never said that!) - how do I/the reader know that Scott logic haven't/hadn't licensed your product (and thus not being independent any longer)? You didn't included any references with an editor review! (I'm not sure what that meant, but it sounds like you're grabbing at straws!) mabdul 13:37, 24 January 2012 (UTC)
Charlie, after Mabdul's comment: "Wikipedia is an encyclopedia and I don't think that there is really a place for your article." and your comment, I went to WP:NOT per your instructions and here's what I observed:
WP:NOT#DICT 2. Dictionary entries. Encyclopedia articles are about a person, or a group, a concept, a place, a thing, an event, etc. In some cases, a word or phrase itself may be an encyclopedic subject, such as Macedonia (terminology) or truthiness. However, articles rarely, if ever, contain more than one distinct definition or usage of the article's title. Articles about the cultural significance (is public misrepresentation & confusion of cultural significance?) or mathematical significance (is estimation vs. calculation to obtain an answer, a mathematical significance?) of individual numbers (45 companies exhibiting confusion in their articles) are also acceptable.
Reading the above clarification, it seems that my article is exactly the type of material Wikipedia is looking for!
I would also think, that anyone writing an article for Wikipedia "must cover the topic in the most factual and comprehensive way possible!" I also believe that if the writer uncovers any confusion or misinformation, it would be necessary to clear up that misinformation with the facts, in order to eliminate any confusion regarding that topic in the future! And if that confusion developed over 27 years, who could pinpoint where it came from? Knowing that there is confusion after reading 45 different articles, to play safe, one could not make accusations, but one would have to simply imply that "the confusion may have happened in such & such a way!"
Charlie, when you accused me of saying “that help you make better, smarter decisions” or addressing the reader as "you," I guess that you didn't notice that it was followed by my Citation #8, which was taken directly from the Microsoft Excel 2010 product information sheet, word for word!
We're sorry, but we cannot accept unsourced articles, or sources that are not reliable per the verifiability policy. Please cite reliable, third-party sources in the article. Third-party sources are needed so the information can be verified, and so the notability of the topic can be established.
I'm not sure how you could say that this is an unsourced article, you must have overlooked Citations #5 and #15. As far as a reliable third-party source and notable topic, Citation #15 is a reference to an Industry Handbook that can be found in the Library of Congress, which includes a description of the SpiderGraph chart. I would say that for anything to be included in an Industry's Standard Handbook, it would have to be very Notable before that could happen!
The main reason there aren't more sources to reference about the SpiderGraph chart is very obvious, that is, if you know anything about how Internet Search Engines work. Many companies make their living keeping websites on the first page of a search. Without their help, your website moves away from the first page and soon into obscurity and then attrition takes over! However, even though the SpiderGraph chart has been obscure for a few years, it deserves its place in History and that's where your help and Wikipedia come in!
Respectfully submitted, Gregory L. Chester
Gregory L. Chester 23:52, 2 April 2012 (UTC)
SpiderGraph chart - your 3/15 removal of "Additional reading"
Resolved
Dear Mabdul, These "Additional reading" links that you removed questioning their value, have everything to do with the SpiderGraph chart article's Creditabilty! After all, the chart is a "decision-making tool" and these references further the reader's understanding & knowledge regarding the art of making decisions and they definitly compliment this article!
I would appreciate it, if you give the reader more knowledge than they expected from Wikipedia, by putting them back in! After all, they're not hurting anything!!
Thanx for your consideration and professionalism, Gregory L. Chester 21:54, 18 March 2012 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by GregLChest (talk • contribs) I restored them and removed the article from my watchlist. I simply don't have the faith to discuss any more! mabdul 14:04, 19 March 2012 (UTC)
SpiderGraph chart - Additional reading section return
Dear Mabdul, Thanks for reconsidering the Additional reading section and returning it! I'm glad you agreed with me! I think the article works much better now, because of your help! Sincerely yours, Gregory L. Chester 17:17, 19 March 2012 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by GregLChest (talk • contribs)
Respectfully submitted, GregLChest Gregory L. Chester 23:52, 2 April 2012 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by GregLChest ( talk • contribs)
I'm not sure what I should say here. The debate on this topic should be at WP:Articles for deletion/SpiderGraph chart rather than here.
I'd read all the material above before, so copying it here was not appropriate. Please learn how to use links/diffs, how to indent comments on WP:TALK pages with colons, and how to sign your name with four tildes. Dates should not change with pastes; formatting should be preserved.
