Stable: Will be only be updated every four years or so
Well-organised: Easy to find any required information
Uncontroversial: no edit wars or disuptes of any kind, ever
Standards / style manual: Layout is clear and concise
Images: Sole image has approriate copyright status
This is the second time this list has been submitted for featured list status (
first time) It failed due to lack of support, rather than opposition. The suggestions amde last time round ave been incorprated. The list was put up for peer review (
read), anmd the few comments made have been acted on.
Tompw14:51, 19 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Could you point out exactly which of the
featured list criteria this list fails to satsisfy as a result of your objection? Crtieria 1f states that "the list is easy to navigate, and is annotated with additional information, as appropriate". This list satisifes that.
Tompw12:06, 23 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Comment A good list order comes under "professional standards of writing and presentation" and also "easy to navigate". So I think this complaint is technically valid but the closing editor should judge how important it is. Three editors questioned/opposed the reverse-chrono order in the last review. Personally, I think there are good arguments for reverse-chrono and think the presentation would be satisfactory in either order. Clearly, there are advantages for all the related Lists of XX general elections to be consistent in their order.
Colin°
Talk13:30, 23 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Taking the lists of general elections for the other Canadian provinces and territories where someone other than me fixed the order:
So "latest first" is in the majority by six to two. Changeing SK's to earliest first would make it less consistent. Please note I'm *not* saying earliest first is wrong. I'm saying both are acceptable, so there is no need to change (like UK vs. US spelling).
Tompw14:44, 23 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Support, but consider replacing class="toccolours" with class="sortable toccolours" to the top row of the table; it's ideal for this sort of table, and allows users to sort the table automatically.
Laïka22:50, 25 November 2006 (UTC)reply
When I first saw this in action, I also thought it would be ideal. However, a few issues emerged:
class="sortable toccolours" doesn't allow any wikilinks in column headings. This means no party wikilinks, and no footnotes (see Renata's point below).
It sorts numbers alphabetically, not numerically. So, sorting by the NDP column puts the 1982 row (9 seats) ahead of the 1991 row (55 seats), and also puts the 1934 row (2 seats) in between the 1967 row (22 seats) and the 1938 row (10 seats).
Sorting by anything over than year means no nice alternate pale grey/paler grey row backgrounds.
Consequently , I've reverted back to class="toccolours". If they ever get the numbers and wikilinks issues sorted out, I'll use it. Thanks for the suggestion though :-)
Tompw15:58, 26 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Oppose for now - I would prefer if the wording in the "Summary" section would be less self-refering. It can be done by adding a "Notes" section and using ref tags. For example, add a note to the heading colunm on Conservatives that "Results in Conservative column include all results for the Progressive Conservatives". Also spelling out CCF and NDP would not hurt.
Renata22:51, 25 November 2006 (UTC)reply
It is not uncommon to use the old ref/note system with letter labels for true footnotes, and keep the <ref> system for numbered inline citations. This article has no inline citations.
Colin°
Talk09:03, 27 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Support Very good- keep up the good work! As I said last time, I think that if the list were in chronological order, not reverse-chron it would actually be less useful. --
G Rutter13:03, 27 November 2006 (UTC)reply
This has been brought to the quality level that the 2004-2006 NFL Drafts, all featured lists, have been brought up to. It is detailed with plenty of references, and the intro is also about as good as I can make it. --
Wizardman18:17, 18 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Support A very comprehensive list, that tells you just about everything you need to know about this draft. Wonderful work.
KOS |
talk08:53, 22 November 2006 (UTC)reply
The first "External link"
2003 NFL Draft is clearly the general reference used for this list and so should be named as the reference (a bullet point at the end of the References section). Less sure about the second one – did you use it as a reference or is it just supplementary info?
The citations/external link formatting need to be improved. You need to give the full title of the web page/news article, the author (if available), the publisher and the date published. The {{cite web}} and {{cite news}} templates are recommended.
The Mr Irrelevant comment isn't a reference (it is a footnote) and isn't really required since it just repeats what the lead says.
You know I never realized that references had to be cited like that. Learn as you go I guess. Anyway Colin and Renata, the refs have been fixed now. --
Wizardman03:06, 26 November 2006 (UTC)reply
We didn't mean for you to remove the footnotes, which I've new restored. All that is required is that the citations are as complete and accurate as possible. The templates help by prompting you for such attributes as author, date, etc and do some simple formatting. Some folk prefer to hand-format so don't like the templates – they aren't mandatory. Don't bother with "format" for HTML pages – it is only useful for uncommon document types like PowerPoint or Word.
Colin°
Talk09:39, 26 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Comment It could use another image. I don't know what could be found, but it looks like a wall of text. Other than that, though, it looks like a pretty good list.
Hurricanehink (
talk)
23:33, 27 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Comment: Wow, you referenced like every single one. Was that necessary? Maybe, I guess, I'm not one to judge on that. Doesn't look too bad, I'm leaning towards support but I'd like the lead to explain a little bit more about the list (such as which one was the first to win gold, the one with the most medals, etc.) --
Wizardman02:51, 19 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Update - photos have been added, and more information has been provided about the first gold medal winners, first female competitors, the events in which Australia are strong, who has won the most medals, most golds, most at one Olympics etc. Thanks, Blnguyen (
bananabucket)
02:31, 20 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Support. Top job Blnguyen. Many hours have gone into that I bet. And what also amazes me is that the vast majority of those articles are substantial - there's no substubs that I could see and most are well beyond stub-dom. The list is referenced, well laid out and most importantly, useful. —
Moondyne01:07, 20 November 2006 (UTC)reply
P.S. I made the references section go into two columns so it looks a little better. There are a lot, but you well-researched and that's all that counts. Also, like above, a See also'd be nice.
→JARED(t)00:19, 21 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Comment The references needlessly gives the full citation for "Australia at the Olympics" for every single usage. Some other lists/articles separate the Notes (brief author(year):page) from the frequently consulted References (full citation) to avoid this.
