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1

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Logo nadace Wikimedia Foundation
Logo nadace Wikimedia Foundation





Wikimedia Quarto

Úvodní vydání   září 2004


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Simple || Updates || more... edit

Rada správců

Jimmy Wales, zakladatel
Angela Beesley
Michael Davis
Florence Nibart-Devouard
Tim Shell

 

Redakce

Šéfredaktor
  Samuel Klein
Výkonný editor
  Florence Nibart-Devouard
Grafický návrh
  Jean-Christophe Chazalette


Přispěvatelé
Angela Beesley, Daniel Mayer,
Arne Klempert, Dpbsmith, Elisabeth Bauer, Jamesday, Nicolas Weeger, Mathias Schindler, Sjc, Yann Forget, Jakob Voss

Přispívající korektoři
Hlavní korektor: Ruth Ifcher
Danny Wool, QT Nguyen

Přispívající překladatelé
Aphaia, Arno Lagrange, Ayman, Chopinhauer, Carlo Ierna, Electric goat, Fruggo, Gleam, Kaare, Kpjas, Kzhr, Looxix, Merclien, Mormegil, Mountain, Minh Nguyen, MH, Neep, Nicolas Weeger, Paddyez, Profoss, Roby, Sansculotte, Sj, Spektr, Strxg, Shizhao, Suisui, Tietew, Tomos, Yann Forget,

sonický třesk

   Vítejte ve zpravodaji nadace Wikimedia Foundation. Uvnitř se nachází články o nejnovějších projektech Wikimedia, nápady a aktivity naší Rady správců a pár slov od našeho zakladatele, Jimmyho Walese. Najdete zde také zprávy našich komisí a poboček, poznámky od komunity a také — díky komentářům a rozhovorům — také čerstvé myšlenky významných osob z oblasti otevřeného obsahu, autorských práv a distribuovaného výzkumu. V tomto vydání s námi hovořil Ward Cunningham o Wikipedii a budoucnosti wiki (viz strana 5).

    Mezi vrcholy tohoto měsíce patří důležitá tisková zpráva oznamující miliontý článek ve Wikipedii, oslava Wikipedie na moderním festivalu Cyberarts v rakouském Linzi, kde nás v květnu poctili cenou Digital Communicities a štědrým grantem, a prezentace u Organizace spojených národů v Ženevě.

    Zpravodaj je k dispozici v několika jazycích a formátech a můžete ho volně distribuovat. Jelikož je toto nové fórum teprve v plenkách, nejdůležitější je názor komunity a nadace, kterou jste vy pomáhali vytvořit. Buďte odvážní ve svých námětech a kritice; dejte nám vědět, co byste na těchto stránkách chtěli vidět. Vítány jsou i stručné eseje na jakékoli téma spjaté s nadací Wikimedia či jejími projekty. Stejně tak uvítáme i informace o vašich lokálních projektech nebo zmínky o Wikimedia ve vašem místním tisku. Připomínky a příspěvky můžete posílat na newsletter@wikimedia.org.

    Chtěli bychom poděkovat těm mnoha dárcům (např. fact-index.com), kteří v tomto roce pomohli udržet rozpočet nadace v černých číslech. Obzvláště jsme vděční každému, kdo našim projektům přispěl eseje, diagramy, fotografie, hudbu, kus programu apod. Bez vašeho nasazení by neexistovalo nic, co by se v tomto zpravodaji dalo zmínit. Spousta rukou udělá spoustu práce a výroba tohoto zpravodaje byla zábava. Doufáme, že se budete u jeho čtení bavit stejně dobře, jako nás bavila jeho příprava.

--tým tvůrců WQ

 




Obsah


Přebal : První schůze Rady (4)

Vítejte, Obsah . . . . . . 1
Dopis od Zakladatele . . . . . . 2
Dopis od Rady
Čtvrtletní zprávy . . . . . . 3
Zprávy z projektů . . . . . . 4
Poznámky z poboček
Rozhovor: Ward Cunningham
     o wiki a Wikipedii
. . . . . . 5
V médiích . . . . . . 6
Mezinárodní poznámky, Galerie . . . . . . 7
Poznámky, Závěr . . . . . . 8



2

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Dopis od Zakladatele

 

Soustředěně a s láskou

Naším posláním je poskytnout sumu znalostí lidstva každému jednotlivému člověku na naší planetě v jazyce, který bude chtít, za podmínek svobodné licence, takže ji bude moci libovolně měnit, upravit, využívat či šířit. A tím „každým jednotlivým člověkem na naší planetě“ myslím přesně to, takže musíme pamatovat na to, že velká část našeho obecenstva dosud nemá spolehlivý, pokud vůbec nějaký, přístup k Internetu.

Jsme ohromujícím globálním projektem, který trvale roste závratným tempem. Některé statistiky, ačkoli jsou komunitě obecně známy, stojí za to zopakovat: Každý měsíc získáme 2000 nových wikipedistů; každý den 2000 nových článků a 40 000 editací těch existujících — a téměř dvakrát tolik, pokud sem započítáte diskuse a metastránky — a to počítáme pouze Wikipedii.

Pokud bude náš růst pokračovat tímto tempem, budeme muset čelit některým výzvám týkajícím se škálovatelnosti. Původní způsoby práce někdy přestávají fungovat ve chvíli, kdy se stáváme komunitou s ještě větším množstvím osob. Chceme udržovat a vylepšovat naše standardy kvality, zatímco současně jako komunita zůstávat otevření, přátelští a přívětiví. To je výzva.

Abychom se s ní vypořádali, budeme potřebovat spoustu uvažování a analýz. Ale také rád mluvím o další ingredienci, která je absolutně nezbytná: láska. V technických, akademických a vědeckých kruzích nebývá obvyklé mluvit v rámci komunity o lásce, ale pro nás je, a musí být, běžná a viditelná.

