Yuvi, much thanks to you, to Srikanthlogic, and to the others who made
this event possible. It sounds like a great success. Sorry for the
late reply.
> It was a one day, 8 hour event focusing on getting people
> together to hack on stuff related to all Wikimedia projects - not just
> Mediawiki patches.
Fantastic idea. And one-day events are a totally reasonable length, and
easier for first-time event-runners to run.
> As people came in, we asked them what technologies/fields they are
> familiar with, and picked out an idea for them to work on from the
> Ideas List (http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Chennai_Hackathon_March_2012/Ideas).
> This took care of the biggest problem with hackathons with new people
> - half the day spent on figuring out what to work on, and when found,
> it is completely outside the domain of expertise of the people hacking
> on the idea. Talking together with them fast to pick an idea within 5
> minutes that they can complete in the day fixed this problem and made
> sure people can concentrate on coding for the rest of the day.
That's a really great tactic and one that I hope to copy for future
outreach events. Can you add it (and any other tricks up your sleeve)
to
https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Volunteer_coordination_and_outreach/Event_pl…
?
> Demos
> =====
I strongly appreciate your consolidated list of names and links -- thanks.
> Vivek is also applying to work with Mediawiki for
> GSoC, so we will hopefully get a long term contributor :)
And of course anyone is welcome to work with us outside of GSoC as well.
(obligatory reminder)
I forwarded the "all unique words in Tamil Wikipedia" project link to
the researchers on wiki-research-l.
> 4. Program to help record pronunciations for words in tawikt
> Is currently blocked on figuring out a way to
> properly upload to commons
You should consider consulting Maarten Dammers and Ryan Kaldari on that
as they are seasoned experts on the social and technical intricacies of
Commons mass upload.
> 6. Structured database search over Wikipedia
> https://github.com/ashwanthkumar/structured-wiki-search.
You could tell Ashwanth to get in touch with those "Swipe" folks from
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn21625-new-search-tool-to-unlock-wikip…
.
> 7. Photo upload to commons by Email
> I hope someone from the community (perhaps people doing WLM?)
> should be able to get in touch with him to see if this tool could
> be developed further with a specific goal in mind.
Yes, talk to Maarten and to the Wiki Loves Monuments people.
> 8. Lightweight offline Wiki reader
I presume you've already told offline-l? :-)
> He's still fixing things on the script. If the community needs people
> to come fix up their user scripts/gadgets, Bharath would be a willing
> (and awesome!) candidate!
That sounds terrific! Please do ask him to contact me.
> 1. WikiPronouncer
> By: Russel Nickson
> I think this would still be a very useful tool, and
> hope someone from the community steps up to work with Russel and get
> this finished.
Talking with Yuvi to ask him about getting developers who know Android
involved. (mobile-l.)
> 2. Wiktionary cross lingual statistics
> By: PranavRC
>
> What it was supposed to do:
> It was a statistical tool that generated statistics about how many
> words overlap between all indic languages in Wiktionary (as measured
> by interwiki links).
>
> Status:
> The code has been written (I've requested the author to put it up
> publicly, will update list when it is). It, however, requires a lot of
> time to be run. So validation by the community that such stats would
> be useful would, IMO, definitely give Pranav the impetus to finish it
> up and show us the pretty graphs :)
Ask wiki-research-l and point them to Pranav's code? If you aren't on
that list, give me an email to forward and I will. Or ask Dario to do so.
> Next Steps
> ==========
> Where do we go from here? Random thoughts:
>
> 1. Geek retention - this is reasonably easy. If we keep feeding
> hackers interesting problems that affect a lot of people, they'll keep
> helping us out. Is it possible to have some sort of a 'tools required'
> or 'hacks required' or 'gadgets required' page/queue someplace where
> we can always direct hackers looking for interesting problems to? IMO
> Wikipedia is full of interesting technical problems, so this *should*
> be feasible.
We have https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Annoying_large_bugs as a start
but it's not quite right, as it's pretty MediaWiki-centric. And every
community has its own wishlist and isn't likely to come off-wiki to add
to yet another one, so probably the best thing to do is to simply
compile links to more those wishlists at the bottom of
https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Annoying_large_bugs#See_also .
> 2. Follow ups - this time, I am able to do this personally (small
> enough group). Clearly this will not scale. Do we have ideas/methods
> for following up with these people so that they stay with us?