Colin°
Talk23:28, 25 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Support - Nice work. However, the list inherently cannot be "Stable"! It would require regular updating. As there is a precedence of a similar list getting featured status, I hope the editors would take care of this aspect. How about adding a national flag on the right upper corner?--
Dwaipayan (
talk)
11:47, 14 November 2006 (UTC)reply
This kind of dynamic list has come up before - it will require regular updating, but that does not make it "unstable" (that is more about controversy and edit wars). An "as of" date will be needed so the reader knows how up-to-date it is. --
ALoan(Talk)14:02, 23 November 2006 (UTC)reply
This list meets all of the criteria for a featured list. Images used in the article have been checked for the approriate useages. Clearly defined criteria for inclusion on the list is outlined on the
Talk page. This is a self-nomination. --
Gadget850 ( Ed)18:08, 6 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Oppose The main reason being the lack on inline citations for each and every person. Have a look at the other FL of people (and the list of Telecaster players below) for how this can be done. I believe
VegaDark is working on doing a similar transformation to
List of Oregon State University people (currently in his own sandbox) – you might find it helpful to discuss with him due to the similarities of the lists. Other issues:
Images CFJ3.jpg, William Hanna01.jpg, TIME Magazine Dec. 12, 2005.jpg, Ray Suarez.jpg and Samwalton.jpg are copyright and a fair use claim is not supportable for this list. They should be removed or a free alternative found.
Thanks- the images in question have been removed. --
Gadget850 ( Ed)
The Gold Eagle.jpg icon should really be a PNG. Saving it as a JPG has made it fuzzy. Have a look at the Help on images. Its size is a little intrusive. Consider making it smaller or just use some other indicator, perhaps just a coloured text character such as a golden •.
Many of the sources don't count as
reliable. Personal (or local scout troop) web sites might be just about OK for the occasional citation here and there (where they give a bio for somebody for example) but the ones that have huge unsourced lists are not acceptable. NNDB is also not a reliable source, as it is largely reader-sourced. The official scouting web sites (.org addresses) are a better bet. Sorry if this means a lot of your names don't have reliable sources. Wikipedia is only as good as its foundation.
I removed NNDB- this is a known suspect source that I did not notice had creeped back in. --
Gadget850 ( Ed)
The Troop 179 references are compiled from BSA information and are known to be reliable. --
Gadget850 ( Ed)
So- we need a cite for each entry? We have ensured that each of the linked articles have a proper citation. --
Gadget850 ( Ed)
OK- we will work that. Every article has been carefully cited, so it is just a matter of copying those cites to the list. Many are going to be duplicated from one of the canonical lists, so that cuts a bit of work. --
Gadget850 ( Ed)16:59, 7 November 2006 (UTC)reply
You need cites for all the incorrect names too. If you can't find some right now, move those to the talk page.
Your Troop & Pack 179 ref is repeated several times. Is it too long that it breaks wiki or do you just think it looks nicer in chunks? Some may think it devious to hide how often this ref is relied on ;-).
The statistics in the lead need citations.
The last sentence in the lead needs backing up with a good source - otherwise it just looks like your opinion.
It is a pretty long list, which makes it less interesting to browse IMO. I wonder if you would consider chopping it into chunks based on profession. E.g. Sports, Politics, Arts, Military, Astronauts, ... Then folk can get a feel for where these scouts ended up. Does anyone else think that's a good idea? It would be a bit of effort, but I think it might be worth it.
Yes, the are so many using the T179 ref that it breaks wiki, so we had to break it up. I built that page from a official hard copy from BSA. I think it's better in alpha order, otherwise, you'd have to look at each topic to find someone whom you weren't familiar with.
Rlevse23:02, 13 November 2006 (UTC)reply
If you take a look at the reference section in this
older version, you will see that cite.php kinda blows up after the bz tag. Breaking it up was the only way I could figure to fix it- I welcome any other way to do this. The T179 reference is a known good cite, based on a compilation of BSA information. --
Gadget850 ( Ed)23:14, 13 November 2006 (UTC)reply
The lead cites are complete.
I removed the last sentence as an unsourced opinion.
Splitting by profession... is Bill Bradley more famous as a basketball player or a politician? Most astronauts were/are military, many politicians were military. Many of the folks had multiple careers. I welcome any thoughts on this, but the only way I can see this is to split it into separate articles with a lot of overlap.
Support I think my serious objections have been addressed. Grouping has been done successfully on other people lists. I wouldn't get too worried if there is overlap. Just pick what you think it the natural group for what they were most notable for. Wrt finding someone you weren't familiar with: 1) If you don't know them well enough to know why they were famous, then why on earth would you be interested in whether they were an Eagle Scout and 2) All browsers have a Find feature.
Colin°
Talk16:39, 15 November 2006 (UTC)reply
I highly object to grouping. Alphabetical makes far more sense to me. Colin's item one only makes sense for an educated adult--what about a young Scout just learning of his famous predecessors and goes on wiki to find out and for item two, we shouldn't have to find what group they were put in, just go to their name.—The preceding
unsigned comment was added by
Rlevse (
talk •
contribs) 16:54, 15 November 2006.
Examples are
List of people with epilepsy,
List of HIV-positive people,
List of notable brain tumor patients, and
List of Oregon State University people (not yet featured and being extensively reworked on
User:VegaDark's sandbox). I really don't buy the young Scout story. Nobody finds the telephone book fascinating, but it has a purpose if you already know the name and don't have a Find button. Why would this scout remember someone's name without being told why they are famous. Surely it would be more interesting for young/old to see how many astronauts, sports stars or politicans were once Eagle Scouts. This info is burried in a monolithic list. Grouping encourages research and learning since they will find other names who are famous for similar reasons, click on those links, etc, etc.
Colin°
Talk22:59, 15 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Conditional Support pending these three notes being addressed. (1) Make it clearer on the talk page guidelines that an eagle scout notable enough for a Wikipedia article must be included in the list (assuming the fact that they are an Eagle can be sourced). (2) Consider converting it to a table format with name, birth-death dates, profession, date of Eagle award, etc. although this wouldn't jive well with the current picture scheme (this is just a suggestion). (3) Fix the title.
Eagle Scout is a disambiguation page between several awards. Does this list include all Eagle Scouts or (I suspect) only BSA Eagle Scouts?
savidan(talk)(e@)02:54, 14 November 2006 (UTC)reply
1- Changed may to should.
2- We had long discussions about going to a table format and the consensus was against.
3- Will think on this. Given the project standard, I reckon it should be List of notable Eagle Scouts (Boy Scouts of America)
Support excellent, well-documented list. Very informative. I vote for keeping it alphabetical and for adding (Boy Scouts of America) to the title.
Sumoeagle17902:28, 17 November 2006 (UTC)reply
After weeks of review and improvement, I think that this list is worthy of featured status. In accordance with the criteria, it is useful, comprehensive, factually accurate, stable, uncontroversial and well-constructed. Self-nom by
Cliff smith19:20, 5 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Support I believe the article meets the FL criteria and has steadily improved over the last month. Please note that I have contributed to this article.--
Opark 7722:42, 5 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Comment Agree, the references/notes/external links aren't right. Put the full citation from your "references" into the linked "notes". Then move the "external links" you actually used as general references into the "references" section. Then ditch the external links.
