Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2011-06-13/From the editors Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2011-06-13/Traffic report Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2011-06-13/In the media
With the release of MediaWiki 1.17 to external sites (its so-called "tarball" release) being drawn out by the incidence of a long series of bugs – a release is now expected "within 24 hours" of the publication of this issue – attention is rapidly turning to design decisions regarding the MediaWiki 1.18 tarball release. In particular, the installer included in the release of 1.17 supported the packaging of commonly used extensions with the software itself, in an attempt to make "straight out of the box" MediaWiki work more like a Wikimedia wiki. Although it remains both difficult and undesirable to replicate the look and feel of a Wikimedia wiki entirely, given that they run approximately 80 extensions, at the moment, even basic extensions such as ParserFunctions must be manually installed by the end user. Therefore, to ease the technical knowledge required to set up a basic wiki, Wikimedia developer and bugmeister Mark Hershberger this week opened the call for a shortlist of the most needed extensions of the wikitech-l mailing list. Though there was concern from fellow developer Robert Lanphier that including even a small number of extensions would push back the rapidly approaching target date for release of the 1.18 tarball, former CTO Brion Vibber was unconcerned: "all that's required is to drop some directories into the tarball, and they'll be available for selection in the installer".
Not all fixes may have gone live to WMF sites at the time of writing; some may not be scheduled to go live for many weeks.
Answer the Foundation's call for testers of its new mobile gateway by grabbing your smartphone, if you have one, and navigating to [1]. Then, leave feedback on the experience via the link at the top.
irc.wikimedia.org
, which provides several Wikimedia-related IRC channels (though not the major chatrooms) was down for a period this week (wikitech-l mailing list).Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2011-06-13/Essay Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2011-06-13/Opinion
Mani Pande, the Wikimedia Foundation's Head of Global Development Research, has shared the first results from an online survey among Wikipedia contributors ("Wikipedia editors do it for fun: First results of our 2011 editor survey", the first in a series of postings about the findings). The survey had been translated into 22 languages (English version), it saw over 5000 participants.
Of the participants, 90% identified as male and 9% as female, a number even lower than the 13% found by the earlier UNU-MERIT study (which, despite some questions about its methodology, had formed the basis of widespread discussions about Wikipedia's "gender gap" earlier this year, see Signpost coverage).
The two most frequently selected reasons for continuing to edit Wikipedia were "I like the idea of volunteering to share knowledge" (71%) and "I believe that information should be freely available to everyone" (69%), followed by "I like to contribute to subject matters in which I have expertise" (63%) and "It's fun" (60%).
Last month, WMF Executive Director Sue Gardner had already highlighted another early result of the survey, concerning editors' satisfaction with the work of the WMF/Wikimedia chapters/all volunteers/themselves, in an interview with GerardM (see Signpost coverage).
In a blog posting titled "Public Policy Initiative wraps up pilot academic year", the WMF's LiAnna Davis gave some statistics about the achievements of the now concluding Public Policy Initiative (which the Foundation had announced in May 2010, funded by an $1.2 million grant from the Stanton Foundation, see for example the brief summary in the Signpost's "2010 in review"). During the project, more than 800 students from US universities contributed 8.8 million bytes to the English Wikipedia, improving articles they worked on "from an average score of 6.88, before the project, to 16.54".
The pilot project is being generalized and extended to a Global University Program. In the US, the system of "Campus Ambassadors" and participating professors introduced by the PPI will be transformed into "Volunteer Regional Ambassadors", while outside the US, the first Campus Ambassadors have recently been trained, in Pune, India.
In a separate blog posting, Davis described the experiences of one student participant whose additions to the article National Democratic Party (Egypt), made in the fall (northern autumn) term, received unexpectedly high readership numbers during the Egyptian revolution a few months afterwards.
The PPI was the subject of an article on the blog of Creative Commons last week, based on interviews with Pete Forsyth, who as the Wikimedia Foundation’s first Public Outreach Officer had been a "key architect" of the PPI, and others.
Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2011-06-13/Serendipity Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2011-06-13/Op-ed Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2011-06-13/In focus
The Arbitration Committee opened no new cases. Two cases are currently open.
See earlier Signpost coverage for background about this case. Arbitrators submitted further votes and a motion to close in the proposed decision during the week. Proposals relating to two editors and one administrator are being considered.
See earlier Signpost coverage for background about this case. During the day, drafter Elen of the Roads submitted additional proposals in the workshop for comment, with an apology for the delay in posting these proposals. Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2011-06-13/Humour