If you could answer this question definitively, you could instantly
achieve a stable career as a religious or political leader. :-) Over
and over we see that there is simply no substitute for personal followup
and delegating right-sized tasks. Our best investment is in that
personal followup and in building infrastructure for ourselves (contact
lists, databases, boilerplate emails).
> 3. More of these? This was pretty much a 'zero cost' event - stickers
> were the only 'cost'. A lot of places around the country would love to
> have their space used for a hackathon of sorts. Should we do more of
> these kind of 'Unofficial' hackathons?
Yes, but only if we can prepare for them as well as you did.
Thanks again.
--
Sumana Harihareswara
Volunteer Development Coordinator
Wikimedia Foundation
The Chennai Unofficial Wikimedia Hackathon Report
Apologies for the delayed email. Work ate me.
TL;DR: 13 completed hacks, including 2 core mediawiki patches, 3
tawiki userscript updates and 2 new deployed tools. It was super
awesome and super productive!
The 'Unofficial' Chennai Wikimedia
Hackathon(http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Chennai_Hackathon_March_2012)
happened on Saturday, March 17 2012 at the Thoughtworks office in
Chennai. It was a one day, 8 hour event focusing on getting people
together to hack on stuff related to all Wikimedia projects - not just
Mediawiki patches.
The event started with us sailing past security reasonably easily, and
getting setup with internet without a glitch. People trickled in and
soon enough we had 21 people in there. Since this was a pure
hackathon, there were no explicit tutorials or presentations. As
people came in, we asked them what technologies/fields they are
familiar with, and picked out an idea for them to work on from the
Ideas List (http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Chennai_Hackathon_March_2012/Ideas).
This took care of the biggest problem with hackathons with new people
- half the day spent on figuring out what to work on, and when found,
it is completely outside the domain of expertise of the people hacking
on the idea. Talking together with them fast to pick an idea within 5
minutes that they can complete in the day fixed this problem and made
sure people can concentrate on coding for the rest of the day.
People started hacking, and just before lunch we made people come up
and tell us what they were working on. We then broke for lunch and
usual socialization happened over McDonalds burgers and Saravana
Bhavan dosas. Hacking started soon after, and people were
concentrating on getting their hacks done before the demo time. And we
did have quite a few demos!
Demos
=====
Here's a short description of each of the demos, written purely in the
order in which they were presented:
1. Wikiquotes via SMS
By: @MadhuVishy and @YesKarthik
What it does:
Send a person name to a particular number, and you'll keep getting
back quotes from that person. Works in similar semi-automated fashion
as the DYKBot. Built on AppEngine + Python.
Status:
Deployed live! Send SMS '@wikiquote Gandhi' to 9243342000 to test it
out! Has limited data right now, however.
---
2. API to Rotate Images (Mediawiki Core Patch)
By: Vivek
What it does:
Adds an API method that can arbitrarily rotate images. Think of this
as first step towards being able to rotate any image in commons with a
single button instantly, without having to wait for a bot. Patch was
attached to https://bugzilla.wikimedia.org/33186.
Status:
It was reviewed on that day itself (Thanks Reedy!). Vivek is now
figuring out how to modify his patch so that it would be accepted into
Mediawiki core. Vivek is also applying to work with Mediawiki for
GSoC, so we will hopefully get a long term contributor :)
---
3. Find list of unique Tamil words in tawiki
By: Shrinivasan T
What it does:
It took the entire tamil wikipedia dump and extracted all unique words
out of it. About 1.3 million unique tamil words were extracted. Has
multiple applications, including a tamil spell checker.
Status:
Code and the dataset live on github:
https://github.com/tshrinivasan/tamil-wikipedia-word-list
---
4. Program to help record pronunciations for words in tawikt
What it does:
Simple python program that gives you a word, asks you to pronounce it
and then uploads it to commons for being used in Wiktionary. Makes the
process much more streamlined and faster.
Status:
Code available at:
https://github.com/tshrinivasan/voice-recorder-for-tawictionary.
Preliminary testing with his friends shows that easy to record 500
words in half an hour. Is currently blocked on figuring out a way to
properly upload to commons
---
5. Translation of Gadgets/UserScripts to tawiki
By: SuryaPrakash [[:ta:பயனர்:Surya_Prakash.S.A.]]