Colin°
Talk19:54, 6 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Object I'm going to have to make my normal "one sentence paragraphs" objection. I still feel that episode summaries should be a full paragraph.
Jay32183 22:59, 6 November 2006 (UTC)Conditional Support Based on the good faith effort I've seen in improving the episodes and noting that it is almost complete, I support if the remaining episodes are brought up to the standard as those that have been updated. Unaired episodes can remain in the state they are in, until a reasonable amount of time after the initial broadcast.
Jay3218319:11, 15 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Interesting point. However, two other featured episode lists--South Park and Stargate SG-1--only have one/two-sentence episode summaries. There is no guideline on the length of an episode summary in a list, however one paragraph is a little excessive since each episode has its own article. —
Cliff smith01:13, 7 November 2006 (UTC)reply
I actually feel both of those lists are insufficient and that a single paragraph is not too much as an individual episode article should have at least three paragraphs of synopsis, rather than one of summary. It doesn't matter how well formatted the list is if it's text is poorly written.
Jay3218321:39, 7 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Here's the thing, Jay--I understand your opinion, but your objection is rather inactionable because 1) There is no guideline on the length of an episode summary in a list (as previously stated); and 2) Your objection doesn't pertain to any specific aspect of
WP:WIAFL, which is what is truly important here.
One problem. The definition of Featured List includes the phrase "represents Wikipedia's best work". This list does not, and there are two actions you could take to satisfy my object, therefore making it actionable. Expand the summaries to full paragraphs or remove the summaries completely. Neither of these actions are unreasonable as neither requires and overabundance of work or resources and both improve the overall quality of the project. If you do not take either of these actions my objection will not be dropped. I have not presented a request that is unreasonable, so my objection probably won't be ignored either.
Jay3218302:50, 8 November 2006 (UTC)reply
This vote is for deciding whether this list meats the critera as laid out in the
WP:WIAFL and as such "represents Wikipedia's best work" in its capacity as a list. As Cliff Smith stated, no where in those guide lines does it state a rule on the length of an episode summary. Your objection appears to be based more on personal preference than the guidelines.
Qjuad03:11, 8 November 2006 (UTC)reply
This is not a vote. I have presented an actionable case as to why this does not represent Wikipedia's best work. Any prose that is included must be up to the standards of prose for the encyclopedia. It's not a simple checklist, those are the general guidelines. Arguing with me will not change anything. Either follow one of the two actions I suggested or my objection will never be retracted. I've participated in enough FAR's and FARC's to know that arguing against a concern with a recommened, reasonable action never generates featured status. By the way, I'm not actually talking about the length of the summary but the quality of the writing. One sentence paragraphs are not good writing, they may not be bad, but any writing included needs to be the best.
Jay3218304:19, 8 November 2006 (UTC)reply
I have an idea for compromise. It is this--
The making of a spoiler-free LOE for The Sopranos; and
Expanding the episode summaries on this list.
Jay, your assistance would be very appreciated in the undertaking of the latter, since I think you know a great deal about matters of this nature. Also, as with the LOEs for Stargate SG-1, the spoiler-free version would be the exact same thing, minus episode summaries. Should this current FLC nomination fail, the new list could be nominated; and hopefully this one will reach the same status after its proposed expansion. What do you think? —
Cliff smith04:32, 8 November 2006 (UTC)reply
I can get behind that. I'll try to help anyway I can, but should inform you I haven't watched "The Sopranos" so I can copy edit, but I won't be able to comfortably write any new material for you. If you don't want any plot in the spoiler-free version that shouldn't be a difficult task, and I'll definitely help there if you like.
Jay3218304:41, 8 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Good job. I've gone ahead and wikilinked all the dates on the main page, I just noticed they weren't. Can't forget to respect users' date preferences.
Jay3218305:22, 8 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Reset indents. Jay, I actually went through and removed all the date links as part of the peer review. This was a suggestion of the automated peer review and I actioned it as I felt they add little context to the article. I don't quite follow you when you say "Can't forget to respect users' date preferences." Could you explain this a bit more?--
Opark 7722:19, 9 November 2006 (UTC)reply
The automated peer review isn't worded clearly to reflect the policy. Whenever you have a complete date as in Month Day, Year or just Month Day, you are supposed to link it because of users date preferences. For instance, my birthdate can be
March 211983 or
21 March1983 or
1983-03-21. If you set your date preferences you saw all three of those as the same. When you have Month Year or just Month or just Year, you don't link unless it provides context. If Spring 2007 had been linked that would have triggered the automated peer review as it should not be linked.
Jay3218322:38, 9 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Thanks Jay that clarifies it. Good work on the spoiler free article guys, that looks great for something that has come up so fast.--
Opark 7722:49, 9 November 2006 (UTC)reply
This is a touchy issue right now. Some people complain that too many images are being used. Others complain that the contribution isn't significant enough. Some see no problem at all. It seems to be a discussion that won't resolve anytime soon. I can't predict how Renata's objection will be handled if it is the only objection left when this closes. I can say that images are optional, so it's really up to how willing you are to argue. I won't object to either an images list or a no images list, but that may just be me.
Jay3218304:22, 12 November 2006 (UTC)reply
(To Renata's positon) Here's the thing about LOEs: They can either have images or not have images. Whether or not images are a part of the list doesn't really affect the quality of the list. However, images that are subject appropriate are part of
the criteria for a featured list. Then again, the image of the title screen and the images of the DVD art would satisfy the criteria. So at this point, I am indifferent as to whether or not there are screenshot images on this LOE. If it is of greater than little importance, the future of the screenshots can be voted upon at the talk page for this list. But note that if they end up being taken down, this opposition should be retracted (I only say this because I've seen instances when something is changed that would make a position inactionable, but the position wasn't retracted). —
Cliff smith04:48, 13 November 2006 (UTC)reply
This list has underwent a
peer review, albeit with no constructive response.
