Samat, it is not really possible to enable *content* features for logged-in users only. An article content is shown to everyone, so if an editor adds a map to an article, everyone would see that map. On the other hand, everyone will be able to see if it's broken, and remove it right away, without any involvement from developers. The whole thing would be in the hands of the community - deciding what to use, usage policies, etc.

On Sun, Nov 6, 2016 at 5:51 AM Samat <samat78@gmail.com> wrote:
I am very happy that we are able to add new type of contents (especially maps) to Wikipedia articles. I would like to see more content of the map layer(s) itself and more options and features of these tools.

I would suggest to release the new features only as (opt in) beta feature (for registered users) for a longer time, until most of the bugs are discovered, and then I would roll out as a stable feature for everybody. Maybe this is a slower way, but safer and cause less dissatisfaction in the community and about Wikipedia.

Best,
Samat



On Sat, Nov 5, 2016 at 11:38 PM, Yuri Astrakhan <yastrakhan@wikimedia.org> wrote:
Guillaume and Federico, thanks! I might have been too generic :) Basically I would like to get a general feel for

* are we enabling new content-oriented (no impact until editors add it to the pages) features too fast or too slow? And that mostly means maps - should we make maps absolutely perfect before giving it into the hands of the community?

* should we enable new features earlier, in a more unfinished state, so that community can comment on things earlier, and possibly tell us if we are going in the wrong direction?  Or should we release them later, so new features are more polished from the start, but possibly less needed (miss the mark) and would require considerable resources to rework?
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