What he did:
Surya spent the day translating two gadgets into Tamil, so they can be
used on tawiki. First is the 'Prove It' Reference addition tool
(http://ta.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mediawiki:Gadget-ProveIt.js). The second
one was the 'Speed Reader' extension that formats content into
multiple columns for faster scanning
(http://ta.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mediawiki:Gadget-TwoColumn.js). Last I
checked, these are available for anyone with only tamil knowledge to
use, so yay!
(He also tried to localize Twinkle for Tamil, couldn't because of
issues with the laptop he was using.
---
6. Structured database search over Wikipedia
By: Ashwanth
What it does:
Built a tool that combined DBPedia and Wikipedia to allow you to
search in a semantic way. We almost descended into madness with people
searching for movies with Kamal and movies with Rajni (both provided
accurate results, btw). Amazing search tool that made it super easy to
query information in a natural way.
Status:
The code is available at
https://github.com/ashwanthkumar/structured-wiki-search. Definitely
would be awesome to see this deployed somewhere, so would be great if
the community could come up with specific ideas on how to make this a
specific cool tool.
---
7. Photo upload to commons by Email
By: Ganesh
What it does:
Started with building a tool that will let you email a particular
address with pictures + metadata in the body of the page, and it will
be uploaded to commons. This was for the benefit of people with older
outdated phones *cough*Logic*cough* who would like to use their
phone's camera to contribute to commons, but can not due to technical
limitations.
Status:
He wasn't able to get that to work during the hackathon - too many
technical issues cropped up. However, he's *very* definitely
interested in setting it up, and has made progress towards it. I
hope someone from the community (perhaps people doing WLM?) should be
able to get in touch with him to see if this tool could be developed
further with a specific goal in mind.
---
8. Lightweight offline Wiki reader
By: Feroze
What it does:
There is a project called qvido
(http://projects.qi-hardware.com/index.php/p/qvido/) which was a
'lightweight' offline Wiki reader (compared to Kiwix, which is
heavier). It has been abandoned for a while, however. Feroze took the
time to revive the project, figure out how to build it (and wrote
build instructions!) and also fixed a bug so that it can be used to
demo showing offline Wiki navigation. He was able to demo it showing
the Odiya Wikipedia dump offline, with working link navigation.
Status:
There exists a git repo (https://github.com/feroze/qvido) with the
code + the build instructions. I hope that people interested in
offline projects check this out and see if it can be made useful, and
take this forward.
---
9. Patches to AssessmentBar
By: gsathya
What it does:
AssessmentBar is a small widget/tool I'm building to make WP India
assessments easier (at the request of User:AshLin. Stay tuned for an
announcement in the next few days). Sathya spent time making the
backend for it more scalable, so the same server can support multiple
projects and concurrent users in a better way. Before that he was
contemplating setting up a hidden Tor node for Wikipedia (he's a Tor
core contributor) and then playing with data visualizations with WP
data.
Status:
There is a pull request (https://github.com/yuvipanda/MadamHut/pull/2)
that I need to merge :)
---
10. Parsing Movie data into a database
By: Arunmozhi (Tecoholic) and Lavanya
What it does:
It scrapes the infoboxes of all movies from whatever category you give
it and stores this into a database. This is harder than it sounds
because parsing wikitext is similar to beating yourself up repeatedly
in the head with a large trout. They managed to figure out a nice way
to extract information from all Indian movie pages, and put it in a
database for programmatic easy access later.
Status:
I've asked them to put the code up publicly somewhere, and since I
believe Tecoholic is in this mailing list, he'll reply with the link
:) These kinds of data scraping can be used to build very nice tools
that show off how much information Wikipedia has, and perhaps also
help people contribute back by editing information for their favorite
movies. I hope the community comes up with a nice idea to utilize
this, and takes this project forward to its ultimate destiny: A super
sexy IMDB type site for Indian Movies with data sourced from Wikipedia
(I can dream :D)
---
11. Random Good WP India article tool
By: Shakti and Sharath
What it does:
It is a simple tool that shows you one B, A, GA or FA article every
time you go there. The idea is to provide a usable service for people
who want to accumulate lots of knowledge by randomly reading stuff,
but only want good stuff (so stubs, etc are filtered out (unlike
Special:Random)). I'll also note that neither of them had worked with
any web service before the hackathon, nor with JSON, nor with the
mediawiki API, yet were able to build and deploy this tool within the
day. /me gives a virtual imaginary barnstar to either of them
Status:
It is currently deployed at http://srik.me/WPIndia. Everytime you hit
that link, you'll get an article about India that the community has
deemed 'good'. The source code is available
(https://github.com/saki92/category-based-search). They are eager to
do more hacks such as these, and I'm hoping that the community will
find enough technical cool things for these enthusiastic volunteers to
work on
---
12. Fix bugs on tawiki ShortURL gadget
By: Bharath
What it does:
The short url service used in tawiki (tawp.in) is shown in the wiki
via a gadget. It is not the most user friendly gadget - you need to
right click and select copy. Bharath looked for a solution by which
you could click it and it would copy to the clipboard, but did not
find any that would work without flash. Hence he abandoned that and
started figuring out easier ways of making that happen. He also fixed
several bugs in the implementation of the gadget, and I expect it to
get deployed soonish. Thanks to SrikanthLogic for helping him through
the process.
