TripAdvisor is very good with sending periodic messages about how 140 people read my  review of SuchAndSuch or how 10 of them rated it as Helpful or how I am 2 restaurant reviews away from my Senior Contributor badge. While the badges don't personally motivate me, I do find myself motivated by the readership and helpful stats.

Speaking of which, I had a great chicken curry at the Temple Restaurant in Pub Street, Siem Reap today, but they were out of crocodile and pork (to the irritation of my companions). FWIW, crocodile tastes like chicken only a bit fishier (well it does in Australia anyway), and pork tastes like pork, and I don't intend to ever find out how Cambodian spiders taste (even with the added benefit of using their deep-fried legs as toothpicks after you've crunched your way through their abdomens).

Kerry, currently on holidays ...



Sent from my iPad

On 22 Feb 2017, at 4:38 pm, Amir E. Aharoni <amir.aharoni@mail.huji.ac.il> wrote:


2017-02-21 17:56 GMT+02:00 Melody Kramer (ET) <mkramer@wikimedia.org>:


Another fun experiment: a blood bank in Sweden texts donors to thank them after donating, and then AGAIN when the blood is actually used:

So basically, they're reminding people of how their contribution is used.


 
Ohhhhhhh, thank you so much for this example. How I wish we did more of that :/

As a volunteer I've been translating strings for MediaWiki and its extensions for over eight years, and I get a happiness shot every time I see my string used on the live site. It still excites me after thousands of strings just as it did the first time in 2009.

I wish we told people that the article they wrote was read by X people, for example (WordPress.com and Quora do it nicely). Or to tell them that it was translated to other languages (our team plans to do it as part of Content Translation, but it wasn't done yet).

When I get code patches from volunteers, I try to notify them when their fix goes live on wikipedia.org or if it helped solving another problem (e.g. https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T106632#3042650 ), but I don't do it systematically enough, and it's certainly not a process that everybody follows.

We really need to do it.

--
Amir Elisha Aharoni · אָמִיר אֱלִישָׁע אַהֲרוֹנִי
http://aharoni.wordpress.com
‪“We're living in pieces,
I want to live in peace.” – T. Moore‬
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