My sense is that you do not understand the comments that the other editors have made about the SpiderGraph article. I agree with the previous editors criticisms, and they have not been corrected in the current article. You may believe that Mabdul ultimately agreed with you when he reverted the additional reading section, but my view is that Mabdul got tired of dealing with the article and moved on to other things. In effect, you wore him down. The article was copied over from WP:AfC, but I believe that was premature.
What WP wants to see is pretty simple. The SpiderGraph has been around since 1985. If the SpiderGraph is notable, then it should be easy to find some independent secondary references that discuss SpiderGraphs. It's easy to find references (and even criticism) for the radar chart and its many aliases. Even NIST covers them in a guide to statistics. [2] Where is that sort of coverage for the SpiderChart? The original journal article, a narrow industrial automation handbook, and where else? Why aren't SpiderGraphs on Friendly's comprehensive list? ( Chernoff face charts made it.) Why isn't it covered in data visualization texts? If the SpiderGraph is not being noticed and reported on, then it is not notable for WP's purposes.
You claim that SpiderGraphs are better than radar charts, but that claim is original research or synthesis without independent, reliable sources that actually make those observations. WP is driven by reliable sources. Without such sources, material may be challenged and deleted.
Pulling back to the present, any debate belongs on the SpiderGraph chart page at WP:AfD. That's were it counts, and I am only one voice. The debate there should be concise -- it should not be walls of text of previous interactions with editors. The main FeatureLine of interest is WP:N -- how many independent, secondary, reliable sources can be found that discuss SpiderGraphs by name.
![]() | 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. |
Archive 1 | Archive 2 | Archive 3 | Archive 4 | Archive 5 |
Hi,
On the Fisher–Yates shuffle history page I notice that you wrote the following comment when you reverted the page to the version before the addition of my C language example:
"(rvt C implementation; have pseudo code imp already; rand() % index is biased without accept/reject)"
I was slightly confused by the bias point, as I had looked up and followed "Algorithm P" from Knuth's The Art of Computer Programming Vol 2. I decided to have another look today. By chance I looked in the 3rd edition and saw the description was slightly different. On investigation I realised that the version I had looked up originally was from the 2nd edition. The 2nd edition makes no mention that "division by j should not be used to determine k" (j being the index and k being the random number), that requirement was added in the 3rd edition.
In the past I've always used the % operator to get random numbers within the required range and had no idea that this was not good practice. If instead I had used the following line, would that resolve your bias concerns? The line is suggested in the FAQ of the comp.lang.c newsgroup.
int randomNum = (int) ((double) rand() / ((double) RAND_MAX + 1) * index);
The full amended code can be seen here: http://pastebin.com/MW7TUTJ4
I would also like to understand why you feel there's no need for a C example of "Algorithm P"? I was just trying to improve the page by adding it. Is it really superfluous rather than helpful?
Best wishes, Matthew Mattstan ( talk) 16:44, 4 February 2012 (UTC)
Could you expand on your "There is a small concern that he wants perfect information" comment as I'm intrigued by it. Dpmuk ( talk) 20:21, 13 February 2012 (UTC)
For the kittens -- could you consider smerging Joe Dan Mills Elementary School into the Austin schools article?
Bearian (
talk)
22:42, 5 March 2012 (UTC)
Hi Glrx. Have moved the Talk:Electronic oscillator discussion here as per Chetvorno's suggestion. Hope that is okay with you - please advise otherwise.
I agree that there is confusion around feedback - unfortunately the replies I'm getting aren't useful. I'm not trying to be disruptive; I have encountered a lot of confusion about what seems to be a simple enough concept, and most of that confusion I put down to the use of ambiguous terms. So I'm looking for some sort of guiding context to sort out the ambiguity.
Your comments about the restorative force may be a point in question. Agreed that the sign of the quantity isn't important. The fact that the force is "restorative" is enough to label it "negative feedback" (isn't it?) After all, the point of NF is to restore the status quo by opposing the change (positional difference) that gave rise to the feedback. Regards a positional difference vs a force... I understood that the direction of the force defines the type of feedback: positive = increasing the difference, etc.