Naše komunita již teď pochází z množství rozmanitých prostředí a toto množství se časem bude jenom zvětšovat. Jediným způsobem, jak můžeme efektivně koordinovat naše úsilí k dosažení cílů, které jsme si sami stanovili, je milovat naší práci a milovat se navzájem, i když spolu nesouhlasíme. Vzájemný respekt a rozumný přístup k nesouhlasu jsou nezbytné a obojího se nejsnáze dosáhne, pokud se vzájemně obdivujeme prostě jako přirozený důsledek toho, že jsme všichni dobrovolníci v neuvěřitelně bláznivém zábavném projektu, který mění svět.

Nikdo z nás není v tomto ohledu dokonalý; taková je lidská povaha. Ale každý z nás se může každodenně snažit — v našich úpravách, na našich e-mailových konferencích, na našich IRC chatech a v našich soukromých e-mailech — dosahovat vyššího standardu, než je ten, který Internet obvykle vzbuzuje, standardu rozumné shovívavosti a lásky.

Už jsme ušli dlouhý kus cesty, a abychom opravdu dosáhli našich cílů, musíme pracovat soustředěně a s láskou.

Dopis od Rady
srv. původní francouzská verze


Tento zpravodaj vznikl z touhy sdílet naše názory a informace o naší činnosti s širším publikem; jeho příjemci jsou desetitisíce přispěvatelů projektů nadace Wikimedia a mnoho dalších, kdo podporují naše aktivity.

Nadace Wikimedia byla založena jako důsledek evoluce Wikipedie, Wikcionáře, Wikiknih, Wikicitátů a Wikisource. Exponenciální růst těchto projektů vyžadoval vytvoření nových struktur a nových režimů práce. Tyto struktury zahrnují legální možnost přijímat příspěvky, odměňovat, žádat o granty, spravovat doménová jména a serverové clustery a publikovat obsah tiskem, prostřednictvím CD nebo DVD a také umožňují koordinaci nových kanálů pro komunikaci mezi jednotlivými projekty.

Přes tento vývoj jsou nejdůležitější silou a největším zdrojem projektů Wikimedia přispěvatelé, takže tyto nové struktury budou stále pracovat na demokratických principech. Úkolem Rady nadace Wikimedia je organizovat související debaty a rozhodovat s cílem zajistit nejlepší možné podmínky pro rozvoj, údržbu a rozšiřování našeho svobodného obsahu. Vede nás touha chránit ducha nadace Wikimedia, založné na otevřenosti (kdokoli může editovat), důvěře (není potřeba žádná speciální kvalifikace), spolupráce (prostřednictvím wiki), respekt k ostatním (rozšiřováním práce ostatních) a kultura darů (založená na dobrovolnosti).

Za poslední tři měsíce jsme postavili pevné základy budoucnosti nadace Wikimedia. Založili jsme základ členského systému, získali jsme početné kontakty s lidmi a organizacemi, které našim projektům budou v příštím roce pomáhat, a začali jsme žádat o granty a organizovat pravidelné kampaně s cílem zajistit Wikimedii stabilní finanční budoucnost. Oficiální funkce pro zajištění transparentního publikování informací o financování Wikimedie, resp. zlepšení komunikace s vývojáři, byly přiděleny Danielu Mayerovi, resp. Timu Starlingovi.

Ve spolupráci s německou a francouzskou pobočkou jsme navázali kontakt s vydavateli s cílem distribuovat obsah Wikipedie na CD a DVD a zahájili jsme přípravu „snímků“ Wikipedie pro takovou offline distribuci. Mezitím byla celosvětově vydána tisková zpráva o dosažení hranice milionu článků. Navazujeme lepší kontakty s tiskem a s pomocí mezinárodní PR komise hodláme dále vylepšovat viditelnost našich projektů.

Konečně, spouštíme oficiální stránky věnované nadaci. Ty budou veřejnosti poskytovat informace o naší nadaci a jejích cílech, mnoha našich projektech a iniciativách a plánech do budoucna. Stránky budou také nabízet detaily naší finanční situace a nabízet online registraci členů. V následujících měsících sledujte wikimediafoundation.org.

Pokud máte otázky či připomínky, velice rádi je vyslechneme. Můžete nás kontaktovat na našich diskusních stránkách (viz [1]) nebo e-mailem: board (zavináč) wikimedia.org.



3

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Quarterly Reports

 

Administration

Where can I find information about the Foundation?

Current information about the Foundation can be found in this newsletter, on the dedicated mailing list [2], on the Wikimedia Meta-wiki [3], and at the Foundation's website [4] (in progress).

How many people make up the Board of Wikimedia?

There are five members, including Jimmy Wales, the founder and chair of Wikimedia. Angela Beesley, secretary, and Florence Devouard, vice chair, are the two elected representatives. Michael Davis is the Board's treasurer and works on Wikimedia's financial matters (see Finance). The fifth member is Tim Shell, who participates actively in the English Wikipedia, and is often found on the #wikimedia IRC channel.

How does the Board communicate among its members?

Board activities are recorded on the Wikimedia Meta-wiki [5], and will in the future be on the Wikimedia Foundation's site [6]. Communication takes place via email, as well as, through the foundation-l mailing list, which is open to the public and publicly archived. Members of the board also frequent the #Wikimedia IRC channel on freenode [7], where they can be reached for a quick response. While three Board members -- the quorum required for a proper Board meeting -- are frequently present on IRC at the same time, such times are not generally official meetings.

There have been a few active meetings of board members over the summer. On July 4, 2004, Jimmy, Angela and Anthère met in Paris (summary: [8]).

Later that month, there was a meeting to discuss the creation of an official foundation website at www.wikimediafoundation.org; many took part in the discussion, including Angela, Anthère, Mav and Tim Starling (summary and results: [9]).

There was also a quick ad-hoc meeting on September 5 about the creation of a database for a tentative Wikispecies project, to let its enthusiasts discuss what they want it to become. All but one of the board members convened for around 20 minutes to discuss this (summary: [10]).