This list is useful (vast majority of blue links), comprehensive (more so than the Norwegian version it was based upon), factually accurate (good references), stable and uncontroversial. I also reckon it is well-constructed, I hope the table is fully understandable. The lead section provides a good background and overview, hopefully not too long. Self-nom by
Punkmorten14:35, 4 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Support I don't think we've had a featured list of things that don't exist. Rather than one big table, could you group them into counties (as with
Municipalities of Norway), or have the county boundaries changed too? I think that would make a big improvement to navigability. If this isn't possible, could you add the county as a column? Currently, there are two each of Borge, Borgund, Eid, Mo, and three of Nes. Rename the "Other" section to "Notes". It might be nice to include a translation of your reference's titles? I guess we'll just have to take your word for it on the references.
Colin°
Talk16:50, 4 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Neither can I, but alas free map images are hard to come by, especially for entities that exist no more. I might find some in the future though...
Punkmorten12:57, 6 November 2006 (UTC)reply
This list has come a long way from the almost random "fanlist" of guitarists it was before several dedicated editors began working on it. It is now a well-defined, stable, useful list of guitarists who have made notable use of the
Fender Telecaster and related models. There are solid criteria for list inclusion, and every entry is properly sourced. Since the list is sourced from actual books about notable Telecaster players, it can be considered comprehensive and useful to someone researching the history of this instrument. Join me in recognizing this excellent list with FL status. --Aguerriero (
talk)22:45, 1 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Comment It is a good list and I can tell that establishing a restrictive entry criteria has been hard. The result is that the lead spends most of its time explaining the rationale rather than just getting on with the facts. Words like "because" and "consequently" are give-aways. Just tell us how popular the guitar is, that thousands of musicians have picked one up and that this list only includes xxxx (your criteria). The first paragraph currently mentions the "lots of" fact and the criteria twice. The second paragraph is similarly pleading. If the two guitars are considered variants of the same model, then just say so (not "can be", just "are"). You could add a citation for this claim (one of your books, or Fender's web site perhaps). A few of your links are dead (fender.demonweb). I see you've got one from the Archive. Is there not a new web site with the info? If not, use the Archive for the others. Try to ensure all your web citations have author (if you can find it), date written (if given) and access date. The date ranges will look better with an
ndash. You must provide a fair-use rationale for this list for the Fender, Steve Cropper, and Waylon Jennings photos.
Colin°
Talk16:30, 4 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Thanks for the feedback! Will get to work on these items right away. I think the somewhat verbose lead section is a result of the almost-daily attempts at "drive-by" additions of various guitarists. Will work on pruning it, and the rest of your items. --Aguerriero (
talk)16:38, 4 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Okay, I believe I have addressed all of your concerns. The lead section has been pruned to use more imperative language, and a citation added for the Esquire statement. I have changed the hyphens in lifespans to endashes. I removed all fair use images and all images in the article are from the commons. I fixed all the web citations to proper format using {{cite web}} and provided date and author where available. I found updated citations for the broken ones, or used the internet archive. --Aguerriero (
talk)19:22, 4 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Support I checked this list out and was immediately impressed. Incredibly well-referenced; the alphabetization makes people easy to find. Great job. —
Cliff smith03:44, 7 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Important topic, very well constructed list, clear and concise with a good use of colours, images and pictures. I think it definitely good enough for an FL.
Support – I've made some edits (noted on the talk page) that I think were required for FL status. It will need updating in
2006-11-09, when the 2006 report is out.
Colin°
Talk22:54, 30 October 2006 (UTC)reply
I wondered about that. I think the 2006 report will show 2004's data, but someone more familiar with these stats might correct me. Clearly the ranking and all the individual values will change. There will probably be changes to the entries in the Unavailable section and the estimates for Taiwan will either be irrelevant or need rediscovered. This will all be true again in a year's time – would we suspend its FL status then until it was revised for 2007? No. That wouldn't be practical. The timing of this FLC is unfortunate, but I think we have to judge this article as it stands, based on 2005's report. If it doesn't get revised in a timely manner, or the revision is poor in some way, then its FL status could be reviewed.
Colin°
Talk17:49, 31 October 2006 (UTC)reply
Yes, the 2006 report will show 2004 data. I also think the timing is irrelevant, since the updating usually doesn't significantly "disturb" the accessibility of the article (usually, it's done in one go). Ronline✉09:32, 1 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Support Based on another FL, so this should be one too. The only thing I would do is add the club crest next to their name, but brilliant list nonetheless.
к1иgf1$н£я5ω1fт10:44, 28 October 2006 (UTC)reply
Support with request - it should be easy to make a map of CONMEBOL countries for lead. Also I would try to go through club articles - there should be some free images. There is a lot of space between the table and right side.
Renata15:12, 30 October 2006 (UTC)reply
I mean all images have problems. The whole {{PD-PhilippinesGov}} is shady. As of right now all images tagged with this template need to be used under
fair use which means that you have to provide specific source, copyright holder,
fair use rationales, make sure no free alternatives are available, and they are really low resolution copies. And then there is this whole thing if fair use images can be used on lists... As for references, it's simple, {{cite web}}.
Renata15:29, 22 October 2006 (UTC)reply
Yes, I know about the tag. But I think the list has really got chance at being featured even without the images. It won't that pretty, but it is still very useful. I edited the lead a bit and got confused with this piece of info: "Note that the Presidents under the Commonwealth of the Philippines were under American administration, and that there was no vice president during the Second Republic, considered to be a puppet government of the Imperial Japan during the World War II." - could you explain it a bit more? Also, {{cite web}} has a lot more parameters than just access date.
Renata03:43, 24 October 2006 (UTC)reply
Do you think this will pass with no pics? I've edited the lead already. And I'm really confused with how cite web works, the dates of access for me are good enough. What other field is needed? --HowardtheDuck 07:15, 24 October 2006 (UTC) I removed the pics. --HowardtheDuck13:23, 26 October 2006 (UTC)reply
Strong Oppose. There is contention with Trias from 1897. From
Verifiability, the burden of evidence lies with the editor who adds or restores material. Any material that is challenged or likely to be challenged needs a reliable source, which should be cited in the article. If an article topic has no reliable, third-party sources, Wikipedia should not have an article on it. There is no third party soure at all for the list of VPs of the Philippines. This wikipedia list is the first of its kind. If there is a credible third party source that is similar to the Philippine government source, conditional support. --
Noypi38016:26, 31 October 2006 (UTC)reply
The contention is clearly stated on the article, on the third sentence, no less:
The inclusion of Mariano Trias in the list is disputed, for Trias was chosen as Vice President at the Tejeros Convention, and again as Vice-President for the short-lived Biak na Bato Republic, which was dissolved after the signing of the Pact of Biak na Bato and Aguinaldo's exile.
