Pine wrote:
... The "Wikipedia live monitor" tool was designed by Thomas Steiner ... this is the first that I can recall seeing it
If you like WLM you will love the Wikipedia Natural Disaster Monitor:
http://disaster-monitor.herokuapp.com/
http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-1268/paper15.pdf
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1b563mkeP91PMWJ6B_Fy3DdKK-SjM06gPVNu2...
https://github.com/tomayac/postdoc/tree/master/demos/disaster-monitor
Best regards, Jim
Thanks, Pine and James. Just adding https://twitter.com/mediagalleries to the link collection, documented here http://arxiv.org/abs/1403.4289.
Great work, Thomas, and thank you for making and sharing these.
On Sun, Jul 19, 2015 at 11:08 AM, Federico Leva (Nemo) nemowiki@gmail.com wrote:
Generally, a moment of high popularity of a subject (and hence movement of the content about it) is the worst possible time to translate an article. Way better to translate when things have settled down.
I generally agree, Nemo: the details/content needs to be established, but at the same time there is a window of opportunity during which people are most interested in the event that can be capitalized upon in terms of editor contributions and reader volumes. There is obviously a balance between these.
Do you know https://tools.wmflabs.org/wikitrends/ ? Probably collaboration
is accepted.
I hadn't see it---cross-language trending articles was an old interest of mine that I've let sit for a while and have clearly missed some developments. Thank you for sharing!
Cheers, Scott
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