Do Jimbo, Tim and Michael dominate Board decisions?

Important Board discussion in Paris
Important Board discussion in Paris

To date, Tim and Michael have played a minimal part in board discussion and decisions, and there is no plan to change this. In order to ensure that the community voice is real, Jimbo has pledged, as a matter of convention, never to vote against Angela and Anthere, unless he feels that it is an issue of an absolutely fundamental change of direction for the project -- which is not likely to happen, since Angela, Anthere and Jimbo share the essential values of the community and the project. So as a practical matter, power is in the hands of the two democratically elected board members on most issues, and Jimbo defers to that.

How many board decisions are made by vote?

We prefer to discuss things, find proposals that we can all agree on, make compromises to accommodate each other, where necessary, and reach agreement. All informal votes taken, so far, have been unanimous.

Does the Board record or publish their activities anywhere?

Most of the time, we discuss things on #Wikimedia IRC channel on freenode. On this channel, everyone is free to not only follow board deliberation, but also to participate to the discussions and help us to make decisions. Logs of planned IRC meetings, such as the one regarding the Foundation website, are published on Meta and the Foundation wiki, along with summaries of other meetings. However we also meet on private channels and exchange private mails, as well. It's important for us to be able to speak freely, to think out loud, so to speak, without people taking our speculative comments and thoughts as being new policy or set-in-stone decisions. We hope that our activities are sufficiently visible through this newsletter, board meeting minutes, official announcements on the mailing lists and the Wikimedia website.

What are the official positions and committees?

Mav is responsible for finances, with the oversight of the Board treasurer, Michael Davis. Mav is, in particular, in charge of establishing our budget [11], and balancing out books [12].

Tim Starling is the liaison between the Board and our group of developers. Developer activity falls into two main areas: server maintenance and development of the MediaWiki software (also used for many non-Wikimedia applications).

Tim Starling is setting up a Developer Committee [13]. This committee will be made up of the most active developers and, among other things, will help formalize a method for reaching development decisions, such as, the direction of future development, definition of necessary purchases, and processing of certain requests.

There are no other official committees, but there are important groups that are much like committees, which form naturally, particularly relating to grants and public relations. For example, Danny Wool has been coordinating a number of grant applications. For other potential committees, see [14].

How can I become a member of the Foundation?

Everyone who is an active participant in one of the Wikimedia projects is automatically a volunteer member of the Foundation. Volunteer members and other project supporters will be encouraged to become contributing members this fall; this will entail paying membership dues.

Discussions in July regarding membership dues led to the following proposal:

Becoming a contributing member will cost 60 USD (or the equivalent), and does not require being an editor of a Wikimedia project. Volunteer members may become contributing members for 6 USD, but are encouraged to pay the normal fee if they can. Members can choose how they wish a portion of their fee to be used (for instance, "30 dollars should be used only for hardware purchases").

There will be no obligation to pay dues; adding to and benefiting from projects will always be free. Contributing money is nothing more than an additional way of helping the project. The full membership proposal may be found on Meta at [15]; other questions about membership are answered in the Membership FAQ. See also [16].

Is Wikipedia planning to have ads?

Wikimedia does not plan to allow advertising on Wikipedia or any of its sister projects in the foreseeable future. We believe that suitable grants and donations from the public will provide for a secure future, without the need for advertisements. There are others ways, as well, to gather money, such a grants, prizes, gifts from our mirrors, donations of hardware etc... Running ads would likely raise money, but it would possibly lower other sources of revenues, in particular, donations, as well as, possibly upset some editors.

I hear developers are being paid now. Is it true?

In July 2004, the Wikimedia developers were polled about the feasibility of a bounty system for development tasks. The motivation for this was to improve the guidance of development in certain directions (for instance, by offering payment for developing certain software features). The results of the poll can be found at [17].

Working closely with the Developer Committee, we will be trying out a system of payment and other rewards for developers who choose to work on particular tasks. This will be a four-month trial run, after which we will step back and evaluate whether it was successful.

The proposed system allows for anyone to request new features, and for any developer to propose their own terms for filling a feature request. The developer committee will advise the Board about the feasibility and usefulness of requests and offers, and the Board will make the final decisions to accept or refuse offers for requested work.

Details of the trial run are available at [18]. All Wikimedia contributors will be encouraged to evaluate it when it is over.

Collaboration


Discussions with potential collaborators have heated up this year. External projects interested in working with Wikimedia projects include Project Gutenberg (Wikisource), OpenTextBook and Free High School Science Texts (Wikibooks), and Open-Media (the newly-started Wikimedia Commons). On July 1, some German Wikipedians met with the Brockhaus new media group to get to know one another. At the end of August, Jimmy and Angela met with people from the BBC new media division at to talk about Wikipedia, opening possibilities of collaboration with them.

Some collaborations have already been realized, starting in May of this year, when Yahoo! invited Wikipedia to become part of its content acquisition program. A data feed of the list of new pages was provided to them to ensure up to date search results of Wikipedia's content; in June, statistics from Yahoo! suggest this provided over 2 million visits, a quarter of our total, with slightly less traffic since then. Other collaborations with individual content distributors have yielded the most physical results: two major CD and DVD distribution efforts are being realized this fall.

Distribution

Directmedia CD

By the end of September, the German company Directmedia Publishing [DMP] [19] will put out a CD-ROM of the German Wikipedia. It will contain a partly cleaned up snapshot from September 1, and will contain an ISO-image and the SQL-dump. 30,000 CD-ROMs will be sent by DMP to registered customers, for free. Another 10,000 CD-ROMs will be given to book shops as freebies, or to sell for not more than 5€.

Directmedia Publishing have published some 180 electronic books in the last 10 years focusing on social sciences, lexicons, and image collections.

Mandrakesoft DVD

Mandrakesoft (producer of their own flavor of Linux) will release a DVD containing a bilingual snapshot of the French and English Wikipedia, with an upcoming version of Mandrake Linux. Mandrakesoft has produced one of the most popular and user-friendly Linux distributions for many years.