Status:
Code is available at
http://ta.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E0%AE%AA%E0%AE%AF%E0%AE%A9%E0%AE%B0%E0%AF%8D:….
He's still fixing things on the script. If the community needs people
to come fix up their user scripts/gadgets, Bharath would be a willing
(and awesome!) candidate!
---
13. Add 'My Uploads' to top bar along with My Contributions, etc
(Mediawiki Core Patch)
By: SrikanthLogic
What it does:
Not satisfied with being the organizer of the hackathon, Srikanth
wanted to flex his programming muscles and spent time fixing a bug in
core mediawiki (https://bugzilla.wikimedia.org/show_bug.cgi?id=30915).
He spent a while digging around the proper way to do this, and managed
to make a proper patch!
Status:
It has been committed in gerrit (currently unable to find a link).
Should be merged in soon. Yay!
Honorable Mentions
===================
1. WikiPronouncer
By: Russel Nickson
What it was supposed to do:
Exactly like Shrini's tool to record word pronunciations and upload to
commons, but written for Android so people could add prononciations on
the go.
Status:
Code is available at https://github.com/russelnickson/pronouncer. He
ran into technical issues with Android setup (it stops working
completely if you look at it the wrong way), and was unable to
complete this. I think this would still be a very useful tool, and
hope someone from the community steps up to work with Russel and get
this finished.
---
2. Wiktionary cross lingual statistics
By: PranavRC
What it was supposed to do:
It was a statistical tool that generated statistics about how many
words overlap between all indic languages in Wiktionary (as measured
by interwiki links).
Status:
The code has been written (I've requested the author to put it up
publicly, will update list when it is). It, however, requires a lot of
time to be run. So validation by the community that such stats would
be useful would, IMO, definitely give Pranav the impetus to finish it
up and show us the pretty graphs :)
So, in all, 13 demos were produced (+ 2 near misses). I think we can
call this one a success, no? :)
Next Steps
==========
Where do we go from here? Random thoughts:
1. Geek retention - this is reasonably easy. If we keep feeding
hackers interesting problems that affect a lot of people, they'll keep
helping us out. Is it possible to have some sort of a 'tools required'
or 'hacks required' or 'gadgets required' page/queue someplace where
we can always direct hackers looking for interesting problems to? IMO
Wikipedia is full of interesting technical problems, so this *should*
be feasible.
2. Follow ups - this time, I am able to do this personally (small
enough group). Clearly this will not scale. Do we have ideas/methods
for following up with these people so that they stay with us?
3. More of these? This was pretty much a 'zero cost' event - stickers
were the only 'cost'. A lot of places around the country would love to
have their space used for a hackathon of sorts. Should we do more of
these kind of 'Unofficial' hackathons?
Thanks due (in random order)
============================
1. Thoughtworks/BalajiDamodaran: He graciously hosted us at
Thoughtworks. The biggest challenge for any hackathon is to find a
nice place which understands what hackathons are, and provides what is
considered the lifeblood of a hackathon - working WiFi. Balaji
(@openbala) was incredibly awesome, and this entire thing would've not
been possible at all without him and ThoughtWorks.
2. Dorai Thodla: He helped popularize the hackathon among the Chennai
Geeks crowd, and acted as a sounding board at various important times.
He also connected us with @openbala and enabled us to get the venue.
Thanks!
3. Srikanth Lakshmanan: The hackathon was his idea, and he made sure
it was executed in a nice way. He was the official 'organizer', and
made sure that all logistics were taken care of. Once the event
started, he was very helpful in helping people technically and in
picking up ideas, while also hacking on his own patch. This event was,
in essence, organized and run by him. He took an overnight trip from
Hyderabad straight out of office just for this. Thanks for making this
possible!