And with that understanding, I don't see positive feedback as having any part in either oscillation or amplification. Where do we differ? What is your understanding? Trevithj ( talk) 00:12, 6 March 2012 (UTC)
Maybe the stumbling block is the harmonic oscillator (LC circuit). An electronic oscillator doesn't necessarily have to have a harmonic oscillator (for example, RC oscillators don't) (although I believe it does have to have energy storage devices such as capacitors or inductors to create a phase shift) All it needs is a circuit that forms a feedback loop, with an amplifier in it to replace the energy dissipated in resistances to give a loop gain of one, and the correct phase shift around the loop, 2πN. -- Chetvorno TALK 02:16, 8 March 2012 (UTC)
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=Please Remove {{proposed deletion/dated 27 March 2012}}== and Refer to "Talk:SpiderGraph chart" for Author's "Objection to Deletion" and Response to the concerns mentioned in the 3/27 "Notice of Proposed Deletion" of the WP Article "SpiderGraph chart." Gregory L. Chester 00:00, 1 April 2012 (UTC) Gregory L. Chester 00:13, 1 April 2012 (UTC)
email address added: [email address deleted by Glrx] Gregory L. Chester 00:15, 1 April 2012 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by GregLChest ( talk • contribs)
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ATTN: Glrx
Per your request, I read Mabdul's response to your question #5. In my opinion, as a new Author and having dealt with him from the beginning, when I first contacted the Help Desk, Mabdul & others teased me & gave me the run-around & even placed a 4 letter word in the middle of my article's title! I was so mad that I almost threw in the towel, but I didn't want to let kids get me down. I wanted to report him to his superior, but I didn't want any retaliation!
When I responded to your proposal for deletion, Mabdul was the one that I referred to as being one of the non-technical kids. Mabdul was not totally truthful with you when he mentioned in Question #5that he explained why he deleted my article's Additional reading section. He did not, all he said was "what does this have to do with a spider chart, not realising that the article is also trying to clear up the confusion between the types of charts.
I think the only way to really be fair & impartial, is to reprint his & Charlie's concerns and my reply:
Hi,
I was rechecking my decline and it was simply correct.
This "diff" (a difference between the last decline and your resubmit) shows that you only removed a new line and didn't changed anything. Since I trust User:Ktr101 (the last decliner) and I'm familiar with this draft - I had defacto nothing to check since nothing changed. Moreover I could have declined the draft as advertising or maybe being not neutral because containing: ®, ©, many boldings and italics, advises for readers ( "NOTE: None of the above 6 obscure limitations of Radar charts exists when using SpiderGraph charts, because area is not a factor and all measurements are linear and straight foreward! Consequently, trade-off decisions can be calculated and not estimated, as done with Radar charts!") (which aren't encyclopedic), etc.
I also don't believe that the references you included show any notability since most referring to "radar charting", are unreliable (blogs) or have other problems.
Regards, mabdul 12:28, 22 January 2012 (UTC)
Dear Mabdul,
The previous last change to my article was to remove underlines from the "6 Comments section." The person that declined it said that the article would be "GOOD TO GO" after the underlines where removed! After I did that, I was declined because of Notability, which I answered and then waited several days. After not hearing anything, I resubmitted to get someone's attention, thinking that the objection was corrected. I still haven't heard anything about my reply since it was entered on the 15th. You said that nothing changed. WRONG, the thing that changed was that I answered a Notability decline and heard nothing about my answer.
This article is definitely not about advertising! It's an impartial comparison of two charting methods that the public is confused about! Unfortunately for the Radar Chart, I can't help it that my research turned up so many negative articles about using the Radar Chart, while I was trying to be neutral! I didn't write the articles, I just referenced them!
The NOTE you mentioned, only points out the difference between the two charting methods, which is what the article is all about. Also, I don't understand the ® & © comment?? In the Wikipedia articles that mention Microsoft, it's always followed by ® symbol. The word SpiderGraph also has a Registered Trademark, why can't that be followed by a ® too! A trademark symbol only shows creditability!
I don't think you understand! The Notability is NOT about the references that find fault with the Radar chart, it's about Wikipedia having an article on Radar Charts and NOT HAVING an article about a competitive charting method that's being confused with the Radar chart by the public, that appears to be better after reading all the user comments! By not clearing up the confusion, it says Wikipedia is promoting the confusion!
In the "6 Comments section" you pointed out a problem, so per your comments, I have removed ALL italics, quotation marks and BOLD areas that highlighted the difference between the two charting methods. Unfortunately, that's the reason for the article, which points out the differences between the two charting methods and explains where the confusion may have come from, as well as references 8 examples (out of approx. 45 confused articles that I found).