The intensive work to tag images and lists in preparation for these publications, long overdue, has provided quality improvement to the Wikipedia projects involved. The image-tagging effort on the English encyclopedia, which involves classifying 50,000 untagged images, is ongoing; please help this effort at [20].

Other Offers and Invitations

Wikimedia has standing offers of free hosting from a webhost in France, where three new squids have recently been set up. There were other offers of free hosting as well, particularly while making contingency plans for the first Florida hurricane, in late August.

Finance

Donations

1180 individual PayPal donations have been made to the Foundation between the start of the year and 31 August, yielding US$46,600 (non-U.S. Currencies converted using current exchange rates), a daily average of $190. Over half that amount ($29,800) was collected in July and August mostly during an unofficial donation drive only on the English Wikipedia.

The Golden Nica that Wikipedia won
The Golden Nica that Wikipedia won

Awards

In May, the Prix Ars Electronica awarded Wikipedia their Golden Nica for Digital Communities, an award which came with a 10,000 Euro grant with no strings attached [21].

Grants

Many grants were considered for application during the summer of 2004, and many hours were devoted to an NEH grant for projects in the humanities which looked promising. Histories of Wikimedia were summarized, a detailed description and budget were written for the proposed humanities project, and biographies of contributors interested in staffing the project were gathered. The application was not sent in, in the end, for lack of sufficient time. However, the text about Wikimedia which was produced, and the experience gained in writing about specific projects, will be useful in future applications this fall.

Purchases

Donations from July and August plus money raised in late December (during and immediately following a major server crash and downtime) was used to purchase over $60,000 worth of new hardware (see [22] and [23]).

Technical Development
File:Technical Dev.png

It has been an exciting year so far on the technical side. We started with two servers in California and an Alexa rank of 900 [24]. In February the site moved to Florida and nine new servers. Three more servers from a May order entered service in early June and a fourth, the fast and sexy database server Ariel, followed at the end of the month. After each upgrade, the number of people using the site rose to fill the available capacity of the new servers. As of the start of September, eight more web servers from an August order are in service, and search and file servers are awaiting installation.

As of September, Wikipedia.org routinely ranks consistently in the top 500 English language sites in Alexa's rankings [25], and is steadily increasing its reach. In June we saw almost a million edits. So far we have managed to avoid the really slow performance we saw at the end of 2003; thanks to those whose donations have made it possible to keep up.

May saw the introduction of version 1.3 of the MediaWiki software, with improved templates, categories, a new site skin and improved language support. Edit conflict handling improved significantly. Version 1.4, due in a few months, will include better database load balancing, assorted speed improvements, preliminary support for PostgreSQL as a database engine and tools to help with article reviewing.

Entering service soon will be the first hardware outside the United States, a three server Squid cache set in Paris, serving pages to those in parts of Europe, so many viewers there will not need to wait for most pages to come from Florida. Once we have that cache working well, we expect to do the same in other places, as offers of hosting allow.

The new developer committee illustrates the international nature of the technical team, with members from six countries, and will be working to keep up with the continued growth of the projects.

Projects


There are six active Wikimedia projects:
  • Wikipedia (1 million articles in 100 languages, 150,000 images, 25,000 contributors, 800,000 visits/day)
  • Wiktionary (70,000 articles in 20 languages, 500 contributors, 800 visits/day)
  • Wikibooks (5,000 modules in 250 books and 15 languages, 300 contributors)
  • Wikiquote (2,500 articles in 6 languages, 100 contributors)
  • Wikisource (4,000 pages in 30 languages, 100 contributors)
  • Meta (1500 articles in 30 languages, 1,000 contributors)

There are a few other projects either newly-created or waiting for further development:

  • Memorial Wiki - currently only a 9/11 memorial; ~200 pages.
  • Wikicommons - set up in September, to jumpstart a long-awaited project to keep shared media such as images and sound files in a single language-independent repository
  • Wikispecies - set up in September, while the contributors work out what they want the project to be, and how they want to store species data.


Community


Summer meetings of Wikipedians

On the occasion of Jimmy Wales's trip to Europe, many meetings took place, notably in London, Berlin, Paris, and Genova. More details are available at [26].

Other events

There were some great photo opportunities at the Prix Ars Electronica awards ceremony in Manhattan in May, when Danny received the Golden Nica award for Digital Communities, on behalf of everyone. At the end of the summer, in the first week of September, there was the big Ars Electronica Festival, which many European Wikipedians attended; Jimmy showed up for that and gave a presentation there.

On September 1, Angela and Jimmy visited the BBC in London. They met during the day with a group including some H2G2 staff, to present Wikipedia to them and discuss wikis in general. Later that evening, Angela gave a presentation to a group of people at a pub called Oyster.

Public Relations


There was a major press release issued this spring, commemorating the 500,000th Wikipedia article (counting all languages together), which was picked up by many local and online news publications. Another is being released this month, commemorating the one millionth article [27].

In May and June, following our winning of the community awards from both the Prix Ars Electronica and the Webby Awards, there were a number of interviews with Jimmy and articles about Wikipedia, most famously his interview on Slashdot [28].

For quotes from articles about us, see "In the Press", pg. 6.




4

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Out of the Projects

[edit]

 

Tree of Life

The Tree of Life wikiproject, focusing on all organisms on the planet, continues to be the largest of all Wikipedia projects. It has contributors and content in many languages, and many thousands of articles to its name.

The board met online in September to discuss Wikispecies [29], a proposed biological project, related to the Tree of Life, that aims to provide data on every species. This resource will feed into Wikipedias of all languages. The project, which was created later that month, will work closely with the Tree of Life Wikiproject, and similar projects across the Wikipedias.