4. Shrini (aka the relentless forwarder): This event wouldn't have
been as much a success without him either. Evangelism across multiple
lists, adding a lot of ideas that could be done, helping the people
there out technically at all times and writing two really good hacks -
Thank you! I'm glad we get to keep you :)
5. Subhashish Panighrahi: For sending us stickers :D (And who all is
involved in that logistical process too!)
Most of all, this event was a success because of the quality and
dedication of the people who turned up, giving up their Saturdays.
Hope everyone who turned up had a nice time :) I am personally in
touch with most of them, and I also have their email address, phone
number *and* permission to contact them again. If anyone here thinks
that they liked one of the hacks and want to take it further, please
contact me (User:Yuvipanda on Mediawiki.org or yuvipanda(a)gmail.com)
and I'll get you people in touch. If there is a more accepted,
standard way of handling this type of private information, please let
me know as well!
Thanks!
-
Yuvi Panda T
http://yuvi.in
Greetings everyone,
I was in Agartala for an outreach session of Wikipedia. Here's a quick wrap
around of my visit:
My flight landed nearly at 5pm evening, a fine breeze was flowing and there
was Nikhil, waiting for me outside. Nikhil & Aveek has been co-ordinating
the whole event.
The NIT campus was nearly 45-50mins journey via car (trust me its quite
long, but you'll love the natural beauty you get to see even when the sun
is falling down).
The following day comprised of two events primarily, a lecture by Dr.
D.Udaya Kumar, asst. Prof, IIT Guwahati* *(The man behind the Indian
currency symbol)* *follwed by the Wiki workshop. I started off with the
basic meaning of the term 'Wiki+pedia' then informed them about the
Wikimedia Foundation & its projects. As the presentation moved forward,
lots of queries started to pour in. It was nice to see that everyone did
little bit of googling on Wikipedia before attending the workshop which
made it easier for me to explain. Along with normal queries on pages
created & the 'neutral point of view', the SOPA issue was also raised & I
had to explain how its going to affect Wikipedia. I tried to be as clear as
possible regarding the copyright vios as they have been an issue through
out the India Education project. In the edit session we had lots of fun
together editing, though the Wifi connection was troubling us, we
managed to do quite a bit of editing.
I have created a wikiacademy page on this (still updating the 53
participants list..) :
http://wiki.wikimedia.in/Wiki_Academy/National_Institute_of_Technology_Agar…
*P.S: It was an honour having Dr. D. Udaya Kumar in the Workshop, he was
very much interested in Wikipedia. He promised me to help us in organising
a similar workshop in IIT Guwahati..:)*
*
*
*
*
*
*
Deepon
Hi Folks
One of the essential things that India Program needs to constantly work out is keeping the community informed of the work that we are doing - so that this work is clearer but also to help cross-pollinate ideas amongst a wider set of community members who might not have been engaged on specific village pump / talk page discussion or involved in particular activities (e.g. outreach events) or wikiprojects.
We used to have a monthly IRC with the community and India Program. (For those who are not familiar with IRC, it is an Internet messaging system similar to a regular chat room. It's very simple to use and you can join in by clicking on the following link: http://webchat.freenode.net/?channels=#wikimedia-office.) I have been remiss in conducting these for the past few months - and I'd like to make amends by restarting, with a couple of modifications.
a) I'd like to propose fortnightly instead of monthly. (I was wary of doing it any more frequently than monthly earlier because I didn't know if there would be enough on the plate to discuss. I have changed my mind now - because there is too much to discuss to cover in a single monthly session.) I'd like to propose that we do it in the 1st and 3rd Thursdays of every month at 9pm IST (which is GMT + 0530) - THOUGH NOT THIS MONTH - BECAUSE I HAVE MISSED THE TIMELINE. Just for March, we will do it on March 15th and March 29th (both at 9pm IST which is GMT + 0530)
b) I'd like to propose that we do it focussed on specific work streams instead of general. The reason I say this is that - as with many community meet-ups, folks will give time to attend a meet-up or participate in an IRC only if there is a topic of relevance to them. To that extent, we could do one IRC on Indic languages and one on Outreach & Communications. I'd start both the IRCs with a re-cap of India Programs activities for the fortnight (or so) prior to the IRC and forward from the IRC - and then we could talk about either Indic langauges or Outreach & Communications.