Stable: Will be only be updated every four years or so
Well-organised: Easy to find any required information
Uncontroversial: no edit wars or disuptes of any kind, ever
Standards / style manual: Layout is clear and concise
Images: Sole image has approriate copyright status
This is the second time this list has been submitted for featured list status (
first time) It failed due to lack of support, rather than opposition. The suggestions amde last time round ave been incorprated. The list was put up for peer review (
read), anmd the few comments made have been acted on.
Tompw14:51, 19 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Could you point out exactly which of the
featured list criteria this list fails to satsisfy as a result of your objection? Crtieria 1f states that "the list is easy to navigate, and is annotated with additional information, as appropriate". This list satisifes that.
Tompw12:06, 23 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Comment A good list order comes under "professional standards of writing and presentation" and also "easy to navigate". So I think this complaint is technically valid but the closing editor should judge how important it is. Three editors questioned/opposed the reverse-chrono order in the last review. Personally, I think there are good arguments for reverse-chrono and think the presentation would be satisfactory in either order. Clearly, there are advantages for all the related Lists of XX general elections to be consistent in their order.
Colin°
Talk13:30, 23 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Taking the lists of general elections for the other Canadian provinces and territories where someone other than me fixed the order:
So "latest first" is in the majority by six to two. Changeing SK's to earliest first would make it less consistent. Please note I'm *not* saying earliest first is wrong. I'm saying both are acceptable, so there is no need to change (like UK vs. US spelling).
Tompw14:44, 23 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Support, but consider replacing class="toccolours" with class="sortable toccolours" to the top row of the table; it's ideal for this sort of table, and allows users to sort the table automatically.
Laïka22:50, 25 November 2006 (UTC)reply
When I first saw this in action, I also thought it would be ideal. However, a few issues emerged:
class="sortable toccolours" doesn't allow any wikilinks in column headings. This means no party wikilinks, and no footnotes (see Renata's point below).
It sorts numbers alphabetically, not numerically. So, sorting by the NDP column puts the 1982 row (9 seats) ahead of the 1991 row (55 seats), and also puts the 1934 row (2 seats) in between the 1967 row (22 seats) and the 1938 row (10 seats).
Sorting by anything over than year means no nice alternate pale grey/paler grey row backgrounds.
Consequently , I've reverted back to class="toccolours". If they ever get the numbers and wikilinks issues sorted out, I'll use it. Thanks for the suggestion though :-)
Tompw15:58, 26 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Oppose for now - I would prefer if the wording in the "Summary" section would be less self-refering. It can be done by adding a "Notes" section and using ref tags. For example, add a note to the heading colunm on Conservatives that "Results in Conservative column include all results for the Progressive Conservatives". Also spelling out CCF and NDP would not hurt.
Renata22:51, 25 November 2006 (UTC)reply
It is not uncommon to use the old ref/note system with letter labels for true footnotes, and keep the <ref> system for numbered inline citations. This article has no inline citations.
Colin°
Talk09:03, 27 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Support Very good- keep up the good work! As I said last time, I think that if the list were in chronological order, not reverse-chron it would actually be less useful. --
G Rutter13:03, 27 November 2006 (UTC)reply
This has been brought to the quality level that the 2004-2006 NFL Drafts, all featured lists, have been brought up to. It is detailed with plenty of references, and the intro is also about as good as I can make it. --
Wizardman18:17, 18 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Support A very comprehensive list, that tells you just about everything you need to know about this draft. Wonderful work.
KOS |
talk08:53, 22 November 2006 (UTC)reply
The first "External link"
2003 NFL Draft is clearly the general reference used for this list and so should be named as the reference (a bullet point at the end of the References section). Less sure about the second one – did you use it as a reference or is it just supplementary info?
The citations/external link formatting need to be improved. You need to give the full title of the web page/news article, the author (if available), the publisher and the date published. The {{cite web}} and {{cite news}} templates are recommended.
The Mr Irrelevant comment isn't a reference (it is a footnote) and isn't really required since it just repeats what the lead says.
You know I never realized that references had to be cited like that. Learn as you go I guess. Anyway Colin and Renata, the refs have been fixed now. --
Wizardman03:06, 26 November 2006 (UTC)reply
We didn't mean for you to remove the footnotes, which I've new restored. All that is required is that the citations are as complete and accurate as possible. The templates help by prompting you for such attributes as author, date, etc and do some simple formatting. Some folk prefer to hand-format so don't like the templates – they aren't mandatory. Don't bother with "format" for HTML pages – it is only useful for uncommon document types like PowerPoint or Word.
Colin°
Talk09:39, 26 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Comment It could use another image. I don't know what could be found, but it looks like a wall of text. Other than that, though, it looks like a pretty good list.
Hurricanehink (
talk)
23:33, 27 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Comment: Wow, you referenced like every single one. Was that necessary? Maybe, I guess, I'm not one to judge on that. Doesn't look too bad, I'm leaning towards support but I'd like the lead to explain a little bit more about the list (such as which one was the first to win gold, the one with the most medals, etc.) --
Wizardman02:51, 19 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Update - photos have been added, and more information has been provided about the first gold medal winners, first female competitors, the events in which Australia are strong, who has won the most medals, most golds, most at one Olympics etc. Thanks, Blnguyen (
bananabucket)
02:31, 20 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Support. Top job Blnguyen. Many hours have gone into that I bet. And what also amazes me is that the vast majority of those articles are substantial - there's no substubs that I could see and most are well beyond stub-dom. The list is referenced, well laid out and most importantly, useful. —
Moondyne01:07, 20 November 2006 (UTC)reply
P.S. I made the references section go into two columns so it looks a little better. There are a lot, but you well-researched and that's all that counts. Also, like above, a See also'd be nice.
→JARED(t)00:19, 21 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Comment The references needlessly gives the full citation for "Australia at the Olympics" for every single usage. Some other lists/articles separate the Notes (brief author(year):page) from the frequently consulted References (full citation) to avoid this.