Paper publication

Two single-topic reference texts, called 'WikiReaders' were produced in german from Wikipedia content, on the topics of Sweden and the Internet [30]. These were developed by a group of contributors led by Thomas Karcher, converted to PDF, and printed in a small print run for 6USD a copy, following a few simple guidelines [31]. They were distributed at meetups in Germany and Austria, and via an online store [32]. Similar reader projects have been started on the English Wikipedia centered around the topics of cryptography and World War II [33].

Wikimedia Commons

Wikimedia Commons was launched in September 2004, with the goal of providing a central repository for free images, music and, possibly, texts and spoken texts, to be used by all Wikimedia projects. Still in the planning stage, the project will, in future, allow images to be reused across projects.



Proposed projects

Wikipeople: This will be both a memorial wiki, incorporating the 911wiki as a portal along with other less specific memorial pages, and a family tree wiki, including genealogical details about people of every era. It hopes to find a way to incorporate the 9/11 memorial wiki.

Wikiversity: This is currently a wikibooks portal to material specifically for (self-)instruction. Interest in Wikiversity is growing rapidly, including outreach to university and highschool teachers, who regularly come to Wikipedia with their classes. There is an effort afoot to convert existing wikibooks to be used in courses, and another to attract support for a more elaborate wikiversity initiative.

Local projects

de : [http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Qualit%C3%A4tsoffensive Qualitätsoffensive]: every 2 weeks a topic is chosen, and related articles are improved. Started in April; 11 topics covered so far. Banner image See also nl.

en : Featured images : in parallel with the featured articles review process, high-quality images are categorized as featured images; a parallel 'Image of the Day' project features one image each day via a fixed template.

fr : A general drive for improving the quality of the project took place this summer: controversial articles were greatly reduced, all images were tagged with license information, and numerous stubs were expanded.

ja : On September 9, Japanese Wikipedia won the Special Prize of the Web Creation Award from the Japanese Advertisers Association, for its excellence among Japanese-language websites.

Ijzeren poort, from the article that won the first contest
Ijzeren poort, from the article that won the first contest

nl : Schrijfwedstrijd: An article-writing contest proves so popular that de: starts their own in September.

zh : every 2 weeks a high-level article is choosen, and related articles are reviewed and updated.


Chapter Reports

[edit]


Efforts to found the first two Wikimedia chapters, based in Germany and France, began this year. Draft bylaws were drawn up, and interested parties were selected to help organize and promote each chapter, particularly among the regulars on the de: and fr: Wikipedias. Both chapter initiatives have produced extensive documentation, much of it stored on the Wikimedia Meta-wiki, and have started to hold regular meetings.

Wikimedia Deutschland

As planned, the German Wikipedia reached two milestones on June 12, 2004: That evening, Wikipedians had a party during the Wizards of OS conference to celebrate the 100,000th article, and on the following day, 34 Wikipedians and friends met to found the German chapter of Wikimedia, Wikimedia Deutschland.

The German chapter began work immediately. On July 1, five members met with the Brockhaus Corporation, the most renowned German encyclopedia publisher, and exchanged experiences. A collaboration was begun with the Digital Library in Berlin to produce a Wikipedia CD-summary, which should conclude at the end of September with the production of 40,000 CDs.

In a well-attended member meeting on IRC, people discussed further strategies and projects. The Berlin Media and Computation Professor, Deborah Weber-Wulff, undertook the coordination of academic efforts on Wikipedia.

Presentations on Wikipedia at festivals and conferences are already planned, particularly, at the Linuxday fairs in Lörrach and the Berlinux conference in Berlin.


Wikimédia France

The French chapter-to-be is still in its formative stages. A pilot committee (comité de pilotage) has been set up, and draft chapter bylaws and structures have been proposed.

The current status of the association (found on [34]) seems to be acceptable to members of the pilot committee; no one currently objects much to any specific point in the proposed structure. The organisation's name, which was finally settled on, is Wikimedia France.

Due to the summer holidays, everything was at a standstill in August. This has been changing with the end of the holidays. However, there are not yet many volunteers for the board. According to the planning timeline (found on ([35]), the next milestone is in October, when a meeting is planned to validate status, after which November will see the official birth of the association.

Some of the issues for the new chapter to deal with are: setting up potential Wikimedia mirrors and squids in France, and acquiring wikimedia-related domain names (as the budget allows).





5

[edit]
Ward Cunningham
Ward Cunningham
Interview : Ward Cunningham

The Quarto caught up with Ward before breakfast one early Oregon morning, while he was recovering from the recent Pattern Languages of Programs (PLoP) conference held in Illinois. In between cans of Moxie, we picked his brain about the evolution of wiki, copyright, and the Wikipedia community. Afterward, he came onto IRC to hang out in #wikipedia for a while, where he was duly lauded.

On the Wiki Way

[edit]

Wikis are all about making editing easy. What barriers to editing still exist? How would you like to see wikis develop?

WC: If we talk about what still makes authoring difficult on a wiki, it's the lack of WYSIWYG style editing. Someone suggested that one reason wikis work is that you have to overcome this strange way of editing. But if you think about it, to have all those pages typed in through a little textbox, talk about brutal. By the way, I wouldn't be satisfied if [the editor] didn't work for everybody.

In "The Wiki Way", you advocated the importance of absolute flexibility in editing and refactoring content. Is there also room for preserving old contributions, and just adding better and better summaries?

WC: In my own wiki, I took issues to the extreme. I made as much as possible editable, and didn't keep a record -- so that 'Delete' really worked, so that you thought about it when you used it. I'm pleased that people have accepted that challenge, and figured out what they can do that way. Having been there, they can say 'here's what's good and bad about that extreme'. I think tampering with the extremes of wiki positions is fine. But every new rule makes it harder for new volunteers to contribute.
    I admire Wikipedia for staying pretty true to my ease of writing, but still achieving very readable pages. I think Wikipedia is the shining example of what is possible in a large project with a high quality of writing, and still with the essential wiki character -- that if I see a mistake, I can correct it. I don't have to create a signin, or go through a training course, or...