The March 15th one will be focussed on Indic Languages and the one on March 29th will be on Outreach & Communications.
Having said that, there is quite a bit of overlap on these topics - so feel free to join both. The more the merrier! Please do also invite anyone who is interested to know more about India Program or - even more importantly - interact with fellow Wikimedians interested in a particular activity to join in. (It's quite a lot of of fun {citation required} - and i've heard a rumour {citation required} that there was actually a romance that started on one of the IRCs...)
As always, the logs will be put up on meta for the benefit of those who can't attend and for the record.
I'll send a reminder on the day of the session and one 30 minutes before the session.
Thanks
hisham
Not sure if everyone knows this:
From: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:HighBeam
*HighBeam Research <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HighBeam_Research>* is an
online, paid search engine for newspapers, magazines, academic journals,
newswires, trade magazines and encyclopedias. The site has access to over
80 million articles from 6,500 publications, most of which are not
available for free elsewhere on the internet. Thousands of new articles are
added daily, archives date back over 25 years including trade journal,
newspaper articles, and peer-reviewed journals covering a wide range of
subjects and industries; and there are tools for finding, saving,
organizing, and sharing information as documents. Aside from a free 7-day
trial (credit card required), access to HighBeam costs $30 per month or
$200 per year for the first year and $300 for subsequent years.
As of March 13, 2012 HighBeam has generouslly agreed to give free,
full-access 1-year accounts for Wikipedia editors to use, at the discretion
of the community. HighBeam is excited about this and does not expect there
to be a shortage of these free, 1-year accounts; however, editors will have
to have a 1 year-old account and 1000 edits in order to qualify for one. At
the end of 1 year, editors who found the resource useful can simply
re-apply.
The current plan, although up for discussion, is for sign-ups for the
accounts to begin on Monday April 2 at 10am EST and remain open until the
following Monday; if there are more editors than accounts, to assign them
randomly; if a surplus of accounts remain available, to re-open the sign-up
page for regular additions.
--
Regards,
Srikanth Ramakrishnan.
Hi,
Recently there was some talk here about Wikisource in Indic languages
and this email is part of that trend.
Possibly the most important extension for Wikisource is ProofreadPage,
which helps transcribing PDF and DjVu files. It is installed in
Wikisource projects in all languages, but to be actually usable, it
must be translated.
It only has 56 messages. They are all short and easy to translate, but
some of them also have technical significance, so complete translation
is important.
Here's a link for translation:
http://translatewiki.net/w/i.php?title=Special%3ATranslate&taction=translat…
This link is for Bengali; simply choose your language in the
"Language" dropdown list and press "Fetch" to see the list of messages
for your language.
If you don't have an account in translatewiki.net already, you'll have
to create one before translating.
--
Amir Elisha Aharoni · אָמִיר אֱלִישָׁע אַהֲרוֹנִי
http://aharoni.wordpress.com
“We're living in pieces,
I want to live in peace.” – T. Moore
Hey All,
I am writing to invite each one of you to India WikiWomen's
Edit-a-Thon<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Meetup/India_WikiWomen%27s_Edit-a-Th…>that
has been scheduled for 25th March 2012, Sunday from 12:00pm to 2:00pm.
It's probably not possible for all of us to meet physically to celebrate
Women's Month but we all meet virtually - online!
During the two hour time slot we all will be editing an article which will
be pre-selected by way of nomination and votes. Depending on the number of
members joining in we can also organise an IRC meet to meet each other
before and during the event.
Everyone is welcome to come edit Wikipedia with us at this event. Women,
new editors, all those who relate to women's history or women's issues,
those who want to learn how to edit or can teach others how, and anyone
with an interest in women's history are particularly encouraged to attend.
Please sign Up here<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Meetup/India_WikiWomen%27s_Edit-a-Th…>and
suggest and vote for articles
here<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Meetup/India_WikiWomen%27s_Edit-a-Th…>.
Nomination for articles will be closed by 22nd of March and the voting will
be closed by 24th March. Hurry! :)
Thanks Nitika <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Nitika.t>, for bringing up
this idea!
I welcome all of you to participate by editing subjects about women's
history and more. Everyone is welcome!
Thanks
--
Netha Hussain
User : Netha Hussain <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Netha_Hussain> on
Wikiprojects
Student of Medicine and Surgery
Govt. Medical College, Kozhikode
Blogs : *nethahussain.blogspot.com
swethaambari.wordpress.com*