To address your comment about Blog References: My two (2) largely used references were 1) Ref #1 is from Microsoft and 2) Ref #2 is from a Microsoft & Sun Microsystems Partner by the name of Scott Logic LTD., a rather large technical consultancy with offices in the London, Bristol, Edinburgh, and Newcastle, England. Below is an excerpt taken from their website:
Our (Scott Logic's) Logical Approach The market for nearshore outsourcing within the global financial sector is vast, and is set to grow in the future. Scott Logic is a world-class consultancy geared towards attracting, developing and retaining elite talent to offer world-beating consultancy and create enterprising solutions for our clients.
Our corporate ethos is founded on three central beliefs that underpin all of our team and client management decisions: We build unique working relationships with all our clients, continually striving to appreciate and work in line with their cultural values.
We attract, develop and retain truly world-class talent, and forge tight bonds with our region’s academic community, to assist the development of our client services. We provide a thriving and creative workplace for our team, which helps to deliver the very best results for our clients. END
May I suggest that you look up their website (www.ScottLogic.co.uk). You will discover that it is not your run-of-the-mill Blog! Their Blog critiques on any and all of the latest technical achievements!
In fairness, I would say that most Blogs, in general, have a reputation to guard and only try to offer their comments as a user, finding a problem and offering a possible solution to other users.
Respectfully submitted, GregLChest Gregory L. Chester 23:52, 2 April 2012 (UTC)
MABDUL's REPLY:
Hi Greg, "The person that declined it said that the article would be "GOOD TO GO" after the underlines where removed!" - I was really sad that a new (==unexperienced) user was declining with this reason - because it is simply untrue. Wikipedia is an encyclopedia and I don't think that there is really a place for your article. "After I did that, I was declined because of Notability, which I answered and then waited several days." - "we" reviewers should read a draft independently and with a neutral and fresh opinion and checking all. Mostly this is rather easy, but if somebody thinks that your draft is "good to go" and the next has another opinion - well that's life. I requested User:CharlieEchoTango (an experienced reviewer and administrator) to help us.
"Also, I don't understand the ® & © comment?? In the Wikipedia articles that mention Microsoft, it's always followed by ® symbol. The word SpiderGraph also has been Registered, why can't that be followed by a ® too! A trademark symbol only shows creditability!"
Huch? Please show me where in the article Microsoft is a (c) or a (r) or a tm symbol is - moreover show me any article - if you find any - it should be removed! Please read our policy at Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Trademarks: "Do not use the ™ and ® symbols, or similar, in either article text or citations, unless unavoidably necessary for context (for instance, to distinguish between generic and brand names for drugs)." Companies, music related topics, books, etc. have different notability criteria (e.g. a single was/is in a national chart) - but to verify and prove that, we need third party, reliable, independent references - and I don't see that in your draft. There might be a difference between a radar chart and your spider chart - and it is not a easy topic to write an article for an encyclopedia. Please read also related WP:OTHERSTUFFEXISTS. mabdul 13:10, 24 January 2012 (UTC)
My problem with your MS and Scott references are - they are either talking about radar chart, or they are not independent. You stated somewhere (can't find it at the moment), that you license the spider chart - how do I/the reader know that Scott logic haven't/hadn't licensed your product (and thus not being independent any longer)? You didn't included any references with an editor review! mabdul 13:37, 24 January 2012 (UTC)
(Charlie) intervening in discussion after request at my talk page GregLChest, first, three things : you have a conflict of interest as you apparently coined the term in 1985, the article is largely unsourced to the extent required by WP:V, and all instances of (r), (c), (tm) as well as most instances of italics and repeated wikilinks should be removed. That said, the article is not suitable for an encyclopedia in its current form. The 'charting method' paragraph is unsourced, and reads like a how-to. That's a WP:NOT right here. The 'not to be confused' section is completely unsuitable for an encyclopedia. Some of it seems to be original research attempting to prove a point, e.g. “may have begun between the two types of charts”, “where the simularities should end”, “The answer however”. Some parts read like an advertisement, e.g. “that help you make better, smarter decisions”. In any case, the tone is wrong. Wikipedia should not provide “the answer”, nor should it address the reader directly as a “you”.