"I don't think Wikipedia would be possible without [separate talk pages]. Now the question is, was mine a wiki without it?"

What do you think about having separate talk and content pages?

WC: I love it. It's just brilliant. I think Wikipedia is valuable to people who don't see themselves an Author and aren't interested in the meta-conversation. I don't think Wikipedia would be possible without it.
    Now the question is, was my site a wiki without it?

How about incorporating many languages within a single wiki?

WC: Oh, I think that is a totally awesome idea. The ability to read a page, and notice a subtle problem with it... that ability to go straight at important subtleties is something wiki is good at. When you have people with one foot in one linguistic culture and the other foot in another, you can communicate very subtle ideas across cultures, about how the world as a whole works.
    My dream of 'what wiki could be' is something where, through the efforts of people who read and understand multiple languages, we create a shared body of work that holds a community of people together despite their not speaking the same language. I think this happens slowly on the surface of the earth with traditional media - a body of translators trying to explain culture to each other.
    But it would have to be done in such a way that languages which look like gibberish to you are invisible, and you can see those you know. I'm imagining that wiki pages in several languages would be presented together. You would get into the habit of reading in all languages, and when there was a dissonance, you would say "there's another error that needs to be corrected", and you'd have this great global process.

So... is Wikipedia a wiki?

WC: Absolutely. A certain amount of credit drifts my way from Wikipedia. I'm always quick to remind people that my wiki is not Wikipedia, and that there's a lot of innovation there. I'm proud of what the Wikipedia community has done, I think it's totally awesome.
    Here's what I think a wiki is: content before community. Low latency to correction. The workflow of submission starts with publication - publish and then edit. Trivial creation of new pages, to let them grow to the right size. And a community provided by RecentChanges -- the ability to see what other editors are doing, encouraging visitors to go from readers to authors to editors.
    One thing I read when I was doing wiki was a book by Edwin Schlossberg, a participatory museum exhibit designer - a thin little book that talked about how the audience defines 'Quality' for a performance (something is "good" if the people paying attention agree it is). He said that as soon as you have a medium where audience members can watch each other work, you develop a sense of community good. That's clearly happening here.

On Microsoft

[edit]

Some people want to know what it's like for you now, working at Microsoft.

WC: As I posted on my own wiki, "I'm joining Microsoft, but I'm still the same Ward". And I think Microsoft is still the same Microsoft.

One would hope that you have some effect on them.

WC: Well, I think they have every intention for me to have some effect on them.  

 
[edit]

When you aren't using wikis for collaboration, what else do you use?

WC: I use about a dozen wikis. The only other thing I use daily is email... it demands attention Right Now. If I have something event-oriented, short-lived, I send somebody an email. And if I want to talk about something timeless, I write it on a wiki and send them a pointer.
    You know, the whole email system is breaking down. Who would have thought that email, with all of its permissions and security, would fall apart faster than wiki? Our inboxes are much more vulnerable than our wikis, where everyone can write.
    Every day, going through my email is a burden, whereas browsing Wikipedia is a joy. I save that for when I want to reward myself, and I'll do a romp through Wikipedia. Wikipedia is my favorite content site.

(We understand. It's ours, too.)

WC: One thing that I'm really interested in, and was pleased to see, is that the Wikipedia content is published under a public license. Who knows, a hundred years from now, what's going to be the 'right' online encyclopedia; if there are fifty to choose from, that might be okay. I think enabling this is great. We're still beginners on this journey; imagine what it's going to be like when we've had a few generations of experience with this [global collaboration].  

On Wikipedia

[edit]

Have you edited Wikipedia recently? What do you think of it?

WC: I read Wikipedia, just out of a need to know something, probably every week. But I haven't edited a lot. If someone were to ask me to point to a modern encyclopedia, I would choose Wikipedia. Wikipedia defines encyclopedia now....
    Wikipedia is close to becoming an original source, I suppose.

Actually, we are totally against that; one of our basic rules is "no original research".

WC: That's because this is the grounding that keeps it from spiraling off into argument? I always wanted people to talk about things that actually happened to them; their own experience was that grounding. A community has to be grounded in something, or else you end up in a spiral of mutual delusion.

In the early days of wiki, did you think that one might some day be used to build an encyclopedia?

WC: I actually thought of it as a glossary for new words that a community would use. The thought that a community needs a dictionary, helped inspire the first wiki. But Wikipedia's scope is so much larger than the scope of my wiki. At the time, I was aware that there were 'divisive' topics. I discouraged people from writing about them, because I thought the forum was vulnerable in that if people didn't seek consensus, they wouldn't find it.
    Now when I'm boasting of the qualities of wikis, I speak of the ability of a community to establish and enforce norms in a way a computer program can't. You couldn't write down NPOV in a rule and run it as a test on submissions. The only way to make [such] a social distinction is to have a lot of people discussing examples.

"Who would have thought that email, with all of its permissions and security, would fall apart faster than wiki?"

Did you expect wikis would grow as large as they have today?

WC: I thought there would be failure modes, but I wasn't surprised that communities found ways around them. I thought it was important that when the organization proved to be wrong, people could reorganize on their own, that organization could emerge.

Why aren't there other huge wiki projects, like a book-review or journal project?

WC: Maybe this can only happen once every few years. Maybe the body of people who realize how the social process works, and the value in it, can only grow so fast; then somebody has to have the energy to form the community that will sustain it. And maybe people do create these communities, and say "well, this is gonna be so good, let me pull a little profit out of it," and are a little disingenuous.
    I suspect there will be wikis on all kinds of subjects. But right now, for people who just want to feel what it's like, why start a new one when you can go to well-formed communities and just participate?

Do you think that's why we have so many Wikipedia-related communities?

WC: The fact that Wikimedia encourages that kind of splintering and that you've done some yourself, is in a sense an even grander goal than finishing the encyclopedia. To turn the process over to more communities.