Colin°
Talk23:28, 25 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Support - Nice work. However, the list inherently cannot be "Stable"! It would require regular updating. As there is a precedence of a similar list getting featured status, I hope the editors would take care of this aspect. How about adding a national flag on the right upper corner?--
Dwaipayan (
talk)
11:47, 14 November 2006 (UTC)reply
This kind of dynamic list has come up before - it will require regular updating, but that does not make it "unstable" (that is more about controversy and edit wars). An "as of" date will be needed so the reader knows how up-to-date it is. --
ALoan(Talk)14:02, 23 November 2006 (UTC)reply
This list meets all of the criteria for a featured list. Images used in the article have been checked for the approriate useages. Clearly defined criteria for inclusion on the list is outlined on the
Talk page. This is a self-nomination. --
Gadget850 ( Ed)18:08, 6 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Oppose The main reason being the lack on inline citations for each and every person. Have a look at the other FL of people (and the list of Telecaster players below) for how this can be done. I believe
VegaDark is working on doing a similar transformation to
List of Oregon State University people (currently in his own sandbox) – you might find it helpful to discuss with him due to the similarities of the lists. Other issues:
Images CFJ3.jpg, William Hanna01.jpg, TIME Magazine Dec. 12, 2005.jpg, Ray Suarez.jpg and Samwalton.jpg are copyright and a fair use claim is not supportable for this list. They should be removed or a free alternative found.
Thanks- the images in question have been removed. --
Gadget850 ( Ed)
The Gold Eagle.jpg icon should really be a PNG. Saving it as a JPG has made it fuzzy. Have a look at the Help on images. Its size is a little intrusive. Consider making it smaller or just use some other indicator, perhaps just a coloured text character such as a golden •.
Many of the sources don't count as
reliable. Personal (or local scout troop) web sites might be just about OK for the occasional citation here and there (where they give a bio for somebody for example) but the ones that have huge unsourced lists are not acceptable. NNDB is also not a reliable source, as it is largely reader-sourced. The official scouting web sites (.org addresses) are a better bet. Sorry if this means a lot of your names don't have reliable sources. Wikipedia is only as good as its foundation.
I removed NNDB- this is a known suspect source that I did not notice had creeped back in. --
Gadget850 ( Ed)
The Troop 179 references are compiled from BSA information and are known to be reliable. --
Gadget850 ( Ed)
So- we need a cite for each entry? We have ensured that each of the linked articles have a proper citation. --
Gadget850 ( Ed)
OK- we will work that. Every article has been carefully cited, so it is just a matter of copying those cites to the list. Many are going to be duplicated from one of the canonical lists, so that cuts a bit of work. --
Gadget850 ( Ed)16:59, 7 November 2006 (UTC)reply
You need cites for all the incorrect names too. If you can't find some right now, move those to the talk page.
Your Troop & Pack 179 ref is repeated several times. Is it too long that it breaks wiki or do you just think it looks nicer in chunks? Some may think it devious to hide how often this ref is relied on ;-).
The statistics in the lead need citations.
The last sentence in the lead needs backing up with a good source - otherwise it just looks like your opinion.
It is a pretty long list, which makes it less interesting to browse IMO. I wonder if you would consider chopping it into chunks based on profession. E.g. Sports, Politics, Arts, Military, Astronauts, ... Then folk can get a feel for where these scouts ended up. Does anyone else think that's a good idea? It would be a bit of effort, but I think it might be worth it.
Yes, the are so many using the T179 ref that it breaks wiki, so we had to break it up. I built that page from a official hard copy from BSA. I think it's better in alpha order, otherwise, you'd have to look at each topic to find someone whom you weren't familiar with.
Rlevse23:02, 13 November 2006 (UTC)reply
If you take a look at the reference section in this
older version, you will see that cite.php kinda blows up after the bz tag. Breaking it up was the only way I could figure to fix it- I welcome any other way to do this. The T179 reference is a known good cite, based on a compilation of BSA information. --
Gadget850 ( Ed)23:14, 13 November 2006 (UTC)reply
The lead cites are complete.
I removed the last sentence as an unsourced opinion.
Splitting by profession... is Bill Bradley more famous as a basketball player or a politician? Most astronauts were/are military, many politicians were military. Many of the folks had multiple careers. I welcome any thoughts on this, but the only way I can see this is to split it into separate articles with a lot of overlap.
Support I think my serious objections have been addressed. Grouping has been done successfully on other people lists. I wouldn't get too worried if there is overlap. Just pick what you think it the natural group for what they were most notable for. Wrt finding someone you weren't familiar with: 1) If you don't know them well enough to know why they were famous, then why on earth would you be interested in whether they were an Eagle Scout and 2) All browsers have a Find feature.
Colin°
Talk16:39, 15 November 2006 (UTC)reply
I highly object to grouping. Alphabetical makes far more sense to me. Colin's item one only makes sense for an educated adult--what about a young Scout just learning of his famous predecessors and goes on wiki to find out and for item two, we shouldn't have to find what group they were put in, just go to their name.—The preceding
unsigned comment was added by
Rlevse (
talk •
contribs) 16:54, 15 November 2006.
Examples are
List of people with epilepsy,
List of HIV-positive people,
List of notable brain tumor patients, and
List of Oregon State University people (not yet featured and being extensively reworked on
User:VegaDark's sandbox). I really don't buy the young Scout story. Nobody finds the telephone book fascinating, but it has a purpose if you already know the name and don't have a Find button. Why would this scout remember someone's name without being told why they are famous. Surely it would be more interesting for young/old to see how many astronauts, sports stars or politicans were once Eagle Scouts. This info is burried in a monolithic list. Grouping encourages research and learning since they will find other names who are famous for similar reasons, click on those links, etc, etc.
Colin°
Talk22:59, 15 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Conditional Support pending these three notes being addressed. (1) Make it clearer on the talk page guidelines that an eagle scout notable enough for a Wikipedia article must be included in the list (assuming the fact that they are an Eagle can be sourced). (2) Consider converting it to a table format with name, birth-death dates, profession, date of Eagle award, etc. although this wouldn't jive well with the current picture scheme (this is just a suggestion). (3) Fix the title.
Eagle Scout is a disambiguation page between several awards. Does this list include all Eagle Scouts or (I suspect) only BSA Eagle Scouts?
savidan(talk)(e@)02:54, 14 November 2006 (UTC)reply
1- Changed may to should.
2- We had long discussions about going to a table format and the consensus was against.
3- Will think on this. Given the project standard, I reckon it should be List of notable Eagle Scouts (Boy Scouts of America)
Support excellent, well-documented list. Very informative. I vote for keeping it alphabetical and for adding (Boy Scouts of America) to the title.
Sumoeagle17902:28, 17 November 2006 (UTC)reply
After weeks of review and improvement, I think that this list is worthy of featured status. In accordance with the criteria, it is useful, comprehensive, factually accurate, stable, uncontroversial and well-constructed. Self-nom by
Cliff smith19:20, 5 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Support I believe the article meets the FL criteria and has steadily improved over the last month. Please note that I have contributed to this article.--
Opark 7722:42, 5 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Comment Agree, the references/notes/external links aren't right. Put the full citation from your "references" into the linked "notes". Then move the "external links" you actually used as general references into the "references" section. Then ditch the external links.