I fail to see how the rest of the article is relevant. “Comments regarding limitations...”, etc, these are all unsuitable paragraphs that may have editorial value, but have very little encyclopedic value. Bottom line is, there might be a potential article here given some of the sources, but it would have to be written from scratch as an encyclopedic article, not something one would read in a specialized magazine with the kind of in-depth comparison, advantage vs. disadvantage sales pitch, comments by vested parties, etc, we see here. The conflict of interest issue is a serious one, it is very hard for someone with one to understand how having an editorial tone and purpose is incompatible with an encyclopedic tone and purpose. This is why we strongly discourage editors with a conflict of interest to edit articles about topics they are involved with. CharlieEchoTango (contact) 00:19, 25 January 2012 (UTC)
Dear Mabdul & CharlieEchoTango,
Thanx for your input! I sure hope you can help me make my article more encyclopedic! I also hope I can prove to you both that this is definitely a neutral and impartial article, that's very worthwhile and notable, as well as being long over due!
Mabdul, you were right about the Wikipedia articles that I read, so as you will see, I have followed your advice and removed all Trademark & Copyright Symbols found in the article. I just didn't realize that encyclopedias must have some exception to the laws governing registered symbols, that the outside world doesn't have.
I am referring to the Online Technical Writing: Book Design article, found at URL: http://www.prismnet.com/~hcexres/textbook/book_design.html#editionnotice Referring to: Edition Notice - Copyright & Trademark paragraphs and also the following Trademark Section.
As you can see, I have defined what a SpiderGraph chart is and tried to explain in this article, just how easy and straight forward the SpiderGraph charting method (1981) is by using just three simple steps, which will aid in making "directly calculated and visual" trade-off decisions. Also, noting that there has been a lot of disappointment & confusion regarding the Radar charting method, I have tried to impartially compare, item for item, the SpiderGraph charting method to that of the Excel Radar charting method (9-30-85), to help clear up any misinformation and confusion.
Charlie, whether or not I coined the term SpiderGraph is immaterial. How can you say there's a Conflict of Interest on my part, when I go out of my way to make an impartial comparison, item for item, between the two types of charts? In addition, the 6 Limitations were quoted from other users comments and a little lower, you will see that what they said has been backed-up by a Wikipedia article!
Even you Mabdul, seem to be confused, by stating: There might be a difference between a radar chart and "your spider chart" - and it is not a easy topic to write an article for an encyclopedia. You state that you are quite familiar with my draft, which is about "the SpiderGraph being confused with the Spider chart," and yet above you say "your spider chart!" Consequently, I guess it's also not easy to discern a technical difference, if you're not to technically inclined.
Unfortunately, Microsoft (a competitor) won't be to pleased to learn that they spent millions of dollars to develop the Excel (Geometric) charting method software that uses spreadsheets to indirectly make Radar charts that aid in making "trend estimated" trade-off decisions, that are not as precise as desired. This is attested to in my article by mentioning articles written by some of their unhappy Radar chart users. Wikipedia itself has said as much! (Refer to Wikipedia: Microsoft Excel, under the section labeled "Quirks - Statistical functions.")
My problem with your MS and Scott references are - they are either talking about radar chart, (they are definately talking about Radar charts; Scott is the MS partner/consultant that writes a blog!) or they are not independent. You stated somewhere (can't find it at the moment), that you license the spider chart (I never said that!) - how do I/the reader know that Scott logic haven't/hadn't licensed your product (and thus not being independent any longer)? You didn't included any references with an editor review! (I'm not sure what that meant, but it sounds like you're grabbing at straws!) mabdul 13:37, 24 January 2012 (UTC)
Charlie, after Mabdul's comment: "Wikipedia is an encyclopedia and I don't think that there is really a place for your article." and your comment, I went to WP:NOT per your instructions and here's what I observed:
WP:NOT#DICT 2. Dictionary entries. Encyclopedia articles are about a person, or a group, a concept, a place, a thing, an event, etc. In some cases, a word or phrase itself may be an encyclopedic subject, such as Macedonia (terminology) or truthiness. However, articles rarely, if ever, contain more than one distinct definition or usage of the article's title. Articles about the cultural significance (is public misrepresentation & confusion of cultural significance?) or mathematical significance (is estimation vs. calculation to obtain an answer, a mathematical significance?) of individual numbers (45 companies exhibiting confusion in their articles) are also acceptable.
Reading the above clarification, it seems that my article is exactly the type of material Wikipedia is looking for!
I would also think, that anyone writing an article for Wikipedia "must cover the topic in the most factual and comprehensive way possible!" I also believe that if the writer uncovers any confusion or misinformation, it would be necessary to clear up that misinformation with the facts, in order to eliminate any confusion regarding that topic in the future! And if that confusion developed over 27 years, who could pinpoint where it came from? Knowing that there is confusion after reading 45 different articles, to play safe, one could not make accusations, but one would have to simply imply that "the confusion may have happened in such & such a way!"