Thank you for talking with us. Do you have any parting thoughts?

WC: I hope you will write about, not just the page count of Wikipedia, but how the ideas [of Wikipedia] are progressing in the world. And I hope you will use the newsletter and the Foundation to monitor and promote these ideas, and to promote culturally idealistic endeavours.

--[WQ]




6

[edit]
In the Media


Here is a look at what the media (in all its forms) has to say about Wikipedia, be it good, bad or indifferent. Up until now, Wikipedia has hogged the media spotlight; by the next newsletter, we hope to have excerpts about its sister projects as well.

Imagine a world in which every single person on the planet is given free access to the sum of all human knowledge. That's what we're doing. --Jimmy Wales in a Slashdot interview, July 28 2004.

If you still have any old Britannicas clogging your bookshelves, it is time finally to haul them off to Oxfam. Wikipedia... is a scholarly, thorough work of reference that costs nothing to consult... Best of all, entries are endlessly updated to keep them relevant, errors are gladly corrected within minutes, and - unlike its stuffier predecessors - it respects the specialist knowledge of you, its user. -- The Times (London), July 20, 2004.

Wikipedia, the encyclopedia of the 21st century, is free as beer, open to all, and free as speech. It's a modest and titanic project with growing success. -- SVM, September, pp 76-77 (a full-color two-page spread)

It's called Wikipedia and, like Google, it is one of the wonders of the world. -- John Naughton in The Observer, Sep 12 2004.


A quick timeline of Wikipedia's maturation through the lens of the press:

- Jul 21, 2003 : "Wikipedia.org, for example, lets the public collaborate to build a surprisingly accurate encyclopedia." -- David Weinberger, NPR
- Oct 17, 2003 : "[one of] our top 10 reference sites" -- the UK's Daily Mirror
- Jan 29 : "One of the most fascinating developments of the Digital Age... extraordinary..." -- Dan Gillmor, San José Mercury News
- Feb 25: 'To achieve the quality of established encyclopedias, much remains to be done' -- Tagesthemen, the late edition of a major german news program, concluding a 3-min segment on Wikipedia
- Mar 1 : "One of the 30 web sites that everyone must know about" -- PC Computer, a spanish tech 'zine, referring to es.wikipedia.org.
- Apr 1 : "Impressive...covering every topic imaginable...informative and authoritative" -- UK's The Guardian
- Apr 23 : "One of the most reliably useful sources of information around, on or off-line" -- BBC News
- Jun 1 : "The web's most stunning and exciting site" -- icWales, the national website of Wales
- Jun 29 : "Astonishingly... not a bunch of graffitti and spam [a la] web fora or guestbooks. Quite the opposite: Many entries in the online-reference compare favorably with a commercial reference" -- Mario Sixtus, Frankfurter Rundschau
- Jul 20 : "Fortunately, the same community (i.e., humans) that ruined the Web is revolutionizing the encyclopedia" -- The Chicago Sun-Times
- Aug 11 : "It used to be if you were a kid in a village in India or a village in northern Canada in the winter, maybe you could get to a place where they have a few books once in a while. Now, if you have a telephone, you can get a free encyclopedia. You have access to the world's knowledge" -- Howard Rheingold, in an MSNBC interview
- Aug 14 : "the Brockhaus of Trivia" -- Andreas M. Bock, Suddeutscher Zeitung
- Sep 10 : "Sharp competition for Brockhaus and Encarta: The free on-line encyclopedia Wikipedia will appear in a few weeks on CD-ROM" -- PC-Welt

Wikipedia has been used as a source in academic papers, legal briefings, business plans, and even weather reports:

"[Hurricane] Ivan was in the Gulf of Mexico on Tuesday... It likely will hit the Alabama coast early Thursday, according to www.wikipedia.org." -- Sept 15, 2004, Dre Jackson, Peoria Journal Star Online

 

Our critics
Illustration of circle strafing
Illustration of circle strafing

Of course, not everyone is a fan. Other encyclopedias regularly point out Wikipedia's limitations when asked about it. "[People] at Microsoft point out that free online sites don't offer the same consistency and reliability, and attention to user's needs, as Encarta does. At the same time, Encarta provides a safer environment than the Web does for student research" [ Seattle P-I Reporter, 7/12].

The UK's Register has also started regularly criticising Wikipedia: "It's hard to imagine anyone other than a Wikipedian arguing [for] the wider availability of high quality information collections," one reporter claims, calling Wikipedia "an occasionally useful online resource that needs to be taken with a huge sackful of salt," and "the world's most useless online text" [The Register, 9/15, 9/7, 7/14]. A few responses from enthusiastic Register readers resulted in another snide column about the insular nature of the Wikipedia community.

Meanwhile a tech column in the Syracuse Post-Standard attracted attention from the blogosphere in August, after publishing an article warning readers not to trust Wikipedia as a source. Many sites picked up a Techdirt article, whose author had contacted the Post-Standard reporter and had been insulted for his efforts.
    The article revolved around a quote from a high-school librarian who seemed altogether opposed to Wikipedia. When some Wikipedians told her about the fuss her comments had raised, she was quick to respond with a polite letter (and to give us permission to quote her in turn):

I just re-read what I originally sent to Al Fasoldt in the recent Post-Standard column. I'm afraid I do have egg all over my face... The message was NOT... that Wikipedia is not an authoritative source. The message was that the best thing about the web (the sharing of information and ideas) can also make it harder for the average high school student to make a judgement call when checking the authority of a source used for research.
I'm sorry if this generated controversy over the authority of the site, this is NOT what was intended. It just illustrates the problem.

We couldn't agree more.




7

[edit]

International

[edit]

Wikipedia reached a combined total of 1 million articles in September. The previous month saw a number of smaller milestones in many languages. The English Wikipedia reached a third of a millon articles. The French Wikipedia celebrated their 50,000th article with a stub about the Medlar fruit. Danish hit the 20,000 mark the day before Russian reached 5,000 and the Arabic and Icelandic Wikipedias each reached 1,000 articles. The Hebrew Wikipedia just passed the 10,000-article milestone, and three more languages (Bulgarian, Finnish, and Norwegian) will soon do the same.