Colin°
Talk19:54, 6 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Object I'm going to have to make my normal "one sentence paragraphs" objection. I still feel that episode summaries should be a full paragraph.
Jay32183 22:59, 6 November 2006 (UTC)Conditional Support Based on the good faith effort I've seen in improving the episodes and noting that it is almost complete, I support if the remaining episodes are brought up to the standard as those that have been updated. Unaired episodes can remain in the state they are in, until a reasonable amount of time after the initial broadcast.
Jay3218319:11, 15 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Interesting point. However, two other featured episode lists--South Park and Stargate SG-1--only have one/two-sentence episode summaries. There is no guideline on the length of an episode summary in a list, however one paragraph is a little excessive since each episode has its own article. —
Cliff smith01:13, 7 November 2006 (UTC)reply
I actually feel both of those lists are insufficient and that a single paragraph is not too much as an individual episode article should have at least three paragraphs of synopsis, rather than one of summary. It doesn't matter how well formatted the list is if it's text is poorly written.
Jay3218321:39, 7 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Here's the thing, Jay--I understand your opinion, but your objection is rather inactionable because 1) There is no guideline on the length of an episode summary in a list (as previously stated); and 2) Your objection doesn't pertain to any specific aspect of
WP:WIAFL, which is what is truly important here.
One problem. The definition of Featured List includes the phrase "represents Wikipedia's best work". This list does not, and there are two actions you could take to satisfy my object, therefore making it actionable. Expand the summaries to full paragraphs or remove the summaries completely. Neither of these actions are unreasonable as neither requires and overabundance of work or resources and both improve the overall quality of the project. If you do not take either of these actions my objection will not be dropped. I have not presented a request that is unreasonable, so my objection probably won't be ignored either.
Jay3218302:50, 8 November 2006 (UTC)reply
This vote is for deciding whether this list meats the critera as laid out in the
WP:WIAFL and as such "represents Wikipedia's best work" in its capacity as a list. As Cliff Smith stated, no where in those guide lines does it state a rule on the length of an episode summary. Your objection appears to be based more on personal preference than the guidelines.
Qjuad03:11, 8 November 2006 (UTC)reply
This is not a vote. I have presented an actionable case as to why this does not represent Wikipedia's best work. Any prose that is included must be up to the standards of prose for the encyclopedia. It's not a simple checklist, those are the general guidelines. Arguing with me will not change anything. Either follow one of the two actions I suggested or my objection will never be retracted. I've participated in enough FAR's and FARC's to know that arguing against a concern with a recommened, reasonable action never generates featured status. By the way, I'm not actually talking about the length of the summary but the quality of the writing. One sentence paragraphs are not good writing, they may not be bad, but any writing included needs to be the best.
Jay3218304:19, 8 November 2006 (UTC)reply
I have an idea for compromise. It is this--
The making of a spoiler-free LOE for The Sopranos; and
Expanding the episode summaries on this list.
Jay, your assistance would be very appreciated in the undertaking of the latter, since I think you know a great deal about matters of this nature. Also, as with the LOEs for Stargate SG-1, the spoiler-free version would be the exact same thing, minus episode summaries. Should this current FLC nomination fail, the new list could be nominated; and hopefully this one will reach the same status after its proposed expansion. What do you think? —
Cliff smith04:32, 8 November 2006 (UTC)reply
I can get behind that. I'll try to help anyway I can, but should inform you I haven't watched "The Sopranos" so I can copy edit, but I won't be able to comfortably write any new material for you. If you don't want any plot in the spoiler-free version that shouldn't be a difficult task, and I'll definitely help there if you like.
Jay3218304:41, 8 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Good job. I've gone ahead and wikilinked all the dates on the main page, I just noticed they weren't. Can't forget to respect users' date preferences.
Jay3218305:22, 8 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Reset indents. Jay, I actually went through and removed all the date links as part of the peer review. This was a suggestion of the automated peer review and I actioned it as I felt they add little context to the article. I don't quite follow you when you say "Can't forget to respect users' date preferences." Could you explain this a bit more?--
Opark 7722:19, 9 November 2006 (UTC)reply
The automated peer review isn't worded clearly to reflect the policy. Whenever you have a complete date as in Month Day, Year or just Month Day, you are supposed to link it because of users date preferences. For instance, my birthdate can be
March 211983 or
21 March1983 or
1983-03-21. If you set your date preferences you saw all three of those as the same. When you have Month Year or just Month or just Year, you don't link unless it provides context. If Spring 2007 had been linked that would have triggered the automated peer review as it should not be linked.
Jay3218322:38, 9 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Thanks Jay that clarifies it. Good work on the spoiler free article guys, that looks great for something that has come up so fast.--
Opark 7722:49, 9 November 2006 (UTC)reply
This is a touchy issue right now. Some people complain that too many images are being used. Others complain that the contribution isn't significant enough. Some see no problem at all. It seems to be a discussion that won't resolve anytime soon. I can't predict how Renata's objection will be handled if it is the only objection left when this closes. I can say that images are optional, so it's really up to how willing you are to argue. I won't object to either an images list or a no images list, but that may just be me.
Jay3218304:22, 12 November 2006 (UTC)reply
(To Renata's positon) Here's the thing about LOEs: They can either have images or not have images. Whether or not images are a part of the list doesn't really affect the quality of the list. However, images that are subject appropriate are part of
the criteria for a featured list. Then again, the image of the title screen and the images of the DVD art would satisfy the criteria. So at this point, I am indifferent as to whether or not there are screenshot images on this LOE. If it is of greater than little importance, the future of the screenshots can be voted upon at the talk page for this list. But note that if they end up being taken down, this opposition should be retracted (I only say this because I've seen instances when something is changed that would make a position inactionable, but the position wasn't retracted). —
Cliff smith04:48, 13 November 2006 (UTC)reply
This list has underwent a
peer review, albeit with no constructive response.