Charlie, when you accused me of saying “that help you make better, smarter decisions” or addressing the reader as "you," I guess that you didn't notice that it was followed by my Citation #8, which was taken directly from the Microsoft Excel 2010 product information sheet, word for word!
We're sorry, but we cannot accept unsourced articles, or sources that are not reliable per the verifiability policy. Please cite reliable, third-party sources in the article. Third-party sources are needed so the information can be verified, and so the notability of the topic can be established.
I'm not sure how you could say that this is an unsourced article, you must have overlooked Citations #5 and #15. As far as a reliable third-party source and notable topic, Citation #15 is a reference to an Industry Handbook that can be found in the Library of Congress, which includes a description of the SpiderGraph chart. I would say that for anything to be included in an Industry's Standard Handbook, it would have to be very Notable before that could happen!
The main reason there aren't more sources to reference about the SpiderGraph chart is very obvious, that is, if you know anything about how Internet Search Engines work. Many companies make their living keeping websites on the first page of a search. Without their help, your website moves away from the first page and soon into obscurity and then attrition takes over! However, even though the SpiderGraph chart has been obscure for a few years, it deserves its place in History and that's where your help and Wikipedia come in!
Respectfully submitted, Gregory L. Chester
Gregory L. Chester 23:52, 2 April 2012 (UTC)
SpiderGraph chart - your 3/15 removal of "Additional reading"
Resolved
Dear Mabdul, These "Additional reading" links that you removed questioning their value, have everything to do with the SpiderGraph chart article's Creditabilty! After all, the chart is a "decision-making tool" and these references further the reader's understanding & knowledge regarding the art of making decisions and they definitly compliment this article!
I would appreciate it, if you give the reader more knowledge than they expected from Wikipedia, by putting them back in! After all, they're not hurting anything!!
Thanx for your consideration and professionalism, Gregory L. Chester 21:54, 18 March 2012 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by GregLChest (talk • contribs) I restored them and removed the article from my watchlist. I simply don't have the faith to discuss any more! mabdul 14:04, 19 March 2012 (UTC)
SpiderGraph chart - Additional reading section return
Dear Mabdul, Thanks for reconsidering the Additional reading section and returning it! I'm glad you agreed with me! I think the article works much better now, because of your help! Sincerely yours, Gregory L. Chester 17:17, 19 March 2012 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by GregLChest (talk • contribs)
Respectfully submitted, GregLChest Gregory L. Chester 23:52, 2 April 2012 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by GregLChest ( talk • contribs)
I'm not sure what I should say here. The debate on this topic should be at WP:Articles for deletion/SpiderGraph chart rather than here.
I'd read all the material above before, so copying it here was not appropriate. Please learn how to use links/diffs, how to indent comments on WP:TALK pages with colons, and how to sign your name with four tildes. Dates should not change with pastes; formatting should be preserved.
My sense is that you do not understand the comments that the other editors have made about the SpiderGraph article. I agree with the previous editors criticisms, and they have not been corrected in the current article. You may believe that Mabdul ultimately agreed with you when he reverted the additional reading section, but my view is that Mabdul got tired of dealing with the article and moved on to other things. In effect, you wore him down. The article was copied over from WP:AfC, but I believe that was premature.
What WP wants to see is pretty simple. The SpiderGraph has been around since 1985. If the SpiderGraph is notable, then it should be easy to find some independent secondary references that discuss SpiderGraphs. It's easy to find references (and even criticism) for the radar chart and its many aliases. Even NIST covers them in a guide to statistics. [2] Where is that sort of coverage for the SpiderChart? The original journal article, a narrow industrial automation handbook, and where else? Why aren't SpiderGraphs on Friendly's comprehensive list? ( Chernoff face charts made it.) Why isn't it covered in data visualization texts? If the SpiderGraph is not being noticed and reported on, then it is not notable for WP's purposes.
You claim that SpiderGraphs are better than radar charts, but that claim is original research or synthesis without independent, reliable sources that actually make those observations. WP is driven by reliable sources. Without such sources, material may be challenged and deleted.
Pulling back to the present, any debate belongs on the SpiderGraph chart page at WP:AfD. That's were it counts, and I am only one voice. The debate there should be concise -- it should not be walls of text of previous interactions with editors. The main FeatureLine of interest is WP:N -- how many independent, secondary, reliable sources can be found that discuss SpiderGraphs by name.