The growth of smaller Wikipedias is often due to the efforts of one or two very enthusiastic editors to give them a kick-start. For example, عصام بايزيدي and أبو سليمان on the Arabic Wikipedia, or Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason on Icelandic. The Asturian and Slovak Wikipedias grew significantly in the last month, thanks largely to the efforts of Bar and Liso. Also of note is the Luxembourgish Wikipedia, which began only at the end of July yet already has over 600 articles.

Wiktionary, Wikiquote and Wikibooks were recently split into subdomains, allowing their interfaces to be translated and leading to hundreds of new potential projects. Wikiquote is already available in over five languages; Wikibooks and Wiktionary in over 15 languages each.

Meanwhile, new Wikipedias continue to be founded, in Cherokee, Muscogee and Laotian among others; Choctaw seems to be the next one up and is available now for creation. A multilingual Swiss portal was also recently set up, and linked to from www.wikipedia.ch.


[edit]

A collection of some of our most beautiful content
Fantasy home panorama


Red sky at night, by dwindrim

O-torii (Grand Gate) of Itsukushima Shrine, Hiroshima, Japan. The floating shrine of a seagoddess, on the flow. Founded 1400 years ago, this is now a World Heritage site.
A rolling thunderstorm in Entschede, The Netherlands

The Perito Moreno glacier in southern Argentina

Gilt silver jug with pattern of dancing horses, Tang Dynasty, China. The horse is presenting a wine cup held in its teeth, a feat not seen in modern dressage.

Mt. St. Helens




8

[edit]
Endnotes

From Sept 2-7, 2004, Wikipedia was present at the Ars Electronica Cyberarts Festival in Linz, Austria. Wikipedia had won a Golden Nica in the category digital communities of the Prix Ars Electronica and Jimbo Wales was invited to speak at the presentation of the prize winning projects.

In the Brucknerhaus where the conference talks took place, all the prize winners were given the opportunity to present their projects. from the german wikipedia organized the Wikipedia booth at the so called electro lobby where Mike, , and explained Wikipedia and its concepts to the visitors. We had a very nice neighbourship: The people from were there, filling everyone up with "Open Source Water" under a Creative Commons License.

Open Source Water under Creative Commons License

The glorious gala on friday which was transmitted on Austrian and German TV was a little bit disappointing, however. After lots of lengthy speeches of local politicians and sponsors the awards were handed out. Instead of a live part in the ceremony, they played a brief video film about Wikipedia which included footage from the London meetup. So we have this nice photo of London Wikipedians as displayed at the Gala.

Wikipedia film at Linz cyberarts festival 2004

Sunday evening Jimbo had dinner with and , two big fans of Wikipedia who were on the Jury of the Award committee. Later we went to a party with Ito and some others, among them Jane Metcalfe from Wired magazine and from the german online magazine Telepolis.

On Monday payed a short visit to Linz, speaking on a panel and Jimbo and he talked about the future of the GFDL. Martin Wattenberg, a researcher from IBM who had worked on a Wikipedia visualization project [36] demonstrated his Java program at the Wikipedia booth - really, really great stuff.

On the last festival day Jimbo held his presentation about Wikipedia on the Digital communities panel, where the jury members Rheingold and Ito explained their decisions for the awards. Since Ito, sitting on the panel, played around with his notebook, Jimbo decided to do the same and went chatting on IRC during the speeches. In an experiment, Jimbo asked the folk on #wikipedia to write an article about Ito for the English wikipedia which resulted in some funny conversations and - in the end - an article while Ito was blogging it. We finished the conference celebrating together with the people from Creative Commons the launch of Creative Commons Austria.

The Lentos museum in Linz, at night

Calendar

[edit]

see Calendar for more
What's happening across the wikiverse and beyond.

Old events  
Jan New servers installed -> traffic spike. Feb 500,000 article mark
Mar Apr
May Prix Ars Electronica "Digital Communities" award. Webby "Community" award. Jun European meetings
Jul Major Slashdot interview, July 4 meeting in Paris. Aug 8 new Apaches set up -> traffic spike.

September

[edit]
  • Sep 9: Aoineko picks up an award for Wikipedia from the Japanese Advertiser's Association
  • Sep 15: Milestone: Wikipedia reaches 1,000,000 articles
  • Sep 21-24: Jimmy Wales in Switzerland; presentation to the UN

October

[edit]
  • Oct 1 : 40,000 copies of a CD with a snapshot of the German Wikipedia sent out
  • Oct 4 : Wikiversity deadline
  • Oct 12: Berlinux conference
  • 3 squid proxy servers set up in France

November

[edit]
  • Nov 27-28 : Rotterdam Symposium

December

[edit]
  • Dec 27-29 : 21C3 in Berlin, wikimeetup

Future Events

[edit]
  • Mar 18-20, 2005 : CCC conference, party

 

Australian sunset, near Swifts Creek
Australian sunset, near Swifts Creek

The Road Ahead

[edit]
The road ahead
The road ahead

Foundation members should be able to see this newsletter in print before the start of winter. Keep an eye on newsletter page on meta for new information, or to sign up to receive newsletter updates by mail. Look for the next edition around the new year, and keep the good work and suggestions coming!

In time of need call on the editor's creed:
    Thesis, antithesis, synthesis!
If you think what you read should be NPOV-ed,
    Thesis, antithesis, synthesis!
So plant a good seed
And do a good deed
And don't ever stop until all have agreed
And then they will call you a real Wikiped-
Ian.
    Thesis, antithesis, synthesis!

-dpbsmith

de:Armin Medosch en:Lawrence Lessig ja:ファイル:ウェブクリエーションアウォード2004年トロフィー.jpg