This list is useful (vast majority of blue links), comprehensive (more so than the Norwegian version it was based upon), factually accurate (good references), stable and uncontroversial. I also reckon it is well-constructed, I hope the table is fully understandable. The lead section provides a good background and overview, hopefully not too long. Self-nom by
Punkmorten14:35, 4 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Support I don't think we've had a featured list of things that don't exist. Rather than one big table, could you group them into counties (as with
Municipalities of Norway), or have the county boundaries changed too? I think that would make a big improvement to navigability. If this isn't possible, could you add the county as a column? Currently, there are two each of Borge, Borgund, Eid, Mo, and three of Nes. Rename the "Other" section to "Notes". It might be nice to include a translation of your reference's titles? I guess we'll just have to take your word for it on the references.
Colin°
Talk16:50, 4 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Neither can I, but alas free map images are hard to come by, especially for entities that exist no more. I might find some in the future though...
Punkmorten12:57, 6 November 2006 (UTC)reply
This list has come a long way from the almost random "fanlist" of guitarists it was before several dedicated editors began working on it. It is now a well-defined, stable, useful list of guitarists who have made notable use of the
Fender Telecaster and related models. There are solid criteria for list inclusion, and every entry is properly sourced. Since the list is sourced from actual books about notable Telecaster players, it can be considered comprehensive and useful to someone researching the history of this instrument. Join me in recognizing this excellent list with FL status. --Aguerriero (
talk)22:45, 1 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Comment It is a good list and I can tell that establishing a restrictive entry criteria has been hard. The result is that the lead spends most of its time explaining the rationale rather than just getting on with the facts. Words like "because" and "consequently" are give-aways. Just tell us how popular the guitar is, that thousands of musicians have picked one up and that this list only includes xxxx (your criteria). The first paragraph currently mentions the "lots of" fact and the criteria twice. The second paragraph is similarly pleading. If the two guitars are considered variants of the same model, then just say so (not "can be", just "are"). You could add a citation for this claim (one of your books, or Fender's web site perhaps). A few of your links are dead (fender.demonweb). I see you've got one from the Archive. Is there not a new web site with the info? If not, use the Archive for the others. Try to ensure all your web citations have author (if you can find it), date written (if given) and access date. The date ranges will look better with an
ndash. You must provide a fair-use rationale for this list for the Fender, Steve Cropper, and Waylon Jennings photos.
Colin°
Talk16:30, 4 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Thanks for the feedback! Will get to work on these items right away. I think the somewhat verbose lead section is a result of the almost-daily attempts at "drive-by" additions of various guitarists. Will work on pruning it, and the rest of your items. --Aguerriero (
talk)16:38, 4 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Okay, I believe I have addressed all of your concerns. The lead section has been pruned to use more imperative language, and a citation added for the Esquire statement. I have changed the hyphens in lifespans to endashes. I removed all fair use images and all images in the article are from the commons. I fixed all the web citations to proper format using {{cite web}} and provided date and author where available. I found updated citations for the broken ones, or used the internet archive. --Aguerriero (
talk)19:22, 4 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Support I checked this list out and was immediately impressed. Incredibly well-referenced; the alphabetization makes people easy to find. Great job. —
Cliff smith03:44, 7 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Important topic, very well constructed list, clear and concise with a good use of colours, images and pictures. I think it definitely good enough for an FL.
Support – I've made some edits (noted on the talk page) that I think were required for FL status. It will need updating in
2006-11-09, when the 2006 report is out.
Colin°
Talk22:54, 30 October 2006 (UTC)reply
I wondered about that. I think the 2006 report will show 2004's data, but someone more familiar with these stats might correct me. Clearly the ranking and all the individual values will change. There will probably be changes to the entries in the Unavailable section and the estimates for Taiwan will either be irrelevant or need rediscovered. This will all be true again in a year's time – would we suspend its FL status then until it was revised for 2007? No. That wouldn't be practical. The timing of this FLC is unfortunate, but I think we have to judge this article as it stands, based on 2005's report. If it doesn't get revised in a timely manner, or the revision is poor in some way, then its FL status could be reviewed.
Colin°
Talk17:49, 31 October 2006 (UTC)reply
Yes, the 2006 report will show 2004 data. I also think the timing is irrelevant, since the updating usually doesn't significantly "disturb" the accessibility of the article (usually, it's done in one go). Ronline✉09:32, 1 November 2006 (UTC)reply
Support Based on another FL, so this should be one too. The only thing I would do is add the club crest next to their name, but brilliant list nonetheless.
к1иgf1$н£я5ω1fт10:44, 28 October 2006 (UTC)reply
Support with request - it should be easy to make a map of CONMEBOL countries for lead. Also I would try to go through club articles - there should be some free images. There is a lot of space between the table and right side.
Renata15:12, 30 October 2006 (UTC)reply
I mean all images have problems. The whole {{PD-PhilippinesGov}} is shady. As of right now all images tagged with this template need to be used under
fair use which means that you have to provide specific source, copyright holder,
fair use rationales, make sure no free alternatives are available, and they are really low resolution copies. And then there is this whole thing if fair use images can be used on lists... As for references, it's simple, {{cite web}}.
Renata15:29, 22 October 2006 (UTC)reply
Yes, I know about the tag. But I think the list has really got chance at being featured even without the images. It won't that pretty, but it is still very useful. I edited the lead a bit and got confused with this piece of info: "Note that the Presidents under the Commonwealth of the Philippines were under American administration, and that there was no vice president during the Second Republic, considered to be a puppet government of the Imperial Japan during the World War II." - could you explain it a bit more? Also, {{cite web}} has a lot more parameters than just access date.
Renata03:43, 24 October 2006 (UTC)reply
Do you think this will pass with no pics? I've edited the lead already. And I'm really confused with how cite web works, the dates of access for me are good enough. What other field is needed? --HowardtheDuck 07:15, 24 October 2006 (UTC) I removed the pics. --HowardtheDuck13:23, 26 October 2006 (UTC)reply
Strong Oppose. There is contention with Trias from 1897. From
Verifiability, the burden of evidence lies with the editor who adds or restores material. Any material that is challenged or likely to be challenged needs a reliable source, which should be cited in the article. If an article topic has no reliable, third-party sources, Wikipedia should not have an article on it. There is no third party soure at all for the list of VPs of the Philippines. This wikipedia list is the first of its kind. If there is a credible third party source that is similar to the Philippine government source, conditional support. --
Noypi38016:26, 31 October 2006 (UTC)reply
The contention is clearly stated on the article, on the third sentence, no less:
The inclusion of Mariano Trias in the list is disputed, for Trias was chosen as Vice President at the Tejeros Convention, and again as Vice-President for the short-lived Biak na Bato Republic, which was dissolved after the signing of the Pact of Biak na Bato and Aguinaldo's exile.